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Leonard Warren Murray, born in Granton,
Nova Scotia, on June 22nd , 1896; died in
Derbyshire, Great-Britain, on November 25th,
1971. Officer of the Royal Canadian Navy
(RCN).
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On
29 July 1942, Rear Admiral L.W.
Murray is presenting awards to
crew members of destroyer HMCS
St. Croix, which sank enemy submarine
U-90 on 24 July 1942. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-037456. |
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Murray entered the recently founded Halifax
Royal Naval College when he was 15-year
old. Two years later he was appointed as
midshipman on a Royal Navy vessel, the first
of a long series of British ships on which
he served during WWI and between the two
world wars.
When WWII breaks out, Murray becomes Deputy
Chief of the Naval Staff and holds highly
important commands throughout the war. Promoted
to Commodore, he is put in charge of the
Newfoundland Escort Force (NEF) on May 31st,
1941, to be reorganized in February 1942
as the Mid-Ocean Escort Force (MOEF).
With the rationalization of the Atlantic
Command, Murray is made a Rear Admiral and,
on April 30th, 1943, Commander-in-Chief
Canadian Northwest Atlantic. From his HQ
in Halifax he commands all Canadian and
Allied air and naval forces involved in
convoy protection in that area. He was the
only Canadian officer in charge of an Allied
theatre of operations during WWII.
Murray was blamed for his failure to curb
the excesses of Canadian sailors celebrating
V-Day in Halifax; bitter, he decides to
resign his command before the expiry of
his term. The Royal Canadian Navy lost an
outstanding officer, a man highly regarded
by his peers and loved by the men under
his command.
L.W. Murray left Canada for Great Britain
in September 1945. He was called to the
British Bar in 1949.
Except for the few
months at sea in Assiniboine, my war work
was a solid slog, mostly at a desk, averaging
15 hours a day with frequently a full
24. My job was to obtain the greatest
possible result from relatively inexperienced
personnel. There was little opportunity
for anyone to step on another’s
toes. They were spread too thinly and
there was a more responsible job for each
as soon as he felt confident of his ability
to take it on. In the autumn of 1941 young
volunteer reserve officers who had never
seen salt water before the war took command
of corvettes manned by 88 men—the
number of white and black keys on a piano
and each with his own peculiar note—and
took their full part in the Battle of
the Atlantic.
Experience had taught
me this: to find out what you’re
capable of, it is only necessary to get
a chance to do it—and someone else
must have enough confidence in you to
provide that chance. In my dealings with
the young RCNVR captains I did my best
to give them the opportunity to find their
own feet and they did it. Once having
tasted success they never looked back.
What a blessing that we had the bright
young peoples to accept this kind of responsibility.
- Rear-Admiral
L.W. Murray
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