Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax: Difference between revisions

From The Dreadnought Project
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Created Page.)
 
(add RN/RNR/RNVR categories)
 
(73 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 4: Line 4:
Drax was born '''Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett''' in London on 28 August, 1880, the second son of John William Plunkett, later Seventeenth Baron of Dunsany, and his wife, Ernle Elizabeth Louisa Maria Grosvenor Burton.  He was the younger brother of the future Eighteenth Baron of Dunsany and in 1916 on inheriting estates from his mother he assumed by Royal Licence the additional names of Ernle-Erle-Drax.  Thenceforth he was usually known by the surname of Drax.
Drax was born '''Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett''' in London on 28 August, 1880, the second son of John William Plunkett, later Seventeenth Baron of Dunsany, and his wife, Ernle Elizabeth Louisa Maria Grosvenor Burton.  He was the younger brother of the future Eighteenth Baron of Dunsany and in 1916 on inheriting estates from his mother he assumed by Royal Licence the additional names of Ernle-Erle-Drax.  Thenceforth he was usually known by the surname of Drax.


From Cheam School he joined the Britannia and went to sea in 1896. He was promoted lieutenant in 1901 and went on to specialize in torpedo. At his own request he attended the Military Staff College, Camberley, and in 1912 he was one of the first officers chosen to undergo the new course of training for staff officers. In the same year he received early promotion to commander and when in 1913 Admiral (later Earl) Beatty [q.v.] was given command of the battle-cruiser squadron, he chose Plunkett as his war staff officer. In this capacity he served in the Lion at the actions of Heligoland Bight, Dogger Bank, and Jutland. He was promoted captain in 1916 and ended the war in the cruiser Blanche which was employed in laying minefields in the Heligoland Bight close to the enemy's main ports. For his services in the Lion he was mentioned in dispatches and he was appointed to the DSO when commanding the Blanche.
From Cheam School he joined the [[Royal Navy]], being appointed to the training ship [[H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship)|''Britannia'']] on 15 July, 1894. He was rated {{MidRN}} immediately on 15 July, 1896, and on 18 August he joined the battleship [[H.M.S. Redoubtable (1892)|''Revenge'']] in the Particular Service Squadron. He remained in ''Revenge'' until 13 December, 1898, when he returned to Britain.  On 15 March, 1899, he was appointed to ''Impregnable'' for ''Pilot'', where he remained until 1 July, joining the battleship [[H.M.S. Magnificent (1894)|''Magnificent'']] in the [[Channel Squadron (Royal Navy)|Channel Squadron]].  He obtained a First Class certificate in his Seamanship examination with 921 marks on 15 January, 1900, and was promoted Acting {{SubRN}} from that date. On 9 February he was appointed for study at the [[Royal Naval College, Greenwich]].  His studies were broken by an appointment to [[H.M.S. Blenheim (1890)|H.M.S. ''Blenheim'']] for the annual manœuvres on 10 July. He obtained a first class certificate in Parts I and II of the College examinations (Navigation) in April and July, 1900, a first in Pilotage in
October, a first in Gunnery in January, 1901, and a first in Torpedo in March.  For attaining five first class certificates he was awarded a £10 prize.


In 1919 Drax became first director of the new Naval Staff College at Greenwich where he served until 1922. Having proved himself as a brilliant staff officer and thinker and also as a fine captain of a cruiser, he was the ideal person for this appointment. He did much to make staff work respectable in a navy where thinkers were apt to be regarded with suspicion and only the proved seamen admired and promoted. Drax showed that it was possible to be both. He went next as president of the allied naval control commission in Berlin until 1924. In 1926–7 he commanded the Marlborough in the third battle squadron.
==Lieutenant==
Plunkett was appointed to [[H.M.S. Jupiter (1895)|H.M.S. ''Jupiter'']] on 22 March, 1901, and on 4 November he was promoted to the rank of {{LieutRN}}, dated 15 January.{{Gaz|27372|7146|5 November, 1901}}  He had been awarded a certificate of efficiency by Captain [[Archibald Berkeley Milne, Second Baronet|Sir A. Berkeley Milne, Bart.]], in September. On 26 November he was appointed to the sloop ''Rinaldo'' on the [[China Station]]. He remained in her until 28 June, 1903, when he was superseded, and returned to Britain to qualify in Torpedo duties.


