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This data is related to World War 2
Ordnance Artificer 4th Class

Arthur Steventon

Service Number C/MX6609
Military Unit HMS Veteran Royal Navy
Date of birth 18 May 1917
Date of Death 05 Apr 1942 (24 Years Old)
Place of Birth Nottingham
Employment, Education or Hobbies He attended Henry Mellish School, Nottingham and worked as a fitter millwright in the Engineering Department of John Player & Son along side his brother and father who was a fitter millwright foreman.
Family History

He was the son of Thomas Henry and Elsie Steventon of 25, Leacroft Road, Bobber's Mill, Nottingham. He was the brother of John Ashley Steventon who was killed serving aboard HMS Veteran later in 1942.

Military History

HMS Cornwall was a County-class heavy cruiser of the Kent sub-class built for the Royal Navy in the mid-1920s. The ship spent most of her pre-World War II career assigned to the China Station. Shortly after the war began, she was assigned to search for German commerce raiders in the Indian Ocean. Cornwall was transferred to the South Atlantic in late 1939 where she escorted convoys before returning to the Indian Ocean in 1941. She then sank the German auxiliary cruiser Pinguin in May. Cornwall rescued 3 officers, 57 ratings and 22 prisoners after the battle. After the start of the Pacific War in December 1941, she began escorting convoys until she was transferred to the Eastern Fleet in March 1942. On 5 April, as part of the engagement known as the Easter Sunday Raid, a wave of Aichi D3A dive bombers took off from three Japanese carriers to attack Cornwall and Dorsetshire, 320 kilometres (170 nmi; 200 mi) south-west of Sri Lanka, and sank the two ships. Arthur Steventon was one of 424 men killed. Two other Nottinghamshire men were lost - Coder Wilfred Bradley from Beeston and Stoker Lionel Kelk from Langold. 1,122 survivors spent thirty hours in the water before being rescued by the light cruiser Enterprise and two destroyers. (Wikipedia)

Extra Information

Chatham Naval Memorial, 63,2

Photographs