Difference between revisions of "Francis Charles Bridgeman Bridgeman"

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==Bibliography==
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*Ross, Stewart (1998). ''Admiral Sir Francis Bridgeman: An Officer and a Gentleman''. London: Baily's. ISBN 0952362880.
  
 
[[Category:Personalities|Bridgeman, Francis Charles Bridgeman]]
 
[[Category:Personalities|Bridgeman, Francis Charles Bridgeman]]

Revision as of 15:52, 16 September 2008

Admiral Sir Francis Charles Bridgeman Bridgeman, G.C.B., G.C.V.O. (7 December, 1848 – 17 February, 1929) was an officer of the Royal Navy.

Early Life & Career

Bridgeman was born Francis Charles Bridgeman-Simpson at Babworth, Nottinghamshire, on 7 December, 1848. He was the fourth son of the Reverend William Bridgeman Simpson (1813–1895), rector of Babworth (who was nephew of Orlando Bridgeman, 1st Earl of Bradford), and his wife, Lady Frances Laura Fitzwilliam (1813–1887), daughter of Charles William, 5th Earl Fitzwilliam. He resumed the family name of Bridgeman in 1896. He entered the Britannia as a naval cadet in 1862, and after serving as Midshipman in the Pacific and the Channel fleets, in 1868 went for nearly four years to the Blanche on the Australian station, being promoted Sub-Lieutenant in 1869. Bridgeman was promoted Lieutenant in 1873, and, having taken up gunnery, served for nearly four years on the China station in the Encounter as Gunnery Lieutenant: while doing the same duty in the Téméraire in the Mediterranean he was promoted Commander in 1884. In this rank he served in the Triumph, Sir Michael Culme-Seymour's Flagship in the Pacific, from 1885 to 1888, and afterwards in the gunnery training ship Excellent until he was promoted Captain in 1890. In 1889 he married Emily Charlotte (1842–1922), daughter of Thomas Shiffner, of Westergate, Sussex; they had no children.

Captaincy and Flag Rank

Bridgeman's first ten years as Captain were mainly employed as Flag Captain to Culme-Seymour in the Channel Fleet and the Mediterranean, and at Portsmouth. In October, 1900 he went on half pay until January, 1903, when he commissioned the Drake and joined Admiral W. H. Fawkes's cruiser squadron. In August of that year he was promoted Royal Navy; he hoisted his flag as Second-in-Command to Lord Charles Beresford in the Channel Fleet for a year in June, 1904, and in 1906 he again served as Second-in-Command to Beresford, this time in the Mediterranean Fleet. In March, 1907, having reached the rank of Vice-Admiral, he was selected as Commander-in-Chief of the newly formed Home Fleet, and held this command for two years with his flag in the new battleship Dreadnought. From 1910 until March, 1911 he was Second Sea Lord at the Admiralty under Reginald McKenna. He then returned as Admiral to the command of the Home Fleet; but in December of the same year he came back to the Admiralty as First Sea Lord under Winston Churchill, on the retirement of Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson. Twelve months later he resigned. On his resignation he was promoted G.C.B., having been created K.C.V.O. in 1907 and K.C.B. in 1908, and promoted G.C.V.O. in 1911. In another year he had reached the age limit of his rank and was placed on the retired list. On leaving the Admiralty he went to live at Copgrove Hall, Burton Leonard, near Harrogate, his country seat, and rarely went to London except to attend court functions in his capacity as Vice-Admiral of the United Kingdom, to which he was appointed in 1920 in succession to his old chief, Sir Michael Culme-Seymour.

Bridgeman was a man of singularly handsome presence, and a fine sea officer with a great knowledge of the service. He was a strong supporter of the naval reforms and strategic schemes of Lord Fisher, and gave him loyal and valuable support in the formation of the Home Fleet originally created out of the reserve divisions at the home ports. When Bridgeman returned to its command in March, 1911, it had been combined with the Channel Fleet, and he did fine work in organizing and training it for the duties which it was later to fulfil with the Grand Fleet during the First World War.

First Sea Lord

Bridgeman had had no previous administrative experience at the Admiralty before he became Second Sea Lord, but he was regarded as a man of sound judgement and commanded confidence in the fleet. When Churchill became First Lord and reconstituted the Board of Admiralty, he chose Bridgeman as his First Sea Lord. Bridgeman was a loyal supporter of Churchill in his plans for the constitution of a naval war staff. Nevertheless he soon became annoyed at Churchill's methods, such as sending signals to the fleet without the authority of the Board and circulating peremptory orders to the other Sea Lords. Churchill, in turn, after a year apparently found Bridgeman unsatisfactory and used his poor health as an excuse to require his resignation. He loyally accepted the decision, but the form in which it was communicated to him caused much resentment, and was the subject of an acrimonious debate in the House of Commons.

Bridgeman was popular in his home county of Yorkshire, and after his retirement devoted himself to the pursuits of a country squire. After the war he was chairman of the divisional council for demobilization and resettlement in the Yorkshire and East Midland areas. He died at Nassau in the Bahamas on 17 February, 1929; his burial took place at St. Michael and All Angels, Copgrove, on 4 March, 1929.

Wealth at death; £138,354 5s. 11d.: Probate; 31 July, 1929

Naval Office
Preceded by
Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson
First Sea Lord
1911 – 1912
Succeeded by
HSH Prince Louis of Battenberg

Bibliography

  • Ross, Stewart (1998). Admiral Sir Francis Bridgeman: An Officer and a Gentleman. London: Baily's. ISBN 0952362880.