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First Sea Lord pays tribute to World War II nurse from Dornoch


By Ali Morrison

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The UK’s First Sea Lord has paid tribute to a Sutherland nurse who died 6500 miles away from home during World War II.

Admiral Tony Radakin, gave thanks to God for Lily Murray who was thought to be aboard a ship in the Far East when it was torpedoed and sunk by the Japanese in February 1942.

Dornoch nurse Lily Murray. Picture: Historylinks Museum
Dornoch nurse Lily Murray. Picture: Historylinks Museum

The professional head of the Royal Navy paid tribute to the 44-year-old in a special online Remembrance Service video produced by Very Rev Dr Susan Brown, minister of Dornoch Cathedral.

Miss Murray is the only woman named on the town’s war memorial which also bears the name of her brother, Angus, who died during the Battle of Arras in France on March 21, 1918.

She was part of The Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service and aboard the SS Tanjong Penang – an evacuation boat - as it was making its escape from PomPong Island in East Malaysia with upwards of 200 passengers and crew.

Some of the passengers had already experienced the horror of shipwreck after being bombed by the Japanese days earlier.

The SS Tanjong Penang, a 97 foot converted ‘tug’, was torpedoed at close range at about 9pm on February 17, 1942 and sank within five minutes.

According to Historylinks Museum in Dornoch, survivor accounts describe how it was ‘blown out of the water’.

Curator, Lynne Mahoney, said a nursing sister who survived later described how she had clung to a raft for four days before being picked up and sent to Muntok Camp on Banka Island where she remained until liberation in 1945.

The last telegraph received from Lily by her parents, Peter and Margaret Murray, was sent on the January 27, 1942 in which she wrote ‘fit and well, love Lily’.

Admiral Radakin, chief of the Naval staff said: “This is a very special occasion for all of us and particularly special as we remember someone on the Dornoch war memorial, the only woman who lost her life during the Second World War. Her name was Lily Murray.

“These days, naval personnel face the same worries and challenges serving the nation operationally on a worldwide basis. We give thanks to God for those who paid the ultimate price whilst serving their country just like Lily Murray. And we give thanks also to those who are serving in the Royal Navy and wider Armed Forces, all of whom are supported wonderfully by their families and wider communities such as Dornoch.”

Admiral Radakin said the Royal Navy has a close affinity to the north of Scotland and the Type 23 frigate, HMS Sutherland, is named after the region.

“On behalf of the Royal Navy, please accept my warmest greetings to all of you in beautiful Sutherland with whom we have some of the strongest connections,” he added.

Dr Brown spent a week visiting Royal Navy units across Scotland in February 2019 during her year as Moderator of the General Assembly.

She was accompanied by Deputy Chaplain of the Fleet, Rev Professor Scott Shackleton who arranged for Admiral Radakin to take part in Dornoch Cathedral’s Remembrance video.

Dr Brown said: “When the stories behind the names on our War Memorials are told, they make the Remembering all the more poignant. The names suddenly belong to real people, with families and friends and lives beyond the inscription on the monument.

Rev Susan Brown of Dornoch Cathedral.
Rev Susan Brown of Dornoch Cathedral.

"It is so important to understand that it was ordinary people like us who went to extraordinary lengths in their day, to give us our today. Those stories are told to encourage us to remember and to inspire us, in our day, to commit to working as hard in our time, to end conflict and grow a more peaceful and just world for all.”


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