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[[Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet]] {{SIR}} '''Geoffrey Thomas Phipps Hornby''', G.C.B., Royal Navy (20 February, 1825 – 3 March, 1895) was an influential officer in the Victorian [[Royal Navy]].
[[File:Phipps Hornby.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Admiral of the Fleet Sir Geoffrey T. Phipps Hornby, as an Admiral.]]
 
[[Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet]] {{SIR}} '''Geoffrey Thomas Phipps Hornby''', G.C.B., Royal Navy (20 February, 1825 – 3 March, 1895) was an influential officer in the late-Victorian [[Royal Navy]].


==Early Life & Career==
==Early Life & Career==
Hornby, second son of Admiral Sir Phipps Hornby (1785–1867) and his wife, Sophia Maria Burgoyne (d. 1860), sister of Field Marshal Sir John Fox Burgoyne, was born at Winwick, Lancashire, on 20 February 1825. James John Hornby was his younger brother. He attended Winwick grammar school and Southwood's School, Plymouth (1832–7). Hornby entered the navy in March 1837 on the Princess Charlotte, flagship of Sir Robert Stopford in the Mediterranean; he served in the Syria campaign of 1840, and remained with his ship until she was paid off in August 1841. After spending six months at Woolwich Dockyard, where his father was superintendent, he was appointed in early 1842 to the Winchester, flagship of Rear-Admiral Josceline Percy, at the Cape of Good Hope. Hornby was promoted lieutenant of the Cleopatra (Captain Christopher Wyvill (1792–1863)) on 15 June 1844, and served on the anti-slavery patrol on the east coast of Africa. He was sent to the Cape in command of a prize in the summer of 1846, and returned to England in the following spring. In August his father accepted the post of commander-in-chief in the Pacific, primarily to advance his son's career. He took him as his flag lieutenant, and on 12 January 1850 Geoffrey was promoted commander of the flagship Asia (84 guns). In the summer of 1851 the Asia returned to England. Hornby went with his cousin Lord Stanley for a tour in India but his health broke down, and he was obliged to return home. In 1852 his father was a lord of the Admiralty in Lord Derby's administration; on the government's downfall he secured Hornby's promotion to captain on 18 December 1852. In 1853 Hornby married Emily Frances, daughter of the Revd John Coles of Ditcham Park, Hampshire, and sister of Captain Cowper-Coles; they had three sons and two daughters. One of their sons, Robert Stewart Phipps Hornby CMG, became captain in the navy; and in 1900 an elder son, Edmund John Phipps Hornby, won the Victoria Cross while serving in South Africa as a major in the artillery.
{{DNB}}
Geoffrey Thomas Phipps Hornby was the second son of Admiral Sir Phipps Hornby, was born at Winwick in Lancashire on 20 Feb. 1825. He entered the navy in March 1837 on board the ''Princess Charlotte'', then fitting out as the flagship of Sir Robert Stopford in the Mediterranean. He remained in her till she was paid off in August 1841, and was thus present at all the operations in the Archipelago and on the coast of Syria in 1839 and 1840.
 
(Sir) Phipps Hornby was at this time superintendent of Woolwich Dockyard, and the boy remained with him till the spring of 1842, when he was appointed to the ''Winchester'', going out to the Cape of Good Hope as flagship of Rear-Admiral Josceline Percy. From her, on 15 June, 1844, he was promoted to the rank of {{LieutRN}}<ref>Clowes.  '''VII'''.  p. 573.</ref> and appointed to the ''Cleopatra'', with Captain Christopher Wyvill (1792–1863), for two years' slaver-hunting on the east coast of Africa. In the summer of 1846 he was sent to the Cape in command of a prize, and in the following spring returned to England in the ''Wolverene''. In August his father was appointed Commander-in-Chief in the Pacific; Hornby went with him as Flag Lieutenant, and on 12 January 1850 was promoted to be {{CommRN}}<ref>Clowes.  '''VII'''.  p. 573.</ref> of the flagship ''Asia'' of 84 guns. In the summer of 1851 the ''Asia'' returned to England, and Hornby settled down at Littlegreen, near Emsworth, a place which he had inherited some fourteen years before, though family arrangements had hitherto prevented his occupying it. Hornby meantime went with his kinsman, Lord Stanley, for a tour in India; but in Ceylon his health broke down, and he was obliged to get home as soon as possible. In the following year his father was a Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty in Lord Derby's administration; and on its downfall Hornby was promoted {{CaptRN}}, 18 December, 1852,<ref>Clowes.  '''VII'''.  p. 573.</ref> at the remarkably young age of twenty-seven.
 
