Alfred Minchin
Alfred Vivian Minchin | |
|---|---|
Alfred Minchin (second right) with SS-Mann Kenneth Berry (second left) and German officers, April 1944 | |
| Born | 27 January 1917 |
| Died | February 1998 (aged 81) Somerset, England, United Kingdom |
| Occupation | British merchant seaman |
| Criminal status | Deceased |
| Conviction | Conspiracy to assist the enemy |
| Criminal penalty | 7 years' imprisonment |
Alfred Vivian Minchin (27 January 1917 – February 1998) was a British merchant seaman who was taken prisoner by a German destroyer after his ship, the SS Empire Ranger, one of a Murmansk convoy, was sunk by German bombers off Norway. He held the rank of Sturmmann in the Waffen-SS British Free Corps during the Second World War. He was taken prisoner on 28 March 1942. It was he who suggested the name for the British Free Corps. By 8 March 1945 he 'was being treated for scabies in the SS hospital at Lichtefelde-West.' The National Archives holds the depositions for his trial at the Central Criminal Court under reference CRIM 1/485. and a Home Office file on him under reference HO 45/25817 He was "convicted at Central Criminal Court on 5 February 1946 of conspiring to assist the enemy and sentenced to 7 years' penal servitude" for offences against the Defence Regulations. He died in Somerset in February 1998 at the age of 81.