Difference between revisions of "Admiralty War Staff"

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*Admiral [[Henry Bradwardine Jackson|Sir Henry B. Jackson]], January, 1913 - July, 1914.
 
*Admiral [[Henry Bradwardine Jackson|Sir Henry B. Jackson]], January, 1913 - July, 1914.
 
*Vice-Admiral [[Frederick Charles Doveton Sturdee, First Baronet|Sir F. C. Doveton Sturdee]], July, 1914 - November, 1914.
 
*Vice-Admiral [[Frederick Charles Doveton Sturdee, First Baronet|Sir F. C. Doveton Sturdee]], July, 1914 - November, 1914.
*Vice-Admiral (Acting) [[Henry Francis Oliver|Sir Henry F. Oliver]], November, 1914 - May, 1917.<ref>Black.  ''The British Naval Staff in the First World War''.  p. 247.</ref>
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*Vice-Admiral (Acting) [[Henry Francis Oliver|Sir Henry F. Oliver]], November, 1914 - May, 1917.<ref name=Black247>Black.  ''The British Naval Staff in the First World War''.  p. 247.</ref>
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==Assistants to the Chief of the Staff==
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*Commander [[Tufton Percy Hamilton Beamish|Tufton P. H. Beamish]], January, 1912 - April, 1913.
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*Captain [[Arthur Vyell Vyvyan]], January, 1913 - October, 1914.
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*Lieutenant-Colonel [[John Markham Rose|John M. Rose]], [[Royal Marine Artillery|R.M.A.]], September, 1914 - October, 1914.
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*Captain [[Sydney Robert Fremantle|Sydney F. Fremantle]], September, 1914 - July, 1915.
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*Lieutenant-Colonel [[Harry Douglas Farquharson|Harry D. Farquharson]], [[Royal Marine Light Infantry|R.M.L.I.]], October, 1914 - March, 1915.<ref name=Black247/>
  
 
==Footnotes==
 
==Footnotes==

Revision as of 14:28, 8 March 2010

Opening Months of the War

In 1919 Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss wrote that:

The Admiralty needs a large and efficient staff organisation. At the commencement of the war this was lamentably inadequate."[1]

Captain Richmond, the Assistant Director of the Operations Division, wrote:

The War Staff was deficient in all the characteristics needed for staff work. The whole of the work passes through the Chief of Staff. There is no decentralisation, and his mind has to grapple with every problem that arises, even in its details. The result is that the First Sea Lord and Chief of Staff are so overworked that they cannot foresee and provide in advance.[2]

Assessment

Historian Richard Hough described the Staff at the time of Coronel: "… craven, inexperienced and not sufficiently brainy."[3]

Chiefs of the Staff

Assistants to the Chief of the Staff

Footnotes

  1. Quoted in Bennett. Naval Battles of the First World War. p. 84.
  2. Quoted in Bennett. Naval Battles of the First World War. p. 85.
  3. Hough. Former Naval Person. p. 64.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Black. The British Naval Staff in the First World War. p. 247.

Bibliography