Robert Stewart Phipps Hornby: Difference between revisions

From The Dreadnought Project
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Remove Categories for ship captains and gunnery officers)
(Remove handwritten Categories for Flag Officers... these will be templated soon)
Line 71: Line 71:
[[Category:Rear-Admirals Commanding, Cruiser Force E (Royal Navy)]]
[[Category:Rear-Admirals Commanding, Cruiser Force E (Royal Navy)]]
[[Category:Royal Navy Admirals]]
[[Category:Royal Navy Admirals]]
[[Category:Royal Navy Flag Officers]]

Revision as of 15:02, 23 August 2012

Admiral Robert Stewart Phipps Hornby, C.M.G., J.P., Royal Navy (9 July, 1866 – 13 August, 1956) was an officer of the Royal Navy.

Life & Career

Hornby was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant dated 9 July, 1886.[1]

Hornby was promoted to the rank of Commander on 30 June, 1898.[2]

On 1 January, 1903 he was promoted to the rank of Captain.[3]

Appointed Captain of H.M.S. Vernon on 16 October, 1908, a post he would retain for three years. [4]

He was appointed command of the battlecruiser Inflexible on 8 May, 1912.[5]

Phipps Hornby was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 15 May, 1913, vice Brock.[6]

Great War

On 1 August, 1914, Hornby was appointed Rear-Admiral Commanding Cruiser Force E (the Eleventh Cruiser Squadron), with his flag in the Doris. On 5 September he transferred his flag to the battleship Glory as Rear-Admiral Commanding Cruiser Force H on the North America and West Indies Station. In February, 1915, he became Rear-Admiral Commanding on the North America and West Indies Station, and on 7 March became Second-in-Command on that station to Vice-Admiral Sir George E. Patey. He hauled down his flag on 21 June, and his last day on full pay was on the 27th.[7][8]

In September, 1917, he was appointed president of an Admiralty Committee to investigate a range of topics including the suitability of the existing system of torpedo personnel, though it had not issued its report as of late August, 1918.[9]

Hornby was promoted to the rank of Vice-Admiral, vice Peirse, on 11 March, 1918.[10]

Post-War

Hornby was promoted to the rank of Admiral in the place of Sir Stanley Colville, placed on the Retired List, on 4 April, 1922.[11] Hornby was himself placed on the Retired List "at his own request" on 6 April.[12]

Footnotes

  1. London Gazette: no. 25660. p. 6612. 31 December, 1886.
  2. London Gazette: no. 26983. p. 3984. 1 July, 1898.
  3. London Gazette: no. 27512. p. 3. 2 January, 1903.
  4. Blond. Technology and Tradition. p. 167.
  5. Roberts. Battlecruisers. p. 122.
  6. London Gazette: no. 28719. p. 3514. 16 May, 1913.
  7. Hornby Service Record. p. 338.
  8. "Squadrons and Senior Naval Officers in Existence on 11th November, 1918, and Which Have Now Ceased to Exist." The National Archives. ADM 6/461. p. 34.
  9. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1917, p. vi.
  10. London Gazette: no. 30599. p. 3756. 26 March, 1918.
  11. London Gazette: no. 32668. p. 2934. 11 April, 1922.
  12. London Gazette: no. 32672. p. 3030. 14 April, 1922.

Bibliography

  • "Adml. Phipps Hornby" (Obituaries). The Times. Wednesday, 15 August, 1956. Issue 53610, col D, pg. 10.

Papers

Service Records


Naval Appointments
Preceded by
New Command
Rear-Admiral Commanding,
Cruiser Force E

1914
Succeeded by
Henry L. Tottenham