Nov 15th

An updated blog on Jack Phillips - well it is 100 years on

By Mary B

 

John George (Jack) Phillips, 1887 - 1912

 

Chief Wireless Telegraphistportrait.jpg

on the Titanic

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                    

                                  



Godalming Museum and Godalming Town Council Collection

 

This oil painting can be seen in the Museum, and was painted by Ellis Martin from a photograph taken by Jennie Stedman of Farncombe.

 

Early Life and Career

 

John George Phillips, known as “Jack” was born in Godalming, Surrey, on the 11th April 1887 at 11, Farncombe Street. He was
the son of George Alfred Phillips and his wife, Ann (née Sanders). They came from Trowbridge in Wiltshire, from a family of weavers. In 1881 the family lived in Deptford Lower Road, Rotherhithe, and George was listed as a draper, with this wife and twin daughters, Elsie and Ethel aged 7, born in Kent.

 


They moved to Godalming c.1883 when they are listed in the Godalming Directory living in Farncombe Street. His father was manager of Gammons, a draper’s shop owned by the Gammon brothers. The family lived above the shop, and Jack was born there in 1887. The house no longer remains. The 1911 census shows that there were five children born to George and Ann but only three survived. His twin sisters never married.


Jack attended a local private school in Hare Lane run by Fanny Stedman. He then went to the St John’s Street School next to the Parish Church of Farncombe, St John, now the Farncombe Day Centre. As a young boy Jack sang in the choir at the Parish Church where there is a brass memorial plaque.    

Farncombe church.jpg

Photograph courtesy of John Young

 

   

Red Lion 2.jpg

Red Lion 1.jpg

  

  

   Photographs courtesy of Hugh Turrall-Clarke

 

Jack was later educated at the Godalming Grammar School, now the public bar of the Red Lion Public House under the headmaster Mr. Charles Elworthy; seen here on the left hand side of the pub.

 

HSBC.jpg

 

In 1902 on leaving school he worked at the local Post Office (now the HSBC Bank) in the High Street, as a telegraphist. Here he learned Morse code under the postmaster, Mr Walter Richard Williams, until March 1906.   

 

 

In 1906 Jack joined the Marconi Company’s Wireless Telegraphy Training School at Seaforth Barracks in Liverpool. On completion of the course, he headed the list of successful candidates in the Postmaster General Examinations. In August after finishing his training he was posted as Junior Wireless Officer on the White Star Line vessel, Teutonic.

 

During the next three years he served on various liners, including the Lusitania, Mauritania, Campania, Oceanic, Corsican, Canada, Victoria, Danube, and Pretorian.

 

In 1908 Jack was transferred to the Marconi Transatlantic Station at Clifden, a high power transmitting station on the west coast of Ireland in County Galway. He spent three years at Clifden, working as an operator transmitting and receiving messages to and from the Marconi sister station at Glace Bay, Nova Scotia.

 

In 1911 he left Clifden and returned to sea on the Adriatic. In March 1912 he was sent to Belfast to take up the post of Chief Wireless Telegraphist on the new White Star Liner, Titanic, then being fitted out at the Harland and Wolff shipyard. Lord Pirrie was Chairman of Harland and Wolff, and had bought Witley Park, near Godalming, in 1909.

 

RMS Titanic

 

 RMS Titanic.jpg

Jack was appointed Chief Wireless Telegraphist on the new, "unsinkable" luxury Titanic, with Harold Bride as his junior operator. The wireless equipment on board was the most modern and most powerful of any merchant ship then afloat.

 

  Godalming Museum Collection

 

It had a range of 250-400 miles in daytime and at night, when conditions for transmitting and receiving were more favourable, it occasionally spanned 2,000 miles. It is recorded that Jack had confided in a friend that while he was proud to be chosen to serve on the Titanic he would have preferred a smaller vessel. Jack expressed a dread of icebergs.

 

In the 24 hours preceding the fateful collision with an iceberg on the 14 April 1912, the two wireless operators had been busy repairing a fault in the transmitter. As a consequence, Jack had very little sleep before commencing his watch from 8.00pm to 2.00am. It was in the hours preceding the collision that the liner achieved its highest speed of 22.5 knots. Thus, on impact, the iceberg inflicted considerable damage to many of the watertight compartments, causing it to sink at the bow.

