Difference between revisions of "William Wordsworth Fisher"

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==Early Life & Career==
 
==Early Life & Career==
Fisher was born at Blatchington Court, Seaford, 26 March 1875, the fifth son and eighth child of Herbert William Fisher, vice-warden of the Stannaries. His eldest brother was H. A. L. Fisher [q.v.] . He entered the training ship Britannia in July 1888. As midshipman he served on the Cape of Good Hope station for three years, in the Raleigh, flagship, which often made the longer passages under sail alone.
+
Sub-Lieutenant Fisher was appointed to the {{UK-Hawke|f=t}} on 13 January, 1896.<ref>"Naval & Military Intelligence". ''The Times''. Tuesday, 14 January, 1896  Issue '''34786''', col A, p. 10.</ref>
  
As sub-lieutenant (1894) and later as lieutenant (1896), Fisher served in the Mediterranean before qualifying as a gunnery lieutenant in 1900. The next year he joined the Canopus in the Mediterranean Fleet. He was already recognized by his contemporaries as a man of great ability and outstanding character, possessing exceptional talents as a leader of men. In 1903 he was appointed a senior staff officer at Whale Island, but having left after a disagreement with Captain (Sir) P. M. Scott [q.v.] , he was appointed to the King Edward VII, flagship, in January 1905 at the request of the commander-in-chief of the Atlantic Fleet, Vice-Admiral Sir W. H. May [q.v.] . He took a prominent share in the renaissance of scientific naval gunnery then in progress; he was promoted commander in June 1906, at the age of thirty-one, and joined the Albemarle, flagship of the rear-admiral of the Atlantic Fleet, as executive officer. Before he joined, her ship's company were slack and discontented, but the new commander in the space of a few months brought about a great improvement and he earned glowing reports from his captain, R. F. Scott [q.v.] , later of Antarctic fame, and from both the rear-admiral and the commander-in-chief. In 1908 he was executive officer of the Indomitable when she took the Prince of Wales to Canada, and he was appointed M.V.O. on completion of the voyage. In May 1909 he became flag commander, in the Dreadnought, to Admiral May, commander-in-chief of the Home Fleet, a position principally concerned with the gunnery of the fleet but also involving close study of naval tactics, to the development of which the commander-in-chief devoted much of the work of the Home Fleet during his two years in command. Fisher accompanied the admiral when he left the fleet to become commander-in-chief at Plymouth; and was promoted to captain in 1912.
+
As {{LieutRN}} (G) in {{UK-KingEdwardVII}}, as enterprising naval persons were fairly required to do, Fisher exploited a gap in the rules of a pre-war prize firing to have all his light gun crews use the same single, slavishly perfected and tweaked gun mount. It sported a super-sized telescope and the results were astounding: crew after crew was hitting 19 out of 20 rounds on a 10-foot square target at over a thousand yards. The winning performance inspired rule changes for the coming year's competition.<ref>Usborne. p. 4.</ref>
  
==Great War Service==
+
He qualified as an Interpreter in French at some point.
Five months later Fisher was appointed to command the battleship St. Vincent in the Home Fleet, then flagship of Rear-Admiral (Sir) S. A. Gough-Calthorpe [q.v.] ; he remained in her for four and a half years. By the time war broke out in 1914 he had brought the St. Vincent to the highest pitch of efficiency, and moreover was able to maintain the morale of his ship's company at high pitch even in the somewhat depressing conditions which the strategic situation imposed on the Grand Fleet. The St. Vincent, which ceased to be a flagship in 1916, was in the battle of Jutland. In May 1917, six months after Sir John Jellicoe [q.v.] left the fleet to become first sea lord, Fisher was called to the Admiralty as director of the recently formed anti-submarine division, in succession to Rear-Admiral A. L. Duff [q.v.] , a position which he held with marked distinction up to the end of the war, earning golden opinions from all, civilian men of science who were called in at his suggestion, as well as British and American naval officers. His great share of the credit for the final defeat of the U-boat campaign was recognized by the dedication to him of Sir Henry Newbolt's unofficial Naval History of the War, 1914–1918 (1920).
+
  
