CHAPTER ONE
Canoes, Violet and Battleships
On 3 May, 1917, the 14,348 ton Anchor Line troopship SS Transylvania sailed from Marseilles carrying 2,860 officers and men in addition to her crew. A submarine threat had delayed her in the French port, but she was bound at last for Alexandria with an escort of two Japanese destroyers, the Matsu and the Sakaki. At 10 oâclock the next morning, while zig-zagging at fourteen knots, south of Cape Vado in the Gulf of Genoa, this overladen vessel was struck in the port engine room by a torpedo. The Master, Lieutenant S.Brennel, Royal Naval Reserve, immediately turned his ship for the shore two miles away, at the same time ordering the Matsu to lie alongside to take off the troops. Meanwhile the Sakaki steamed round in an attempt to keep the submarine safely below periscope depth, but she was unsuccessful, for twenty minutes after the first, a second torpedo was seen approaching. To save herself and the embarking survivors the Matsu went full astern giving the torpedo an unhindered run into the already stricken liner. The Transylvania sank within an hour of the first attack.
Along with her captain, one shipâs officer and ten of her crew, twenty-nine military officers and 373 NCOs and men were lost. Among this number was Lieutenant (Quartermaster) Arthur Thomas Hasler, MC, MĂ©daille Militaire, Royal Army Medical Corps, returning from leave in England to rejoin the British and French campaign in Salonika where the Allies were supporting Serbia and where he had been serving since 1915. In addition to his British and French decorations, won during the retreat from Mons when he had commandeered lorries to evacuate the wounded under fire, Hasler was mentioned in despatches in October, 1914; a second âmentionâ, earned in Salonika, was gazetted after his death.
Arthur Hasler was born on 11 March, 1875, joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in 1895, was commissioned on 6 February, 1915, and led a reasonably typical army career for that era, serving in Egypt between 1898â1900 and Ceylon between 1900â1903. On 14 September, 1907, then a Staff Sergeant, he married Annie Georgina Andrews1 at Charlton Parish Church, near Woolwich, three months before being posted to the Province of South Africa for six years with his school-mistress bride. The three of them â a first child, John, was born in December, 1908 â returned to the United Kingdom a year before the outbreak of the Great War in 1914. On 27 February that year a second boy, Herbert George, was born to Arthur and Annie at Sandford Avenue, Dublin.
Six months later Arthur, now a Warrant Officer, was mobilized for war and stationed under canvas in nearby Phoenix Park, Dublin, before being sent to France in October as a member of the British Expeditionary Force. He returned in April the following year on receiving his commission in the RAMC, upon which he moved his family to his parentâs house in St Andrews Road, Southsea, but shortly afterwards moved to his own house at 13 Winter Road, via a brief stay in 77 Devonshire Avenue; all three houses being within an eighteen-month-oldâs pram-ride of the beach and the sea.
On Transylvaniaâs foundering Arthur Hasler was posted as âmissing presumed drownedâ and the standard War Office telegram was duly handed to Mrs Hasler starting with the dreaded words, âDeeply regret to inform you that. . .â Annie, now widowed, was offered a six-month teaching post by the army and so moved her family to Empshott Road, Aldershot, and when that ended she moved them back to Southsea.
Arthur Hasler had not been a seaman and had had no deep love for the sea to pass on but he did have courage and determination and by marrying an equally intrepid woman of great fortitude these attributes were distilled with considerable interest in their two children. Fifty-one years on, the younger Hasler would, too, choose a wife of equal tenacity, but although John was destined for a career of some distinction starting with a Bachelor of Arts degree from Cambridge University before reaching the rank of Colonel and subsequently being decorated with the American Legion of Merit in the Degree of âOfficerâ,2 he would never marry.
While still in his twenties Arthur and Annieâs younger son was to change the style of covert nautical operations in wartime and by his thirties would have begun to influence and guide the rather more peaceful, but no less demanding, ocean racing world into equally radical methods and designs unimagined before his appearance. He linked these two careers through an inventive and fertile mind unchecked by boundaries and convention until his death in 1987.
