Infighting Admirals

Infighting Admirals

by Geoffrey Penn (Author)

Synopsis

After the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, the Royal Navy was not involved in a major war until 1914. The Crimea and Boer Wars required little more than bombarding the enemy and ferrying the Army. Nevertheless, mighty fleets were kept in all parts of the Empire ready to take action in the event of hostilities. Such was the standing of the Royal Navy that many of its officers were recruited from the landed aristocracy. One of these was the reactionary Lord Charles Beresford, who, in addition to holding his commission, became a Member of Parliament and brazenly used his position of influence and considerable wealth to further his advancement and his views. 'Jacky' Fisher, now widely acknowledged to be the Father of the modern Royal Navy, was as different from Beresford as it is possible to imagine. The son of an impoverished Army Officer, he rose to become First Sea Lord - twice. Fisher was determined to utilise emerging scientific developments such as steam turbines, gunnery, monitors, submarines and communications in his sustained campaign to ensure the RN remained the finest in the World. All Beresford and Fisher had in common was ambition and drive. The clash between them was as inevitable as it was dramatic. This is more than a story of the development of the Royal Navy; it is a fascinating study of two totally contrasting characters. At stake was nothing less than the survival of the Nation in the face of the emerging threat from Germany. Geoffrey Penn describes both these titanic characters and the momentous events that occurred with his usual precision and in his engaging style.

$4.68

Save:$26.68 (85%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Published: 07 Mar 2000

ISBN 10: 0850527562
ISBN 13: 9780850527568

Media Reviews
This book is one of a number from Pen & Sword about the high profile feud that occurred in the first decade of the 20th century in the senior echelons of the Royal Navy about the need for change. On the one hand the aristocratic, arrogant and highly popular Lord Charles Beresford, one of a number of senior naval commanders steeped in what he saw as the traditions of British sea power. On the other Jacky Fisher, a man of much humbler origins from a coffee plantation in Ceylon who had risen through the ranks by sheer determination and hard work to the top naval post of First Sea Lord and who saw it as his role to drag the Royal Navy into the 20th century, either willingly or kicking and screaming. This work not only tells us much about the Victorian and Edwardian navy but also about the social history of the period and the social situations of the various participants. - The Northern Mariner