In 1928 Drax was promoted rear-admiral and in 1929 appointed to command the first battle squadron in the Mediterranean. As director of manning at the Admiralty (1930–2) he was involved in the recovery of the navy's morale after the Invergordon mutiny, an episode for which he had had no responsibility. In 1932–4 he was commander-in-chief America and West Indies, where he cruised widely in his flagship and did much to promote friendly relations with the United States navy. He was promoted vice-admiral in 1932 and admiral in 1936. In 1935–8 he served as commander-in-chief, Plymouth. In 1939 he headed the British section of the Anglo-French military mission to Russia to concert plans against German aggression, a mission which was doomed from the start through no fault of his, for whilst Drax was engaged in vague staff talks at Leningrad, the Russo-German treaty of non-aggression was being negotiated.
On 1 September, 1903, Plunkett was appointed to [[H.M.S. Vernon (Torpedo Training School)|H.M.S. ''Vernon'']] at Portsmouth, the home of the torpedo branch.  On 31 August, 1904, he qualified as a torpedo officer, with 1661 out of 1900 marks. On 1 September he was reappointed to ''Vernon'' for service on the Junior Staff of the school. Around this time he met Admiral [[John Arbuthnot Fisher, First Baron Fisher|Sir John Fisher]], the [[Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth]], and recalled the incident in correspondence with [[Arthur Marder (Naval Historian)|Arthur Marder]]:


In 1939–41 Drax was commander-in-chief at the Nore where he was responsible for the main defences against German attack. After Dunkirk, when Drax worked in close co-operation with his old friend (Sir) Bertram Ramsay at Dover, his inventive mind did much to prepare for the expected invasion. After serving his full time at the Nore, Drax retired and returned to his estates in Dorset where he served as a private in the Home Guard. In the spring of 1943 he volunteered for duty as a commodore of convoy and served until 1945 with the distinction of never losing a ship.
<blockquote>I met Fisher only once when, as a very junior Lieutenant, I was bidden to dine with the C. in C. at Admiralty House, Portsmouth because some friends of mine were staying there. After dinner we sat down to play bridge and I somehow found myself as the partner of the great man. In one hand that I had to play I succeeded, mostly by luck, in winning a grand slam, on which Jackie said "good lad: your promotion is assured", to which I replied "Thank you sir, it's a bargain".<ref>Notes on Marder's draft of chapter 12 of ''From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow'', 11 November 1959, DRAX 6/18, Drax MSS., Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College.</ref></blockquote>


A critic of much of British strategy, Drax privately printed in 1943 a book on the ''Art of War'' which attacked many aspects of defence policy. Events have vindicated many of his views. Perhaps his greatest contribution to the navy was his promotion of the study of war, a topic which at the beginning of the century was somewhat discouraged due to the flood of technological change. Drax was a founder-member of the Naval Society which from 1913 has issued the quarterly Naval Review to encourage new ideas on naval matters and persuade young officers to put their thoughts on paper. Throughout his career Drax studied the art of war and constantly produced new ideas and new policies, based mainly on a thorough study of history. It was little known that he had a particular sympathy for the men of the lower deck and their pay and conditions of service. He was a friend of "Lionel Yexley" (James Woods), the naval reformer, and invited him to lecture to the staff course—a move looked upon as most radical. Drax was firm but kindly and he inspired great affection from those with whom he served. He encouraged junior officers constructively and was never too busy to advise or if necessary to criticize. In retirement at Charborough he remained busy with the management of his estates and the writing of articles on many subjects. The swimming bath, warmed by rays of the sun, was one invention of which he was very proud.
Plunkett remained on the staff of ''Vernon'' until 8 May, 1905, when he was appointed Lieutenant (T) of the armoured cruiser [[H.M.S. Bacchante (1901)|''Bacchante'']], then in Reserve. On 5 September he joined the cruiser [[H.M.S. Roxburgh (1904)|''Roxburgh'']] of the [[First Cruiser Squadron (Royal Navy)|First Cruiser Squadron]] as Lieutenant (T). He was temporarily relieved as torpedo lieutenant from 18 July, 1906, when he went on sick leave suffering from synovitis. He was found fit on 7 December and returned to ''Roxburgh''.