On the instructions of his mother, who considered the abbreviation âappropriate, wholly suitable and to be taken seriously by the rest of her familyâ,3 Herbert George was known as Bert until his teens when he asked that he be called George, the name by which all members of his family â except his mother â would know him for the rest of their lives. However, in his early twenties he was nicknamed âBlondieâ by his naval and marine contemporaries due to his thinning fair hair and luxuriant golden moustache, and it is by that name that he will now be referred. As a very small child with a near-cherubic face beneath a mass of blond curls he also looked the part.
Blondie began life as he was to live it, with modesty and equanimity, although this last attribute was not always appreciated by those with a more stressful outlook. On Southseaâs shingle beach he and a young friend were playing contentedly until his companion suddenly, and certainly without physical provocation, hit Blondie hard in the face. When asked why, the assailantâs reply was simple and truthful, âBecause he looks so happy!â Later Blondie boxed for his school but not always with the necessary success: violence, especially personal violence (even if under strict sporting control) was not to be his style.
Blondieâs aunt and her three sons lived close by, allowing the five cousins to spend as much time as they could together on the beach, a beach that faces the eastern Solent and the English Channel beyond. It was here that Annie Hasler learned quickly that she should not take her eyes off her âBertâ, for whenever Blondie detected a slackening in vigilance he would head seawards very fast. He did not crawl on hands and knees in the accepted fashion for his age but, already true to his future, âinventedâ a better and more effective method of propulsion by skidding across the shingle on his bottom in a form of rolling, rowing motion. He would practice this to perfection by sliding around the house still attached to his pot yet remaining in the upright position. His mother was always horrified, but it amused her visitors.
Another influence on the youngest Hasler, and one as important as the beach and the sea beyond, was Southsea Canoe Lake, also within pram-walking distance; here he would sit fascinated by the men and boys trundling their magnificent model yachts to the stone edge from where they were launched, to be kept on course by rudimentary wind vanes resembling huge goose feathers.
In due course the question of schooling arose, while Annie struggled on her widowâs pension, determined that only the best was suitable for her late husbandâs sons. With financial assistance offered by the army to the children of those killed in action, she was able to send John to Portsmouth Grammar School for one year before he took up a place at Christâs Hospital, the Bluecoat School. Blondie, aged five, was enrolled in the local school as a day boy for two years, before moving to de Gresly Lodge (where he was to be the head boy of nine), which itself then moved to Soberton Towers in the Meon valley in 1925.
As he grew older and able to make his own way through Southseaâs quiet suburban streets much of Blondieâs spare time was spent on the edge of Southsea Canoe Lake watching, talking and questioning until the caretaker, realizing that the only way to satisfy a twelve-year-oldâs quest for knowledge was to start him with some practical gift, presented him with a pair of dinghy paddles. Grateful though Blondie was for this present, he believed oars to be useless without a boat (which is what the caretaker, with some prescience, had foreseen) and so with Colin Ellum, a friend from school, and aided by their Deputy Headmaster, Mr Fiddian, he set about building his first sea-going craft. While he would certainly have built something that floated without the impetus of two free oars it is a convenient moment to establish the first practical beginnings of his love of small ships and the sea.
This canoe, a two-seater and canvas covered, would roam the local waters with Colin and Blondie embarked while, in his diaries, Blondie recorded these first forays across the medium that was to dominate his life:
Proud owner of a canvas canoe built at school; tried to sail it in Langstone Harbour during the holidays.
âTriedâ may have been the correct word for although rowing was the prime method of navigating the local tides and mud flats, this was hard work for two young boys and a waste of good, free winds. Experiments with various rigs, contrived out of any lengths of cloth they could scrounge, produced some very basic forms of propulsion and, as a contemporary note admits, even that was downwind; nevertheless, the die was cast. Just seventeen years later Lieutenant-Colonel H.G.Hasler was designing similar craft and their sails for less peaceful purposes in the Far East.