 

Jack was sending personal messages from the passengers to America - this was his job with Marconi - when he was first instructed by the captain to advise other vessels in the area of the collision with the berg. Due to the much publicised and widely believed claim that the Titanic was an unsinkable ship, almost all on board carried on as before and other ships receiving this message did not immediately prepare to head for the given position of the stricken liner. However it was soon realized that the Titanic was sinking and Jack was instructed by Captain Edward Smith to send out CQD messages requesting immediate assistance from all vessels in the area. Later Smith requested Jack to change the message to SOS.

 

From this time onwards Jack stayed at his post, sending out the distress calls, advising on the latest position of the Titanic, urging and convincing other ships to assist in the rescue of those taking to the boats. Jack stayed at the transmitter while Harold Bride put a lifejacket on him after the captain gave the instruction, "Every man for himself" and had personally thanked the two wireless operators for their perseverance. Bride was sent off by Phillips to save himself, while Jack continued transmitting. It was as a consequence of his total devotion to duty that Jack Phillips lost his life and has since become widely admired. It was this bravery and persistence which reduced the magnitude of the disaster in respect of lives lost. Jack's last message was picked up by the Virginia of the Allen Line at 2.17am, and the Titanic foundered at 2.20am. After this incident everyone adopted SOS as the primary distress call.

 

 

Phillips Memorial

 

 

Phillips Memorial 2.jpg

Phillips Memorial 1.jpg

      

 Photographs courtesy of John Young

 

The Phillips Memorial Cloister, a garden designed by Gertrude Jekyll, with a magnificent brick cloister 80 feet square designed by Hugh Thackeray Turner, was laid out, built and opened exactly two years to the day after the sinking. The memorial is situated between the River Wey and Godalming Parish Church in the Phillips Memorial Park.

 

WTC Memorial.jpg

 

 


Within the cloister, the Wireless and Telegraph Company commissioned and had erected a memorial stone tablet to the perpetual honour of this brave man, who died four days after his 25th birthday, leaving behind a lasting example of putting lives of others before one's own.

 

 

 

 

   Godalming Museum Collection

 

 

 

Phillips Grave.jpg

 

 

For the 90th anniversary of the loss of the Titanic, in April 2002, Godalming Town Council refurbished the Phillips family grave of Jack's father, George, and his mother, Ann, and twin sisters, Elsie and Ethel, in the Nightingale Cemetery, Nightingale Road. In the centre of a six foot square curb all in white marble, is an obelisk in the shape of an iceberg, a fitting memorial to Godalming hero Jack Phillips.        

                                                    
            
Photograph courtesy of John Young

 

 

 

Godalming Museum Local Studies Library

 

Open from Tuesday to Saturday from 1pm - 4pm or by prior arrangement

 

Ellis Martin's portrait of Jack Phillips, commissioned by Godalming Grammar School after the tragedy, is on display in the local history galleries.

 

At Godalming Museum Local Studies Library you can study publications on the Titanic, including a facsimile of the 1972 page report of the formal investigation of the sinking in 1912. The library collection includes images of, and information about, the Phillips Memorial in Godalming, which was designed by Hugh Thackeray Turner, with the gardens laid out by Gertrude Jekyll. The Post Office Telegraph messages sent to the Phillips family from the Marconi Company after Jack’s death can be seen.

 

You can learn about local people connected with Jack Phillips. You can read about two local people from Witley who were on board the Titanic. Lucy Snape, a stewardess, who lost her life, and Walter Henry Nichols, a steward who survived.

 

There will be an Exhibition in Godalming Museum from the 6th March 2011 until the 12th May 2012 marking the centenary of the loss of the Titanic, and Jack Phillips, the Chief Wireless Telegraphist who grew up in Farncombe.

 

School Loan Boxes about Titanic and Jack Phillips will be available.

 

Godalming will be marking the centenary with celebrations; please watch this space.

 

© Trustees of Godalming Museum 2011

Godalming Museum Local Studies Library - John Young

 

John Young.jpg

Photography courtesty of John Young 

  

John Young is a volunteer working for the Museum with a considerable interest in Jack Phillips, and all aspects of Godalming History. He would be very glad to hear from you if you have any information relating to these subjects, or if you have any questions about the article. He is available for talks and slide shows.


Please e-mail godalming.museum@waverley.gov.uk

Links: http://www.hf.ro/ The RMS Titanic Radio Page

Oct 19th

Jack Phillips and the Titanic

By Mary B

Jack Phillips and the Titanic

At Godalming Museum Library you can study a wide range of publications on the Titanic, including a facsimile of the 972 page report of the formal investigation of the sinking in 1912. Ellis Martin's portrait of Jack Phillips, commissioned by Godalming Grammar School after the tragedy, is on display in the local history galleries. The library collection includes images of, and information about, the Phillips Memorial in Godalming, which was designed by Hugh Thackeray Turner, with the gardens laid out by Gertrude Jekyll.