==Captain==
Partly, it may be, from political or party reasons, partly because he married in 1853, and in great measure, probably—being, by the death of his elder brother, the eldest son—to manage his father's property in Sussex, Hornby remained on half-pay till August 1858, when, under Lord Derby's ministry, he was appointed to the ''Tribune'', then in Chinese waters. He joined her at Hong Kong in the end of October, and was almost immediately sent off with a detachment of marines to Vancouver's Island, in consequence of the dispute with the United States relative to San Juan, one of a group of islands between Vancouver's and the mainland. The ownership of the island remained an open question till 1872, when it was settled in favour of the States; but in 1859 feeling on both sides ran high, and at one time war appeared to be imminent. That the difficulty was tided over was considered mainly due to the temper and tact shown by Hornby, whom the governor of Victoria wished to take forcible measures and the responsibility of them. When the dispute was temporarily compromised, the ''Tribune'' was ordered to England, arriving at the end of July 1860. In March 1861 Hornby was sent out to the Mediterranean to take command of the ''Neptune'', an old three-decker converted into a screw two-decker, and manned by "bounty" men, whom Hornby characterised as "shameful riffraff." Here he came under the command of Sir William Fanshawe Martin, and had some experience in that admiral's attempts at the devolution of steam manœuvres. At the time he thought them needlessly complicated and likely to be dangerous; but in later life he seems to have better recognised the difficulties which Martin had to contend with, and to have acknowledged the merit of Martin's work. His comments on this are particularly interesting, as there can be little doubt that it was this practice which first led to his own profound studies of the subject and to his future excellence in the management of fleets.


Having become the youngest full captain in the navy, Hornby, a Conservative related to Lord Derby, spent many years on half pay; the last year of this period was spent at the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth. Then, in August 1858, during Lord Derby's second ministry, he was appointed to the Tribune. He joined her at Hong Kong in October, and was sent with a detachment of marines to Vancouver Island, because of the dispute with the United States over San Juan, an island between Vancouver and the mainland. The island was awarded to the United States in 1872; but in 1859 the difficulty was tided over mainly owing to Hornby's tact. The Tribune was ordered home to repair serious defects, and arrived at the end of July 1860. In March 1861 Hornby went out to the Mediterranean to command the Neptune, an old three-decker converted into a screw two-decker, and manned by ‘bounty’ men, whom he characterized as ‘shameful riffraff’. Here he came under the command of Sir William Fanshawe Martin, and witnessed Martin's attempts to develop steam manoeuvres. At the time Hornby thought them needlessly complicated and probably dangerous; but in later life he seems to have better recognized the difficulties with which Martin had to contend, and to have acknowledged their merit. This practice led to his own profound studies of the subject and to his future excellence in the management of fleets.
In November, 1862 the ''Neptune'' returned to England, and in the following March Hornby was appointed to the ''Edgar'' as Flag Captain of Rear-Admiral Sidney Colpoys Dacres, commanding the Channel Squadron. This post he held till September, 1865, when he was appointed to the ''Bristol'' as {{Com1RN}} on the West Coast of Africa Station. Here Hornby continued till the end of 1867, when the state of his health, as well as his private affairs after the death of his father, forced him to apply to be relieved, and he reached England early in 1868.  


In November 1862 the Neptune returned to England, and in the following March Hornby was appointed to the Edgar as flag captain of Rear-Admiral Sidney Colpoys Dacres, commanding the channel squadron. In September 1865 Hornby was appointed to the Bristol as a first-class commodore for the west coast of Africa, where he continued until the end of 1867; his health, and his private affairs after his father's death, forced him to return to England early in 1868. On 1 January 1869 he was promoted rear-admiral, and appointed to command the flying squadron, which he did for two years. From 1871 to 1874 he commanded the channel squadron, being entrusted with the first heavy weather trials of the epochal battleship Devastation. From 1875 to 1877 he was one of the lords of the Admiralty, a position which, to a man of active habits, proved very irksome, the more so because he disagreed with the Admiralty's methods of conducting naval business. His time, he complained, was so taken up with many little details that he was unable to give proper consideration to important affairs. For this he blamed the reforms introduced by Hugh Childers in 1869, and in consequence he and admirals Key and Beauchamp Seymour agreed to refuse the post of senior naval lord without the promise of a major enquiry and additional naval assistance. Key broke this agreement in 1879. On 13 January 1877 Hornby wrote that he had left the Admiralty with less regret and more pleasure than he had left any other work with which he had previously been so long connected. It was thus that, when offered the choice of being first sea lord or commander-in-chief in the Mediterranean, he unhesitatingly chose the latter, and he was accordingly appointed early in January 1877, having been promoted vice-admiral on 1 January 1875.
==Flag Rank==
On 1 January, 1869 he was promoted to the rank of {{RearRN}},{{Gaz|23456|50|5 January, 1869}} aged forty-three, and was almost immediately appointed to the command of the Flying Squadron, which he held for two years.


