ROBERT AITKEN
Death of prominent AEA member and war hero
The death has been announced of Robert Aitken, formerly managing director of agricultural machinery manufacturers R Hunt & Co based at Earls Colne, Colchester. The company, founded in 1824 made a range of farm machinery and during its heyday employed over 300 people in Earls Colne at its 10-acre Atlas Works site. However, business subsequently declined and it closed its doors in 1988.
However, Lieutenant Robert Aitken was a submarine diver who took part in Operation Source, the daring attack by midget submarines on the German battleship Tirpitz in its lair in northern Norway and told in the 1955 film Above Us the WavesIn the real Operation Source, Aitken was one of two divers in the four-man crew of midget submarine X-7, commanded by Lieutenant Godfrey Place, one of six midget submarines (or X-craft) which were towed across the Norwegian Sea to attack the battleship in its heavily protected anchorage at Altenfjord in September 1943.
Churchill called Operation Source a naval episode of highest importance: Place and Donald Cameron (the Scottish captain of X-6) were awarded the VC, while Sub-Lieutenants Richard Kendall and John Lorimer, and Aitken himself, were awarded DSOs.
The son of a Norwich doctor, Robert Aitken was born on January 1 1923 and educated at Oundle, after which he was articled as an accountant; but as soon as he was able he volunteered for the Navy as a seaman. He passed out of HMS King Alfred in 1942 top of his class, and volunteered for special duties . It was in a classroom at HMS Dolphin, Gosport, that Aitken and a group of officers and ratings were told that they had volunteered to be charioteers (crew of two-man “human torpedoes”). He enjoyed the training, later observing: “If you give a teenager what is essentially an underwater motorbike, that’s great fun. ” Post-war, Aitken completed his articles and joined a firm in London. In 1951 he married Anne Hunt, and moved to R Hunt & Co, his wife’s family’s firm where he became managing director. Read full obituary in the Daily Telegraph
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