==Flag Captain and Flag Rank==
+
Fisher was promoted to the rank of {{CommRN}} on 30 June, 1906<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 45.</ref> and to {{CaptRN}} on 1 July, 1912.<ref>''The London Gazette'': [http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/28623/pages/4748 no. 28623.  p. 4748.]  2 July, 1912.</ref>
In April 1919 Fisher returned to the sea in command of the Iron Duke, flagship of the Mediterranean Fleet, and in August 1919, when the new commander-in-chief, Admiral Sir John De Robeck [q.v.] , arrived, Fisher became his chief of staff with the rank of commodore, 2nd class. Throughout the troubled times in the Near East he was De Robeck's right-hand man and a particularly valued counsellor in a situation which was never free from problems and difficulties. In 1922 De Robeck transferred from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic Fleet and Fisher continued as his chief of staff, first with the rank of commodore, 1st class and, from November 1922, as rear-admiral. When De Robeck hauled down his flag in 1924 Fisher was appointed rear-admiral in the first battle squadron (flag in the Barham) and returned once more to the Mediterranean for an uneventful year.
+
  
In August 1926 Fisher was appointed director of Naval Intelligence; but the following April he joined the Board of Admiralty as fourth sea lord. It was promotion in status, but the work was not to his taste and he was delighted when he was translated in 1928 to the even more responsible post, also with a seat on the Board, of deputy chief of the Naval Staff. He had become a vice-admiral three months earlier, and in his new office was directly concerned with naval policy on the highest plane. It was a difficult period for the sea lords, under successive governments committed to disarmament and naval limitation. Fisher was much exercised regarding the moral and constitutional obligations of the sea lords in such a situation, and what action it was their duty to take if their professional judgement regarding standards of security should be overruled on political grounds.
+
He was appointed to command the {{UK-StVincent|f=t}} on 10 December, 1912{{NLDec14|p. 379}} as Flag Captain. He remained in her until 10 May, 1917, though he had ceased being Flag Captain on 24 October, 1915.<ref>Fisher Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 45.</ref>
  
Fortunately, reductions were not pressed beyond those which Fisher felt that he could conscientiously accept. To him, and to the divisions of the Naval Staff working under him, fell the tasks of working out the voluminous technical details involved in the negotiations for the Naval Treaty of London (1930) and of marshalling the strategical arguments against any over-drastic limitations urged for political ends. That the treaty was not more crippling than it proved to be when published, his brother officers attributed chiefly to Fisher's able advocacy.
+
==Great War==
 +
He was appointed an Additional Member of the Third Class, or Companion, in the Military Division of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (C.B.) on 1 January, 1918.<ref>''The London Gazette'': [http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/30451/supplements/80 (Supplement) no. 30451.  p. 80.]  1 January, 1918.</ref>
  
In the autumn of 1930 Fisher was appointed vice-admiral commanding the first battle squadron (flag in the Revenge and the Resolution) and second-in-command of the Mediterranean Fleet. That appointment was something of a disappointment to him, since a deputy chief of the Naval Staff could usually expect to become a commander-in-chief on resuming sea service; but he gave no sign of it, and no commander-in-chief could have had a more loyal lieutenant than Admiral Sir Alfred Ernle Montacute (afterwards Lord) Chatfield had in him for the next year and a half. Together they devoted much attention to anti-aircraft gunnery and to the hitherto neglected problems of night fighting between heavy ships. He was now able to exercise to the full his talent for leadership, in a wider sphere than hitherto. That quality stood him, and the ships of the battle squadron under his command, in good stead in 1931, when cuts in naval pay led to the mutiny in the Home Fleet at Invergordon in September. That there was no similar breakdown in the morale or discipline of the Mediterranean Fleet was due in no small measure to Fisher's personal influence on all those under his command.
+
He commanded [[H.M.S. St. Vincent (1908)|''St. Vincent'']] at the [[Battle of Jutland]], operating with the [[Grand Fleet]]'s [[First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|First Battle Squadron]]. [[H.M.S. St. Vincent at the Battle of Jutland|He reported]] firing 96 seemingly accurate shells by director without suffering damage.
  