With his flag in the Alexandra Hornby arrived at Malta on 18 March, and took up the command, which he held during the Russo-Turkish War (1877–8); and in February 1878, the Russian army having advanced to within what seemed striking distance of Constantinople, Hornby was ordered by Disraeli's cabinet to take the fleet through the Dardanelles. The Turkish governor and government protested, but they made no attempt to oppose the passage, though Hornby went through prepared to use force if necessary. His services and tact were rewarded by the KCB in August 1878. In June 1879 he was promoted admiral, and in February 1880 he returned to England. In 1881 he was appointed president of the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth; thereafter he was regularly consulted by the Admiralty on all issues of policy. In November 1882 he became commander-in-chief at Portsmouth, a position he held for the customary three years. In the summer of 1885 he left Portsmouth for a few weeks to command the Baltic fleet assembled during the Panjdeh crisis. After the crisis abated Hornby and his flag captain, John Fisher, carried out a series of experiments on the attack and defence of harbours using mines and torpedoes. On 19 December 1885 he was appointed GCB, with especial reference to his summer ‘work in command of the evolutionary squadron’; and on 18 January 1886 he was appointed first and principal naval aide-de-camp to the queen.
From 1871 to 1874 he commanded the Channel Squadron, and from 1875 to 1877 he was one of the Lords Commissioner of the Admiralty, an appointment which, to a man of very active habits, proved excessively irksome, the more so as he found himself out of agreement with the methods of conducting the business of the navy. His time, he complained, was so taken up with a hundred little details, that he was unable to give proper consideration to the really important affairs that came before him. On 13 January, 1877 he wrote: "I left the admiralty with less regret and more pleasure than any work with which I have hitherto been so long connected." It was thus that, when offered the choice of being First Naval Lord or Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, he unhesitatingly chose the latter, and he was accordingly appointed early in January, 1877. He had been promoted to the rank of {{ViceRN}} two years before, 1 January, 1875.  Captain (later Admiral of the Fleet Lord) [[John Arbuthnot Fisher, First Baron Fisher|John Fisher]] later recalled of him:


Hornby now proposed to settle down on his estate at Lordington, near Emsworth, Hampshire. Although he continued to farm his own land, and to take much interest in county affairs, the welfare of the service always had prior claims. From 1884 Hornby took the lead in providing naval support for the ‘big navy’ agitation. He directed his followers, notably Captain John Fisher, to provide W. T. Stead with the material for his 1884 Pall Mall Gazette articles, and he continued to speak publicly on the subject after the Conservatives returned to power. Since his time at the Admiralty in the mid-1870s Hornby had believed the navy was too small. For him this was not a party political issue, and he refused to be silenced by the Conservatives. Here the defection of his cousin the fifteenth earl of Derby to the Liberals helped him. Supported by the London chamber of commerce Hornby continued to urge increased provision for the defence of trade. His efforts were in part responsible for the Naval Defence Act of 1889 and the Spencer programme of 1894. He even accepted the presidency of the Navy League. On 1 May 1888 he was promoted admiral of the fleet, and in 1889, and again in 1890, he was appointed aide-de-camp to Kaiser Wilhelm II during his visits to Britain. In 1891 he was officially sent, at the Kaiser's invitation, to the German manoeuvres in Schleswig-Holstein. Although he recovered from a serious illness in 1888, and from a severe accident in the early spring of 1891, he was then considerably aged. The death of his wife in January 1892 was a further shock. In February 1895, on his seventieth birthday, he was retired. On 3 March he died of influenza at Little Green, Lordington, Sussex. After his cremation at Woking his ashes were buried at Compton, Sussex, on 9 March.
<blockquote>That great man was the finest admiral afloat since Nelson. At the Admiralty he was a failure.  So would Nelson have been!  With both of them their Perfection was on the Sea, not at an office desk. Admiral Hornby I simply adored. I had known him
many years; and while my cabins on board my ship were being painted, he asked me to come and live with him aboard his Flagship, which I did, and I was next ship to him always when at sea. He was astounding. He would tell you what you were going to do wrong before you did it; and you couldn't say you weren't going to do it because you had put your helm over and the ship had begun to move the wrong way. Many years afterwards, when he was the Port Admiral at Portsmouth, I was head of the Gunnery School at Portsmouth, and, some war scare arising, he was ordered to take command of the whole Fleet at home collected at Portland. He took me with him as a sort of Captain of the Fleet, and we went to Bantry Bay, where we had exercises of inestimable value. He couldn't bear a fool, so of course he had many enemies. There never lived a more noble character or a greater seaman. He was incomparable.<ref>Fisher. ''Memories''.  pp. 146-147.</ref></blockquote>


