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Wartime Heritage
ASSOCIATION
Remembering World War II
Carl Hayward Shaw
Boatswain
SS El Lago (New York) Merchant Navy
March 6, 1910
Sandy Point, Newfoundland
Church Of England
Single
October 11, 1942
32
Halifax Memorial, Nova Scotia
Listed at Panel 22 on the Memorial
Commemorated on Page 225 of the Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance
Displayed in the Memorial Chamber of the Peace Tower in Ottawa on
May 4, October 1, and December 6
Carl Hayward Shaw was the son of Samuel Stanley Shaw (1868-1957) and Emily Margaret (Nichols) Shaw
(1872-1940), of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. His mother was born in Mosers River, Halifax Co., NS. The family
moved to Dartmouth, Nova Scotia in 1916. In 1929, Carl, aged 19 years, was living in Gloucester,
Massachusetts, US where his parents lived for a time before returning to Nova Scotia.
In 1942 Carl Shaw was the Boatswain on SS El Lago, that sailed from Reykjavik on October 5, 1942 en
route to New York. The ship departed Reykjavik in a small convoy of 12 ships in two columns as third ship
in the port column with a complement of 39 crew members, 14 armed guards and six merchant seamen
being repatriated as passengers. These ships later joined convoy ONS-136. The convoy ran into a storm
with hurricane force winds, tremendous heavy seas, rain and poor visibility about 250 miles south of
Iceland. The El Lago was forced to slow down and lost convoy.
On October 11, at approximately 8:00 pm, U-615 sighted the ship and fired a spread of two torpedoes,
both struck the El Lago and broke the ship in two. Within minutes the ship sank. None of the lifeboats
could be launched and the few survivors climbed on rafts, which had floated free. The U-boat approached
the survivors, asking for the name of the ship and for the master. The Norwegian master and the Dutch
first engineer were ordered aboard the U-boat and were taken prisoner. The other survivors on the rafts
were never rescued.
The ship’s complement consisted of 39 crew members, 14 armed guards and 6 merchant seamen being
repatriated as passengers. Only the two crew members taken aboard the submarine survived. In 1945 they
were repatriated from the POW Camp Marlag near Bremen.
Alexander John Chisholm (Seaman) aged 33, of Malignant Cove, Antigonish Co., Nova Scotia, was also lost
on the SS El Lago.
Carl Hayward Shaw
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