James Joseph Magennis

Rank: Temporary Acting Leading Seaman
Unit: XE-3 (Midget Submarine), Royal Naval
Awarded: 11th December 1945
Nationality: British

The citation in the London Gazette of 18th January 1946 gives the following details:

Leading Seaman Magennis served as Diver in His Majesty's Midget Submarine XE-3 for her attack on 31st July, 1945, on a Japanese cruiser of the Atago class. Owing to the fact that XE-3 was tightly jammed under the target the diver's hatch could not be fully opened, and Magennis had to squeeze himself through the narrow space available. He experienced great difficulty in placing his limpets on the bottom of the cruiser owing both to the foul state of the bottom and to the pronounced slope upon which the limpets would not hold. Before a limpet could be placed therefore Magennis had thoroughly to scrape the area clear of barnacles, and in order to secure the limpets he had to tie them in pair’s by a line passing under the cruiser keel. This was very tiring work for a diver, and he was moreover handicapped by a steady leakage of oxygen which was ascending in bubbles to the surface. A lesser man would have been content to place a few limpets and then to return to the craft. Magennis, however, persisted until he had placed his full outfit before returning to the craft in an exhausted condition. Shortly after withdrawing Lieutenant Fraser endeavoured to jettison his limpet carriers, but one of these would not release itself and fall clear of the craft. Despite his exhaustion, his oxygen leak and the fact that there was every probability of -his being sighted, Magennis at once volunteered to leave the craft and free the carrier rather than allow a less experienced diver to undertake the job. After seven minutes of nerve racking work he succeeded in releasing the carrier. Magennis displayed very great courage and devotion to duty and complete disregard for his own safety.

Additional Information

McGinnes was from a working class Roman Catholic family born in Belfast
In 1935 he joinedthe Royal Navy as a boy seaman adopting the surname Magennis.
At the end of 1942 Magennis was drafted into the Submarine Service.
In March 1943 Magennis volunteered for special and hazardous duties which brought him into contact with X-Craft for the first time.
After training as a diver, in 1943 Magennis took part in the first major use of the X-craft when two midget submaries disabled the Tirpitz in a Norwegian Fjord.
Magennis was the only person from Northern Ireland to win a VC during WW2.
In 1949 Magennis left the Royal Navy and returned to Belfast, where, at some point, he sold his Victoria Cross.
Magennis moved to West Yorkshire in 1955 to pursue a career as an Electrician.
Belfast City Council erected a memorial to Magennis in 1999 which was attended by Ian Fraser, Magennis’s former CO who said of him, ‘Jim gave me bother from time to time. He liked his tot of rum, but he was a lovely man and a fine diver. I have never met a braver man. It was a privilege to know him and it’s wonderful to see Belfast honour him at last’.
In 1986 Lord Ashcroft purchased Magennis’s VC for £29,000 which was his first purchase of the 142 now owned by him as of 2006.
In 2008 Lord Ashcroft announced a donation of £5 million for a permanent gallery at the Imperial War Museum, where the Victoria Crosses already held by the museum will be put on display alongside his own.

Credit to ww2talk.com forum