While president of the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth, Hornby delivered there, in the spring of 1882, a short course of lectures on ‘exercising squadrons’, the notes of which were printed for the use of officers. During his later years he wrote occasionally in The Times and the monthly reviews on professional subjects. For many years he was recognized in the navy as the highest authority on tactics and strategy, though, except as a boy at Acre in 1840, he had never seen a shot fired in war. Almost all his service had been in flagships, and thus he had exceptional familiarity with fleets, and received the traditions and reflections of past generations.
With his flag in the ''Alexandra'', Hornby arrived at Malta on 18 March, and took up the command, which he held during two years of great political excitement. It was the time of the Russo-Turkish war, and in February, 1878, the Russian army having advanced within what seemed striking distance of Constantinople, Hornby was ordered to take the fleet through the Dardanelles. The Turkish governor and government protested, probably as a matter of form and to avoid irritating the Russians; but they made no attempt to oppose the passage, though Hornby went through quite prepared to use force if necessary. A good deal was said at the time about the "illegality" of the proceeding, but to Hornby, as to Lord Beaconsfield, the objection was a thing of naught, and ''The Times'', commenting on the movement, said, "The admiral was directed to proceed to Constantinople, and he has proceeded." He anchored the fleet, in the first instance, at Prince's Island, about two miles from the city, but afterwards moved to a greater distance, remaining in the Sea of Marmora.


Hornby dominated the navy between 1875 and 1885, and even in his last years remained a major influence on it, through his followers and his successful exploitation of the ‘big navy’ propaganda. His career had been made by two men: his father, who twice took posts that his age and health would otherwise have led him to refuse, in order to secure his son's early promotion; and his relative Lord Derby. As a result in 1852 Hornby, at the age of twenty-seven, had become the youngest captain in the navy. This provided him with experience of command, and the relative youth for a long and active flag career. Although considered the finest fleet commander of the era, Hornby was equally influential in issues of ship design and strategy. Throughout his career he stressed the importance of efficiency, order, and discipline, and he helped to raise standards in all areas. He led the movement that would transform the Victorian navy into the modern service that went to war in 1914.
In acknowledgment of his services at this time, and of the tact with which he had conducted them, he was nominated a K.C.B. on 12 August, 1878. On 15 June 1879 he was promoted to the rank of {{AdmRN}}, and in February, 1880 he returned to England. In 1881 he was appointed President of the [[Royal Naval College, Greenwich]] from which he was removed in November, 1882, to be [[Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth]], which office he held for the customary three years. In the summer of 1885, leaving Portsmouth for a few weeks, he commanded an evolutionary squadron, the direct precursor of the "manœuvres" which have been pretty regularly carried out ever since. One interesting feature of the exercises was the defence of the fleet at anchor in Berehaven against an attack by torpedo-boats. On 19 December, 1885 he was nominated a G.C.B., with especial reference to his summer "work in command of the evolutionary squadron;" and on 18 January, 1886 was appointed [[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the Queen.


