Henry Stoker | |
Birth Date: | 2 February 1885 |
Birth Place: | Dublin, Ireland |
Death Place: | London, England |
Allegiance: | United Kingdom |
Branch: | Royal Navy |
Serviceyears: | 1900–1920 1939–1945 |
Rank: | Captain |
Commands: | HMS Minos (1940–42) (1919–20) (1914–15) (1911–13) (1910–11) (1909–10) |
Battles: | First World War |
Awards: | Distinguished Service Order Mentioned in Despatches |
Relations: | Bram Stoker (cousin) Frank Stoker (uncle) |
Laterwork: | Actor Theatre director |
Spouse: |
Captain Henry Hugh Gordon Dacre Stoker, (2 February 1885 – 2 February 1966), also known as Hew Stoker and commonly credited in films as H. G. Stoker or Dacre Stoker, was an Irish Royal Navy officer who commanded the Royal Australian Navy's submarine during the First World War. Stoker was captured in 1915 and he spent the remaining three-and-a-half years as a prisoner of war of the Ottoman Empire. He retired from the navy in 1920 to pursue an acting career on the stage and film. As an amateur athlete, Stoker competed in the Wimbledon tennis championships throughout the 1920s. With the outbreak of the Second World War, he was recalled to service in the navy, where he helped with public relations. When the war finished, Stoker returned to his acting career. In 1962, at the age of 77, he became Irish Croquet Champion.
Henry Hugh Gordon Dacre Stoker was born in Dublin, Ireland, on 2 February 1885, the fourth of six children and second son of Dr William Stoker and Jane Martin Ross Stoker .[1] [2] William's brother was Dr Francis Owen Stoker, a two-time winner of the Wimbledon Championships Gentlemen's Doubles and an Irish international rugby union player. They were cousins of the author Bram Stoker.[3]
Henry was educated in Dublin; he was an average student but excelled at sport, particularly tennis and rugby.[1]
Stoker joined the Royal Navy on 15 January 1900 as a cadet on the training ship at Dartmouth Harbour.[1] [4] On 30 May 1901, he was promoted to midshipman and posted to as part of the Channel Fleet and was later posted to in the Mediterranean.[1]
On 30 July 1904, Stoker was made a sub-lieutenant and left Implacable to study at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, after which he volunteered for the new Royal Navy Submarine Service but was posted for a year to in the Western Atlantic before being accepted to submariner training in October 1906.[1] Stoker was promoted to lieutenant on 31 December 1906; he completed his submariner training in October 1907 and was given command of the submarine in January 1909. The following January, he assumed command of, which in August 1911 was stationed at Gibraltar.[1]
In 1913, after hearing rumours of a man in Sydney sponsoring men to play polo,[5] Stoker volunteered to be loaned to the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). On 7 November 1913, he was subsequently given command of,[1] which was built at Barrow-in-Furness and commissioned into the RAN at Portsmouth on 28 February 1914.[6] AE2 was accompanied by its sister submarine, with crews composed of both RN and RAN personnel, and sailed from England for Australia on 2 March 1914. The first leg, under the escort of, arrived at Colombo, on 9 April. The second leg, with an escort provided by, arrived in Singapore on 21 April. The final leg was completed under escort of and arrived in Sydney on 24 May, completing a voyage of 13000nmi, the longest voyage recorded by a submarine up to that time.[6]
Following the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914, AE1 and AE2 joined the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force (ANMEF) to capture the German colony New Guinea. The German territories surrendering on 22 September; AE2 patrolled the sea around Fiji and returned to Sydney for maintenance on 16 November.[6]
AE2 departed Sydney on 19 December to meet up with the second convoy of Australian Imperial Force (AIF) in Albany, Western Australia. She joined the convoy to Suez, completing most of it under tow.[6] Stoker was promoted to lieutenant commander on 31 December 1914.[1] On 28 January 1915, AE2 arrived at Suez, where it joined the Mediterranean Fleet, which operated in support of the Dardanelles campaign. To Vice-Admiral John de Robeck, Stoker presented plans for his submarine to force a passage through the heavily defended Dardanelles Strait, and enter the Sea of Marmara and disrupt shipping, which would make supply and reinforcement of the enemy more difficult.[6]