Drax was appointed C.B. in 1928 and K.C.B. in 1934. In 1916 he married Kathleen (died 1980), daughter of Quintin Chalmers, MD, and sister of the future Rear-Admiral [[William Scott Chalmers|W. S. Chalmers]]. Of an unusually happy marriage there were four daughters and one son. Drax died in Poole on 16 October, 1967.
He was appointed on 1 April, 1907, Lieutenant (T) additional for W.T. duties in [[H.M.S. King Edward VII (1903)|H.M.S. ''King Edward VII'']], flagship of Admiral [[Charles William de la Poer Beresford, First Baron Beresford|Lord Charles Beresford]], [[Channel Fleet (Royal Navy)|Commander-in-Chief, Channel Fleet]]. There he remained until 28 July, 1908, when he was appointed to ''Vernon'' to requalify in torpedo duties. On 29 September he was appointed to the [[Royal Naval War College]] at Portsmouth.  There he placed first out of six lieutenants in order of merit, and consequently was sent to the Army Staff College, Camberley, from 22 January to 23 July, 1909.  Dr. Robert S. Davison opines that this latter appointment "was extremely unusual duty for a naval officer, especially considering the often strained relations between the Admiralty and the War Office."<ref>Davison.  p. 44.</ref>  Plunkett was actually one of seven officers to study at Camberley before the war.  The strained relations referred to by Davison weren't the problem (if indeed they were a problem at all). In reality it simply wasn't practical to spare junior officers for courses of study at Camberley, which usually lasted two years, rather than the six months' course Plunkett undertook.


==Footnotes==
On 31 July, 1909, he again requalified at ''Vernon'', and on 27 December was appointed Lieutenant (T) of [[H.M.S. Cressy (1899)|H.M.S. ''Cressy'']] in the [[Home Fleet (Royal Navy)|Home Fleet]].  On 10 May, 1910, he became Lieutenant (T) of [[H.M.S. Natal (1905)|H.M.S. ''Natal'']].  He was appointed First Lieutenant and Torpedo Lieutenant (First & T) on 27 June, 1911.
{{reflist}}
 
In 1910 a volume entitled ''Modern Naval Tactics'', dated, 1909, was printed by the Admiralty.  Captain [[Herbert William Richmond|Herbert W. Richmond]], then Flag Captain in {{UK-Dreadnought}}, called it at the time "a thesis on Tactics, clever & very Irish, dogmatic to a degree but quite worth writing if only as a way of discussing matters."<ref>Diary entry of 27 August, 1910.  Richmond Papers.  National Maritime Museum.  RIC 1/8.</ref>
 
Plunkett was appointed to ''Victory'' on 10 April, 1912, having been selected to take the War Staff Course at the Royal Naval War College.  It doesn't seem to have gone to his head at all: He apparently wrote in his diary about this time:
 
<blockquote>I cannot help thinking that Richmond, Dewar, I and a few others must try to undertake the regeneration of the British Navy.<ref>Dewar Papers.  National Maritime Museum.  DEW/27.  f. 201.</ref></blockquote>
 
==Commander==
On 30 June, 1912, Plunkett was promoted to the rank of {{CommRN}}.{{Gaz|28623|4748|2 July, 1912}}  On 2 July he was lent to [[H.M.S. Aboukir (1900)|H.M.S. ''Aboukir'']] for service on the staff of Rear-Admiral [[David Richard Beatty, First Earl Beatty|David Beatty]], commanding the [[Sixth Cruiser Squadron (Royal Navy)|Sixth Cruiser Squadron]] for the annual manœuvres.<ref>ADM 196/45.  f. 214.</ref>  He qualified for the War Staff in January, 1913, and the Flag Captain of the War College, [[Richard Webb]], noted: "All V.G.I.  Strength of character & high ability.  Somewhat lacking in tact & inclined to shirk details.  Works well when interested.  Special aptitude in Operations."<ref>ADM 196/125.  f. 188.</ref>
 
On 24 February Plunkett was appointed War Staff officer on the staff of Beatty, the newly-appointed Rear-Admiral Commanding, [[First Battle Cruiser Squadron (Royal Navy)|First Battle Cruiser Squadron]].<ref>ADM 196/45.  f. 214.</ref>
 
==Great War==
On 15 April, 1916, Plunkett married Kathleen Meda Irene Chalmers in a ceremony conducted at St. John's Church, Edinburgh.  The new Mrs. Plunkett was the only daughter of Dr. Quintin Chalmers of London.<ref>"Marriages" (Marriages).  ''The Times''.  Thursday, 20 April, 1916.  Issue '''41146''', col A, p. 1.</ref> She was the sister of Lieutenant [[William Scott Chalmers|William S. Chalmers]], Plunkett's fellow War Staff officer in ''Lion''. On 12 May he was appointed Beatty's Flag Commander, also helping out with wireless signalling duties.  He served at the [[Battle of Jutland]].  On 30 June he was promoted to the rank of {{CaptRN}} for services in the battle where he "was most valuable in observing the effect of our fire" and on the strength of Beatty's re-iterated recommendations, and reappointed for War Staff duties on Beatty's staff, though he would be in {{UK-Tiger|f=p}}.<ref>ADM 196/45.  f. 214.</ref>
 
On 15 January, 1917, he was appointed in command of the {{UK-1Blanche|f=t}}.  In April, 1918, he was appointed in command of the {{UK-Dublin|f=t}}.<ref>{{TNA|ADM 196/45.}}  f. 214.</ref>
 
==Post-War==
He was appointed captain of {{UK-Marlborough}} in April 1926, staying with her one year.
 
