Military service
Burial/memorial information
Son of Thomas A. Corrigan and Elizabeth Dinn, of Trepassey, Newfoundland.
On 26 May 1915, the Morwenna was travelling between Cardiff, Wales, and Sydney, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, when it was boarded at sea by U-41, which opened fire 72 miles (116 km) south-east of Fastnet Rock, a lighthouse island in south-east Ireland. She was sunk the same day, in position 50°27'N/08°44'W. Corrigan was the only fatality.
Digital gallery of Able Seaman Thomas Corrigan
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In the Books of Remembrance
Commemorated on:
Page 21 of the Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance.
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TOWER HILL MEMORIAL London, United Kingdom
THE TOWER HILL MEMORIAL stands on the South side of the garden of Trinity Square, a hundred yards East of Mark Lane Station, and just within the boundaries of the Metropolitan Borough of Stepney and the Liberty of the Tower. It is at the hub of maritime England. Behind it are Trinity House and the offices of the Port of London Authority, and the Thames stretches before it; the wide space of Great Tower Hill, leading down from it to the river, is the traditional forum of merchant seamen and their fellow workers. Lloyd's is on the North, the Custom House and Billingsgate Market are near it on the West, and beyond the Tower, Eastwards, is the long line of the Docks the greatest dock system in the world.
For more information, visit Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
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