The
splendid Grade II listed Art Deco Bianchi memorial was created by Cesare
Bianchi for his wife Martha who died in 1936 giving birth to her second child. The
memorial is set in a large triangular plot that had wrought iron railings and a
gate until they were stolen by thieves in 2011. A futurist angel stands with
wings outstretched over a gateway inscribed with the name Bianchi. On either
side of the gateway are carved relief panels, one showing Martha ascending to
heaven accompanied by wingless angels and the other showing Martha and Cesare,
apparently reunited in the afterlife, sitting on a bench with Martha finally
cradling the baby she presumably never got to hold before she died.
Martha Gall-Bianchi |
On
the 30 June Cesare joined 734 other interned Italian men on the SS Arandora
Star (owned by Frederick Leyland & Co) along with 479 interned Germans and
86 German PoW’s, all bound for St John’s Newfoundland. The ship sailed
unescorted and early in the morning of 2 July, having crossed to the north of
Ireland, was 75 miles west of Bloody
Foreland in County Donegal and about to set off across the open Atlantic to Newfoundland.
Here she was spotted by U Boat U-47
commanded by Gunther Prien. The U boat was almost out of torpedoes and about to
sail back to base when she picked up the Arandora Star. In fact all that was
left in her guns was a single broken torpedo that had already failed to fire.
Prien decided to give the defective missile one last chance and took aim at the
enemy ship; this time the torpedo fired, detonating against the starboard side
of the ship, flooding the engine rooms and immediately killing all the personnel
there. There was chaos on board the sinking ship as sailors, military guards
and the Italian and German internees fought to get on the lifeboats and life
rafts, some of them falling from the bows in the desperate scramble. 805 people
drowned including the ships commander, Captain Moulton, 12 ships officer, 42
crew, 37 military guards, 486 Italians and 175 Germans. Cesare survived and
returned to Liverpool from where he was interned on the Isle of Man. He was
lucky, many of the survivors were sent to Australia to be interned on an
isolated camp on the Murray River for the duration of the war. When the
authorities decided that Cesare was no longer a threat in 1942 and released him
from internment the journey home from the Isle of Man was much easier than it
would have been from South Australia. He re-joined his family in Hampstead where
his sister in law had been looking after the children in his absence. He found
work in catering, helping to develop frozen food in Smithfield Market and must
have hoped that he could now quietly see the rest of the war out.
V2 devastation at Smithfield Market |
Cesare
was buried with other victims of the V2 in the City of London Cemetery in Manor
Park. He would have certainly wanted to
be buried with his wife but the circumstances of his death made that
impossible. Mary Gall’s place of burial is not known.
I would like to thank Jon Gliddon for allowing me to use the results of his genealogical research in this post and Robert Bianchi for permission to use his parents photograph's and for providing additional information about them.