==Mediterranean Command==
+
==Post-War==
In July 1932 Fisher was promoted admiral and the following October, after six months unemployed at home, he took over the Mediterranean command from Chatfield (flag in the Resolution and later the Queen Elizabeth). Within three weeks he was able to say that he had seen practically every officer and man under his command; and within a year he had visited almost every part of his station. He continued the series of exercises and experiments in night fighting begun under his predecessor, and was able to demonstrate the progress achieved in that important province in a spectacular manner in the combined fleet exercises of 1934. His work in that respect bore valuable fruit in the battle of Cape Matapan, fought four years after his death. Wherever he went, whatever country he visited round the Mediterranean, he was received with every honour and left with the friendship and appreciation of all. An example of his talents in this direction was furnished by the affection, born of his insight, understanding, and sympathy, with which he was regarded by the people of Malta, and of one small Maltese village in particular.
+
Fisher was promoted to the rank of {{RearRN}} on 1 November, 1922, vice [[John Frederick Ernest Green|Green]].<ref>''The London Gazette'': [http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/32764/pages/7873 no. 32764. p. 7873.]  7 November, 1922.</ref>
  
In the summer of 1935 Fisher brought the Mediterranean Fleet home for the jubilee review at Spithead, at which he was the senior admiral afloat. Returning to his station after those ceremonies he soon found himself immersed in more serious events, for the Italo-Abyssinian war made it necessary to assemble in the Eastern Mediterranean under his command practically the whole of the Royal Navy outside the Home Fleet. This great fleet had to be concentrated at Alexandria and maintained for months on end in instant readiness for attack, with few if any opportunities for relaxation or recreation for the greatly increased numbers of officers and men, and at first no organized facilities for such alleviations. That the morale and spirit of all men of the fleet remained of the highest was due in great measure to the example, wise conduct, and unrivalled personal influence of Fisher as commander-in-chief, an influence which was even enhanced by the personal tragedy which overtook him at the height of the crisis by the death in a flying accident of his elder son.
+
He was promoted to the rank of {{ViceRN}} on 15 January, 1928, vice [[Henry Ralph Crooke|Crooke]].<ref>''The London Gazette'': [http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/33349/pages/440 no. 33349.  p. 440.]  20 January, 1928.</ref>
  
It was not until the end of March 1936 that tension had relaxed enough for the government to authorize a change of commander-in-chief. Fisher turned over the command to Admiral Sir Dudley Pound and after only three and a half months' rest was appointed commander-in-chief at Portsmouth. He was a tired man by then and the coronation celebrations in the following May, with another Spithead review, threw an even greater strain upon him. A month later, taking the salute at a King's Birthday parade on Southsea Common, he collapsed from fatigue before it was over. A few days later, 24 June 1937, he died in London and was buried at sea with full naval honours.
+
On the occasion of the King's birthday he was appointed an Ordinary Member of the Second Class, or Knight Commander, in the Military Division of the Order of the Bath (K.C.B.) on 3 June, 1929.<ref>''The London Gazette'': [http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/33501/supplements/3667 (Supplement) no. 33501. p. 3667.] 3 June, 1929.</ref>
 
+
Fisher was appointed C.B. in 1918, C.V.O. in 1924, K.C.B. in 1929, and G.C.B. and G.C.V.O. in 1935. He married in 1907 Cecilia, youngest daughter of Francis Warre Warre-Cornish, and had two sons and two daughtersShe passed away on [[30 January]], [[1965]] at St. Mary's Cottage Hospital, Hampton.
+
  
 
==Assessment==
 
==Assessment==
 
[[Arthur Marder (Naval Historian)|Marder]] wrote of Fisher:
 
[[Arthur Marder (Naval Historian)|Marder]] wrote of Fisher:
  
:But for his death when C.-in-C., Portsmouth, he would probably have succeeded Chatfield and become, no doubt, one of the great First Sea Lords in British naval history.<ref>Marder.  ''From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow''.  '''II'''.  p. 16.</ref>  
+
<blockquote>But for his death when C.-in-C., Portsmouth, he would probably have succeeded Chatfield and become, no doubt, one of the great First Sea Lords in British naval history.<ref>Marder.  ''From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow''.  '''II'''.  p. 16.</ref> </blockquote>
 
+
==Footnotes==
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{{reflist}}
+
  
 
==Bibliography==
 
==Bibliography==
Line 41: Line 35:
 
*"Obituary" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Tuesday, 2 February, 1962.  Issue '''56235''', col E, pg. 14.
 
*"Obituary" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Tuesday, 2 February, 1962.  Issue '''56235''', col E, pg. 14.
 
*[[William Milbourne James|James, Admiral Sir William Milbourne, Royal Navy]] (1943).  ''Admiral Sir William Fisher''.  London: Macmillan & Co. Ltd.
 
