Annual Manoeuvres of 1901
The Royal Navy's Annual Manoeuvres of 1901 were described in documents issued publically from the Admiralty on 10 July.[1] An official report of the manoeuvres was later issued.
Scenario and Rules
Two fleets "B" and "X" would engage in a battle exercise between the 56th and 47th parallels. The event was umpired by Vice-Admiral Sir Robert Harris and Rear-Admirals James L. Hammet and Sir Baldwin Walker, Bart., with Lieutenant General J. F. Owen, R.A. helping to determine the effect of land defences.
Fleet "B"
Fleet "B" would would cruise the North Sea and would coal at any of the "fortified" (and unassailable, in this scenario) ports of Plymouth, Portland or Portsmouth, at which ports it also maintained forces of cruisers and torpedo craft. Britain was considered the territory of Fleet "B".
Main Fleet
- Major Units
- Revenge, Frederic William Fisher[Fact Check]
- Sans Pareil, Archibald James Pocklington
- Howe, Henry Louis Fleet
- Nile, Robert Sidney Rolleston
- Trafalgar, George Anson Primrose
- Benbow, Francis Raymond Pelly
- Anson, William Wilson
- Camperdown, Alvin Coote Corry
- Collingwood, Leslie Creery Stuart
- Colossus, James Edward Clifford Goodrich
- Edinburgh, Frederick Sidney Pelham
- Dreadnought, Henry Compton Anderson Baynes
- Amphitrite, William Blake Fisher
- Ariadne, William Stokes Rees
- Edgar, George Astley Callaghan
- Galatea, Robert Dalrymple Barwick Bruce[Fact Check]
- Imperieuse, Peyton Hoskyns
- Minerva, Charles Home Cochran
- Hyacinth, Robert Kyle McAlpine
- Forth, Edward Percy Ashe
- Andromache, unknown captain
- Apollo, Reginald Purves Cochran
- Pandora, Somerset Arthur Gough-Calthorpe
- Fox, Charles Hope Robertson
- Latona, Frederick Robert William Morgan
- Onyx, Gerald Oliver
- Destroyers from Portsmouth
Squadron "C"
Squadron "C" was a sub-component of Fleet "B" based on Plymouth
- Squadron "C" Main Force
- Squadron "C" Destroyers from Devonport
Squadron "D"
Squadron "D" was a sub-component of Fleet "B" based on Portland and Portsmouth
- Squadron "D" Main Force
- Squadron "D" Destroyers from Portsmouth
- Spiteful, unknown commander
- Starfish, Bernard St. George Collard
- Viper, William Speke
- Havock, Geoffrey Tatton Bowles
- Brazen, Christopher Powell Metcalfe?
- Dove, Geoffrey Tatton Bowles
- Wizard, John Ambrose Slee
- Violet, Edwyn Sinclair Alexander-Sinclair
- Electra, Cecil Dacre Staveley Raikes?
- Teazer, Leonard Andrew Boyd Donaldson
- Surly, Ernest Orford Ballantyne
- Sylvia, John Alexander Ingles?
- Hunter, Rudolf Miles Burmester
- Charger, George Parker Bevan
- Bullfinch, John Alexander Duncan
Under C-in-C, Plymouth
These ships based at Plymouth supported Fleet "B", the starred ships being for "examination service".
- Antelope, Oliver Adrian Stokes?
- Traveller*, unknown commander
- Tay, Guy de Lancy Ormsby Johnson
- T.B. 45, Richard Wyville Bromley
- T.B. 52, Robert Francis Pitcairn
- T.B. 53, Arthur Thomas Muir
- T.B. 54, John Knowles im Thurn
The Times indicates that T.B. 80 was to be involved as flotilla lead, but she is not listed in the official report.[2]
Under C-in-C, Portsmouth
These ships based at Portland and Portsmouth supported Fleet "B", the starred ships being for "examination service".