On 2 August (of 1927?) he was appointed a [[Naval Aide-de-Camp]] to the King, vice [[Wilfred Tomkinson|Tomkinson]].{{Gaz|33303|5332|16 August, 1927}}
 
Drax was appointed an Ordinary Member of the Third Class, or Companion, of the Military Division of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (C.B.) on 2 January, 1928,{{GazSup|33343|3|2 January, 1928}} and was promoted to the rank of {{RearRN}} on 16 January, vice Campbell.{{Gaz|33349|440|20 January, 1928}}
 
On 12 April, 1929, Drax was appointed Rear-Admiral (Second-in-Command) in the [[First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|First Battle Squadron]], assuming command on 6 May.<ref>{{TNA|ADM 196/45}}.  f. 214.</ref>  After giving a lecture entitled "Battle Tactics" in November, 1929, Drax apparently got into a spat with his squadron commander, [[William Archibald Howard Kelly|Sir W. A. Howard Kelly]], who was also Second-in-Command, Mediterranean.  Having described Kelly as "violently antagonistic" and his arguments to be "plausible, persuasive, and utterly unsound," Drax then privately descended into petty one-upmanship, writing "my theories are based almost entirely on an exhaustive study of the late war, where, incidentally, I did more sea time and saw far more fighting than he [Kelly] did."<ref>Davison.  p. 50.</ref>  Evidently Drax felt he had much to be proud of in serving as a member of one of the most incompetent staffs afloat in modern naval history.
 
At some point the First Battle Squadron became the {{UK-BS|2}} of the [[Atlantic Fleet (Royal Navy)|Atlantic Fleet]], and Drax came under the command of Chatfield.  His report on Drax, dated 23 April, 1930, reads:
 
<blockquote>I have been v. favourably impressed with with the zeal of this offr.  He is a student of his profession with marked imagination & initiative, continually thinking how to improve the fighting efficiency of the fleet.  He has on several occasions handled the fleet with ability.  Of a somewhat shy nature, he is hardly a leader of men, though he <u>is</u> a leader in thought.  For this reason I doubt whether he would be a success in com<sup><u>d</u></sup> of a big fleet, where personal contact with those under com<sup><u>d</u></sup> is such an important factor.  He is definitely a user of weapons rather than a 'materiel' man, & he would do good work on the Staff side of the Admiralty.<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/90.|}} f. 88.</ref></blockquote>
 
Despite Chatfield's view that Drax was better at weaponry than materiel, Drax was next appointed as [[Director of the Manning Department]] in late 1930.  Curiously, he was granted a Private Pilot's Certificate of Competency in July of 1931 and an "A" Pilot's Licence.  In 1932, he left the Manning Department to take up an appointment as Commander-in-Chief, [[America and West Indies Station]], where he would preside until late 1934.<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/90.|}} f. 88.</ref>
 
In his later years, and doubtless with the wisdom coming from firsthand experience of a flag officer's responsibilities, he mellowed in his views of his former superiors. In 1959 he cautioned [[Arthur Marder (Naval Historian)|Arthur Marder]] that:
<blockquote>I now well how easy it is to exaggerate or state one[']s criticisms too harshly. [[Herbert William Richmond|Richman]] [''sic''] and [[Kenneth Gilbert Balmain Dewar|Dewar]] were able men but they did this and no doubt I have sometimes done it.<ref>Drax to Marder, 27 November 1959, DRAX 6/18, Drax MSS., Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College.</ref></blockquote>
 
Drax was appointed C.B. in 1928 and K.C.B. in 1934.  In 1916 he married Kathleen (died 1980), daughter of Quintin Chalmers, M.D., and sister of Lieutenant (later Rear-Admiral) [[William Scott Chalmers|W. S. Chalmers]].  Drax died in Poole on 16 October, 1967.