'''Wealth at death;''' £27,339 16''s''. 1''d''.: Resworn probate; July, 1896.
==Admiral of the Fleet and Retirement==
He now proposed to settle down on his estate at Lordington, near Emsworth, and to be known thenceforward as "Yeoman Hornby." Fate and the service were too strong for him; and though he did continue to "farm his own land," and to take a great deal of interest in the affairs of the county, the welfare of the service had always prior claims. On 1 May, 1888 he was promoted to the rank of {{FleetRN}},{{Gaz|25816|2766|15 May, 1888}} and in 1889, and again in 1890, was appointed aide-de-camp to the German emperor during his visits to this country. In 1891 he was officially sent, on the direct invitation of the emperor, to witness the German manœuvres in Schleswig-Holstein, where his long hunting experience enabled him to astonish the young German princes. Hornby was, in fact, a horseman from his childhood, and as a cross-country rider was among the best. Although he completely recovered from a serious illness in 1888, and from a severe accident in the early spring of 1891, he was then sensibly aged. The death of his wife in January 1892 was a further shock. On 19 February, 1895 he attended a levee, the last time in his official capacity, for on 20 February, he was placed on the Retired List upon reaching the age of seventy.{{Gaz|26601|1066|22 February, 1895}}  On 3 March he died of influenza. The body was cremated at Woking, and the ashes buried at Compton on 9 March.


==Footnotes==
Hornby married in 1853 Emily Frances, daughter of the Rev. John Coles of Ditcham Park, Hampshire, by whom he had issue. One of his sons, [[Robert Stewart Phipps Hornby]], C.M.G., became captain in the navy; an elder son, Edmund John Phipps Hornby, while major in the artillery, received in 1900 the Victoria Cross for service in South Africa. While president of the Royal Naval College, Hornby delivered there, in the spring of 1882, a short course of lectures on "Exercising Squadrons," the notes of which were printed for the use of naval officers. During his later years he wrote occasionally in ''The Times'' and the monthly magazines, always on professional subjects. For many years before his death he was universally recognised in the navy as the highest authority on naval tactics and naval strategy, although, except as a boy at Acre in 1840, he had never seen a shot fired in actual war. But almost the whole of his service was in flagships, and he had thus not only a very exceptional familiarity with fleets, but had also been the recipient of the traditions and the reflections of past generations.
{{reflist}}


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
*"Death of Sir Geoffrey Hornby" (News).  ''The Times''.  Monday, 4 March, 1895.  Issue '''34515''', col C, pg. 10.
*"Death of Sir Geoffrey Hornby" (News).  ''The Times''.  Monday, 4 March, 1895.  Issue '''34515''', col C, pg. 10.
*{{BibFGDNI}}
*{{AllenBritishNavalTactics}}
*Egerton, Mrs. Fred. (1896).  ''Admiral of the Fleet Sir Geoffrey Phipps Hornby, G.C.B.: A Biography''.  London: William Blackwood and Sons.
*{{FGDNI}}
*{{GordonRules2005}}
*Lambert, Andrew (2009).  ''Admirals: The Naval Commanders who made Britain Great''.  London: Faber and Faber Limited. ISBN 978-0-571-23157-7.
{{refend}}
 
==Papers==
{{refbegin}}
*[http://collections.rmg.co.uk/archive/objects/491800.html Papers in the possession of the National Maritime Museum.] For a detailed list of his papers see [[Phipps Hornby Papers at the National Maritime Museum]].
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


==Service Records==
==Service Records==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
*The National Archives.  [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7894083&queryType=1&resultcount=4 ADM 196/36.]
*{{TNA|ADM 196/36.|}}
*The National Archives.  [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7895649&queryType=1&resultcount=4 ADM 196/1.]
*{{TNA|ADM 196/1.|}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


