Brogden, David John

“Tycho” – Tower Hill Memorial London Borough of Tower Hamlets London, England

BORN GREENWICH, 1879. SON OF JOHN & MARY JANE BROGDEN. LOST BY ENEMY ACTION. HULL MERCHANT NAVY RECORDS.
SS Tycho, built by Earle’s Shipbuilding & Eng. Co. Ltd., Hull in 1904 and owned at the time of her loss by Ellerman’s Wilson Line, Ltd., Hull, was a British steamer of 3216 tons. On May 20th, 1917, Tycho, on a voyage from Bombay to Hull with general cargo, was sunk by the German submarine UB-40 (Hans Howaldt), 16 miles W1/2S of Beachy Head. 15 persons were lost.
When about 8 miles south of Beachy Head on the 20th May, the British steamer Tycho was torpedoed without warning and began to go down by the head. The order to abandon ship was given at 5.10 p.m., ten minutes after the ship had been struck, and was carried out without casualties. The vessel went down at 5.20.
The crew then pulled towards the steamship Porthkerry, which had seen the explosion and was standing by about 200 yards away on the port beam. As the Tycho’s boats came alongside her, another torpedo was discharged by the submarine.
This blew up one of the boats, killing the master and 14 men, and capsized the other boat. The Porthkerry was abandoned, with eight casualties, the vessel going down in three minutes after being struck by the torpedo. The survivors from both ships were picked up at 7 o’clock that night by a small coasting steamer and landed at Newhaven at midnight on the 21st May.


First name:
DAVID JOHN
Rank:
Fireman
Date Died
20/05/1917
Place died:
Sea
Age:
38
GREENWICH, LONDON, GREENWICH, GREATER LONDON, UK