Difference between revisions of "Sydney Robert Fremantle"
Simon Harley (talk | contribs) |
Simon Harley (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
==Lieutenant== | ==Lieutenant== | ||
− | |||
− | |||
==Captain== | ==Captain== |
Revision as of 16:03, 16 March 2011
Admiral SIR Sydney Fremantle, G.C.B., M.V.O., Royal Navy (16 November, 1867 – 29 April, 1958) was an officer of the Royal Navy during the First World War. He is chiefly remembered for his command of the First Battle Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet at the time of the Scuttling of the High Sea Fleet in 1919.
Family Background
Sydney Robert Fremantle's great-grandfather was Admiral Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle (1765-1819), a friend of Nelson who had commanded Neptune, third ship in the weather division at Trafalgar. Sir Thomas died in 1819 while in command of the Mediterranean Fleet at Naples. Fremantle's grandfather was Thomas Francis Fremantle, First Baron Cottesloe (1798-1890), a leading Tory politician who in retirement settled at Swanbourne, Bucks.[1] Admiral Sir Thomas Fremantle had bought a property later known as "The Old House" in Swanbourne, which had passed on his death to the First Baron Cottesloe. Cottesloe then built a large house (now Swanbourne House School). A third house in the village known as "The Cottage" was the home of Fremantle's great-uncle Stephen who had retired from the Royal Navy in 1860 with the rank of Captain. Upon Stephen's death The Cottage passed to Fremantle's father, Edmund Robert Fremantle, then serving on the Australian Station in the Navy.[2]
Early Life & Career
In 1877 Fremantle was sent to Mr. Bartholomew's School at Park House, Reading, a prepatory school for Marlborough. He believed that his mother intended him to join the Royal Engineers. He spent three years at Park House and had, in his own words, "very pleasant recollections of the school. The education was, I suppose, good, though its classical foundation was of little value to me in after life, and we were taught only a minimum of mathematics, very little history or geography, no literature, and no science of any description."[3] Having decided at the age of twelve to follow his father into the Royal Navy, Fremantle was sent to Burney's Royal Academy at Gosport. "It was a rough place, but the cramming was good, the masters were genial and capable, and we boys had a pretty free hand out of school." He passed the examination for entry into H.M.S. Britannia first out of batch, and with his term of twenty-three cadets entered Britannia in January, 1881. The Captain was his second cousin, Richard Wells, "whom we found tolerant, easy-going, and kind-hearted."[4]
Lieutenant
Captain
Fremantle was promoted to the rank of Captain on 30 June, 1903.[5]
He was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 7 December, 1913, vice Keppel.[6] He was forty-six years old when promoted to Flag Rank.
Admiralty Service
War Division
Dreadnought
Signal Committee
Desirous of an appointment afloat, Fremantle arranged through the Naval Secretary to the First Lord of the Admiralty, his friend Commodore, First Class Allan Everett, that a request he had written to that effect be put on top of Churchill's office basket the next morning. The paper was returned, with an inscription in a corner in red ink that read: "Admiral Fremantle has done well as Head of the Signal Division, and deserves to be given a chance to be shot at." Soon after, Everett visited Fremantle in his room, and offered him the position of Second-in-Command of the Third Battle Squadron if he could be ready in forty-eight hours, or Second-in-Command of the First Battle Squadron if he could wait six weeks. Fremantle chose in favour of what he called the "bird in hand" and in forty-eight hours was on his way to Rosyth to join his flagship, Hibernia in the Third Battle Squadron.[7]
Sea Service during the First World War
Third Battle Squadron
Eastern Mediterranean Squadron
Ninth Cruiser Squadron
Second Cruiser Squadron
