NameLily Gertrude Clark
Birth1910, Carlise
Spouses
Marriage16 Feb 1929, at 34 Chamber's Street Registry Office, Edinburgh
Birth10 Jan 1908
Death3 Jan 1975, Glasgow Royal Infirmary (603 15) Age: 66
FatherJames Law Dumbreck (1872-1958)
MotherMargaret McLeod (1875-1916)
Misc. Notes
This is the story as to why William became known as "Torchy" Dumbreck
Transcribed from a newspaper cutting

Floating torch saves
"Luckiest Man Alive"

SEEN IN ATLANTIC
Express Staff Reporter
Nov 1941
In the darkness of a North Atlantic night four survivors in a lifeboat saw a speck of light flashing. "It's a floating torch," said one of the men in the boat, "and we could do with one."

They pulled towards the light - and that is how William Dumbreck of 7 Pentland Place, Bridgeton, Glasgow, is able to be with his wife and four-year-old daughter today.

"I am the luckiest man alive," he told me when he landed with the other survivors from a torpedoed ship at a Scottish port last night.

"Immediately before the ship was torpedoed," he told me, "I decided to have a stroll on deck. My watch was ended and I went up on deck to get the air. No sooner had I got on deck than I heard a terrific explosion as a torpedo struck the ship.

"When I came to my senses, I was struggling in the sea. I had no idea where I was trying to swim to."

SAW A LIGHT
"My strength was giving way when I saw a light near me. I made for it and found that it was an electronic torch attached to a lifebuoy."

"I managed to get my arms and shoulders through the buoy and took the torch in my hands and held it as high as I could. That is all I remember." One of his mates Walter Edwards, who lives at 12 Milton Avenue, North London, said:- "There were four of us in the lifeboat. We could not understand the light at first, because it seemed to be going out and in.

"We decided to recover it as it would be useful if we had to signal to passing ships. When we got to where the torch was floating we found Dumbreck. The torch was still in his hand, and it was with great difficulty that we managed to loosen his grip and take it from him. An hour later we were all rescued by a naval vessel."

Said Dumbreck:- "My neck was sore for days but the choking was worth it."

Dumbreck has been at sea since he was a boy. He was for years in the Royal Navy.
Marriage1933
ChildrenJames Frances Maxwell (1934-)
Last Modified NewCreated 9 Jan 2017 using Reunion for Macintosh