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・ Joseph Warren Sheehy
・ Joseph Warren Stilwell, Jr.
・ Joseph Warton
・ Joseph Warwick Bigger
・ Joseph Wasse
・ Joseph Waterhouse
・ Joseph Waterhouse (minister)
・ Joseph Waters
・ Joseph Waters (rugby union)
・ Joseph Watkins
・ Joseph Watkins (disambiguation)
・ Joseph Watson
・ Joseph Watson (academic)
・ Joseph Watson Sidebotham
・ Joseph Watson, 1st Baron Manton
Joseph Watt
・ Joseph Watt (disambiguation)
・ Joseph Wattmann
・ Joseph Waugh
・ Joseph Wauters
・ Joseph Wawrykow
・ Joseph Wayas
・ Joseph Wayne Mercer
・ Joseph Wear
・ Joseph Wearne
・ Joseph Webb
・ Joseph Webb House
・ Joseph Webbe
・ Joseph Webber Jackson
・ Joseph Weber


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Joseph Watt : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Watt

Joseph Watt, VC (25 June 1887 – 13 February 1955) was a Scottish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He achieved the award during service in the Strait of Otranto and as a result of his meritorious service also received the French Croix de Guerre and the Italian Silver Medal for Military Valour.
==Early life==
Joseph Watt was born in 1887 in the Scottish fishing village of Gardenstown on the Moray Firth, into the large family of Joseph Sr. and Helen Watt. His father was a fisherman of many years service and his mother was also employed in the fish industry. At age ten his father was lost at sea in an accident, and the family moved to Fraserburgh in Aberdeenshire where his mother remarried. He learned the fishing trade from an early age and served aboard the ''White Daisy'' before purchasing a stake in the drifter ''Annie''.
The war changed life in the community as most of the menfolk volunteered for service with the Royal Navy on the patrol service, hunting for enemy shipping and submarines, often in small drifters and trawlers similar to the ones they sailed in every day. Joe was no exception, being rated a skipper in the patrol service, and marrying Jesse Ann Noble in the days before his posting overseas. Transferred to Italy in 1915, Watt served on drifters in the Adriatic Sea, enduring boring patrol work keeping Austrian submarines from breaking into the Mediterranean Sea. During this time he was highly commended, for his role in the operation to evacuate the remnants of the Serbian Army following their defeat and retreat to Albania in January 1916 for which he was later awarded the Serbian Gold Medal for Good Service.
Shortly before Christmas 1916, Watt's drifter, HM Drifter ''Gowanlea'' was attacked by an Austrian destroyer sortie, which was attempting to break the line of drifters and allow submarines to escape into the Mediterranean. Although hit several times by shellfire, the drifter was not seriously damaged and the crew unhurt. It was however a mild precursor to a major raid planned against the Otranto Barrage as the drifter line was now called.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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