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

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The '''Signal Division of the Naval Staff''' was the constituent part of the [[Royal Navy]]'s [[Naval Staff (Royal Navy)|Naval Staff]] responsible for communications.  The division was instituted on 18 August, 1917,<ref>Dewar.  ''Encyclopædia Britannica''.  '''XXX'''.  p. 6.</ref> and emerged from the earlier [[Signal Section (Royal Navy)|Signal Section]] of the [[Admiralty War Staff]] set-up in 1914 under Rear-Admiral [[Sydney Robert Fremantle|Sydney Fremantle]].
 
The '''Signal Division of the Naval Staff''' was the constituent part of the [[Royal Navy]]'s [[Naval Staff (Royal Navy)|Naval Staff]] responsible for communications.  The division was instituted on 18 August, 1917,<ref>Dewar.  ''Encyclopædia Britannica''.  '''XXX'''.  p. 6.</ref> and emerged from the earlier [[Signal Section (Royal Navy)|Signal Section]] of the [[Admiralty War Staff]] set-up in 1914 under Rear-Admiral [[Sydney Robert Fremantle|Sydney Fremantle]].
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==History==
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On 8 September, 1914, the Admiralty directed that:
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<blockquote>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.<ref>The National Archives.  ADM 116/3403.</ref></blockquote>
  
 
==Footnotes==
 
==Footnotes==

Revision as of 10:57, 30 December 2010

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]

Footnotes

  1. Dewar. Encyclopædia Britannica. XXX. p. 6.
  2. The National Archives. ADM 116/3403.

Bibliography

Primary Sources