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[[Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet]] '''Bruce Austin Fraser''', First Baron Fraser of North Cape, G.C.B., K.B.E., Royal Navy (5 February, 1888 – 12 February, 1981) was an officer of the [[Royal Navy]].
[[Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet]] Lord '''Bruce Austin Fraser''', First Baron Fraser of North Cape, G.C.B., K.B.E., Royal Navy (5 February, 1888 – 12 February, 1981) was an officer of the [[Royal Navy]].


==Early Life & Career==
==Early Life & Career==
was born in Acton, London, 5 February 1888, the younger son (there were no daughters) of General Alexander Fraser, CB, of the Royal Engineers, and his wife, Monica Stores Smith. He was educated at Bradfield College before passing into HMS Britannia in September 1902. He completed his cadetship with distinction, and was appointed a midshipman in HMS Hannibal, a battleship with the Channel Fleet, in January 1904.
Born in Acton, Fraser gained four months' time on passing out of {{UK-1Britannia}}.


In the years that followed, Fraser served in a succession of battleships and destroyers in home waters, being promoted sub-lieutenant in September 1907. In 1911, having determined to become a gunnery specialist, he was posted to HMS Excellent at Whale Island. Fraser passed out top of the course. He acted as gunnery officer in the cruiser Minerva (1914–16), and saw action in the Dardanelles. He spent some months of 1916 on the senior staff of HMS Excellent, thus missing Jutland. At the end of the year, he was posted to the new battleship Resolution, in which he became commander in 1919. Ironically, for an officer who had shown exceptional leadership and technical capabilities, Fraser was obliged to end the war without experiencing a major action in a modern warship.
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{LieutRN}} on 15 March, 1908.


In April 1920 he suffered a bizarre misfortune. Because he was on poor terms with his captain in Resolution, he sought escape by responding to a call for Mediterranean Fleet volunteers to travel to Baku and assist the White Russian fleet against the Bolsheviks. He arrived in command of his detachment of thirty-one men, just in time to be caught up in a local Bolshevik coup. The British party was imprisoned in wretched conditions until freed in November, when Fraser came home to spend a further two years on the staff of Excellent.
After passing the best examination in practical Gunnery when qualifying for Gunnery Lieutenant, Fraser was awarded the [[Commander Egerton Prize]] of 1911-12.


Despite favourable reports and widespread acceptance as a popular and able officer, Fraser's career thus far had been sluggish. But from 1922 onwards he was plainly marked for high rank, earning the commendation of the Admiralty Board in 1924 for his work on a new fire control installation. As fleet gunnery officer in the Mediterranean (1925–6) and as a captain in the Admiralty tactical division (1926–9), he worked close to the heart of the navy's gunnery development. From 1929 to 1932 he held his first seagoing command in the cruiser ''Effingham'' in the East Indies. As director of naval ordnance (1933–5), he devised the armament for Britain's last generation of battleships, the 14-inch ''King George V'' class.
==Great War==
Fraser was appointed to the {{UK-Minerva|f=t}} as her gunnery lieutenant for the Test Mobilisation. On 1 August, he was re-appointed in her.


In 1936–7 Fraser commanded the aircraft carrier Glorious. In January 1938, just short of his fiftieth birthday, he was appointed rear-admiral, and chief of staff to Sir A. Dudley Pound [q.v.] , C-in-C Mediterranean. It was in this role that he forged the close relationship with Pound that continued in World War II, when Pound was first sea lord.
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{LCommRN}} on 15 March, 1916. He remained with ''Minerva'' until being sent back to England on 8 April, 1916.  He first was appointed to {{UK-Excellent}}, additional, and then on 15 June to ''Victory'', to become gunnery officer in the new {{UK-Resolution|f=c}} upon her commissioning and being lent to {{UK-PrincessRoyal}} for some short period prior to her ''Resolution'' becoming ready.