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
*"Sir Reginald Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Wednesday, 18 October, 1967.  Issue '''57075''', col F, pg. 12.
*"Sir Reginald Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax" (Obituaries).  ''The Times''.  Wednesday, 18 October, 1967.  Issue '''57075''', col F, p. 12.
*Davison, Robert L. (April 2003).  "Striking a Balance Between Dissent and Discipline: Admiral Sir Reginald Drax".  ''The Northern Mariner/Le Marin du nord'' '''XIII''' (2): pp. 43-57.
*Plunkett, Lieut. Hon. R. A. R. Plunkett, R.N. (1910).  ''Modern Naval Tactics: 1909''.  London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, Ltd., for His Majesty's Stationary Office.
*R.P.D. (1953).  "Lord Beatty's "Battle Cruiser Orders"."  ''The Naval Review''.  XLI.  No. 3.  pp. 269-276.
{{refend}}
 
==Papers==
{{refbegin}}
*[http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FDRAX Papers in the possession of Churchill Archives Centre, University of Cambridge.]
{{refend}}
{{refend}}


==Service Record==
==Service Record==
*[http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7919014&queryType=1&resultcount=1 ADM 196/45]
{{refbegin}}
*{{ADM196|142|D8121536}}
*{{ADM196|125|D8119395}}
*{{ADM196|90|D8115816}}
*{{ADM196|45|D7603462}}
{{refend}}
 
<div name=fredbot:appts>{{TabApptsBegin}}
{{TabNaval}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[John Moore Casement|John M. Casement]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Blanche (1909)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Blanche'']]'''<br>15 Jan, 1917{{NLNov17|p. 391''u''}} &ndash; Apr, 1918<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Francis Alexander Waddilove Buller|Francis A. W. Buller]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Albert Charles Scott|Albert C. Scott]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Dublin (1912)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Dublin'']]'''<br>Apr, 1918<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref> &ndash; 19 Feb, 1919<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Edward Hilary Rymer|Edward H. Rymer]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Arthur Brandreth Scott Dutton|Arthur B. S. Dutton]]'''|'''[[H.M.S. Marlborough (1912)|Captain of H.M.S. ''Marlborough'']]'''<br>9 Apr, 1926<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref> &ndash; 12 Apr, 1927<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Frederick Charles Fisher|Frederick C. Fisher]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[William Munro Kerr|William M. Kerr]]'''|'''[[First Battle Squadron (Royal Navy)|Rear-Admiral in the First Battle Squadron]]'''<br>12 Apr, 1929<ref>"Flag Appointments" (Official Appointments and Notices).  ''The Times''.  Wednesday, 9 June, 1929.  Issue '''45096''', col G, p. 6.</ref> &ndash; 26 Apr, 1930<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Henry Daniel Pridham-Wippell|Henry D. Pridham-Wippell]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Edward Astley Astley-Rushton|Edward A. Astley-Rushton]]'''<br><small>as '''Director of the Mobilisation Department'''</small>|'''[[Mobilisation Department (Royal Navy)|Director of the Manning Department]]'''<br>18 Dec, 1930 &ndash; 2 Apr, 1932|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Arthur Lionel Snagge|Arthur L. Snagge]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Vernon Harry Stuart Haggard|Vernon H. S. Haggard]]'''|'''[[North America and West Indies Station|Commander-in-Chief, America and West Indies Station]]'''<br>2 Apr, 1932<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref> &ndash; 10 Nov, 1934<ref>Date is indistinct, save for year. Drax Service Record. {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Matthew Robert Best|The Hon. Matthew R. Best]]'''<br><small>as '''Commander-in-Chief, North America and West Indies Station'''</small>}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Eric John Arthur Fullerton|Eric J. A. Fullerton]]'''|'''[[Plymouth Station|Commander in Chief, Plymouth Station]]'''<br>11 Jun, 1935 &ndash; 24 Oct, 1938|Succeeded by<br>'''[[Martin Eric Dunbar-Nasmith|Martin E. Dunbar-Nasmith]]'''}}
{{TabApptsRow|Preceded by<br>'''[[Henry John Studholme Brownrigg|Henry J. S. Brownrigg]]'''|'''[[Nore Station|Commander-in-Chief at the Nore]]'''<br>1 Dec, 1939<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref> &ndash; 2 Apr, 1941<ref>Drax Service Record.  {{TNA|ADM 196/45.}} f. 214.</ref>|Succeeded by<br>'''[[George Hamilton D'Oyly Lyon|Sir George H. D'O. Lyon]]'''}}
{{TabEnd}}
</div name=fredbot:appts>
 
 
==Footnotes==
{{reflist}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax, Reginald}}


[[Category:1880 births|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
{{CatPerson|UK|1880|1967}}
[[Category:1967 deaths|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
{{CatBritannia|July, 1894}}
[[Category:Personalities|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
[[Category:Directors of the Royal Naval Staff College]]
[[Category:Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Dublin (1912)|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
[[Category:First and Principal Naval Aides-de-Camp to King George VI]]   
[[Category:Directors of the Royal Naval Staff College|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
{{CatAdm|UK}}
[[Category:Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Marlborough (1912)|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
{{CatRN}}
[[Category:Commanders-in-Chief on the North America and West Indies Station|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
[[Category:Commanders-in-Chief, Plymouth|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
[[Category:First and Principal Naval Aides-de-Camps to King George VI|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]   
[[Category:Commanders-in-Chief at the Nore|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
[[Category:Royal Navy Admirals|Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax]]
[[Category:Royal Navy Flag Officers|Royal Navy Flag Officers]]

Latest revision as of 16:04, 7 April 2022

Admiral THE HONOURABLE SIR Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax, K.C.B., D.S.O., Royal Navy (22 August, 1880 – 16 October, 1967) was an officer of the Royal Navy.

