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leonard stokes

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michelle

michelle Report 8 Jul 2011 12:22

hello i am having trouble finding a death entry for my granddad he was lost at sea in 1954 on a trawler called the laforey from grimsby are deaths registered different for people lost at sea.thanks,michelle

MargaretM

MargaretM Report 8 Jul 2011 12:30

Would his death have been registered much later if his body wasn't found?

Astra

Astra Report 8 Jul 2011 13:09

Someone called Gareth Evans. has added a comment to his birth registration on Ancestry. Have you been in touch with this person?

Leonard Stokes
Leonard Stokes was the Cook on the Grimsby trawler Laforey GY 85 which Hit a Reef called Sendingane off the west Coast of Norway on the late night of 7th February 1954. All 20 Crewmen tragically drowned and Leonard's body was not recovered

MargaretM

MargaretM Report 8 Jul 2011 13:52

8 April 2011 Last updated at 07:45 ET Share this pageEmail Print Share this page

1ShareFacebookTwitter.Grimsby trawler ship's bell returns to crew's relatives
The ship had lain undiscovered for 56-years Continue reading the main story
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A bell salvaged from a sunken Grimsby trawler has been handed back to the lost men's relatives in a special ceremony.

The Laforey sank off the coast of Norway on the 8 February 1954, with the loss of 20 lives.

The wreck lay undiscovered until Norwegian divers found the vessel in September last year.

The bell has been installed in the town's Fisherman's Chapel as a permanent memorial to the lost crew.

Allen Brydges lost his 16-year-old nephew, Tony Craven, who was working on the ship.

Mr Brydges said it was the biggest tragedy in Grimsby's fishing history.

"It was terrible," he said. "It was the most that were lost on a trawler.

"Lots went down before but there were usually 12 or 13 on board, there were 20 on this, it was absolutely devastating."

For many years the Laforey lay on the Norwegian Sea bed undiscovered.

In September last year, divers Trond Fjellestad and Frode Ellingsund found the wreck near the coastal city of Floro. The divers filmed their findings.

Trond Stromgren, a historian from Floro, has researched the Laforey and, along with the divers, will attend a service at Grimsby's fishermen's chapel on Friday.


Twenty crew members were lost when the ship capsized on 8 February 1954. Mr Stromgren said the bell had been so camouflaged under the water that the divers did not even realise what it was.

"They found this bell by accident," he said. "It looked like a rock, they cleaned it.

"They're good guys. They say the bell must belong to Grimsby."

From this site:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-13012697