In March 1939 Fraser became controller of the navy and third sea lord. In this role, for three testing years he bore responsibility for the navy's construction and repair programme, perhaps above all for the creation of the corvette, the mainstay of the Atlantic convoy escort system. He also played an important part in the development of warship radar. In May 1940 he became vice-admiral.
==Interbellum==
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{CommRN}} on 30 June, 1919.


Fraser won the confidence of (Sir) Winston Churchill in this period at the Admiralty, and never lost it for the remainder of the war, despite periodic differences of opinion, for instance when the controller opposed Churchill's enthusiasm to build a new battleship. In June 1942 Fraser was sent to sea once more, as second-in-command of the Home Fleet under Sir John (later Lord) Tovey [q.v.] . He arrived just before the tragedy of convoy PQ17, one of the darkest naval episodes of the war.
Fraser remained in {{UK-Resolution}} until 19 April, 1920, having become her executive officer on 5 November, 1919.


By 8 May 1943, when Fraser was appointed to succeed Tovey as C-in-C Home Fleet, he could claim wide experience of both naval operations at sea, and their strategic direction ashore. A bluff, cheerful, straightforward officer with much shrewdness and technical knowledge but no pretensions to intellectualism, he was committed throughout his career to making inter-service co-operation a reality. He had shown remarkable gifts for winning the confidence of his peers and political masters at home, while commanding the affection and loyalty of subordinates afloat. Essentially a simple man who used to declare without embarrassment that he had never read a novel in his life, a bachelor who had made the Royal Navy his life-work, he was acknowledged as one of the outstanding naval professionals of his generation. His elevation was widely welcomed.
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{CaptRN}} on 30 June, 1926.


Yet in the strategic situation in the summer of 1943, it seemed unlikely that Fraser would be granted the opportunity to conduct a major fleet action. The Russian victory at Stalingrad, and the consequent shift in the balance of advantage against the Germans, diminished the importance of the western Allies' Arctic convoys. These now offered a lure to the three German capital ships based in Norwegian waters—Tirpitz, Scharnhorst, and Lützow—but it seemed unlikely that the Germans would consider the bait worth the hazard to their remaining fleet. Correspondingly, the British Home Fleet had been weakened by the transfer of ships to the Mediterranean. Anson and Duke of York—in which Fraser flew his flag—were now the only British battleships at Scapa.
He was appointed temporarily in command of the new light cruiser [[H.M.S. Leander (1932)|''Leander'']] on 25 November, 1932 to oversee her pre-commissioning trials. He was superseded by [[Robert Ross Turner]] on 21 December, 1932.


Yet in September, to the surprise of the British, Tirpitz and Scharnhorst sortied for two days to bombard Spitsbergen. This was a negligible feat, yet sharply reminded the Royal Navy of the difficulties of keeping effective watch on the German ships. A fortnight later, a substantial British success was gained, when midget submarines successfully crippled Tirpitz in Kaafiord. She was rendered unfit for active operations for six months. Four days afterwards, Lützow escaped into the Baltic. Scharnhorst was now alone.
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{RearRN}} on 11 January, 1938. On 2 May, he was appointed to {{UK-Warspite}}, additional, as Chief of Staff to Admiral [[Alfred Dudley Pickman Rogers Pound|Pound]], vice [[George Frederick Basset Edward-Collins|Edward-Collins]]. He was superseded on 6 February, 1939.


As a succession of Allied convoys sailed to Russia that autumn, almost unmolested but shadowed by units of the Home Fleet, Fraser, having declined an offer by Churchill to become first sea lord, continued to believe that Scharnhorst would sooner or later come out. Earlier in the war, the German battle cruiser had inflicted major damage upon British shipping. On 19 December British Ultra decrypts revealed that Scharnhorst had been brought to three hours' readiness for sea. Fraser's Force 2, led by the cruiser Jamaica and the Duke of York—the only British ship with the armament to match that of Scharnhorst—sailed from Icelandic waters at 23.00 hours on 23 December. Fraser had carefully briefed his captains, and carried out repeated exercises in identifying and engaging hostile ships by radar, given the almost permanent Arctic darkness.
==World War II==
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{ViceRN}} on 8 May, 1940.


