HYETT, NICHOLAS, second son of Charles Hyett MP, Painswick, Gloucs., Constable of Gloucester Castle, and Anna, dau. of Nicholas Webb, Alderman, Gloucester; b. 6 Dec 1709; adm. Apr 1718; in under school list 1722; Pembroke Coll. Oxford, matr. 4 May 1725; adm. Inner Temple 27 Jan1724/5, called to bar 3 Jul 1731, chambers there 6 Feb 1728/9 – May 1750; contested Gloucester 1734; Recorder of Tewkesbury from 1760; Constable of Gloucester Castle from 1765; Chairman, Gloucestershire Quarter Sessions; m. 1 May 1735 (IGI) Henrietta Maria, widow of John Holker, Gravesend, Kent, brewer, and dau. of --- James [probably Thomas James, Lydney, Gloucs. (IGI)]; d. 4 Mar 1777.
HYETT, WILLIAM HENRY, eldest son of Rev. Henry Cay Adams, Shrewsbury, and Frances, dau. of Richard Marston, Willenhall, Staffs.; b. 2 Sep 1795; adm. 1805; left 1811; assumed surname of Hyett in lieu of Adams 5 Aug 1813, in pursuance of will of Benjamin Hyett (qv); Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 21 Oct 1813; while on his travels in 1819 Hyett swam across the Hellespont from Sestos to Abydos in one hour and twenty minutes; of Painswick House, Gloucs.; DL JP Gloucestershire; MP (Whig) Stroud 1832-4; FRS 29 Feb 1844; made experiments on growth of trees by watering them with chemical solutions; issued privately his printed translations of Goethe, Victor Hugo, Filicaja and others; author, Flowers from the South, 1869; m. 25 Oct 1821 Anne Jane, second dau. of Joseph Seymour Biscoe, Hempsted Court, Gloucs.; d. 10 Mar 1877.
HYLLE, ---; b.; adm.; a pensioner, Midsummer quarter 1567 (tutor, Prebendary Hutton) (Chapter Muniments).
HYNDE, ---; b.; adm.; QS 1553-6 (Chapter Muniments 37713).
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Iago, John Martindale, son of George Martindale Iago FCA, of Harrow, and Beatrice Mary, d. of George Waldron Bowen of Knighton, Radnor; b. 16 Jan. 1916; adm. Jan. 1930 (A); left Dec. 1933; Imperial Coll. of Science, BSc 1938; RNVR 1939-41 (Lieut. (E)); lost in HMS Hood 24 May 1941.
John Martindale Iago was born at Northwood, Middlesex on the 16th of January 1916 the son of George Martindale Iago FCA, an accountant, and Beatrice Mary (nee Bowen) Iago of “Gerrans”, Crofters Road, Northwood. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Ashburnham from January 1930 to December 1933. He played the flute solo from the First Movement from Sonata No. 4 by J.C.F. Bach at an informal concert in the Michaelmas term of 1932 and the flute solo “Gavotte” by Gossec at an informal concert in early 1933.
He went on to the Imperial College of Science from where he graduated BSc (Eng) in 1938 and also qualified as ACGI.
He was commissioned as an Electrical Sub Lieutenant in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve on the 29th of August 1939 and was posted to the crew of battlecruiser HMS Hood on the 14th of September 1939. He was promoted to Electrical Lieutenant on the 16th of January 1941. He was engaged to Dorothy Castle of Belsize Gardens in London.
At 1am on the 22nd of May 1941, the battleship HMS Hood set sail from Scapa Flow in company with the newly built battleship HMS Prince of Wales. They were escorted by the destroyers HMS Achates, HMS Antelope, HMS Anthony, HMS Echo, HMS Electra and HMS Icarus and were bound for Hvals Fjord in Iceland following reports that the German battleship Bismarck and the cruiser Prinz Eugen had left Bergen in search of merchant shipping to attack.
By the evening of the 23rd of May they were to the south of Iceland when they received a report from the destroyer HMS Suffolk that they had sighted the Bismarck in the Straits of Denmark and at 7.39pm they increased their speed and changed course to intercept the enemy ship.
Due to the pounding seas and the high speed of the two larger ships, the escorting destroyers struggled to keep up and were given permission to drop back at 4am on the 14th of May as the two capital ships continued the hunt on their own.
The enemy ships were sighted and at 5.52am HMS Hood opened fire on Prinz Eugen at a range of 25,000 yards. Prince of Wales fired its first salvo one minute later. HMS Hood received five salvos in reply from the two enemy ships, the second and third of which bracketed the ship causing a fire to break out on the port side.
At 6am she was hit by the fifth salvo in the aft magazine, blew up, and sank in three to four minutes with the loss of 1,415 of her crew of 1,418.
His sister Beatrice “Bee” (later Kenchington) published a book of his letters called “...and Home There’s No Returning: Letters of Lieutenant John Martindale Iago RNVR from HMS 'Hood', 1939-41”
He is commemorated on the Roll of Honour of Electrical Engineers and on the memorial at the Hood Chapel at the Church of St John the Baptist, Boldre, Hampshire.
He is commemorated on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial Panel 60, Column 3.