*[[William Milbourne James|James, Admiral Sir William Milbourne, Royal Navy]] (1943).  ''Admiral Sir William Fisher''.  London: Macmillan & Co. Ltd.
*{{BibMarderFDSFII}}
+
*{{MarderFDSFII}}
 +
*{{UsborneBlast}}
 
{{refend}}
 
{{refend}}
  
 
==Papers==
 
==Papers==
 
{{refbegin}}
 
{{refbegin}}
*[http://www.nmm.ac.uk/collections/archive/catalogue/record.cfm?ID=FHR Papers in the possession of the National Maritime Museum.]
+
*[http://collections.rmg.co.uk/archive/objects/491751.html Papers in the possession of the National Maritime Museum.] For a detailed list see [[Fisher Papers at the National Maritime Museum]].
 
*[http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FWWFI Papers in the possession of Churchill College, Cambridge.]
 
*[http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FWWFI Papers in the possession of Churchill College, Cambridge.]
 
{{refend}}
 
{{refend}}
  
==Service Record==
+
==Service Records==
 
{{refbegin}}
 
{{refbegin}}
*The National Archives.  [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7892048&queryType=1&resultcount=72 ADM 196/44.]
+
*{{TNA|ADM 196/141.|D8120945}}
 +
*{{TNA|ADM 196/89.|D8115662}}
 +
*{{TNA|ADM 196/44.|D7576585}}
 
{{refend}}
 
{{refend}}
  
[[Category:1875 births|Fisher]]
+
==See Also==
[[Category:1937 deaths|Fisher]]
+
{{refbegin}}
[[Category:Personalities|Fisher]]
+
{{WP|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wordsworth_Fisher}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Gunnery Officers|Fisher]]
+
{{refend}}
[[Category:Commanding Officers of H.M.S. St. Vincent (1908)|Fisher]]
+
 
[[Category:Directors of the Anti-Submarine Division (Royal Navy)|Fisher]]
+
<div name=fredbot:appts>{{TabApptsBegin}}
[[Category:Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Iron Duke (1912)|Fisher]]
+
{{TabNaval}}
[[Category:Directors of Naval Intelligence (Royal Navy)|Fisher]]
+
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Herbert Edward Holmes-à-Court|The Hon. Herbert E. Holmes-à-Court]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. St. Vincent (1908)|Captain of H.M.S. ''St. Vincent'']]'''<br>10 Dec, 1912{{NLDec16|p. 397''u''}} &ndash; 10 May, 1917<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 45.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Edward Reeves|Edward Reeves]]'''}}
[[Category:Deputy Chiefs of the Naval Staff|Fisher]]
+
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Alexander Ludovic Duff|Alexander L. Duff]]'''|'''[[Anti-Submarine Division (Royal Navy)|Director of the Anti-Submarine Division]]'''<br>31 May, 1917{{UKNavalStaff|p. 122}} &ndash; 2 Jan, 1919<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 45.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Forster Delafield Arnold-Forster| Forster D. Arnold-Forster]]'''}}
[[Category:Commanders-in-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet (Royal Navy)|Fisher]]
+
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Eustace La Trobe Leatham|Eustace La T. Leatham]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Iron Duke (1912)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Iron Duke'']]'''<br>2 Jan, 1919{{NLAug19|p. 821}} &ndash; 26 Aug, 1919<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 45.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Richard Augustus Sandys Hill|Richard A. S. Hill]]'''}}
[[Category:Commanders-in-Chief, Portsmouth|Fisher]]
+
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''1BS Reformed in Mediterranean'''|'''[[First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|Vice-Admiral Commanding, First Battle Squadron]]'''<br>14 Oct, 1924<ref>"Naval and Military" (Official Appointments and Notices).  ''The Times''.  Tuesday, 14 October, 1924.  Issue '''43782''', col E, p. 6.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Cecil Minet Staveley|Cecil M. Staveley]]'''}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Admirals|Fisher]]
+
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''1BS Reformed in Mediterranean'''|'''[[First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|Rear-Admiral in the First Battle Squadron]]'''<br>14 Oct, 1924<ref>"Naval and Military" (Official Appointments and Notices).  ''The Times''.  Tuesday, 14 October, 1924.  Issue '''43782''', col E, p. 6.</ref> &ndash; 7 Sep, 1925<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Cecil Minet Staveley|Cecil M. Staveley]]'''}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Flag Officers|Fisher]]
+
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Alan Geoffrey Hotham|Alan G. Hotham]]'''|'''[[Naval Intelligence Division (Royal Navy)|Director of Naval Intelligence]]'''<br>17 Aug, 1926{{UKNavalStaff|p. 124}} &ndash; 1 Jan, 1927<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Barry Edward Domvile|Barry E. Domvile]]'''}}
 +
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Donald Kelly|John D. Kelly]]'''|'''[[Fourth Sea Lord|Fourth Sea Lord and Chief of Supplies and Transport]]'''<br>30 Apr, 1927<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref> &ndash; 2 Apr, 1928<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Vernon Harry Stuart Haggard|Vernon Haggard]]'''}}
 +
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Frederick Laurence Field|Sir Frederick L. Field]]'''|'''[[Deputy Chief of Naval Staff|Deputy Chief of Naval Staff]]'''<br>1 May, 1928<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref> &ndash; 30 Jun, 1930<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Frederic Charles Dreyer|Sir Frederic C. Dreyer]]'''}}
 +
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[William Archibald Howard Kelly|W. A. Howard Kelly]]'''|'''[[First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|Vice-Admiral Commanding, First Battle Squadron]]'''<br>12 Sep, 1930<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref> &ndash; 12 Apr, 1932<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Charles Morton Forbes|Charles M. Forbes]]'''}}
 +
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Alfred Ernle Montacute Chatfield, First Baron Chatfield|Sir Alfred E. M. Chatfield]]'''|'''[[Mediterranean Station|Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Station]]'''<br>30 Sep, 1932<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref> &ndash; 20 Mar, 1936<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Alfred Dudley Pickman Rogers Pound|Sir Alfred D. P. R. Pound]]'''}}
 +
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Donald Kelly|Sir John D. Kelly]]'''|'''[[Portsmouth Station|Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Station]]'''<br>13 Jul, 1936<ref>Fisher Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/44.}}  f. 231.</ref> &ndash; Jun, 1937|Succeeded by<br>'''[[William Henry Dudley Boyle, Twelfth Earl of Cork and Orrery|The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Cork and Orrery]]'''}}
 +
{{TabEnd}}
 +
</div name=fredbot:appts>
 +
 