On the afternoon of 24 December 1943, in atrocious weather, the British convoy JW55B was ordered to slow to eight knots because Force 2 was 400 miles behind, too distant for comfort when the convoy was only the same distance from Scharnhorst in Altenfiord. Scharnhorst sailed to attack JW55B at 19.00 on 25 December, commanded by Rear-Admiral Erich Bey.
Fraser was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the [[Home Fleet]] in May of 1943.  In this appointment on 26 December 1943, he commanded a surface force that destroyed the German battleship ''Scharnhorst'' at the [[Battle of the North Cape]].


Eight hours later, this news was passed to Fraser, whose ships were still struggling through mountainous seas to close the gap with the convoy. Fraser accepted the risk that Scharnhorst would turn away if he broke wireless silence, and ordered JW55B to turn northwards, away from the Germans. Bey was still searching in vain for the convoy at 07.30 on 26 December, when the 8-inch cruiser Norfolk, a unit of Force I, led by Vice-Admiral (Sir) R. L. Burnett [q.v.] , located Scharnhorst on radar at 33,000 yards. The British ship, with her 6-inch consorts Belfast and Sheffield, opened fire at 09.29. They strove to close the range speedily, and avoid the sort of mauling Graf Spee had inflicted upon a British cruiser squadron four years earlier. At this early stage, Norfolk damaged Scharnhorst's radar. Bey, as the British had expected, at once withdrew at 30 knots.
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{AdmRN}} on 7 February, 1944.


The British now suffered almost three hours of acute apprehension, having lost touch with Scharnhorst, and being fearful that she might break away into the Atlantic. Only at 12.20 did Belfast triumphantly report the battle cruiser once more in sight. Bey had turned north, still searching for JW55B. Burnett's cruisers and destroyers lay between the Germans and the convoy.
==Post-War==


In the second twenty-one minute cruiser action, the British ships suffered significant damage before Scharnhorst broke away unscathed. Yet Bey now hesitated fatally. He knew that a British battle group was at sea. But he believed it was too distant to harm him. Only at 14.18 did he abandon the attempt to engage the convoy and turn for home, independent of his destroyer escort.
Fraser was promoted to the rank of {{FleetRN}} on 7 February, 1948.


Fraser was now racing to cut across Scharnhorst's southward track. At 16.17, Duke of York's 14-inch guns opened fire at 12,000 yards, and straddled their target—clearly illuminated by starshell—with the first broadside. Critics subsequently suggested that Scharnhorst might have been destroyed at this stage of the battle, had Fraser not delayed ordering in his destroyers. He was fearful that a premature torpedo attack would drive the German ship away north-eastwards, beyond his grasp.
==See Also==
 
{{refbegin}}
Under fire from Duke of York, Scharnhorst turned away at full speed first north, then east. By 17.13, when at last Fraser loosed his destroyers, he had left it too late. The enemy was outrunning both the British cruisers and destroyers. Only Duke of York's guns were still within range. At 18.20, an 11-inch shell from Scharnhorst temporarily severed the flagship's radar cables, blinding her gunners. For a few terrible minutes, Fraser believed that victory had been snatched from him.
* [http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/results/r?_q=ADM+196+Bruce+Fraser Service Records]
 
{{WP|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Fraser,_1st_Baron_Fraser_of_North_Cape}}
Yet just before the British ship was hit, although Scharnhorst had succeeded in opening the range to 20,000 yards, a shell from Duke of York burst in her number 1 boiler room, abruptly cutting the ship's speed to eight knots. Power was restored soon afterwards. But the brief crisis allowed three of Fraser's destroyers to close. Four of the twenty-eight torpedoes which they launched hit Scharnhorst, drastically reducing her power and ensuring her destruction. At 19.45, after enduring concentrated gunfire and torpedo attacks for almost three hours more, Scharnhorst sank. Her guns continued firing almost to the last. Out of her complement of 1,803, thirty-six survivors were plucked from the Arctic darkness.
*"Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fraser of North Cape" (Obituaries). ''The Times''. Friday, 13 February, 1981. Issue '''60851''', col F, pg. 16.
 