[[Category:1825 births|Hornby]]
<div name=fredbot:appts>{{TabApptsBegin}}
[[Category:1895 deaths|Hornby]]
{{TabNaval}}
[[Category:Personalities|Hornby]]
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[George Greville Wellesley|George G. Wellesley]]'''|'''[[Channel Squadron (Royal Navy)|Senior Officer in Command, Channel Squadron]]'''<br>31 Aug, 1871<ref>Phipps Hornby service record. {{TNA|ADM 196/36/1838.}}</ref> &ndash; 30 Sep, 1874<ref>Phipps Hornby service record. {{TNA|ADM 196/36/1838.}}</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Frederick Beauchamp Paget Seymour, First Baron Alcester|Sir Frederick B. P. Seymour]]'''}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Admirals of the Fleet|Hornby]]
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Walter Tarleton|Sir John W. Tarleton]]'''|'''[[Second Sea Lord|Second Naval Lord]]'''<br>1 Jan, 1875|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Arthur William Acland Hood, First Baron Hood|Arthur W. A. Hood]]'''}}
[[Category:Royal Navy Flag Officers|Hornby, Geoffrey Thomas Phipps]]
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[James Robert Drummond|Sir James R. Drummond]]'''|'''[[Mediterranean Station|Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Station]]'''<br>5 Jan, 1877 &ndash; 5 Feb, 1880|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Frederick Beauchamp Paget Seymour, First Baron Alcester|Frederick B. P. Seymour]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Charles Frederick Alexander Shadwell|Charles F. A. Shadwell]]'''|'''[[Royal Naval College, Greenwich|President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich]]'''<br>1 Mar, 1881<ref>Phipps Hornby Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/36.}}  f. 653.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[William Garnham Luard|William G. Luard]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Alfred Phillipps Ryder|Sir Alfred P. Ryder]]'''|'''[[Portsmouth Station|Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Station]]'''<br>28 Nov, 1882{{ClowesVII|p. 85}} &ndash; Nov, 1885|Succeeded by<br>'''[[George Ommanney Willes|Sir George O. Willes]]'''}}
{{TabCourt}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Astley Cooper Key|Sir Astley C. Key]]'''|'''[[First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp|First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp]]'''<br>18 Jan, 1886<ref>;''The Navy List, Corrected to the 20th March, 1891''.  p. 501.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Algernon McLennan Lyons|Sir Algernon McL. Lyons]]'''}}
{{TabEnd}}
</div name=fredbot:appts>
 
==Footnotes==
{{reflist}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Phipps Hornby, Geoffrey}}
 
{{CatPerson|UK|1825|1895}}
{{CatAdmOfTheFleet|UK}}
{{CatBritannia|Pre}}
{{CatRN}}

Latest revision as of 21:14, 30 October 2022

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Geoffrey T. Phipps Hornby, as an Admiral.

Admiral of the Fleet SIR Geoffrey Thomas Phipps Hornby, G.C.B., Royal Navy (20 February, 1825 – 3 March, 1895) was an influential officer in the late-Victorian Royal Navy.

Early Life & Career

This article may temporarily contain text from an edition of the Dictionary of National Biography which is in the Public Domain.

Geoffrey Thomas Phipps Hornby was the second son of Admiral Sir Phipps Hornby, was born at Winwick in Lancashire on 20 Feb. 1825. He entered the navy in March 1837 on board the Princess Charlotte, then fitting out as the flagship of Sir Robert Stopford in the Mediterranean. He remained in her till she was paid off in August 1841, and was thus present at all the operations in the Archipelago and on the coast of Syria in 1839 and 1840.

(Sir) Phipps Hornby was at this time superintendent of Woolwich Dockyard, and the boy remained with him till the spring of 1842, when he was appointed to the Winchester, going out to the Cape of Good Hope as flagship of Rear-Admiral Josceline Percy. From her, on 15 June, 1844, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant[1] and appointed to the Cleopatra, with Captain Christopher Wyvill (1792–1863), for two years' slaver-hunting on the east coast of Africa. In the summer of 1846 he was sent to the Cape in command of a prize, and in the following spring returned to England in the Wolverene. In August his father was appointed Commander-in-Chief in the Pacific; Hornby went with him as Flag Lieutenant, and on 12 January 1850 was promoted to be Commander[2] of the flagship Asia of 84 guns. In the summer of 1851 the Asia returned to England, and Hornby settled down at Littlegreen, near Emsworth, a place which he had inherited some fourteen years before, though family arrangements had hitherto prevented his occupying it. Hornby meantime went with his kinsman, Lord Stanley, for a tour in India; but in Ceylon his health broke down, and he was obliged to get home as soon as possible. In the following year his father was a Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty in Lord Derby's administration; and on its downfall Hornby was promoted Captain, 18 December, 1852,[3] at the remarkably young age of twenty-seven.

