Sinking of the Zam Zam was written in 1941 by James W. Stewart. He was a member of the British American Ambulance Corps on their way to Africa in aid to the Free French troops of General Charles de Gaulle when their ship was shelled and sunk by the German Raider Atlantis in April, 1941.
Briefly, some background about James Stewarts life prior to his voyage on the Zam Zam:
James William Stewart was born in Oneonta, NY, August 7, 1904. His early years were spent in Vermont, where his father, William Becker Stewart, was a doctor in the town of Bennington. Dr. Stewart passed away at age thirty-three when James was seven and his sister, Clara, five. James, sister Clara and their mother, Clarissa Arnold Stewart, lived in Unadilla until 1915, when Clarissa married Harrison Beatty of Bainbridge, NY, and moved there with her children. Mr. Beatty lived only four years and then Clarissa again returned to Unadilla with her family.
James attended Union College in Schenectady, NY, and in 1925 married Helen Morris of Milford Center, NY. They had two sons while living in Unadilla; William Morris born in 1927, followed by David Arnold in 1930.
In 1932, James opened a manufacturing business, Stewart Ice, Inc., in Oneonta. In 1936 the family moved to Oneonta and after living there only a few years the marriage failed, James and Helen separated, and he lived a life apart from his family.
After only half completing the draft of this book to the period of relaxed house detention in Biarritz, he embarked for Burma in mid-November 1941, having volunteered to help keep truck traffic rolling along the Burma Road to China.
Pearl Harbor interrupted this plan on December 7th, and he was set ashore in Australia. Following service with the American Red Cross and the US Office of War Information during the war, James married an Australian girl, fathered two children, Matthew and Clarissa, and remained in Australia until his death in 1958 at age 54.
1 Ebooks door Weber Deborah
James W. Stewart: Sinking of the Zam Zam
Thursday, April 17th, 1941 at 5:55 in the morning a peculiar and outlandish new noise was heard by those on board A vicious howling hissing sound I shall never forget and yet seem never quite able to …
EPUB
Engels
DRM
€3.99