*Humble, Richard (1983). ''Fraser of North Cape''. London: Routledge.
Duke of York's gunnery had plainly been the decisive factor in the victory. For all the undoubted British advantage of strength, the entrapment and destruction of Scharnhorst had been a considerable achievement, ensuring Fraser's perpetual celebrity in the annals of the Royal Navy, alongside that of the Norwegian North Cape beyond which the battle was fought.
{{refend}}
 
Fraser's remaining service with the Home Fleet was dominated by the conduct of further Russian convoys. But with the shift of strategic attention from the Mediterranean to north-west Europe, force was now available to provide massive escorts, and Allied losses declined steeply. On 16 June 1944 Fraser relinquished command. He was now assigned to become commander-in-chief, Eastern Fleet. In November he became C-in-C Pacific Fleet.
 
Fraser's task in the Pacific was delicate. The US navy dominated the theatre, and the Royal Navy's contribution seemed not merely modest, but even unwelcome. The Americans were deeply suspicious of British imperial motives in the eastern hemisphere. It is a tribute to Fraser's competence and transparent good nature that he achieved an amicable working relationship with the Americans. He believed passionately in the need to develop—and to perpetuate post-war—Anglo-American co-operation. Such gestures as volunteering to adopt US navy signalling procedures went far to encourage trust.
 
His command continued to suffer from lack of resources, and it was only in the last weeks of the war that its forces achieved real weight. The British were hampered by the acute discomfort of their ships in tropical conditions. But the fleet made a useful contribution to the last stages of the Pacific war. It was Fraser who signed the Japanese surrender document for Britain, aboard the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945.


On his return home in 1946, Fraser was saddened to be denied the succession as first sea lord. He was appointed C-in-C Portsmouth in May 1947, and at last gained the first sea lordship in September 1948, together with promotion to admiral of the fleet a month later.
<div name=fredbot:appts>{{TabApptsBegin}}
 
{{TabNaval}}
Fraser's tenure at the Admiralty embraced a series of cold war crises, and finally responsibility for British naval participation in the Korean war. For all the affection and respect that he commanded as an old ‘sea-dog’, Fraser was considered by some critics to possess too limited an intellect to distinguish himself at the summits of power. He retired from the Royal Navy in April 1952, and passed the next twenty-eight years in almost uneventful retirement.
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Lancelot Ernest Holland|Lancelot E. Holland]]'''|'''[[Mediterranean Station|Fleet Gunnery Officer, Mediterranean Fleet]]'''<br>20 Dec, 1924{{NLJan26|p. 260}}|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Edward Neville Syfret|Edward N. Syfret]]'''}}
 
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Patrick Macnamara|Patrick Macnamara]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Effingham (1921)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Effingham'']]'''<br>6 Sep, 1929{{NLJul31|p. 235}} &ndash; 8 Aug, 1932|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Cecil Burnaby Prickett|Cecil B. Prickett]]'''}}
A barony was conferred upon him in 1946. He was appointed GCB in 1944 (KCB 1943, CB 1939); KBE in 1941 (OBE 1919). He was first and principal naval ADC to the King (1946–8), and held honorary degrees from the universities of Oxford (DCL 1947), Edinburgh (LLD 1953) and Wales (LLD 1955). He held the American DSM. He was a member of the Russian Order of Suvarov and of the Grand Order of Orange Nassau (Netherlands); was a chevalier of the Legion of Honour and holder of the croix de guerre with palm (France); and held the grand cross, Order of St Olav (Norway).
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Julian Francis Chichester Patterson|Julian F. C. Patterson]]'''|'''[[Naval Ordnance Department (Royal Navy)|Director of Naval Ordnance]]'''<br>12 Aug, 1933 &ndash; 20 Apr, 1936|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Charles Edward Barrington Simeon|Charles E. B. Simeon]]'''}}
 