- Portland Ships
- Portsmouth Ships
Fleet "X"
Fleet "X" would cruise off the North Coast of Ireland, and be able to coal at the "fortified" (and unassailable) port of Queenstown and the Scilly Islands and maintain cruisers and torpedo craft at the Scillys and the Channel Islands. Ireland, the Scillys and the Channel Islands were territories of "X".
Main Fleet
- Major Units
- Majestic, Edward Eden Bradford?
- Magnificent, Arthur John Horsley?
- Prince George, Robert Archibald James Montgomerie?
- Jupiter, Sir Archibald B. Milne?
- Hannibal, Gerald Walter Russell?
- Mars, Henry Deacon Barry?
- Resolution, Alexander William Chisholm-Batten?
- Repulse, Spencer Henry Metcalfe Login?
- Diadem, Henry Leah?
- Niobe, John Denison?
- Hawke, Algernon Horatio Anson
- Immortalité, Sackville Hamilton Carden?
- Narcissus, Ernest Kindersley Loring?
- Furious, Frederick Tower Hamilton?
- Arrogant, Henry Charles Bertram Hulbert?
- Mersey, Charles Holcombe Dare
- Rainbow, Arthur Hale Smith-Dorrien
- Retribution, Robert Hathorn Johnston Stewart
- Pelorus, unknown commander
- Pactolus, Francis Alban Arthur Giffard Tate?
- Gleaner, Frank Henry Peyton?
- Fleet "X" Destroyers from Devonport
Squadron "Y"
Squadron "Y" was a sub-component of Fleet "X" based in the Scilly Islands
- Squadron "Y" Main Force
- Squadron "Y" Destroyers and T.Bs. from Chatham
- Lee, unknown commander
- Cynthia, James William Guy Innes?
- Sturgeon, John Arthur Lambert Hay
- Cheerful, Barry Edward Domvile
- Desperate, Basil Ayton Austen?
- Angler, Oliver Backhouse
- Salmon, Ivor Francis Chichester
- Mallard, Philip James Stopford?
- T.B. 58, Robert James Buchanan
- T.B. 66, The Hon. Alexander Robert Maule Ramsay
- T.B. 76, Mervyn Patrick Traill-Smith
- T.B. 98, Forster Delafield Arnold-Forster
Squadron "Z"
Squadron "Z" was a sub-component of Fleet "X" based in the Channel Islands
- Squadron "Z" Main Force
- Squadron "Z" Destroyers and T.Bs. from Chatham
- Mermaid, John Frederick Ernest Green?
- Zebra, Laurence Richard Oliphant
- Avon, Robert Henry Coppinger
- Bittern, unknown commander
- Spitfire, Stanley Ray Miller
- Albatross, Frederic William Dean?
- Snapper, John Roderick Segrave?
- Haughty, John Moore Casement
- Porcupine,
- Ariel, Bertram Mordaunt Chambers
- Contest, Claud Hamilton Sinclair
- Dasher, Kerrison Kiddle
- T.B. 55
- T.B. 79, Arthur Edward Frederick Bedford
- T.B. 81, Sydney Stewart Hall (in command of flotilla)
- T.B. 82, Algernon Henry Chester Candy
- T.B. 85, Charles Laverock Lambe
- T.B. 86, George Thomas Carlisle Parker Swabey
Under Rear-Admiral, Queenstown
These ships supported Fleet "X", the starred ships being for "examination service".
- Curlew, Charles Henry Umfreville
- the twin screw vessel H.M.S. Seahorse*
- the tugboat H.M.S. Stormcock*
Action
The Admiralty published the typical dry account of the exercise rich in detail. A more exciting accounting is found in the public press of the day, capturing the novel intensity of interest in such evolutions as recorded by journalists aboard both fleets, reporting via wireless telegraphy.[3]
Bibliography
- Admiralty "Naval Manœuvres, 1901". Copyright 2005, ProQuest. under "Simon PDFs/UK/Command Papers"
Footnotes
Annual Manoeuvres of the Royal Navy |
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