Arthur Cavenagh Leveson

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File:Arthur Leveson Dodd Portrait.JPG
Sir Arthur Levesion, portrayed as a Rear-Admiral.
Portrait: Francis Dodd, 1917.

Admiral SIR Arthur Cavenagh Leveson, G.C.B., F.R.G.S., Royal Navy (27 January, 1868 – 26 June, 1929) was an officer of the Royal Navy.

Early Life & Career

Leveson was promoted to the rank of Commander on 1 January, 1899.[1]

Captain

Leveson was promoted to the rank of Captain on 30 June, 1903.[2]

Leveson was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral on 1 December, 1913, vice Baker Baker.[3] He was forty-five years and ten months old.

Great War

Oliver later recounted:

Fisher had a hatred of the D.O.D. R.A. Leveson, and when Fisher was yarning in my office, as he often did, and Leveson came in, as soon as he went out Fisher would say he was a 'traitor'. I asked him once what he had against Leveson and he said he could not remember but he knew he had something. Fisher was so set against Leveson that I went to Churchill and told him and asked that he might get a command at sea and Churchill sent him to the 2nd Battle Cruiser Squadron.[4]

Post-War

Leveson was confirmed in the rank of Vice-Admiral on 1 January, 1919.[5]

Leveson was promoted to the rank of Admiral on 1 June, 1922, vice Heath.[6]

He was placed on the Retired List on 22 February, 1928.[7]

Footnotes

  1. London Gazette: no. 27040. p. 84. 6 January, 1899.
  2. London Gazette: no. 27572. p. 4187. 3 July, 1903.
  3. London Gazette: no. 28780. p. 9083. 9 December, 1913.
  4. Quoted in Mackay. Fisher of Kilverstone. p. 470.
  5. London Gazette: no. 31104. p. 199. 3 January, 1919.
  6. London Gazette: no. 32717. p. 4329. 6 June, 1922.
  7. London Gazette: no. 33362. p. 1493. 2 March, 1928.

Bibliography

  • "Admiral Sir Arthur Leveson" (Obituaries). The Times. Friday, 28 June, 1929. Issue 45241, col D, pg. 18.
  • Mackay, Ruddock Finlay (1973). Fisher of Kilverstone. London: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198224095.

Service Record


Naval Offices
Preceded by
George A. Ballard
Director of the Operations Division
1914 – 1915
Succeeded by
Thomas Jackson
Preceded by
Sir Robert K. Arbuthnot
Rear-Admiral in the Second Battle Squadron
1915 – 1916
Succeeded by
William E. Goodenough
Preceded by
George A. Ballard
Rear-Admiral Commanding,
Second Battle Cruiser Squadron

1916 – 1918
Succeeded by
Lionel Halsey
Preceded by
Sir Hugh Evan-Thomas
Vice-Admiral Commanding,
Fifth Battle Squadron

1918 – 1919
Succeeded by
Command Abolished
Preceded by
Sir Henry F. Oliver
Vice-Admiral Commanding,
Second Battle Squadron

1919 – 1920
Succeeded by
Sir William C. M. Nicholson
Preceded by
Sir Alexander L. Duff
Commander-in-Chief on the China Station
1922 – 1924
Succeeded by
Sir Allan F. Everett
Preceded by
Sir Montague E. Browning
First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp
1926 – 1928
Succeeded by
Sir Richard F. Phillimore