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Henry Clive Rawlings|Henry C. Rawlings]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Glorious (1916)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Glorious'']]'''<br>22 May, 1936{{NLJul37|p. 244}} &ndash; 7 Dec, 1937|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Arthur Lumley St. George Lyster|Arthur L. St. G. Lyster]]'''}}
A lifelong bachelor, he died in London 12 February 1981. The barony became extinct. A portrait of him by Sir Oswald Birley hangs in the Royal Naval College, Greenwich.
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Reginald Guy Hannam Henderson|Sir Reginald G. H. Henderson]]'''|'''[[Third Sea Lord|Third Sea Lord and Controller of the Navy]]'''<br>1 Mar, 1939 &ndash; 22 May, 1942|Succeeded by<br>'''[[William Frederic Wake-Walker|Sir William F. Wake-Walker]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Alban Thomas Buckley Curteis|Alban T. B. Curteis]]'''|'''[[Second Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|Vice-Admiral Commanding, Second Battle Squadron]]'''<br>28 Jun, 1942|Succeeded by<br>'''?'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[James Fownes Somerville|Sir James F. Somerville]]'''<br><small>as '''Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet'''</small>|'''[[China Station|Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Fleet]]'''<br>Aug, 1944 &ndash; Jun, 1946|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Denis William Boyd|Sir Denis W. Boyd]]'''<br><small>as '''Commander-in-Chief, Far Eastern Fleet'''</small>}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Geoffrey Layton|Sir Geoffrey Layton]]'''|'''[[Portsmouth Station|Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Station]]'''<br>May, 1947 &ndash; Jul, 1948|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Algernon Usborne Willis|Sir Algernon U. Willis]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Henry Dacres Cunningham|Sir John H. D. Cunningham]]'''|'''[[First Sea Lord|First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff]]'''<br>Sep, 1948{{MackieRNSA}} &ndash; Dec, 1951{{MackieRNSA}}|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Rhoderick Robert McGrigor|Sir Rhoderick R. McGrigor]]'''}}
{{TabEnd}}
</div name=fredbot:appts> 


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==Bibliography==
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fraser, Bruce}}
{{refbegin}}
*"Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fraser of North Cape" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Friday, 13 February, 1981.  Issue '''60851''', col F, pg. 16.
*Humble, Richard (1983).  ''Fraser of North Cape''.  London: Routledge.
{{refend}}
 
==Service Record==
*[http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7920401&queryType=1&resultcount=1 ADM 196/51]


[[Category:1888 births|Fraser]]
{{CatPerson|UK|1888|1981}}
[[Category:1981 deaths|Fraser]]
{{CatBritannia|September, 1902}}
[[Category:Personalities|Fraser]]
{{CatGunneryOfficer|UK}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Gunnery Officers|Fraser]]
{{CatAdmOfTheFleet|UK}}
[[Category:First Sea Lords|Fraser]]
{{CatRN}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Admirals|Fraser]]
[[Category:Royal Navy Flag Officers|Fraser]]

Latest revision as of 18:55, 27 June 2022

Admiral of the Fleet Lord Bruce Austin Fraser, First Baron Fraser of North Cape, G.C.B., K.B.E., Royal Navy (5 February, 1888 – 12 February, 1981) was an officer of the Royal Navy.

Early Life & Career

Born in Acton, Fraser gained four months' time on passing out of Britannia.

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant on 15 March, 1908.