 +
==Footnotes==
 +
{{reflist}}
 +
 
 +
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fisher, William Wordsworth}}
 +
 
 +
{{CatPerson|UK|1875|1937}}
 +
{{CatGunneryOfficer|UK}}
 +
{{CatAdm|UK}}
 +
{{CatBritannia|July, 1888}}
 +
{{CatInterpreter|UK|French}}

Revision as of 10:32, 24 August 2018

Admiral SIR William Wordsworth Fisher, G.C.B., G.C.V.O., Royal Navy (26 March, 1875 – 24 June, 1937) was an officer of the Royal Navy during the First World War.

Early Life & Career

Sub-Lieutenant Fisher was appointed to the first class protected cruiser Hawke on 13 January, 1896.[1]

As Lieutenant (G) in King Edward VII, as enterprising naval persons were fairly required to do, Fisher exploited a gap in the rules of a pre-war prize firing to have all his light gun crews use the same single, slavishly perfected and tweaked gun mount. It sported a super-sized telescope and the results were astounding: crew after crew was hitting 19 out of 20 rounds on a 10-foot square target at over a thousand yards. The winning performance inspired rule changes for the coming year's competition.[2]

He qualified as an Interpreter in French at some point.

Fisher was promoted to the rank of Commander on 30 June, 1906[3] and to Captain on 1 July, 1912.[4]

He was appointed to command the battleship St. Vincent on 10 December, 1912[5] as Flag Captain. He remained in her until 10 May, 1917, though he had ceased being Flag Captain on 24 October, 1915.[6]

Great War

He was appointed an Additional Member of the Third Class, or Companion, in the Military Division of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (C.B.) on 1 January, 1918.[7]

He commanded St. Vincent at the Battle of Jutland, operating with the Grand Fleet's First Battle Squadron. He reported firing 96 seemingly accurate shells by director without suffering damage.

