In 1939, war seemed to grow inevitable so Drummond applied to return to sea as a Second Engineer. Despite her good service on liners of two of the most prestigious companies in the
Merchant Navy, and glowing references from numerous superior officers, all her many applications were declined. Therefore, on the eve of
World War II she joined Jean and Frances enlisting as
Air raid wardens in
Lambeth, London.
Har Zion Drummond then tried visiting the
Royal Docks in the hope of finding a ship that would take her on. Eventually on such a visit a donkeyman, who had served with her on
Mulbera 12 years earlier, recognised Drummond in a café. He and his shipmates advised her that if no British company would take her she should try for a berth on a foreign ship. They introduced her to a representative of Palestine Maritime Lloyd, owned by a group of Jewish businessmen based in
Haifa,
Palestine. He was sceptical of signing a woman engineer until he saw her papers. Palestine Maritime Lloyd operated mostly
coasters of 200 to , but had also one small deep-sea cargo and passenger ship, the (
Mount Zion), that which could carry both cargo and 110 passengers.
Har Zion needed a new Second Engineer so he immediately offered Drummond a berth at a salary of £41 10s.
Har Zion was registered at
Famagusta in the British
Protectorate of Cyprus. Her officers and crew were a mixture of Arab, Czech, Egyptian, German, Hungarian, Russian, and Spanish, and the ship's dog was Polish. She was built in 1907 and by 1940 was in poor condition. Drummond mastered disciplinary problems among the engine room crew and then in
drydock in
Antwerp completed enough furnace and boiler repairs for
Har Zion to pass its Lloyd's Certificate inspection. In Antwerp,
Har Zion took on a Greek Third Engineer who clashed with Drummond. The ship worked to Beirut, Haifa and back, and on its return trip evacuated the British Consul and part of the
British Expeditionary Force from
Marseille Bonita In August 1940 a
Panamanian company,
Compañía Arena Limitada, gave Drummond a berth on its cargo ship at a salary of £46 10s – £5 a month more than on
Har Zion. There Drummond received news that The Studio at 143 Kennington Road had been bombed but Frances and Jean were safe. Aboard
Bonita Drummond formed a close friendship with another married man, the
First Mate Mr Warner. In a published account of her conduct in the air raid, Warner described Drummond as
"about the most courageous woman I ever saw". Newspapers in Norfolk, VA quoted Captain Herz commending Drummond as
"one of the most competent engineers ever employed on this vessel". and the
Lloyd's War Medal for Bravery at Sea in July 1941. Her MBE was presented by
George VI.
Czikos In February 1941, Warner and Drummond signed on as captain and second engineer of an old Panamanian steamship, . The ship was in
Lisbon so a skeleton crew including Warner and Drummond sailed out to join her on
Yeoward Brothers' passenger liner . They sailed
Czikos to Gibraltar, where they joined a convoy bound for the
Firth of Clyde. About northwest of Ireland a
Luftwaffe Fw 200 Condor attacked
Czikos. As with
Bonita, none of the bombs hit but the near misses damaged the ship. The Condor also machine-gunned the ship, killing a quartermaster at the helm and wounding two other crewmen.
Manchester Port In April 1942, Drummond joined Manchester Liners' in Liverpool as Fifth Engineer. The ship was unkempt and filthy, including the galley, the food was ill-served and the Master, Captain Davis, seemed permanently drunk. Nevertheless,
Manchester Port was made Commodore Ship for
convoy ON 89 to North America. The ship survived the crossing and on 17 May loaded
dynamite at
Trois-Rivières,
Quebec. On 20 May the ship reached Halifax to join an eastbound convoy. Drummond reported Davis for drunkenness and on 21 May he was removed under police escort, replaced by a Captain Middleton.
Manchester Port joined convoy
HX 191, which left Halifax on 24 May and reached Liverpool on 6 June. The ship discharged her explosive cargo in Manchester and Drummond returned to her sisters in Lambeth.
Danae II At the end of August 1942, Drummond and Warner joined the cargo steamer at
Boston, Lincolnshire as First Mate and Second Engineer. The ship was owned by the
Ministry of War Transport and managed by Ambrose, Davies and Matthews, who had chosen someone else for Second Engineer. The
Third and
Fourth Engineers were unqualified. The Master, Captain Cheek, the Chief Engineer and either the third or fourth engineer were all heavy drinkers. Drummond called
Danae II "The worst ship I ever sailed in". The ship steamed north
via North Shields in
Northumberland to
Methil Docks in
Fife. There Cheek tried to give Drummond her notice on medical grounds, but a doctor ashore stopped him. When the ship reached
Aultbea in
Ross, Cheek sacked Drummond with 24 hours' notice, although she had signed on for two years. The firemen, greasers and donkeyman all refused to sail without Drummond, and so did the deck crew. Her friend Warner, however, refused to leave the ship, leaving Drummond feeling betrayed. Drummond reported the mismanagement of
Danae II to the MoWT and Ambrose, Davies and Matthews. Cheek's solicitors threatened to sue Drummond for defamation, but no action followed.
Perseus At the end of January 1943, Drummond returned to Blue Funnel, signing on as refrigeration engineer on the
refrigerated cargo ship . Again Drummond was beset by a hostile Second Engineer always being rude to her, giving her extra work and trying to prevent her from getting shore leave.
Perseus circumnavigated the World westbound from Liverpool
via New York,
Cuba, the
Panama Canal, Australia,
South Africa,
Sierra Leone and
Gibraltar, returning to Liverpool in September 1943. In July 1943 the ship visited
Cape Town, where Drummond was able to go ashore and visit her friend Malcolm Quayle's grave outside the city. After an eight-month voyage Drummond did not want to return to sea immediately. After leaving
Perseus in September 1943, she returned to her sisters in Lambeth, where
Restormel House had been damaged by a bomb but their flat remained intact. Drummond did not seek another position at sea until January 1944.
Karabagh In April 1944, Drummond signed on as Assistant Engineer of a diesel ship, the Baltic Trading Company's
oil tanker , with which she sailed on an
Arctic convoy to
Onega in the
USSR. On return to England in May 1944, Drummond signed onto
Karabagh again as Fourth Engineer. After
D-Day on 6 June 1944, the tanker spent three months shuttling supplies such as
aviation spirit across the
English Channel for the
Invasion of Normandy, initially from the
Solent and later from
Newport, Wales. Drummond formed a friendship with
Karabaghs Master, a man from
Northern Ireland called Captain Charlton. In Newport the two took occasional trips ashore, and once on a visit to
Tintern Abbey he proposed to her. She did not accept, and later explained that this was because both he and she had short tempers. ==Post-war years==