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In memory of:

Carpenter Michael Lynch

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Merchant Navy emblem

Military service

Age: 69
Rank: Carpenter
Force: Merchant Navy
Unit/Regiment: Canadian Merchant Navy
Division: S.S. Nereus (Montreal, Québec) (163243)
Birth: September 14, 1872 Saint-Roche, Prince Edward Island
Death: December 10, 1941 Caribbean Sea

Burial/memorial information

Grave reference: Panel 18.
Additional information

His full name is Michael J. Lynch.


Son of Thomas W. Lynch and Mary Ellen White of Prince Edward Island. Husband of Annie Laurie May Mackie of Prince Edward Island, with whom he had four children, Olive Marie, Robert Emmett, Mary Winnifred and Annie Lynch. He remarried Frances Ruth Murphy of Prince Edward Island, who gave him two children, Michael Frederick Howe and Florence May Lynch.


On 10 December 1941 the Nereus, which left St Thomas, in the Virgin Islands, with ore, was sailing alone when it disappeared at sea. No German submarine claimed to have sunk her. Her wreckage has never been found. Sometimes coal boats accidentally caught fire from coal residue accumulated in the hold.

In the Books of Remembrance

Commemorated on:

Page 178 of the Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance.
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HALIFAX MEMORIAL Nova Scotia, Canada

The HALIFAX MEMORIAL in Nova Scotia's capital, erected in Point Pleasant Park, is one of the few tangible reminders of the men who died at sea. Twenty-four ships were lost by the Royal Canadian Navy in the Second World War and nearly 2,000 members of the RCN lost their lives.

This Memorial was erected by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and was unveiled in November 1967 with naval ceremony by H.P. MacKeen, Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia, in the presence of R. Teillet, then Minister of Veterans Affairs.

The monument is a great granite Cross of Sacrifice over 12 metres high, clearly visible to all ships approaching Halifax. The cross is mounted on a large podium bearing 23 bronze panels upon which are inscribed the names of over 3,000 Canadian men and women who were buried at sea.

The dedicatory inscription, in French and English, reads as follows:

1914-1939
1918-1945
IN THE HONOUR OF
THE MEN AND WOMEN
OF THE NAVY
ARMY AND MERCHANT NAVY
OF CANADA
WHOSE NAMES
ARE INSCRIBED HERE
THEIR GRAVES ARE UNKNOWN
BUT THEIR MEMORY
SHALL ENDURE.

On June 19, 2003, the Government of Canada designated September 3rd of each year as a day to acknowledge the contribution of Merchant Navy Veterans.

For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

 

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