Captain

Partly, it may be, from political or party reasons, partly because he married in 1853, and in great measure, probably—being, by the death of his elder brother, the eldest son—to manage his father's property in Sussex, Hornby remained on half-pay till August 1858, when, under Lord Derby's ministry, he was appointed to the Tribune, then in Chinese waters. He joined her at Hong Kong in the end of October, and was almost immediately sent off with a detachment of marines to Vancouver's Island, in consequence of the dispute with the United States relative to San Juan, one of a group of islands between Vancouver's and the mainland. The ownership of the island remained an open question till 1872, when it was settled in favour of the States; but in 1859 feeling on both sides ran high, and at one time war appeared to be imminent. That the difficulty was tided over was considered mainly due to the temper and tact shown by Hornby, whom the governor of Victoria wished to take forcible measures and the responsibility of them. When the dispute was temporarily compromised, the Tribune was ordered to England, arriving at the end of July 1860. In March 1861 Hornby was sent out to the Mediterranean to take command of the Neptune, an old three-decker converted into a screw two-decker, and manned by "bounty" men, whom Hornby characterised as "shameful riffraff." Here he came under the command of Sir William Fanshawe Martin, and had some experience in that admiral's attempts at the devolution of steam manœuvres. At the time he thought them needlessly complicated and likely to be dangerous; but in later life he seems to have better recognised the difficulties which Martin had to contend with, and to have acknowledged the merit of Martin's work. His comments on this are particularly interesting, as there can be little doubt that it was this practice which first led to his own profound studies of the subject and to his future excellence in the management of fleets.

In November, 1862 the Neptune returned to England, and in the following March Hornby was appointed to the Edgar as Flag Captain of Rear-Admiral Sidney Colpoys Dacres, commanding the Channel Squadron. This post he held till September, 1865, when he was appointed to the Bristol as Commodore, First Class on the West Coast of Africa Station. Here Hornby continued till the end of 1867, when the state of his health, as well as his private affairs after the death of his father, forced him to apply to be relieved, and he reached England early in 1868.

Flag Rank

On 1 January, 1869 he was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral,[4] aged forty-three, and was almost immediately appointed to the command of the Flying Squadron, which he held for two years.

From 1871 to 1874 he commanded the Channel Squadron, and from 1875 to 1877 he was one of the Lords Commissioner of the Admiralty, an appointment which, to a man of very active habits, proved excessively irksome, the more so as he found himself out of agreement with the methods of conducting the business of the navy. His time, he complained, was so taken up with a hundred little details, that he was unable to give proper consideration to the really important affairs that came before him. On 13 January, 1877 he wrote: "I left the admiralty with less regret and more pleasure than any work with which I have hitherto been so long connected." It was thus that, when offered the choice of being First Naval Lord or Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean, he unhesitatingly chose the latter, and he was accordingly appointed early in January, 1877. He had been promoted to the rank of Vice-Admiral two years before, 1 January, 1875. Captain (later Admiral of the Fleet Lord) John Fisher later recalled of him:

That great man was the finest admiral afloat since Nelson. At the Admiralty he was a failure. So would Nelson have been! With both of them their Perfection was on the Sea, not at an office desk. Admiral Hornby I simply adored. I had known him many years; and while my cabins on board my ship were being painted, he asked me to come and live with him aboard his Flagship, which I did, and I was next ship to him always when at sea. He was astounding. He would tell you what you were going to do wrong before you did it; and you couldn't say you weren't going to do it because you had put your helm over and the ship had begun to move the wrong way. Many years afterwards, when he was the Port Admiral at Portsmouth, I was head of the Gunnery School at Portsmouth, and, some war scare arising, he was ordered to take command of the whole Fleet at home collected at Portland. He took me with him as a sort of Captain of the Fleet, and we went to Bantry Bay, where we had exercises of inestimable value. He couldn't bear a fool, so of course he had many enemies. There never lived a more noble character or a greater seaman. He was incomparable.[5]

With his flag in the Alexandra, Hornby arrived at Malta on 18 March, and took up the command, which he held during two years of great political excitement. It was the time of the Russo-Turkish war, and in February, 1878, the Russian army having advanced within what seemed striking distance of Constantinople, Hornby was ordered to take the fleet through the Dardanelles. The Turkish governor and government protested, probably as a matter of form and to avoid irritating the Russians; but they made no attempt to oppose the passage, though Hornby went through quite prepared to use force if necessary. A good deal was said at the time about the "illegality" of the proceeding, but to Hornby, as to Lord Beaconsfield, the objection was a thing of naught, and The Times, commenting on the movement, said, "The admiral was directed to proceed to Constantinople, and he has proceeded." He anchored the fleet, in the first instance, at Prince's Island, about two miles from the city, but afterwards moved to a greater distance, remaining in the Sea of Marmora.

