Roy Francis (Royal Navy officer)

Lieutenant-Commander Roy Wallace Francis was a British naval officer who served on HMS Edinburgh (16) and HMS Manchester (15) during World War II. He was later the founder of the gauge Wells Harbour Railway and Wells & Walsingham Light Railway, both located in Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk, United Kingdom. Francis died in January 2015, aged 92.

Early life
Francis was born in Chingford, Essex on 2 July 1922 the son of Colonel Aubrey Francis. Francis developed an interest in railways at an early age. He had an ambition to work on the railway, but his father signed him up for a naval school at the age of fourteen.

Military service
Francis joined the training ship HMS Conway (school ship) in 1936 and joined the Royal Navy as a midshipman in 1939. During World War II, Francis served in the Royal Navy on HMS Manchester, which was in the Mediterranean in July 1941 when she was hit by the first aerial torpedo used in combat by the Germans. He then served on HMS Duke of York (17). Following promotion to sub-lieutenant, he served on HMS Edinburgh (16), which was involved in the escorting of convoys to the Soviet Union. After that ship was sunk in 1942, He served on HMS Waveney (K248). For his service on the Arctic convoys, he was awarded the Arctic Star and Ushakov Medal. In 1943, he was transferred to HMS Papua (K588). The ship was one of four that sank GS U-1014 off Malin Head, County Donegal, Ireland. In November 1945, Francis was given command of HMS Barndale (Z92). In 1949, HMS Barndale was involved in trials assessing the effect of nuclear blasts on ships. HMS Arethusa (26) was the subject of these experiments. He was then engaged in mine clearance operations off Sierra Leone until 1951. He was also involved in the search for a missing American nuclear trigger off Orford Ness, Suffolk in 1955. The trigger was recovered.

Civilian life
Francis married Marie Bartlett in 1942 They had a son and a daughter. He left the Royal Navy in 1956, and set up a boat building company in the Norfolk Broads, Rowancraft Ltd. He maintained his interest in railways, taking miniature steam trains to fairs during the 1960s and 1970s. In 1972, he had an 0-4-2ST steam locomotive built by David King. Named Edmund Hannay, it was used on the Wells Harbour Railway (WHR), which Francis built in 1976 at Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk at the request of Norfolk County Council in a bid to alleviate traffic congestion in the town. He later sold the WHR to finance the construction of the Wells and Walsingham Light Railway, which runs between Wells-next-the-Sea and Walsingham, Norfolk and opened in 1982.

Death
Francis died in the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on 27 January 2015 at the age of 92. He left a wife, Marie, two children, three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. His funeral was held on 13 February at St. Peter's Church, Forncett St Peter, Norfolk. attended by about 200 people. Francis lived in nearby Forncett St Mary.