Ernest Rice

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Admiral SIR Ernest Rice, K.C.B., Royal Navy (24 February, 1840 – 15 April, 1927) was an officer of the Royal Navy.

Early Life & Career

Rice's entry into the Royal Navy was later recounted by his son-in-law:

He drove with his parents in a carriage and pair from their home at Dane Court to Deal, a distance of some five miles: there he embarked in one of the Deal luggers (now, unhappily, extinct), and was taken out to H.M.S. Odin, lying in the Downs, on her way to the Baltic. He had no previous naval training, but within a few weeks of joining his ship he found himself in a sanguinary boat action, in which his life was in all probability saved by his being unable to extricate himself from beneath the dead body of a marine who had fallen upon him; and in this affair of Gamla Carleby he brought the boats out of action as the only surviving officer.[1]

Flag Rank

On 21 May, 1903 Rice was appointed as Admiral Commanding Coastguard and Reserves.[2] He was placed on the Retired List on 24 February, 1905.[3]

Footnotes

  1. "Training in the Old Navy" (Obituaries). The Times. Tuesday, 19 April, 1927. Issue 44559, col B, pg. 15.
  2. "Naval & Military Intelligence" (Official Appointments and Notices). The Times. Saturday, 9 May, 1903. Issue 37076, col D, pg. 8.
  3. London Gazette: no. 27769. p. 1503. 28 February, 1905.

Bibliography

  • "Admiral Sir Ernest Rice" (Obituaries). The Times. Saturday, 16 April, 1927. Issue 44557, col C, pg. 12.

Service Records