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Displaying items by tag: Seaman's National Memorial

The Annual National Commemoration Services For Irish Seafarers will be held at 11.30 am on Sunday 21 November at the Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, City Quay, Dublin. Wreaths will be laid at the Irish Seaman's National Memorial, City Quay. After a break for lunch the company will reassemble for Evensong at 3.15 pm in St. Patrick's Cathedral.
Published in Boating Fixtures

About Commander Bill King, Solo Circumnavigator

William Donald Aelian King was the last surviving submarine commander in the Second World War - in charge of the British Navy's T-class Telemachus that sank a Japanese sub in the Strait of Malacca, between Malaysia and Sumatra, in 1944.

Decorated many times for his service by the end of the war, King became a trailblazing solo sailor.

At the age of 58, he was the oldest participant in The Sunday Times Golden Globe Race sailing Galway Blazer II, a junk-rigged schooner he designed himself.

After a number of abortive attempts, including an incident with "a large sea creature", he finally completed his solo circumnavigation of the globe in 1973.

Beyond his aquatic escapades, King settled with his wife Anita (who died in 1984, aged 70) at Oranmore Castle outside Galway after the war, where he later developed a pioneering organic farm and garden to help tackle his wife's asthma.

The round-the-world sailor and Galway native Bill King died on Friday, 21 September, 2012, aged 102.