At the end of 1916 Fremantle was asked whether he wanted to remain in his present position or be sent to join the Grand Fleet. He replied that he wanted to join the Grand Fleet, "without hesitation" in his own words. A fortnight later Rear-Admiral Thomas D. L. Sheppard relieved him on 28 December, and Fremantle "had an enjoyable four days' rest at the hospitable house on the hill of the Colonial Secretary and his wife … My staff came home with me and we had a most comfortable and uneventful passage home in the Balmoral Castle, which chanced to be passing, and in which the suite de luxe provided the only cabins available." Upon returning to Britain, he spent two days in London buying new cold-weather gear to replace that lost in the Russell. he then journeyed to Scapa Flow, where he had an interview with the Commander-in-Chief, Sir David Beatty. He took command of the Second Cruiser Squadron on 14 January, 1917, flying his flag in Minotaur, which met him in Scapa and took him to the squadron's base in the Shetland Islands.[8]
FREMANTLE Sydney R MVO Rear Admiral RN 78A019 Commanding 2nd Cruiser Sqdn. C-in-C Grand Fleet 18.04.19 Gazetted
Action between H.M.S. Achilles & German Raider
Mentioned in Despatches That the Raider was intercepted and brought to action is the result of much patient work under trying conditions. Much credit is due to Rear Admiral Sydney R. Fremantle for his conduct of the Second Cruiser Squadron Patrol.[9]
Aegean Squadron
Further Sea Service
Board of Admiralty
First Battle Squadron
High Sea Fleet
Mediterranean Sojourn
Portsmouth Command
Retirement
Having stood down at Portsmouth, Fremantle decided to settle in his London flat so as to be near to his father, then in his ninetieth year. His wife Leila, who was in poor health, remained at their home in Cosham. Being only fifty-eight years old, but with no prospect of further service in the Navy, the Admiralty put pressure on him to retire. Fremantle presented himself to the First Lord of the Admiralty, then Sir William Bridgeman, and informed him that he did not wish to retire from the Service in the possible event of war, and also that he wished to equal the example of his father and of his great-uncle, who both reached the top of the Admirals' list.[10] Upon the death of Admiral of the Fleet John de Robeck, and the subsequent elevation of Henry Oliver to Admiral of the Fleet, the Admiralty sent Fremantle an advance copy of The Navy List showing him at the head of the list of Admirals. His goal reached, he expressed his wish to retire, but for it to be announced as being "at his own request" and not in order to further the advancement of junior officers.[11] He was placed on the Retired List on 5 April, 1928.[12]
In 1949 Fremantle published his memoirs, My Naval Career: 1880—1928. Naval historian Arther Marder, with whom Fremantle corresponded in his later years, wrote of the memoirs, "One of the more informative of naval autobiographies, with excellent descriptions of leading personalities."[13]
Mention in Despatches
FREMANTLE Sydney R MVO Rear Admiral RN 78A019
Commanding 2nd Cruiser Sqdn. C-in-C Grand Fleet 18.04.19 Gazetted
Action between H.M.S. Achilles & German Raider Mentioned in Despatches
That the Raider was intercepted and brought to action is the result of much patient work under trying conditions. Much credit is due to Rear Admiral Sydney R. Fremantle for his conduct of the Second Cruiser Squadron Patrol.
Who was Who
FREMANTLE, Admiral Sir Sydney Robert GCB, 1929 (KCB, 1919; CB 1917); MVO 1909
Born 16 Nov. 1867; e s of late Admiral Hon. Sir E. R. Fremantle, GCB, GCVO; m 1st, 1896, Leila Hope (d 1930), d of late Lieut David Delvin Fremantle, RN; two s two d; 2nd, 1931, Geraldine, widow of Lt-Col J. S. FitzGerald and d of Col Cooke-Collis, CMG, DL; died 29 April 1958
CAREER Entered RN 1881; Lieut 1887; Comdr 1899; Capt. 1903; Rear-Adm. 1913; Vice-Adm. 1919; Adm. 1922; served Dardanelles, 1915 (despatches); Commanded 9th Cruiser Squadron, 1916; 2nd Cruiser Squadron, 1917; Ægean Squadron, 1917–18; Deputy Chief of Naval Staff, 1918–19; Vice-Admiral commanding First Battle Squadron, 1919–21; Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Station, 1923–26; retired list, 1928; is a Commander of Legion of Honour, Commander of the Order of the Redeemer of Greece, a Commander of the Order of St Maurice and St Lazarus of Italy, and has the 2nd Class of the Order of the Rising Sun of Japan, and the US of America Distinguished Service Medal; awarded Beaufort Testimonial, 1888; Goodenough Gold Medal, 1888
PUBLICATIONS My Naval Career, 1880–1928, 1949; part author Nautical Terms and Phrases in French and English; article on Naval Ordnance in Ency. Brit.; Magazine and Press articles on Naval subjects
RECREATIONS Golf, dowsing
CLUB Naval and Military
ADDRESS 30 Bullingham Mansions, Church Street, Kensington, W8 Western 2071
Footnotes
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. p. 13.