Early Life & Career

Drax was born Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett in London on 28 August, 1880, the second son of John William Plunkett, later Seventeenth Baron of Dunsany, and his wife, Ernle Elizabeth Louisa Maria Grosvenor Burton. He was the younger brother of the future Eighteenth Baron of Dunsany and in 1916 on inheriting estates from his mother he assumed by Royal Licence the additional names of Ernle-Erle-Drax. Thenceforth he was usually known by the surname of Drax.

From Cheam School he joined the Royal Navy, being appointed to the training ship Britannia on 15 July, 1894. He was rated Midshipman immediately on 15 July, 1896, and on 18 August he joined the battleship Revenge in the Particular Service Squadron. He remained in Revenge until 13 December, 1898, when he returned to Britain. On 15 March, 1899, he was appointed to Impregnable for Pilot, where he remained until 1 July, joining the battleship Magnificent in the Channel Squadron. He obtained a First Class certificate in his Seamanship examination with 921 marks on 15 January, 1900, and was promoted Acting Sub-Lieutenant from that date. On 9 February he was appointed for study at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich. His studies were broken by an appointment to H.M.S. Blenheim for the annual manœuvres on 10 July. He obtained a first class certificate in Parts I and II of the College examinations (Navigation) in April and July, 1900, a first in Pilotage in October, a first in Gunnery in January, 1901, and a first in Torpedo in March. For attaining five first class certificates he was awarded a £10 prize.

Lieutenant

Plunkett was appointed to H.M.S. Jupiter on 22 March, 1901, and on 4 November he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant, dated 15 January.[1] He had been awarded a certificate of efficiency by Captain Sir A. Berkeley Milne, Bart., in September. On 26 November he was appointed to the sloop Rinaldo on the China Station. He remained in her until 28 June, 1903, when he was superseded, and returned to Britain to qualify in Torpedo duties.

On 1 September, 1903, Plunkett was appointed to H.M.S. Vernon at Portsmouth, the home of the torpedo branch. On 31 August, 1904, he qualified as a torpedo officer, with 1661 out of 1900 marks. On 1 September he was reappointed to Vernon for service on the Junior Staff of the school. Around this time he met Admiral Sir John Fisher, the Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth, and recalled the incident in correspondence with Arthur Marder:

I met Fisher only once when, as a very junior Lieutenant, I was bidden to dine with the C. in C. at Admiralty House, Portsmouth because some friends of mine were staying there. After dinner we sat down to play bridge and I somehow found myself as the partner of the great man. In one hand that I had to play I succeeded, mostly by luck, in winning a grand slam, on which Jackie said "good lad: your promotion is assured", to which I replied "Thank you sir, it's a bargain".[2]

Plunkett remained on the staff of Vernon until 8 May, 1905, when he was appointed Lieutenant (T) of the armoured cruiser Bacchante, then in Reserve. On 5 September he joined the cruiser Roxburgh of the First Cruiser Squadron as Lieutenant (T). He was temporarily relieved as torpedo lieutenant from 18 July, 1906, when he went on sick leave suffering from synovitis. He was found fit on 7 December and returned to Roxburgh.

He was appointed on 1 April, 1907, Lieutenant (T) additional for W.T. duties in H.M.S. King Edward VII, flagship of Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, Commander-in-Chief, Channel Fleet. There he remained until 28 July, 1908, when he was appointed to Vernon to requalify in torpedo duties. On 29 September he was appointed to the Royal Naval War College at Portsmouth. There he placed first out of six lieutenants in order of merit, and consequently was sent to the Army Staff College, Camberley, from 22 January to 23 July, 1909. Dr. Robert S. Davison opines that this latter appointment "was extremely unusual duty for a naval officer, especially considering the often strained relations between the Admiralty and the War Office."[3] Plunkett was actually one of seven officers to study at Camberley before the war. The strained relations referred to by Davison weren't the problem (if indeed they were a problem at all). In reality it simply wasn't practical to spare junior officers for courses of study at Camberley, which usually lasted two years, rather than the six months' course Plunkett undertook.

