Difference between revisions of "Henry Francis Oliver"

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*"Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Oliver" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Monday, 18 October, 1965.  Issue '''56455''', col A, pg. 20.
 
*"Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Oliver" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Monday, 18 October, 1965.  Issue '''56455''', col A, pg. 20.
*[[William Milbourne James|James, Admiral Sir William]] (1956).  ''A Great Seaman: The Life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Oliver''.  London: H. F. & G. Witherby Ltd..
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*[[William Milbourne James|James, Admiral Sir William]] (1956).  ''A Great Seaman: The Life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry F. Oliver''.  London: H. F. & G. Witherby Ltd..
 
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Revision as of 17:04, 5 December 2010

Admiral of the Fleet SIR Henry Francis Oliver, G.C.B., K.C.M.G., M.V.O., HON. L.L.D., Royal Navy (22 January, 1865 – 15 October, 1965) was an officer of the Royal Navy during the First World War.

Early Life & Career

Oliver was born in Lochside, near Kelso, on 22 January, 1865, was the fifth child in a family of seven sons and three daughters of Robert Oliver and his wife, Margaret Strickland. To his father, who came from sound yeoman stock and farmed 2000 acres of good border land, and to his talented mother, he owed a strong constitution and a vigorous approach to life.

Entering the Britannia in 1878 Oliver joined a navy in which sail, still dying hard, developed fine seamen. More than once his quick reactions averted disaster. On promotion to lieutenant in 1888 he volunteered for surveying. This service offered better pay and unusual activities abroad, but slender prospects, and in 1894 he returned to general service and qualified as a navigator.

After varied service in cruisers Oliver was promoted to the rank of Commander on 31 December, 1899.[1] As navigating commander of the Majestic, wearing the flag of Vice-Admiral A. K. Wilson, he became widely known when they took the squadron at high speed from Northern Ireland to the Isles of Scilly in thick fog—a severe test of skill and nerve with the navigational aids then available. He was promoted to Captain in June 1903, unusually early for a navigator.

Selected by Sir John Fisher, Second Sea Lord, to improve the training and status of navigation specialists, Oliver established a school first in the Mercury, an old cruiser, and then in the old Royal Naval College in Portsmouth Dockyard, with the torpedo gunboat Dryad as name ship and floating tender. In 1905 he was appointed M.V.O., and in 1907, in the new armoured cruiser Achilles, led the navy in gunnery skill. Fisher, now First Sea Lord, summoned him to become his naval assistant, a strenuous post which he retained when Wilson succeeded Fisher in 1910. Returning to sea, Oliver again made gunnery history in the new battleship Thunderer in 1912.

Appointed Director of the Intelligence Division on the new Admiralty War Staff, Oliver faced increasing responsibilities as war approached. he was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 8 December, 1913, vice Gamble.[2] He was forty-eight years and ten months old on promotion to Flag Rank. On the outbreak of war, he established wireless interception stations, staffed to decipher enemy messages. In September, he preceded the First Lord Winston Churchill to Antwerp to prevent the advancing enemy from making use of German ships moored there. Working long hours with a small Belgian staff he personally disabled the engines of thirty-eight ships with explosive charges.

He was Churchill's naval secretary for a short while, but on Fisher's return as First Sea Lord in November Oliver became Chief of the Admiralty War Staff with the acting rank of Vice-Admiral. In this capacity he favoured the Dardanelles operations, introduced taut-wire measuring gear which greatly improved mine-laying accuracy, and was a general source of sound advice. In June, 1916 he was prompted K.C.B., having been appointed C.B. in 1913. In May, 1917 Sir John Jellicoe assumed the dual role of First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff and Oliver became Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff, with board status.

