Difference between revisions of "Director of Naval Ordnance and Torpedoes (Royal Navy)"

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*Rear-Admiral [[Frederick Charles Tudor Tudor|Frederick C. T. Tudor]], 1 June, 1912 - 19 August, 1914.
 
*Rear-Admiral [[Frederick Charles Tudor Tudor|Frederick C. T. Tudor]], 1 June, 1912 - 19 August, 1914.
 
*Rear-Admiral [[Morgan Singer]], 19 August, 1914 - 1 March, 1917.
 
*Rear-Admiral [[Morgan Singer]], 19 August, 1914 - 1 March, 1917.
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==See Also==
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*[[Instructions for the Director of Naval Ordnance and Torpedoes]].
  
 
==Footnotes==
 
==Footnotes==

Revision as of 13:17, 23 September 2011

Duties

In ship construction, the Director of Naval Ordnance was responsible for turret armour, with the Director of Naval Construction being responsible for the rest.[1]

Lord Jellicoe (D.N.O., 1905 - 1907) wrote in his unpublished memoirs:

In those days the staff of the D.N.O. composed an Assistant Director of Torpedoes, three officers of Commanders or Lieutenants rank for gunnery work, three for torpedo work and a marines' officer for general duties.[2]

On 1 March, 1917, when Captain F. C. Dreyer succeeded Singer, the torpedo branch was devolved into the Department of the Director of Torpedoes and Mining under Rear-Admiral The Hon. Edward S. Fitzherbert and Dreyer became solely Director of Naval Ordnance.[3]

List of Directors of Naval Ordnance and Torpedoes

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Brown; McCallum. "Ammunition Explosions in World War I". p.67.
  2. British Library. Jellicoe Papers. Add. MSS. 49038. f. 53.
  3. Jellicoe. The Crisis of the Naval War. p. 228.

Bibliography