BROWN Amy

  • First Name(s):
    Amy 
  • Surname:
    BROWN
  • Service Number:
    274633
  • Rank:

    Sister

  • Conflict:
    WW2
  • Nursing Service:
    Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
  • Nationality:
    English
  • Date of Death:
    12th February 1944
  • Age At Death:
    23
  • Cause of Death:
    Enemy action
  • Place of Burial:
    Brookwood 1939-1945 Memorial, Surrey, Panel 22. Column 2.
Staff Nurse Helena BENNET served and died in WW1.

Further Information About BROWN Amy

Daughter of John and Sarah Brown. S.R.N.

Amy Brown was born in Newport, Monmouthshire on the 2nd December 1920, the daughter of John and Sarah Jane Brown. Her mother died shortly afterwards on the 26th December 1920 and her father later remarried. Amy trained as a nurse at Walton Hospital, Liverpool between 1939 – 1942, entering the Register of Nurses on the 10th June 1942 when her permanent address was Danesbury, High Cross, Rogerstone, Newport, Monmouthshire. She lost her life at sea whilst serving with QAIMNS. She is commemorated on the Brookwood Memorial, Surrey and on a war memorial at St Basil’s Church, Bassaleg, Newport.

Bassaleg War Memorial. Photo courtesy & © Mark Newton


She is also remembered on a family grave in St John the Baptist Church at Rogerstone.

The Grave of Sister Amy Brown , St John’s Rogerstone. Photo courtesy & Copyright of Andrew Hemmings


The steamship Khedive Ismail sailed from Mombasa, Kenya on the 6th February 1944. Bound for Colombo, Ceylon, she was carrying 1,324 passengers including 996 members of the East African Artillery’s 301st Field Regiment, 271 Royal Navy personnel, 19 WRNS, 53 nursing sisters and their matron, nine members of the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry and a war correspondent, Kenneth Gandar-Dower. She was part of Convoy KR 8 consisting of five troop transports escorted by a heavy cruiser, HMS Hawkins, and two destroyers, HMS Paladin and HMS Petard.

SS Khedive Ismail
Copyright Unknown


Early in the afternoon of the 12th February she was hit by two torpedoes from the Japanese submarine I-27, causing the ship to sink in less than 3 minutes with heavy loss of life including 51 nurses who died as a result of the attack. The troop ship had sunk too quickly to launch any lifeboats, but her Carley floats floated free and some survivors were able to board them. The submarine having been forced to the surface engaged in a battle with the two destroyers before submerging again and taking refuge beneath the survivors. The destruction of a submarine that might sink more ships took precedence over the lives of survivors so the battle continued with the destroyer HMS Petard attacking first with depth charges, then shellfire and finally torpedoes. The depth charge fuses had to be set to detonate at the shallowest depth, and they killed or wounded many people who had survived the initial sinking. The submarine was eventually sunk by a torpedo fired from the destroyer resulting in the loss of all onboard.

Initially the British army nurses were posted as ‘Missing’ on the British Army Casualty List. However, this was later amended to ‘Previously reported Missing 12.2.44 now Presumed Killed in Action.

With no known grave but the sea the QAIMNS nurses who lost their lives on that fateful day are all commemorated on Panel 22 of the Brookwood 1939 – 1945 Memorial in Surrey.

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