GROUPS AND SINGLE DECORATIONS FOR GALLANTRY
‘November 1st. A day of lying up but it cleared this afternoon. Steve and Colin efficiently despatched those dogs which we had to part with - Silver, Whiskey, Jim, Cyclops, Pie and Rosie. It's horrid to lose them but thank God the deed is done. They also fed the dogs and I prepared tea for the three of us. Then we had a short All Saints Day service; a Psalm, two lessons and some prayers. We now have 20 days dog-food and 19 1/4 days man-food to take us to Terra Firma Island, where John has promised there will be a depot for us ... ’
‘November 4th. This is a bad place to be held up and we may yet be hard put to it to make rations last to get to Terra Firma Islands, and thereafter who knows but that the sea-ice be breaking up. However sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof, and one must trust to God's good providence. Meanwhile we spend our time lying up in idleness whiling away the hours as best we may - and we are in very good spirits I'm glad to say ... ’
‘November 7th. A wretched day of snow and so we have been forced to lie up and open our last 3 boxes of food. We are likely to reach Terra Firma very hungry and having to sacrifice more of our dogs. However there is no use fretting and we must needs learn to accept the conditions which come and there is no saying but that we may have a change of conditions to help us on our way ... ’
In the event the weather finally broke on 11 November, and the three men reached safety on the 19th, having covered and mapped near 600 miles of territory and established that there was no break through in Graham Land from the Bellinghausen Sea to the Weddell Sea. Colin Bertram later wrote: ‘He was unquestionably the only member of the Expedition who was always welcome, whenever, wherever, whoever. Launcelot treated me to my first cigar; he acquainted me with Axel Munthe; he employed me as labourer-with-the- ice-chisel to chip out samples of sea-ice, a job that got me away from the mock service discipline of the ship. Launcelot's contribution to the morale of the Expedition was incalculable; he upheld and comforted and counselled, he kept the peace while trenchantly arguing Christian dogma and ritual with Quintin Riley; he helped maintain standards of civilised behaviour just by being himself.’ Fleming was awarded the Polar Medal, in silver, one of just 16 such awards for the expedition.
One of the indirect benefits derived for his time in Antarctica was a knowledge of naval ways, care of Lieutenant-Commander R. E. D. Ryder, R.N., who had commanded the expedition’s vessel the Penola, and would be awarded the V.C. for his gallant part in the St. Nazaire Raid. And that knowledge would shortly be put to good use.
Naval Chaplain - under fire in the Queen Elizabeth
Having since his days in Antarctica pursued an academic career, acting as an examining chaplain to a number of bishops while retaining a base at Trinity Hall, of which he became Dean in 1937, Fleming was appointed ‘Probationary Temporary Chaplain, Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, additional to the Royal Naval Barracks, Portsmouth’ in July 1940, and, after but a week’s indoctrination, was posted as Chaplain to the officers’ training establishment King Alfred in Hove. Here, such was the rapidity of training that it is said he became acquainted with nearly half of all serving R.N.V.R. officers over the next six months: indeed he found it ‘something of a problem to remain decently sober when invited to attend three passing-out parties each week.’
An excellent summary of Fleming’s subsequent wartime career appears in The Bishops, by Trevor Beeson: ‘Then in November 1940 [he was appointed to] the battleship H.M.S. Queen Elizabeth, which after service in the North Atlantic became the flagship of Admiral Cunningham, the Commander-in-Chief of the Mediterranean Fleet. Operations in the Eastern Mediterranean, including the closing stages of the Battle of Crete, brought the ship under frequent attack. During an engagement Fleming, who never wore uniform - preferring a flannel suit and a battered soft hat - would often ascend the bridge and use the intercom to give a running commentary for the benefit of the majority of the crew who were working below and could see nothing of the action. On 25 November 1941 he used the intercom for a unique spiritual purpose. Twenty-four hours earlier, the Queen Elizabeth, in company with two other battleships - Barham and Valiant - sailed from Alexandria but, in spite of an escort of eight destroyers, Barham, which was close to Queen Elizabeth, was struck by three torpedoes. The ship turned on its side, blew up, and within minutes was sunk, leaving 450 survivors in the water and more than 850 others, including the captain, dead. All this was witnessed from the Queen Elizabeth and amid the chaos Fleming obtained permission to say prayers for the dead and dying, and for the Fleet, over the intercom system. Shortly before Barham left Alexandria its chaplain, Gerald Ellison, who was destined to become the Bishop of Chester, then of London, left the ship following a disagreement with the captain. His successor was among those killed. Just over three weeks after the Barham disaster, the Queen Elizabeth was herself hit by a torpedo while in harbour at Alexandria and so badly damaged that repairs and refitting occupied more than eighteen months. This led to Fleming’s appointment in 1943 as senior chaplain of H.M.S. Ganges - a large training establishment at Shotley, near Ipswich.’ Following Ganges, Fleming served as Director of Service Ordination Candidates from December 1944 until the War’s end.
