. .. It is remarkable that one man should have been involved in so much action in so few years...I commend his biography to the reader.. .by any standard he was a hero & he tells his life's story with modesty & humour. Extract from the Foreword by Admiral Lord Boyce Captain Mervyn Wingfield was one of the last of his generation of submariners who made their reputation in the Second World War. Pre-war he had served on the China station & lived the riotous life of a young officer; in the war he commanded three submarines Umpire Sturgeon & Taurus survived a collision in the North Sea spent a winter in the Arctic penetrated the Norwegian fjords submerged through a minefield surfaced off St Nazaire in view of German guns to act as a navigation marker for the raiding force fought cavalry in the northern Aegean & later off Penang was the first British submariner to sink a Japanese submarine
- & barely survived the subsequent vicious counterattack after Taurus was severely damaged & became stuck in the mud at the bottom. Any one of these incidents would have merited a place for Wingfield in the history of naval warfare & the pantheon of submarine heroes. The Royal Navy's most senior submariner Admiral Lord Boyce notes in his Foreword that the diesel-powered submarines in which both men served were not so different but the risks which Wingfield took in wartime were greater & Lord Boyce admired the way in which Wingfield led his crew & was loved by them. Many men were burned-out by the war but in the postwar years Wingfield enjoyed a successful peacetime career in the Royal Navy where finally his personal qualities & his diplomacy were put to the test as a naval attache. In retirement Wingfield was well-known for hosting lively beef & Stilton lunches at the London Boat Show! He was also one of the last of the generations of Anglo-Irish families who served the Crown & provided officers & men for the Army & the Navy & his story in addition gives some insights into his early days especially with regard to being a young officer in the Royal Navy in the 1930s.