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. p. 14.
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. pp. 18-19.
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. p. 19.
- ↑ London Gazette: no. 27572. p. 4187. 3 July, 1903.
- ↑ London Gazette: no. 28780. p. 9083. 9 December, 1913.
- ↑ Fremantle. pp. 176-177.
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. p. 215.
- ↑ Information courtesy of Dennis a Feary.
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. p. 349.
- ↑ Fremantle. My Naval Career. pp. 349-350.
- ↑ London Gazette: no. 33376. p. 2740. 17 April, 1928.
- ↑ Marder. From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow. V. p. 376.
Bibliography
- "Adml. Sir Sydney Fremantle" (Obituaries). The Times. Wednesday, 30 April, 1958. Issue 54138, col B, pg. 14.
- Fremantle, Admiral Sir Sydney Robert (1949). My Naval Career: 1880–1928. London: Hutchinson & Co. (Publishers) Ltd.
- Parry, Ann (1971). The Admirals Fremantle: 1788-1920. London: Chatto & Windus. ISBN 070111603X.
Service Record
- The National Archives. ADM 196/42.
Naval Offices | ||
Preceded by Sir A. Gordon H. W. Moore |
Rear-Admiral Commanding, Ninth Cruiser Squadron 1916 |
Succeeded by Thomas D. L. Sheppard |
Preceded by Herbert L. Heath |
Rear-Admiral Commanding, Second Squadron 1917 |
Succeeded by Sir Reginald G. O. Tupper |
Preceded by Sir Cecil F. Thursby |
Rear-Admiral Commanding, Ægean Squadron 1917 – 1918 |
Succeeded by Arthur Hayes-Sadler |
Preceded by Sir Henry F. Oliver |
Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff 1918 – 1919 |
Succeeded by James A. Fergusson |
Preceded by Sir Charles E. Madden |
Vice-Admiral Commanding, First Battle Squadron 1919 – 1921 |
Succeeded by Sir William C. M. Nicholson |
Preceded by The Hon. Sir Somerset A. Gough-Calthorpe |
Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth 1923 – 1926 |
Succeeded by Sir Osmond de B. Brock |
- 1867 births
- 1958 deaths
- Personalities
- H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship) Entrants of January, 1881
- Winners of the Beaufort Testimonial
- Winners of the Goodenough Medal
- Royal Navy Gunnery Officers
- Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Albion (1898)
- Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Cæsar (1896)
- Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Lancaster (1902)
- Assistant Directors of Naval Mobilisation (Royal Navy)
- Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Dreadnought (1906)
- Heads of the Signal Section (Royal Navy)
- Rear-Admirals in the Third Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)
- Rear-Admirals in the Eastern Mediterranean Squadron (Royal Navy)
- Rear-Admirals Commanding, Ninth Cruiser Squadron (Royal Navy)
- Rear-Admirals Commanding, Second Cruiser Squadron (Royal Navy)
- Rear-Admirals Commanding, Ægean Squadron (Royal Navy)
- Deputy Chiefs of the Naval Staff
- Vice-Admirals Commanding, First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)
- Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth
- Royal Navy Admirals
- Royal Navy Flag Officers