John George (Jack) Phillips, 1887 - 1912

Early life and career

Jack Phillips was born in Godalming, Surrey, at 11 Farncombe Street, on 11 April 1887. As a young boy Jack sang in the choir at the Parish Church of St John the Evangelist, where there is a brass memorial plaque. He attended the school next to the church and later was educated at the Godalming Grammar School, now the public bar of the Red Lion Inn. On leaving he worked at the local Post Office (now the HSBC Bank), as a telegraphist, where he learned his Morse code.

In 1906 Jack joined the Marconi training school at Liverpool and, on completion of the course, headed the list of successful candidates in the Postmaster General examinations.

Jack was considered a serious man who stood high in the confidence of his superiors in the Marconi Marine Company. He progressed steadily to the top of his chosen profession and served on the ocean-going liners Teutonic, Lusitania, Mauritania, Campania, Oceanic, Corsican, Canada, Victoria, Danube, Pretorian and Adriatic. He spent three years at Clifden, a Marconi high-powered transmitting station on the West coast of Ireland.

RMS Titanic

Jack was appointed Chief Wireless Telegraphist on the new, "unsinkable" luxury RMS Titanic, with Harold Bride as his junior operator. The wireless equipment on board was the most modern and most powerful of any merchant ship then afloat. It had a range of 250-400 miles in daytime and at night, when conditions for transmitting and receiving were more favourable, it occasionally spanned 2,000 miles. It is recorded that Jack had confided in a friend that while he was proud to be chosen to serve on the Titanic he would have preferred a smaller vessel. Jack expressed a dread of icebergs.

In the 24 hours preceding the fateful collision with an iceberg on the 14 April 1912, the two wireless operators had been busy repairing a fault in the transmitter. As a consequence, Jack had very little sleep before commencing his watch from 8.00pm to 2.00am. It was in the hours preceding the collision that the liner achieved its highest speed of 22.5 knots. Thus, on impact, the iceberg inflicted considerable damage to many of the watertight compartments, causing it to sink at the bow.

Jack was sending personal messages from the passengers to America - this was his job with Marconi - when he was first instructed by the captain to advise other vessels in the area of the collision with the berg. Due to the much publicised and widely believed claim that the Titanic was an unsinkable ship, almost all on board carried on as before and other ships receiving this message did not immediately prepare to head for the given position of the stricken liner. However it was soon realized that the Titanic was sinking and Jack was instructed by Captain Edward Smith to send out SOS messages requesting immediate assistance from all vessels in the area.

From this time onwards Jack stayed at his post, sending out the distress calls, advising on the latest position of the Titanic, urging and convincing other ships to assist in the rescue of those taking to the boats. Jack stayed at the transmitter while Harold Bride put a lifejacket on him after the captain gave the instruction, "Every man for himself" and had personally thanked the two wireless operators for their perseverance. Bride was sent off by Phillips to save himself, while Jack continued transmitting. It was as a consequence of his total devotion to duty that Jack Phillips lost his life and has since become widely admired. It was this bravery and persistence which reduced the magnitude of the disaster in respect of lives lost. Jack's last message was picked up at 2.17am and the ship foundered at 2.20am.

The Phillips Memorial

The Phillips Memorial in Godalming, a garden designed by Gertrude Jekyll, with a magnificent brick cloister 80 feet square designed by Hugh Thackeray Turner, was laid out, built and opened exactly two years to the day after the sinking. The memorial is situated between the River Wey and Godalming Parish Church. Within the cloister, the Wireless and Telegraph Company commissioned and had erected a memorial stone tablet to the perpetual honour of this brave man, who died four days after his 25th birthday, leaving behind a lasting example of putting lives of others before one's own.

For the 90th anniversary of the loss of the Titanic, in April 2002, Godalming Town Council refurbished the Phillips family grave of Jack's father, George, and his mother, Ann, and twin sisters, Elsie and Ethel, in the Old Cemetery, Nightingale Road. In the centre of a six foot square curb all in white marble, is an obelisk in the shape of an iceberg, a fitting memorial to Godalming hero Jack Phillips.

In 2011 the Phillips Memorial is being renovated again so that it looks  perfect for the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic in 2012. 

© Trustees of Godalming Museum 2010
Godalming Museum Local Studies Library - John Young

© DropBy 2010