On 31 July, 1909, he again requalified at Vernon, and on 27 December was appointed Lieutenant (T) of H.M.S. Cressy in the Home Fleet. On 10 May, 1910, he became Lieutenant (T) of H.M.S. Natal. He was appointed First Lieutenant and Torpedo Lieutenant (First & T) on 27 June, 1911.

In 1910 a volume entitled Modern Naval Tactics, dated, 1909, was printed by the Admiralty. Captain Herbert W. Richmond, then Flag Captain in Dreadnought, called it at the time "a thesis on Tactics, clever & very Irish, dogmatic to a degree but quite worth writing if only as a way of discussing matters."[4]

Plunkett was appointed to Victory on 10 April, 1912, having been selected to take the War Staff Course at the Royal Naval War College. It doesn't seem to have gone to his head at all: He apparently wrote in his diary about this time:

I cannot help thinking that Richmond, Dewar, I and a few others must try to undertake the regeneration of the British Navy.[5]

Commander

On 30 June, 1912, Plunkett was promoted to the rank of Commander.[6] On 2 July he was lent to H.M.S. Aboukir for service on the staff of Rear-Admiral David Beatty, commanding the Sixth Cruiser Squadron for the annual manœuvres.[7] He qualified for the War Staff in January, 1913, and the Flag Captain of the War College, Richard Webb, noted: "All V.G.I. Strength of character & high ability. Somewhat lacking in tact & inclined to shirk details. Works well when interested. Special aptitude in Operations."[8]

On 24 February Plunkett was appointed War Staff officer on the staff of Beatty, the newly-appointed Rear-Admiral Commanding, First Battle Cruiser Squadron.[9]

Great War

On 15 April, 1916, Plunkett married Kathleen Meda Irene Chalmers in a ceremony conducted at St. John's Church, Edinburgh. The new Mrs. Plunkett was the only daughter of Dr. Quintin Chalmers of London.[10] She was the sister of Lieutenant William S. Chalmers, Plunkett's fellow War Staff officer in Lion. On 12 May he was appointed Beatty's Flag Commander, also helping out with wireless signalling duties. He served at the Battle of Jutland. On 30 June he was promoted to the rank of Captain for services in the battle where he "was most valuable in observing the effect of our fire" and on the strength of Beatty's re-iterated recommendations, and reappointed for War Staff duties on Beatty's staff, though he would be in H.M.S. Tiger.[11]

On 15 January, 1917, he was appointed in command of the scout cruiser Blanche. In April, 1918, he was appointed in command of the light cruiser Dublin.[12]

Post-War

He was appointed captain of Marlborough in April 1926, staying with her one year.

On 2 August (of 1927?) he was appointed a Naval Aide-de-Camp to the King, vice Tomkinson.[13]

Drax was appointed an Ordinary Member of the Third Class, or Companion, of the Military Division of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath (C.B.) on 2 January, 1928,[14] and was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 16 January, vice Campbell.[15]

On 12 April, 1929, Drax was appointed Rear-Admiral (Second-in-Command) in the First Battle Squadron, assuming command on 6 May.[16] After giving a lecture entitled "Battle Tactics" in November, 1929, Drax apparently got into a spat with his squadron commander, Sir W. A. Howard Kelly, who was also Second-in-Command, Mediterranean. Having described Kelly as "violently antagonistic" and his arguments to be "plausible, persuasive, and utterly unsound," Drax then privately descended into petty one-upmanship, writing "my theories are based almost entirely on an exhaustive study of the late war, where, incidentally, I did more sea time and saw far more fighting than he [Kelly] did."[17] Evidently Drax felt he had much to be proud of in serving as a member of one of the most incompetent staffs afloat in modern naval history.

At some point the First Battle Squadron became the Second Battle Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet, and Drax came under the command of Chatfield. His report on Drax, dated 23 April, 1930, reads:

I have been v. favourably impressed with with the zeal of this offr. He is a student of his profession with marked imagination & initiative, continually thinking how to improve the fighting efficiency of the fleet. He has on several occasions handled the fleet with ability. Of a somewhat shy nature, he is hardly a leader of men, though he is a leader in thought. For this reason I doubt whether he would be a success in comd of a big fleet, where personal contact with those under comd is such an important factor. He is definitely a user of weapons rather than a 'materiel' man, & he would do good work on the Staff side of the Admiralty.[18]

Despite Chatfield's view that Drax was better at weaponry than materiel, Drax was next appointed as Director of the Manning Department in late 1930. Curiously, he was granted a Private Pilot's Certificate of Competency in July of 1931 and an "A" Pilot's Licence. In 1932, he left the Manning Department to take up an appointment as Commander-in-Chief, America and West Indies Station, where he would preside until late 1934.[19]

In his later years, and doubtless with the wisdom coming from firsthand experience of a flag officer's responsibilities, he mellowed in his views of his former superiors. In 1959 he cautioned Arthur Marder that:

I now well how easy it is to exaggerate or state one[']s criticisms too harshly. Richman [sic] and Dewar were able men but they did this and no doubt I have sometimes done it.[20]

Drax was appointed C.B. in 1928 and K.C.B. in 1934. In 1916 he married Kathleen (died 1980), daughter of Quintin Chalmers, M.D., and sister of Lieutenant (later Rear-Admiral) W. S. Chalmers. Drax died in Poole on 16 October, 1967.