After passing the best examination in practical Gunnery when qualifying for Gunnery Lieutenant, Fraser was awarded the Commander Egerton Prize of 1911-12.

Great War

Fraser was appointed to the second class protected cruiser Minerva as her gunnery lieutenant for the Test Mobilisation. On 1 August, he was re-appointed in her.

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-Commander on 15 March, 1916. He remained with Minerva until being sent back to England on 8 April, 1916. He first was appointed to Excellent, additional, and then on 15 June to Victory, to become gunnery officer in the new Revenge Class battleship Resolution upon her commissioning and being lent to Princess Royal for some short period prior to her Resolution becoming ready.

Interbellum

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Commander on 30 June, 1919.

Fraser remained in Resolution until 19 April, 1920, having become her executive officer on 5 November, 1919.

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Captain on 30 June, 1926.

He was appointed temporarily in command of the new light cruiser Leander on 25 November, 1932 to oversee her pre-commissioning trials. He was superseded by Robert Ross Turner on 21 December, 1932.

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 11 January, 1938. On 2 May, he was appointed to Warspite, additional, as Chief of Staff to Admiral Pound, vice Edward-Collins. He was superseded on 6 February, 1939.

World War II

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Vice-Admiral on 8 May, 1940.

Fraser was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Home Fleet in May of 1943. In this appointment on 26 December 1943, he commanded a surface force that destroyed the German battleship Scharnhorst at the Battle of the North Cape.

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Admiral on 7 February, 1944.

Post-War

Fraser was promoted to the rank of Admiral of the Fleet on 7 February, 1948.

See Also

  • Service Records
  • Wikipedia
  • "Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fraser of North Cape" (Obituaries). The Times. Friday, 13 February, 1981. Issue 60851, col F, pg. 16.
  • Humble, Richard (1983). Fraser of North Cape. London: Routledge.

Naval Appointments
Preceded by
Lancelot E. Holland
Fleet Gunnery Officer, Mediterranean Fleet
20 Dec, 1924[1]
Succeeded by
Edward N. Syfret
Preceded by
Patrick Macnamara
Captain of H.M.S. Effingham
6 Sep, 1929[2] – 8 Aug, 1932
Succeeded by
Cecil B. Prickett
Preceded by
Julian F. C. Patterson
Director of Naval Ordnance
12 Aug, 1933 – 20 Apr, 1936
Succeeded by
Charles E. B. Simeon
Preceded by
Henry C. Rawlings
Captain of H.M.S. Glorious
22 May, 1936[3] – 7 Dec, 1937
Succeeded by
Arthur L. St. G. Lyster
Preceded by
Sir Reginald G. H. Henderson
Third Sea Lord and Controller of the Navy
1 Mar, 1939 – 22 May, 1942
Succeeded by
Sir William F. Wake-Walker
Preceded by
Alban T. B. Curteis
Vice-Admiral Commanding, Second Battle Squadron
28 Jun, 1942
Succeeded by
?
Preceded by
Sir James F. Somerville
as Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet
Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Fleet
Aug, 1944 – Jun, 1946
Succeeded by
Sir Denis W. Boyd
as Commander-in-Chief, Far Eastern Fleet
Preceded by
Sir Geoffrey Layton
Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Station
May, 1947 – Jul, 1948
Succeeded by
Sir Algernon U. Willis
Preceded by
Sir John H. D. Cunningham
First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff
Sep, 1948[4] – Dec, 1951[5]
Succeeded by
Sir Rhoderick R. McGrigor

 

Footnotes

  1. The Navy List. (January, 1926). p. 260.
  2. The Navy List. (July, 1931). p. 235.
  3. The Navy List. (July, 1937). p. 244.
  4. Mackie, Colin. ROYAL NAVY SENIOR APPOINTMENTS.
  5. Mackie, Colin. ROYAL NAVY SENIOR APPOINTMENTS.