Difference between revisions of "Royal Naval College, Dartmouth"

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(Commanding Officers)
(Commanding Officers)
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*Captain [[Edmond Hyde Parker]], 1914–1915.
 
*Captain [[Edmond Hyde Parker]], 1914–1915.
 
*Captain [[Norman Craig Palmer|Norman C. Palmer]], C.V.O., 1915–1916.
 
*Captain [[Norman Craig Palmer|Norman C. Palmer]], C.V.O., 1915–1916.
*{{RearRN}} [[William George Elmhirst Ruck Keene|William G. E. Ruck Keene]], M.V.O., 1916–1919.
+
*{{RearRN}} [[William George Elmhirst Ruck-Keene|William G. E. Ruck-Keene]], M.V.O., 1916–1919.
 
*Rear-Admiral [[Eustace La Trobe Leatham|Eustace La T. Leatham]], C.B., 1919–1921.
 
*Rear-Admiral [[Eustace La Trobe Leatham|Eustace La T. Leatham]], C.B., 1919–1921.
  

Revision as of 15:01, 23 October 2011

Staff

Captain Stanley and the Staff and Masters of the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth at Christmas, 1912.

The College was commanded by a Royal Navy Captain on the Active List. He had command of the ship Pomone, upon whose books all the College's naval staff were borne. An Engineer Captain had charge of the extensive College workshops. There were on average thirty officers and warrant officers on the naval staff, with another six in charge of the College's tenders.

The professorial staff was headed by a Headmaster. There were five departments; Modern Languages, History & English, Science, Navigation and Mathematics, each with a Head of Department. The remaining staff consisted of Senior Masters, Masters and Naval Instructors.

Term Organisation

The Cadets were organised into six terms based on when they entered the college. Each term was named after a famous naval officer. For example, in May, 1914 the six terms were named; "Blake", "Drake", "St. Vincent", "Exmouth", "Greynvile" and "Hawke". Each term had two "Officers of Term", a Lieutenant and an Engineer Lieutenant, assisted by three to four "Cadet Captains" selected from the term's cadets. In some cases a "Chief Cadet Captain" was also selected.

First World War

One Dartmouth cadet described his going away to war:

I was 5th term, Greynvile, in July 1914 when we hurried away. Actually, another chap in my term and I were playing cricket for an "A" team at Kingswear on Saturday afternoon when one K. G. Reid, a master, head of Science and later a Lieut. R.N.V.R. in the old Tiger, advanced across the ground shouting "Mobilise!" Very shortly afterwards we went to sea and guarded the flank of troopships carrying the British Expeditionary Force to France. We in the Vengeance on the Western Patrol used to stop at sea and take our mail from a destroyer. Why we were never torpedoed I can't think! Eventually, about March 1915, the old Prince George took us to the Dardanelles.[1]

Commanding Officers

Footnotes

  1. Quoted in Pack. Britannia at Dartmouth. p. 193.

Bibliography

  • Davies, E. L.; Grove, E. J. (1980). The Royal Naval College Dartmouth: Seventy-five years in Pictures. Portsmouth: Gieves & Hawkes Limited. ISBN 0-85997-462-6.
  • Pack, Captain S. W. C. (1966). Britannia at Dartmouth: The Story of H.M.S. Britannia and the Britannia Royal Naval College. London: Alvin Redman Limited.