Post-War

Fisher was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 1 November, 1922, vice Green.[8]

He was promoted to the rank of Vice-Admiral on 15 January, 1928, vice Crooke.[9]

On the occasion of the King's birthday he was appointed an Ordinary Member of the Second Class, or Knight Commander, in the Military Division of the Order of the Bath (K.C.B.) on 3 June, 1929.[10]

Assessment

Marder wrote of Fisher:

But for his death when C.-in-C., Portsmouth, he would probably have succeeded Chatfield and become, no doubt, one of the great First Sea Lords in British naval history.[11]

Bibliography

  • "Admiral Sir William Fisher" (Obituaries). The Times. Saturday, 26 June, 1937. Issue 47721, col C, pg. 16.
  • "Ecclesiastical News" (Official Appointments and Notices). The Times. Friday, 27 September, 1946. Issue 50567, col B, pg. 13.
  • "Obituary" (Obituaries). The Times. Tuesday, 2 February, 1962. Issue 56235, col E, pg. 14.
  • James, Admiral Sir William Milbourne, Royal Navy (1943). Admiral Sir William Fisher. London: Macmillan & Co. Ltd.
  • Marder, Arthur Jacob (1965). From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow, The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904-1919: The War Years : To the Eve of Jutland.. Volume II. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Usborne, C. V. (1935). Blast and Counter-Blast. London: John Murray.

Papers

Service Records

See Also

Naval Appointments
Preceded by
The Hon. Herbert E. Holmes-à-Court
Captain of H.M.S. St. Vincent
10 Dec, 1912[12] – 10 May, 1917[13]
Succeeded by
Edward Reeves
Preceded by
Alexander L. Duff
Director of the Anti-Submarine Division
31 May, 1917[14] – 2 Jan, 1919[15]
Succeeded by
Forster D. Arnold-Forster
Preceded by
Eustace La T. Leatham
Captain of H.M.S. Iron Duke
2 Jan, 1919[16] – 26 Aug, 1919[17]
Succeeded by
Richard A. S. Hill
Preceded by
1BS Reformed in Mediterranean
Vice-Admiral Commanding, First Battle Squadron
14 Oct, 1924[18]
Succeeded by
Cecil M. Staveley
Preceded by
1BS Reformed in Mediterranean
Rear-Admiral in the First Battle Squadron
14 Oct, 1924[19] – 7 Sep, 1925[20]
Succeeded by
Cecil M. Staveley
Preceded by
Alan G. Hotham
Director of Naval Intelligence
17 Aug, 1926[21] – 1 Jan, 1927[22]
Succeeded by
Barry E. Domvile
Preceded by
John D. Kelly
Fourth Sea Lord and Chief of Supplies and Transport
30 Apr, 1927[23] – 2 Apr, 1928[24]
Succeeded by
Vernon Haggard
Preceded by
Sir Frederick L. Field
Deputy Chief of Naval Staff
1 May, 1928[25] – 30 Jun, 1930[26]
Succeeded by
Sir Frederic C. Dreyer
Preceded by
W. A. Howard Kelly
Vice-Admiral Commanding, First Battle Squadron
12 Sep, 1930[27] – 12 Apr, 1932[28]
Succeeded by
Charles M. Forbes
Preceded by
Sir Alfred E. M. Chatfield
Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Station
30 Sep, 1932[29] – 20 Mar, 1936[30]
Succeeded by
Sir Alfred D. P. R. Pound
Preceded by
Sir John D. Kelly
Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Station
13 Jul, 1936[31] – Jun, 1937
Succeeded by
The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Cork and Orrery

Footnotes

  1. "Naval & Military Intelligence". The Times. Tuesday, 14 January, 1896 Issue 34786, col A, p. 10.
  2. Usborne. p. 4.
  3. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 45.
  4. The London Gazette: no. 28623. p. 4748. 2 July, 1912.
  5. The Navy List. (December, 1914). p. 379.
  6. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 45.
  7. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 30451. p. 80. 1 January, 1918.
  8. The London Gazette: no. 32764. p. 7873. 7 November, 1922.
  9. The London Gazette: no. 33349. p. 440. 20 January, 1928.
  10. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 33501. p. 3667. 3 June, 1929.
  11. Marder. From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow. II. p. 16.
  12. The Navy List. (December, 1916). p. 397u.
  13. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 45.
  14. The Naval Staff of the Admiralty. p. 122.
  15. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 45.
  16. The Navy List. (August, 1919). p. 821.
  17. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 45.
  18. "Naval and Military" (Official Appointments and Notices). The Times. Tuesday, 14 October, 1924. Issue 43782, col E, p. 6.
  19. "Naval and Military" (Official Appointments and Notices). The Times. Tuesday, 14 October, 1924. Issue 43782, col E, p. 6.
  20. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  21. The Naval Staff of the Admiralty. p. 124.
  22. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  23. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  24. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  25. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  26. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  27. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  28. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  29. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  30. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.
  31. Fisher Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/44. f. 231.