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Name: WHITE, Gwendoline May (Serjeant)
Nee: dau of Lewis William and Alice Angelene White
Birth Date: 1917 India
Death Date: 12 Feb 1944 on active service, drowned in SS Khedive Ismail
Last Date: 1944
Profession: Sister, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
Book Reference: CWGC, KR
School: Prince of Wales
General Information:
CWGC - East Africa Memorial - Serjeant G.M. White, LF/3058. Kenya Regiment. Lost in SS Khedive Ismail (London). 12th February 1944. Column 53.
https://britisharmynurses.com/wiki/index.php?title=SS_Khedive_Ismail The SS Khedive Ismail was a steamship sunk with great loss of life in 1944. On 6 February 1944 Convoy KR-8 sailed from Kilindini Harbour at Mombasa, Kenya to Colombo, Ceylon. The convoy consisted of five troop transports (Khedive Ismail, City of Paris, Varsova, Ekma & Ellenga), escorted by the heavy cruiser HMS Hawkins and the destroyers HMS Petard and HMS Paladin.
The Khedive Ismail was an Egyptian transport of 7,513 tons requisitioned by the British for use as a troopship while docked at Bombay in 1940. The vessel was carrying 1,511 returning service personnel including 178 ships crew, 996 officers and men of the 301st Field Regiment, East African Artillery, 271 Royal Navy personnel and a detachment of 19 British Wrens. Also on board were 53 nursing sisters with one matron and 9 members of the WTS (Women's Transport Service, East Africa). While returning from Colombo, Ceylon, in convoy KR-8, the ship was torpedoed in the Indian Ocean at 14.33 hours. It took only 1 minute 40 seconds for the ship to sink taking 1,297 of her passengers and crew with her. There were 214 survivors including only six female passengers from the vessel, a victim of the Japanese submarine I-27 commanded by Lt Cdr Fukumura. This was the greatest maritime tragedy involving female service personnel in British naval history. The Army nurses that died are commemorated on the Brookwood Memorial.
The Khedive Ismail was an Egyptian transport of 7,513 tons requisitioned by the British for use as a troopship while docked at Bombay in 1940. The vessel was carrying 1,511 returning service personnel including 178 ships crew, 996 officers and men of the 301st Field Regiment, East African Artillery, 271 Royal Navy personnel and a detachment of 19 British Wrens. Also on board were 53 nursing sisters with one matron and 9 members of the WTS (Women's Transport Service, East Africa). While returning from Colombo, Ceylon, in convoy KR-8, the ship was torpedoed in the Indian Ocean at 14.33 hours. It took only 1 minute 40 seconds for the ship to sink taking 1,297 of her passengers and crew with her. There were 214 survivors including only six female passengers from the vessel, a victim of the Japanese submarine I-27 commanded by Lt Cdr Fukumura. This was the greatest maritime tragedy involving female service personnel in British naval history. The Army nurses that died are commemorated on the Brookwood Memorial.
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