In acknowledgment of his services at this time, and of the tact with which he had conducted them, he was nominated a K.C.B. on 12 August, 1878. On 15 June 1879 he was promoted to the rank of Admiral, and in February, 1880 he returned to England. In 1881 he was appointed President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich from which he was removed in November, 1882, to be Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth, which office he held for the customary three years. In the summer of 1885, leaving Portsmouth for a few weeks, he commanded an evolutionary squadron, the direct precursor of the "manœuvres" which have been pretty regularly carried out ever since. One interesting feature of the exercises was the defence of the fleet at anchor in Berehaven against an attack by torpedo-boats. On 19 December, 1885 he was nominated a G.C.B., with especial reference to his summer "work in command of the evolutionary squadron;" and on 18 January, 1886 was appointed First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp to the Queen.

Admiral of the Fleet and Retirement

He now proposed to settle down on his estate at Lordington, near Emsworth, and to be known thenceforward as "Yeoman Hornby." Fate and the service were too strong for him; and though he did continue to "farm his own land," and to take a great deal of interest in the affairs of the county, the welfare of the service had always prior claims. On 1 May, 1888 he was promoted to the rank of Admiral of the Fleet,[6] and in 1889, and again in 1890, was appointed aide-de-camp to the German emperor during his visits to this country. In 1891 he was officially sent, on the direct invitation of the emperor, to witness the German manœuvres in Schleswig-Holstein, where his long hunting experience enabled him to astonish the young German princes. Hornby was, in fact, a horseman from his childhood, and as a cross-country rider was among the best. Although he completely recovered from a serious illness in 1888, and from a severe accident in the early spring of 1891, he was then sensibly aged. The death of his wife in January 1892 was a further shock. On 19 February, 1895 he attended a levee, the last time in his official capacity, for on 20 February, he was placed on the Retired List upon reaching the age of seventy.[7] On 3 March he died of influenza. The body was cremated at Woking, and the ashes buried at Compton on 9 March.

Hornby married in 1853 Emily Frances, daughter of the Rev. John Coles of Ditcham Park, Hampshire, by whom he had issue. One of his sons, Robert Stewart Phipps Hornby, C.M.G., became captain in the navy; an elder son, Edmund John Phipps Hornby, while major in the artillery, received in 1900 the Victoria Cross for service in South Africa. While president of the Royal Naval College, Hornby delivered there, in the spring of 1882, a short course of lectures on "Exercising Squadrons," the notes of which were printed for the use of naval officers. During his later years he wrote occasionally in The Times and the monthly magazines, always on professional subjects. For many years before his death he was universally recognised in the navy as the highest authority on naval tactics and naval strategy, although, except as a boy at Acre in 1840, he had never seen a shot fired in actual war. But almost the whole of his service was in flagships, and he had thus not only a very exceptional familiarity with fleets, but had also been the recipient of the traditions and the reflections of past generations.

Bibliography

  • "Death of Sir Geoffrey Hornby" (News). The Times. Monday, 4 March, 1895. Issue 34515, col C, pg. 10.
  • Allen, Matthew (July 2008). "The Deployment of Untried Technology: British Naval Tactics in the Ironclad Era". War in History 15 (3): pp. 269–293.
  • Egerton, Mrs. Fred. (1896). Admiral of the Fleet Sir Geoffrey Phipps Hornby, G.C.B.: A Biography. London: William Blackwood and Sons.
  • Fisher of Kilverstone, Lord (1952). Marder, Arthur J.. ed. Fear God and Dread Nought: The Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher of Kilverstone: The Making of an Admiral, 1854-1904. Volume I. London: Jonathan Cape.
  • Gordon, Andrew (2005). The Rules of the Game: Jutland and British Naval Command. London: John Murray (Publishers). ISBN 0719561310. (on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk).
  • Lambert, Andrew (2009). Admirals: The Naval Commanders who made Britain Great. London: Faber and Faber Limited. ISBN 978-0-571-23157-7.

Papers

Service Records

Footnotes

  1. Clowes. VII. p. 573.
  2. Clowes. VII. p. 573.
  3. Clowes. VII. p. 573.
  4. The London Gazette: no. 23456. p. 50. 5 January, 1869.
  5. Fisher. Memories. pp. 146-147.
  6. The London Gazette: no. 25816. p. 2766. 15 May, 1888.
  7. The London Gazette: no. 26601. p. 1066. 22 February, 1895.
  8. Phipps Hornby service record. The National Archives. ADM 196/36/1838.
  9. Phipps Hornby service record. The National Archives. ADM 196/36/1838.
  10. Phipps Hornby Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/36. f. 653.
  11. Clowes. The Royal Navy. Vol. VII. p. 85.
  12. ;The Navy List, Corrected to the 20th March, 1891. p. 501.