Commemorated:

1. Memorial:Plymouth Naval Memorial, Devon23
2. Book:The (1921) Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918Pg.130
3. Memorial:The (1940) Scroll - WW1 Roll of Honour59C GQS
    

Awards & Titles:

 

Family :

"Ernest was born was born circa 1886, the 3rd son of the late John Charles and Elizabeth Midgley, and in 1917 he was living at 16, Buxton Road, Rock Ferry, Birkenhead. Ernest served his apprenticeship at Messrs. Cammell Laird & Co., Shipbuilders and on the outbreak of war, in August, 1914, he was serving with the Elder Dempster Line. When he was at home and outside of Freemasonry he had been a prominent member of the Bedford Mission, Rock Ferry, Birkenhead. He had been a member of The Liverpool Branch of the Marine Engineers Association. On 3rd November, 1916, he joined the Royal Naval Reserve. He then took passage on a ship bound for Halifax, Nova Scotia where he was to join the crew of the H.M.S. Laurentic on the 17th of November, 1916. He came home on leave in December, 1916, when the Laurentic returned to Birkenhead."

Portrait photo: British Newspaper Archives.

Service Life:

Campaigns:

Unit / Ship / Est.: HMS Laurentic 

Owner: White Star Line Tonnage: 14,892 Gross Register Tonnage Length: 565 ft (172 m) Beam: 67 ft 3 in (20.5 m) Decks: 3 Installed power: Triple-expansion steam engines driving outboard propellers, with low-pressure turbine driving the center propeller. Total 11,000 indicated horsepower. Propulsion: Triple screws Speed: 16 kn (30 km/h; 18 mph) Capacity: 1st Class: 230; 2nd Class: 430; 3rd Class; 1,000

Action : HMS Laurentic, sinking of 

See also: Laurentic Memorial.

HMS Laurentic Being in Montreal when the war began, Laurentic was immediately commissioned as a troop transport for the CEF. After conversion to armed merchant cruiser service in 1915, she struck two mines off Lough Swilly north of Ireland on 25 January 1917 and sank within an hour. Only 121 of the 475 aboard survived.The Laurentic was delivering cargo to Nova Scotia for Canadian and American governments as payment for munitions. 45 minutes after leaving port she was struck by two mines laid by the German U-boat, U-80. It was the second time that her commander had been maltreated by enemy action. Captain Norton was in command of H.M.S. Hogue when that cruiser was torpedoed in the North Sea. The Laurentic had only left harbour about an hour and a half before, and was steaming full speed ahead with Captain Norton on the bridge, when a violent explosion occurred on the port side abreast of the foremast, followed within a few seconds by a second explosion abreast of the engine-room. The latter stopped the dynamo, plunging the ship in total darkness and rendering the wireless unworkable. After telegraphing Full speed astern, he sent up a rocket, and ordered the boats to be swung out for immediate use, if necessary. When it was found impossible to beach the vessel, and that she was gradually sinking, the men were ordered into the boats. To make quite certain that not a living soul remained on board, Captain Norton searched the ship in company with the chief steward and by the light of an electric torch. The most terrible experience of all was yet to come. Although it is very probable that a few of the ship's complement of 470 men were killed as a result of the two explosions, the majority got safely away. Of these only 120 survived the bitter weather. The remainder died of exposure. One boat, containing seventeen frozen bodies, was picked up many hours later; in another there were only five survivors out of twenty. In addition to her passengers and crew, the ship was carrying about 35 tons of gold ingots stowed in its second class baggage room. At the time the gold was valued at £5 million, (approximately £750 million in 2009 values). Royal Navy divers made over 5,000 dives to the wreck between 1917 and 1924 and recovered all but about 1% of the ingots. Still to this day 22 bars of gold remain on the sea bed, perhaps under parts of the hull, The last of the gold recovered was some 10 metres under the sea bed, thus the remaining gold must be difficult to reach. 11 Freemasons lost their lives on HMS Laurentic.
Sources; Daring Deeds of Merchant Seamen in the Great War - Wheeler, Harold F. B 1918.

See also: Wrecksite EU.

Detail :

MIDGLEY, Edward Ernest, Engineer Sub Lieutenant, Royal Naval Reserve.

"It is nor clear if Edward Midgley was on duty or resting when H.M.S. Laurentic struck the two mines which were to eventually sink her or if he was able to get to a lifeboat, as his body was never recovered. His mother, Mrs Elizabeth Midgley, received the telegram from the Admiralty informing her and her husband of their son’s death on Sunday, 28th January, 1917."

Citations & Commemorations :

  As well as being commemorated on the Plymouth Naval Memorial, Devon, Ernest is also commemorated on the war memorial plaque commemorating all members of the The Liverpool Branch of The Marine Engineers Association who lost their lives during the war, at his family grave in Flaybrick Hill Cemetery, Birkenhead and on the Birkenhead War Memorial.

Masonic :

TypeLodge Name and No.Province/District :
Mother : Evening Star No. 3644 E.C.Cheshire

Initiated
Passed
Raised
21st June 1914
18th February 1914
15th April 1914
 

Initiated in 1914 into Evening Star Lodge, Liscard.


Source :

The project globally acknowledges the following as sources of information for research across the whole database:

Additional Source:

Last Updated: 2020-11-30 16:09:56