Tin Hats, Oilskins & Seaboots:
A Naval Journey, 1938-1945
Latham B. Jenson
The wartime career of the popular Alberta-born
author/artist. With humour, he recalls his training days
as a sea cadet in Calgary and life as a young midshipman.
His wartime service began with HMS
Renown in the
South Atlantic, searching for the
Graf Spee, and
off Norway engaging the battleships
Scharnhorst
and
Gneisenau. He served on HMS
Matabele
and HMS
Hood, leaving that ship weeks before she
was sunk with all hands in battle with the
Bismarck. In 1941, he joined HMCS
Ottawa, sunk a year later with great loss of
life. Surviving this, he joined the destroyer
Niagara on convoy duty before going to
Algonquin, one of the first ships to open fire in
the Normandy invasion.
The book is illustrated with Jenson’s line drawings,
as well as sketches and diagrams of uniforms, insignia and
so on. It is a valuable record not only of how ships fought
the battles of the Atlantic, but of life on board, where
men had to live under difficult conditions for weeks on end
– all seen through the eyes of an energetic and engaging
young officer.