Bibliography

  • "Sir Reginald Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax" (Obituaries). The Times. Wednesday, 18 October, 1967. Issue 57075, col F, p. 12.
  • Davison, Robert L. (April 2003). "Striking a Balance Between Dissent and Discipline: Admiral Sir Reginald Drax". The Northern Mariner/Le Marin du nord XIII (2): pp. 43-57.
  • Plunkett, Lieut. Hon. R. A. R. Plunkett, R.N. (1910). Modern Naval Tactics: 1909. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, Ltd., for His Majesty's Stationary Office.
  • R.P.D. (1953). "Lord Beatty's "Battle Cruiser Orders"." The Naval Review. XLI. No. 3. pp. 269-276.

Papers

Service Record

Naval Appointments
Preceded by
John M. Casement
Captain of H.M.S. Blanche
15 Jan, 1917[21] – Apr, 1918[22]
Succeeded by
Francis A. W. Buller
Preceded by
Albert C. Scott
Captain of H.M.S. Dublin
Apr, 1918[23] – 19 Feb, 1919[24]
Succeeded by
Edward H. Rymer
Preceded by
Arthur B. S. Dutton
Captain of H.M.S. Marlborough
9 Apr, 1926[25] – 12 Apr, 1927[26]
Succeeded by
Frederick C. Fisher
Preceded by
William M. Kerr
Rear-Admiral in the First Battle Squadron
12 Apr, 1929[27] – 26 Apr, 1930[28]
Succeeded by
Henry D. Pridham-Wippell
Preceded by
Edward A. Astley-Rushton
as Director of the Mobilisation Department
Director of the Manning Department
18 Dec, 1930 – 2 Apr, 1932
Succeeded by
Arthur L. Snagge
Preceded by
Vernon H. S. Haggard
Commander-in-Chief, America and West Indies Station
2 Apr, 1932[29] – 10 Nov, 1934[30]
Succeeded by
The Hon. Matthew R. Best
as Commander-in-Chief, North America and West Indies Station
Preceded by
Eric J. A. Fullerton
Commander in Chief, Plymouth Station
11 Jun, 1935 – 24 Oct, 1938
Succeeded by
Martin E. Dunbar-Nasmith
Preceded by
Henry J. S. Brownrigg
Commander-in-Chief at the Nore
1 Dec, 1939[31] – 2 Apr, 1941[32]
Succeeded by
Sir George H. D'O. Lyon

 

Footnotes

  1. The London Gazette: no. 27372. p. 7146. 5 November, 1901.
  2. Notes on Marder's draft of chapter 12 of From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow, 11 November 1959, DRAX 6/18, Drax MSS., Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College.
  3. Davison. p. 44.
  4. Diary entry of 27 August, 1910. Richmond Papers. National Maritime Museum. RIC 1/8.
  5. Dewar Papers. National Maritime Museum. DEW/27. f. 201.
  6. The London Gazette: no. 28623. p. 4748. 2 July, 1912.
  7. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  8. ADM 196/125. f. 188.
  9. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  10. "Marriages" (Marriages). The Times. Thursday, 20 April, 1916. Issue 41146, col A, p. 1.
  11. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  12. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  13. The London Gazette: no. 33303. p. 5332. 16 August, 1927.
  14. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 33343. p. 3. 2 January, 1928.
  15. The London Gazette: no. 33349. p. 440. 20 January, 1928.
  16. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  17. Davison. p. 50.
  18. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/90. f. 88.
  19. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/90. f. 88.
  20. Drax to Marder, 27 November 1959, DRAX 6/18, Drax MSS., Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College.
  21. The Navy List. (November, 1917). p. 391u.
  22. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  23. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  24. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  25. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  26. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  27. "Flag Appointments" (Official Appointments and Notices). The Times. Wednesday, 9 June, 1929. Issue 45096, col G, p. 6.
  28. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  29. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  30. Date is indistinct, save for year. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  31. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.
  32. Drax Service Record. The National Archives. ADM 196/45. f. 214.