Like many of his senior contemporaries Oliver was temperamentally unable to delegate responsibility, even in detail—a major difficulty in creating an effective naval staff—and his ‘extraordinary power of continuous mental toil’, remarked on by Churchill, was now becoming strained. When Rear-Admiral Phillimore was promoted to command the Grand Fleet's aircraft carriers, Beatty asked for Halsey to command the the First Battle Cruiser Squadron. Jellicoe suggested Oliver instead, writing "I would be delighted to have him commanding a small squadron … I don't want to lose him here but on the other hand I don't want to keep him here to ruin his career."[3] Oliver was relieved as Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff in January, 1918, whereupon he was appointed K.C.M.G. In March he became Rear-Admiral commanding the First Battle Cruiser Squadron, Grand Fleet, in the Repulse, and saw the German fleet surrender off the Firth of Forth in November. When the Grand Fleet dispersed in 1919 he became Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet, as a Vice-Admiral in the King George V. The Reserve Fleet was later merged with his force.

In 1920 Oliver received an honorary L.L.D. (Edinburgh) and became Second Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Personnel, which gave him the painful task of reducing the navy list to peacetime needs. The drastic measures taken in 1922 were generally considered as fair and liberal as might be. Promoted to the rank of Admiral on 1 November, 1923,[4] in 1924 he declined the Portsmouth command in favour of the Atlantic Fleet, which he commanded with customary efficiency until 1927. He was promoted to Admiral of the Fleet and G.C.B. in 1928 and retired in 1933. He was restored to the Active List in 1940 but was denied wartime employment.

Oliver had married in June, 1914 Beryl Carnegy White (1882–1972), the only daughter of Francis Edward Joseph Carnegy, of Lour in Forfarshire. In the Second World War, Dame Beryl's Red Cross work kept the Olivers much in London, but the admiral regularly visited Scotland for shooting and fishing, his main recreations, together with carpentry. Among his other interests, the foremost was the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, of which he became Deputy Chairman. The verbal economy which gave him the nickname "Dummy" (derived presumably from "Dumby") Oliver did not conceal his solid worth from those who served him. His integrity, justice, foresight, judgement, and seamanship were evident throughout his career. He died at his home, 20 South Eaton Place, London, on 15 October, 1965.

Wealth at death; £15,089 9s.: Confirmation; 25 January, 1965.

Footnotes

  1. London Gazette: no. 27150. p. 3. 2 January, 1900.
  2. London Gazette: no. 28780. p. 9083. 9 December, 1913.
  3. Jellicoe Papers. II. p. 240.
  4. London Gazette: no. 32878. p. 7658. 9 November, 1923.

Bibliography

  • "Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Oliver" (Obituaries). The Times. Monday, 18 October, 1965. Issue 56455, col A, pg. 20.
  • James, Admiral Sir William (1956). A Great Seaman: The Life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry F. Oliver. London: H. F. & G. Witherby Ltd..

Papers

Service Record


Naval Office
Preceded by
Thomas Jackson
Director of the Intelligence Division
1913 – 1914
Succeeded by
W. Reginald Hall
Preceded by
The Hon. Horace L. A. Hood
Naval Secretary to the First Lord of the Admiralty
1914
Succeeded by
Charles Bartolomé
Preceded by
Sir F. C. Doveton Sturdee
Chief of the Admiralty War Staff
1914 – 1917
Succeeded by
Title Changed
Preceded by
New Position
Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff
1918 – 1918
Succeeded by
Sydney R. Fremantle
Preceded by
Sir Richard F. Phillimore
Rear-Admiral Commanding,
First Battle Cruiser Squadron

1918 – 1919
Succeeded by
Command Dispersed
Preceded by
Sir William C. Pakenham
Vice-Admiral Commanding,
Battle Cruiser Force

1919
Succeeded by
Command Dispersed
Preceded by
Sir John M. de Robeck
Vice-Admiral Commanding,
Second Battle Squadron

1919
Succeeded by
Sir Arthur C. Leveson
Preceded by
New Command
Vice-Admiral Commanding,
Home Fleet

1919
Succeeded by
Command Abolished
Preceded by
New Command
Vice-Admiral Commanding,
Reserve Fleet

1919 – 1920
Succeeded by
Sir Richard F. Phillimore
Preceded by
Sir Montague E. Browning
Second Sea Lord
1920 – 1924
Succeeded by
Sir Michael Culme-Seymour
Preceded by
Sir John M. de Robeck
Commander-in-Chief,
Atlantic Fleeet

1924 – 1927
Succeeded by
The Hon. Sir Hubert G. Brand