Young navy officer inspired by grandfathers who served on opposite sides

A young navy officer is setting sail inspired by the wartime exploits of his grandfathers – who served on opposing sides in the Second World War.

Sub Lieutenant Ben Hoffmeister, 23, from Oxford, is following in the footsteps of the two men in pursuing a life at sea.

He will be aboard new patrol ship HMS Trent as it sets off for the Mediterranean next week.

Ernest Hoffmeister
Ben’s grandfather Ernest Hoffmeister (Royal Navy/PA)

Ernest Hoffmeister served in the Atlantic and Arctic determined to keep the UK’s sea lanes open, while Sub Lieutenant Hoffmeister’s maternal grandfather Erwin Menzel crewed a U-boat determined to strangle Britain’s lifelines.

After completing training as a mechanical engineer, Mr Menzel was assigned to U-963 and sailed on 10 war patrols out of bases in Norway and France in the final two years of the war.

This included a failed attempt to attack the Normandy invasion armada in June 1944.

Ben Hoffmeister
Ben’s grandfather Erwin Menzel (Royal Navy/PA)

The submarine was eventually scuttled off the village of Nazare in Portugal 12 days after VE Day and Mr Menzel was taken prisoner with his shipmates.

He subsequently emigrated to Britain, where he settled down.

Ben Hoffmeister
U-963 arriving in Portugal (Royal Navy/PA)

He died when Sub Lieutenant Hoffmeister was just 10 – with the future officer too young to have asked the questions he wished he could have about the war.

Sub Lieutenant Hoffmeister said: “One of the few stories I remember him talking about was having to climb up the mainmast during the convoys to chip off ice that had accumulated and risked capsizing the vessel.”

Ben Hoffmeister
HMT King Sol on the Mersey (Royal Navy/PA)

It is unlikely, given where their vessels served and when, that his grandfathers faced each other in the Atlantic or Arctic, but his parents were nevertheless somewhat nervous when they met for the first time.

“They got on incredibly well when they eventually met,” he says. “It seemed the shared experience of the Battle of the Atlantic was more important to them than which side of the war they had fought it on.

“That legacy is perhaps the most important aspect to take away from their story.”

Ben Hoffmeister
Sub Lieutenant Ben Hoffmeister on the Trent (Royal Navy/PA)

Lieutenant Commander David Webber, in charge of Trent’s marine engineering department, said: “It’s an interesting story from the perspective of how far Europe has come, with Ben now serving in the Royal Navy on a ship that will work alongside the modern Deutsche Marine.

“His family history acutely tracks the human impact of the history of 20th century Europe: World War 2, the division of Europe in the Cold War, reunification and co-operation.”

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