JAMES FORSHAW 

James FORSHAW
Rank: Able Seaman
Service Number:Mersey 4/19.
Regiment: H.M.S. "Viknor." Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
Killed In Action Wednesday 13th January 1915
Age 20
County Memorial Birkenhead
Commemorated\Buried Plymouth Naval Memorial
CountryUnited Kingdom

James's Story.

Birkenhead News, Saturday, February 6, 1915.

Seaman James Forshaw

Seaman James Forshaw, an old Laird Street boy, whose parents reside at 215, Lansdowne road, was lost in the Viknor. He joined the Mersey Division of the R.N.V.R. last February, went through the siege of Antwerp, and afterwards joined the Viknor. He was 19 years of age.

HMS Viknor

Built in 1888 and originally named RMS Atrato she operated as Royal Mail Ship and ocean liner. In 1912 the ship was sold to a cruise company and renamed The Viking. With the outbreak of war in 1914 she was requisitioned by the Admiralty, armed as merchant cruiser, and renamed HMS Viknor.

During the first weeks of 1915 the HMS Viknor was patrolling off the north coast of Scotland when she was ordered to intercept a neutral Norwegian vessel, who the military suspected was carrying a German spy. HMS Viknor began to return to port in Liverpool; however on 13th January in heavy seas off Tory Island, County Donegal, she sank without sending a distress signal. All the crew aboard were lost. Some wreckage and many bodies were washed ashore on the north coast of Ireland and Scotland.

It has never been fully established the cause of the sinking, however the wreck was discovered in 2006 by an Irish survey vessel and because of the location it is thought that the Viknor may have struck a German mine, as a minefield was known to be in the vicinity.

J
ames Forshaw's photograph and research by Chris Booth