10 May 1917
L'Pool St 11.25 to Royal Albert Docks. Embarked P&O (BI) Karagola at Royal Albert Dock for Bombay and sailed at 2pm. Walter saw me off.
So after 2 1/2 years Louis leaves the UK bound for Ceylon. His war experiences do not end here though.
On 12 May as the ship was leaving Torbay Louis recorded that he saw a lifeboat passing going to or coming from a ship that had been sunk close to them .This was most likely The Galicia that was torpedoed off Teignmouth on that day. There were no casualties.
Louis continued his journey and his diary entries throughout the voyage as the ship passed by Gibraltar, Marseilles and then down the coast of Italy to Malta.
Amazingly the history of the Karagola records that on 19 May as the ship was 240 miles out of Gibraltar she drove off U47 with her stern gun. Louis has no record of this is his diary!
A fortnight later between Malta and Port Said , she sighted another periscope 'from which she quickly distanced herself without having to open fire.
Whether Louis saw the periscope or not is uncertain. However Louis does record the event - and comments that it put 'the wind up'!
After Port Said the ship sailed through the Suez Canal and into the Red Sea stopping at Aden, before reaching Bombay on 16 June.
Louis finally reached Colombo on 21 June 1917.
L'Pool St 11.25 to Royal Albert Docks. Embarked P&O (BI) Karagola at Royal Albert Dock for Bombay and sailed at 2pm. Walter saw me off.
So after 2 1/2 years Louis leaves the UK bound for Ceylon. His war experiences do not end here though.
On 12 May as the ship was leaving Torbay Louis recorded that he saw a lifeboat passing going to or coming from a ship that had been sunk close to them .This was most likely The Galicia that was torpedoed off Teignmouth on that day. There were no casualties.
Louis continued his journey and his diary entries throughout the voyage as the ship passed by Gibraltar, Marseilles and then down the coast of Italy to Malta.
Amazingly the history of the Karagola records that on 19 May as the ship was 240 miles out of Gibraltar she drove off U47 with her stern gun. Louis has no record of this is his diary!
A fortnight later between Malta and Port Said , she sighted another periscope 'from which she quickly distanced herself without having to open fire.
Whether Louis saw the periscope or not is uncertain. However Louis does record the event - and comments that it put 'the wind up'!
After Port Said the ship sailed through the Suez Canal and into the Red Sea stopping at Aden, before reaching Bombay on 16 June.
Louis finally reached Colombo on 21 June 1917.