On 25 April 1915, Stoker took AE2 through the 75km (47miles) strait and entered the Sea of Marmara, the first allied submarine to do so.[1] Other submarines soon followed. On 30 April, while attempting to rendezvous with, AE2 was damaged by the Ottoman torpedo boat Sultanhisar while on the surface, after which AE2 was no longer able to dive, and Stoker was forced to surrender and scuttle her.[1]
Stoker spent the rest of the war a prisoner of war (POW) in the Ottoman Empire. He made three unsuccessful escape attempts, but spent the majority of his time entertaining other POWs. He was repatriated to England in December 1918 and reverted back to Royal Navy service on 9 February 1919.[1] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) on 22 April 1919 "In recognition of his gallantry in making the passage of the Dardanelles in command of HM Australian Submarine AE2 on 25 April 1915".[7] On 17 October 1919 he was mentioned in despatches "For valuable services in HM Australian Submarine AE2 in the prosecution of the war".[8]
On 10 February 1919, Stoker was given command of . He was promoted to commander on 31 December 1919. In 1920 he was offered command of submarine depot vessel, but instead chose to resign and was put on the retired list on 2 October 1920.[1]
In 1939, at the outbreak of the Second World War, Stoker was recalled to service in the Royal Navy. He was given the rank of acting captain and was chief of staff to Rear-Admiral Richard Matthew King, commander at Belfast-based . In August 1940, Stoker was given command of HMS Minos, an onshore base at the Port of Lowestoft.[1]
In July 1942, Stoker was assigned as a public relations officer with the Admiralty Press Division. In April 1944, he was a staff officer with the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force but after the Normandy landings, he returned to his previous role in the Admiralty. Stoker again retired from the Navy with the rank of captain in late 1945.[1]
Stoker was an avid sportsman who as a schoolboy was proficient at tennis and rugby.[1] He volunteered to serve on RAN’s submarine after hearing a false rumour of sponsorship to play polo in Sydney, Australia.[5]
Competing under the name Hew Stoker, he entered the 1920 Wimbledon Championships, losing in the first round to former finalist and doubles champion Major Josiah George Ritchie.[9] In the following year's Wimbledon Championship, Stoker reached the third round, beating L. Andrews in the first and Arthur Wallis Myers in the second, losing to eventual finalist Manuel Alonso Areizaga.[9] The 1922 at Wimbledon, Stoker defeated Sydney Watts in the first round but lost to Cecil Tindell-Green in the second.[9] Stoker again made the second round at the 1923 Wimbledon Championships, beating Alexander Blair and losing to H.A. Carless.[9] Stoker made the second round in 1924, winning against Brian Helmore and losing to Sydney Montague Jacob.[9] In 1925 Wimbledon Championships Stoker lost in the first round to John Pennycuick.[9] Stoker's final entry to Wimbledon came in 1927, when he lost his first-round match against William Powell.[9]
Stoker continued his involvement in sport; he served as president of the Royal Navy Lawn Tennis Association between 1953 and 1963.[2] In 1962, at the age of 77, he became Croquet Singles Champion of Ireland.[10]
Stoker was married twice; his first wife was Olive Joan Violet Gwendoline Leacock, daughter of Colonel Schuler Leacock of the Bengal Cavalry. The marriage ended in divorce when Stoker, after returning to England after service with the RAN and being a POW in Turkey, discovered she had given birth to three children in his absence.[2] In 1925, Stoker published an autobiography called "Straws in the Wind"; the same year, he married actor Dorothie Margaret Pidcock, to whom he remained married until his death on his 81st birthday, 2 February 1966.[2]
With the introduction of a separate Australian Honours system, there has been debate about whether Stoker should be awarded the Victoria Cross for Australia for his service as commander of AE2 during the Dardanelles campaign.[11]