Difference between revisions of "Signal Division (Royal Navy)"

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==Bibliography==
 
==Bibliography==
 
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*[[Alfred Charles Dewar|Dewar, Alfred C.]] (1922).  ''Encyclopædia Britannica: The New Volumes''.  '''Volume XXX'''.  London: Encyclopædia Britannica Company, Ltd..
 
*{{BibUKNavalStaff}}
 
*{{BibUKNavalStaff}}
*[[Alfred Charles Dewar|Dewar, Alfred Charles]] (1922).  ''Encyclopædia Britannica: The New Volumes''.  '''Volume XXX'''.  London: Encyclopædia Britannica Company, Ltd..
 
 
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Revision as of 16:52, 10 January 2012

The Signal Division of the Naval Staff was the constituent part of the Royal Navy's Naval Staff responsible for communications. The division was instituted on 18 August, 1917,[1] and emerged from the earlier Signal Section of the Admiralty War Staff set-up in 1914 under Rear-Admiral Sydney Fremantle.

History

On 8 September, 1914, the Admiralty directed that:

the Signal Committee shall be temporarily transferred from Portsmouth to London and attached to the Admiralty War Staff of which it will for the present constitute a Section.[2]

In an Admiralty Memorandum of 18 August, 1917, the Section was upgraded to a Division:

Signal Division will be responsible for all Naval, Mercantile, Allied and Naval and Military: W/T Signalling (including the allocation of all W/T Call-signs other than 'commercial'); S/T Signalling; Visual Signalling(including allocation of pennants); Private and Recognition Signals; Signal Books; Codes and Ciphers; Methods of Drafting, Coding Ciphering and dealing with all messages (whether W/T, S/T, Visual, Landline, or Cable); 'S' Orders and 'SR' Orders … Signal Division is not responsible for either Personnel or Materiel, but will act in an advisory capacity to the departments dealing therewith and should be consulted as necessary.[3]

Directors of the Signal Division

Dates of appointment given:

Footnotes

  1. Dewar. Encyclopædia Britannica. XXX. p. 6.
  2. The National Archives. ADM 116/3403.
  3. The National Archives. ADM 116/3404.
  4. Naval Staff. p. 122.

Bibliography

Primary Sources