Many years later, however, in the summer of 1977, Fleming was delighted to be offered a month-long appointment as Honorary Chaplain in H.M.S. Kent. Admiral Sir Jock Slater, then C.O. of the Kent, later wrote: ‘I will never forget the weeks he spent with me in H.M.S. Kent in 1977 ... Despite the difficulty he experienced in getting about the ship at sea, he did just that and there wasn't a single sailor who didn't know - and love - the “Bish” after only a few days. When Launcelot asked me if I thought the sailors might like to hear about the Graham Land Expedition and see some of his slides, I immediately agreed but was concerned that not many would turn up. Little did I know! The dining room was packed to bursting.’
Bishop of Portsmouth and Norwich - and Dean of Windsor
To his surprise, probably on account of his lack of parochial experience, Fleming was called to be Bishop of Portsmouth in 1949, becoming the youngest Bishop at the age of 43 years. But it was an entirely appropriate appointment - being a largely naval diocese - and one in which he flourished, soon winning over clergy and laity alike. And by the time of his departure to take up the reins at Norwich in 1959, Portsmouth was a busy and exceptionally well run diocese. Nonetheless, he also found time to Chair the Church of England Youth Council and get involved in the establishment of the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme. Norwich, with 650 churches and a shortage of clergy, proved more challenging, but with characteristic determination, he set about making notable improvements, among them the development of rural group ministries and, as an uncanny judge of character, and good in one-to-one encounters, attracting some first rate new clergymen. In 1971, however, as a result of a rare spinal disorder that affected his legs, he was compelled to resign, but he continued to lend valuable service in the House of Lords where, after a maiden speech about cruelty to whales, and piloting through the Antarctic Treaty bill, he was appointed to the Standing Committee on Environmental Pollution. Fleming was also an Honorary Vice-President of the Royal Geographical Society and onetime Director of the Scott Polar Research Institute at Cambridge, but whether his daring driving habits also emanated from his years as an explorer remains unknown: ‘Driving with Launcelot, even when he was not pressed for time, could be a nerve-wracking experience in itself. He enjoyed driving fast, scoring plus one for every car which he passed and minus one for every car which overtook him. He drove well unless preoccupied with what he had been doing, and so the emergence from the Bishopswood drive on to the main Southampton road was a daily hazard. It was generally believed that the Portsmouth police were indulgent, though a group of young men about to be ordained in the Cathedral were asked to keep a sharp look-out for any police cars’ Donald Lindsay’s Friends for Life refers). On resigning as Bishop of Norwich in 1971, Fleming was appointed the Queen’s Domestic Chaplain and Dean of Windsor, in which capacity, among other duties, he officiated at the funeral of the Duke of Windsor, and acted as Registrar of the Order of the Garter. During this appointment in particular, Fleming received wonderful support from his wife, Jane, though she could become a little exasperated when her husband gave little notice of visitors: thus the occasion the Duke of Edinburgh appeared for lunch, only moments after the Bishop had told her of his imminent arrival - and proposed that cheese sandwiches would suffice. He was appointed K.C.V.O. on his retirement in 1976. Launcelot Fleming, ‘the sort of man one never forgets’, retired to Dorset, and died in Sherborne in July 1990. He is buried in the churchyard of All Saints’ Church, Poyntington.
Sold with a selection of original photographs (approximately 30 images, including a fine large image of H.M.S. Queen Elizabeth), mainly relevant to his wartime career in the R.N.V.R., copies of the biographies, Launcelot Fleming, by Giles Hunt, and Friends for Life, by Donald Lindsay, in addition to a copy of Portrait of Antarctica, the photographic contributors including Fleming, and from which all three publications much of the above information has been taken, in addition to reference to Trevor Beesom’s The Bishops.
www.dnw.co.uk
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