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Thread: The Lady in White

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    Default The Lady in White

    I was having a drink with a friend when we started reminuscing 9 as you do ) and Durban 1967 came up in the conversation , we talked about the Indian market , The Four Seasons , the Officers Club , and then she said do you remember the Lady in White who used to wave to British Ships from the Bluff , well I don't but anyone else know who she was talking about ?
    Rob Page R855150 - British & Commonwealth Shipping ( 1965 - 1973 ) Gulf Oil -( 1973 - 1975 ) Sealink ( 1975 - 1986 )

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    Default The Lady in White...

    Hi Rob,the following may enlighten you:-
    ‘We departed Durban early the next morning and as we passed slowly out of the harbour towards the sea we were greeted by Mrs. Perla Siedl Gibson the ‘lady in white’, standing at the end of the northern breakwater and singing through her megaphone and waving to us, we could still see her waving, long after the sound of her voice had faded. The ‘lady in white’ was a wartime legend who sang to the troops as they left harbour on their journey to the battlefields of the Middle and Far East. When we arrived in Durban in 1956, the war had been over for 11 years, but still this lady knew we were coming and sang to us farewell greetings to speed us on our way.’
    I believe that a monument was erected to honour her.
     
    That was taken from the following site CLICK
    Best Regards
    Gulliver
    Last edited by Gulliver; 24th June 2011 at 08:30 PM.

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    Thank yopu Vernon (That should be Gulliver) , according to my friend , she was still going strong into the middle of the nineteen sixties . I actually don't remember her at all . Maybe I was always on Stand By leaving Durban , or asleep !
    Rob Page R855150 - British & Commonwealth Shipping ( 1965 - 1973 ) Gulf Oil -( 1973 - 1975 ) Sealink ( 1975 - 1986 )

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    Default the lady in white

    oh i remember that lady very well i sailed into durban a few times during the war she use to sing all the old favourites the white cliffs of dover ill be seeing you and a lot more the troops use to line the ships rail and sometimes they would join in

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    Default Mrs Perla Siedle (Gibson)

    Durban's Lady in White is perhaps one of South Africa most well known figures of the Second World War. The Lady in White, Mrs Perla Siedle Gibson became a well
    known figure to Allied troops at Durban harbour, which was South Africa's busiest port during the war. Mrs Gibson was the daughter of a wealthy South African ship owner
    and studied as a young woman in Germany to be a soprano. She went on to give recitals in London and Manhattan.


    Once described by Perla as her "wharfside work", it began one day as she was seeing off a young Irish seaman who had been entertained by her family the day before. As
    his ship was departing, he shouted at her across the water, "Please sing something Irish." She cupped her hands and started reciting the song, When Irish Eyes are
    Smiling. Throughout the years which followed she went on to sing to more than five thousand ships carrying an estimated quarter of a million Allied servicemen in total.
    Perla Siedle would often stand at the harbour dressed in her trademark white dress and hat singing to the passing ships with the aid of a megaphone which came from a
    torpedoed liner as a gift from grateful English troops. Americans would often request that she sing such songs as God Bless America and The Star-Spangled Banner.
    English troops often asked for There'll Always Be An England, while Australians preferred her performances of Waltzing Matilda, and South Africans always requested their
    own national folk songs like Sarie Marais. Czechs, Poles and Greeks chose opera arias.

    Soldier's talk eventually led to The Lady in White's fame spreading across the world, and ship captains would salute her as they were passing her. Perla Siedle was even
    known to U.S. soldiers as Kate Smith or Ma, to Britons as the Lady in White or the Soldiers' Sweetheart, and to the Poles as the South African Nightingale. Perla Siedle
    was married to Air Sergeant Jack Gibson, last stationed at Foggia, Italy, and also had two sons and one daughter in the South African Army. She had sung goodbye to all of
    them, watching their ships move out of sight over the bar to the tune of her favourite closing number, Auld Lang Syne. Even after the loss of one of her own sons, she refused
    to stop singing to the troops.

    Mrs Gibson passed away in 1971, a short time before her 83rd birthday, and a stone cairn with a bronze plaque was erected on Durban's North Pier in June 0f 1972. The
    memorial was erected on the site where she would have stood, singing to "her boys". It was donated by the men of the Royal Navy and reads:

    To the memory of Perla Gibson "The Lady In White" Who sang to countless thousands of British commonwealth and Allied Servicemen as they passed through Durban over
    the years 1940 to 1971 This tablet was presented by the Officers and Men of the Royal Navy.

    In 1995 a statue of Perla was unveiled by Queen Elizabeth II and today it stands in a prominent place next to the Emtateni Centre, which is part of the Ocean Terminal
    Building on the Durban Harbour's T-Jetty. The Perla Siedle Gibson Mobile Library was also founded to serve British seamen and a five room unit at the Highway Hospice was
    created with funds raised in her memory. The boarding establishment at Glenwood High School was named Gibson House after Perla's son Roy and its colour is white in
    her honour.
    Senior Site Moderator-Member and Friend of this Website

    R697530

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    Default Re: Mrs Perla Siedle (Gibson)

    lady in white at marina durban.jpg the lady in white is now at the maritime museum
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