Hasi saioa elementu hau beste hizkuntza batzuetan ikusteko
A photograph of my uncle Able-Seaman Arthur Hanna
A photograph of my uncle Arthur Hanna. When asked he said he "was only a common sailor and my home is on the deep." He was "a boxer of real ability and an even better scrapper," according to his brother Frank Hanna. His one effort at promotion ended with a fight with one of the course instructors and he was to remain an Able Seaman until the end of his days.When war was declared he was serving in …
Laguntzaileak
- Michael Hanna
Gaia
- World War I
- Lehen Mundu Gerra
Elementu mota
- Photograph
- Argazki
Erakunde hornitzailea
Agregatzailea
Elementu honen baimenen egoera (besterik adierazi ezean)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Sortze data
- 2013-01-18 18:02:37 UTC
- 2013-01-18
- 2013-01-18
Lekuak
- Gallipoli Front
- Naval Warfare
Iturria
- UGC
Identifikatzailea
- 54259
- https://1914-1918.europeana.eu/contributions/4882/attachments/54259
Hizkuntza
- English
- eng
Honen parte da
- EnrichEuropeana
Herrialde hornitzailea
- Europe
Bildumaren izena
Lehenengo aldiz argitaratua Europeana-n
- 2019-09-11T08:13:58.042Z
Erakunde hornitzaileak azken aldiz eguneratu du
- 2023-06-05T08:05:33.085Z
Edukien taula
- A photograph of my uncle Arthur Hanna. When asked he said he "was only a common sailor and my home is on the deep." He was "a boxer of real ability and an even better scrapper," according to his brother Frank Hanna. His one effort at promotion ended with a fight with one of the course instructors and he was to remain an Able Seaman until the end of his days.When war was declared he was serving in the destroyer Scorpion, commanded by Andrew Cunningham, later Admiral of the Fleet, Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope. Arthur remained in this ship throughout the Gallipoli campaign, until he was shot in the foot during a raid on the Turkish mainland. After medical treatment he was drafted to Laforey, a Harwich Force destroyer seconded to the Dover Patrol. he lost his life when she was mined in the English Channel in March 1917.