John Hasler had by now been offered a commission in the Royal Engineers and, while attending courses with the Royal Artillery at Woolwich noted in a letter to his mother that âall the people he admired came from schools such as Wellington College at Crowthorne, Berkshireâ. He suggested that Bert should apply, but money was short and Wellington one of the leading public schools with fees that matched its status. Nevertheless, with her customary determination, she did apply and Wellington responded, equally positively, by offering Blondie the chance to sit a âspecial scholarshipâ examination. He failed, but so impressed the headmaster that he was offered a bursary instead and in the Lent Term, 1928, joined Wellingtonâs Lyndock Dormitory under the tutorage of G.T.Griffith, the housemaster.
Blondieâs years at Wellington were notable for distinguished performances in various activities, but especially swimming, rugby and cross-country running. His first term, though, was an unhappy one for he was teased about his name Bert and his Portsmouth accent to such an extent that the holiday was spent persuading his mother that he should be called George while he learnt to speak more like his public school contemporaries. A victory was recorded on both accounts, allowing him to adopt a happier mien more in keeping with his character.
Once settled, he bought a Boyâs Own Paper publication, How to Make Canoes, Dinghies and Sailing Punts â the well-thumbed copy still sits on his bookshelves â and set about constructing, in his own words, âa sort of flat-bottomed puntâ. With an overall length of ten foot, dart-shaped in plan and only one plank in depth she was not likely to be very seaworthy but he knew no better way to discover the whys and hows of this fundamental requirement than to sail her across the shoals of Langstone Harbour. During her building in the back garden of 63 Festing Road (to where Annie had moved the family after Aldershot) the tenant, a handyman of considerable talent, watched carefully. His plan had been to offer practical advice and hints but he realized that he had nothing to offer the young lad and so sat back and watched admiringly.
She (no name was given to her, nor the canvas predecessor, whose fate is unknown) was first launched off Southseaâs beach from a borrowed hand-cart at which precise moment it became clear that she was badly in need of ballast and some form of centre-board. John Hasler and, of more importance, his Bull-Nosed Morris motor car, were pressed into service while Blondie scoured Old Portsmouth and the camber area. Eventually after much negotiation, and poorer by five shillings, he appeared with a âmonstrous piece of metalâ. This centre-board severely tested the Morrisâs springs but it was exactly what was needed by the âpuntâ.
In thanks for this help, John was offered a clockwise sail around the âislandâ of Portsmouth which was planned to end at the Eastney pontoon of the Hayling Island ferry where there would be a rendezvous with mother, young female cousin and the borrowed hand-cart. It was Easter and not warm. The tides were right for his purpose, Blondie having meticulously checked them, and the brothers set off on the nine-mile, clockwise passage. The draft of the vessel was minimal but even so there was not enough water at the north-west corner of Langstone Harbour where Blondie discovered that Portsmouth was not always as much of an island as it believed itself to be. They attempted to remove the centreboard altogether so that it could be carried by hand across the shallowest parts, thus raising the draught of the vessel for this phase of the journey, but something went wrong and the monstrosity dropped into four feet of water. Now drawing only one foot the punt was easily pushed across the shoal while Blondie dived to recover his five shillings worth. With no harm done they continued towards mother and cousin but by then nobody was waiting and they sailed on the two miles to Southsea Beach. Blondie wrote in his notes:
Learnt to sail from books, trial and error, in Langstone Harbour with school friend.
Empirical observations of the need for freeboard forced the addition of a second plank after the first summerâs trials, thus increasing considerably (a comparative term!) the puntâs sailing ability, stability and safety.
With the second summer and the increased freeboard he was able to venture further along the south coast, extending the length of his cruises to the point that he would be away for âdays at a timeâ; on one memorable occasion sheltering up an Isle of Wight creek. Many mothers might have fussed and, although Annie did worry immensely, she was anxious that her active and intelligent sons were not stifled by too much motherly concern. In Georgeâs case she would recall, âI knew that he would always turn up.â The freedom, and particularly the maternal confidence in his ability, was a vital component of the younger Haslerâs formative years that allowed him the freedom to âcruise all over the Solent with a tent to fit over the boat.â
If Wellington did not teach Blondie to sail4 it did give him the opportunity to excel in other sports that were to be useful in later life. Swimming brought him th...