James Somerville
Sir James Somerville | |
---|---|
Born | Weybridge, Surrey | 17 July 1882
Died | 19 March 1949 Dinder House, Somerset | (aged 66)
Buried | St Michael and All Angels Church, Dinder |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service | Royal Navy |
Years of service | 1897–1946 |
Rank | Admiral of the Fleet |
Commands | Eastern Fleet (1942–44) Force H (1940–42) Battlecruiser Squadron (1940) East Indies Station (1938–39) Destroyer Flotillas, Mediterranean Fleet (1936–38) HMS Norfolk (1931–32) HMS Barham (1927–29) HMS Warspite (1927) HMS Benbow (1922–23) |
Battles / wars | |
Awards | Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire Distinguished Service Order Mentioned in Despatches (2) Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau (Netherlands) Commander of the Legion of Merit (United States) |
Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Fownes Somerville, GCB, GBE, DSO, DL (17 July 1882 – 19 March 1949) was a Royal Navy officer. He served in the First World War as fleet wireless officer for the Mediterranean Fleet where he was involved in providing naval support for the Gallipoli Campaign. He also served in the Second World War as commander of the newly formed Force H: after the French armistice with Germany, Winston Churchill gave Somerville and Force H the task of neutralizing the main element of the French battle fleet, then at Mers El Kébir in Algeria. After he had destroyed the French Battle fleet, Somerville played an important role in the pursuit and sinking of the German battleship Bismarck.
Somerville later became Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet. In April 1942 Admiral Chūichi Nagumo's powerful Indian Ocean raid inflicted heavy losses on his fleet. However, in spring 1944, with reinforcements, Somerville was able to go on the offensive in a series of aggressive air strikes in the Japanese-occupied Dutch East Indies. He spent the remainder of the war in charge of the British naval delegation in Washington, D.C.
Early life and family
[edit]Somerville was born on 17 July 1882, the second son of Arthur Fownes Somerville, of Dinder House, Somerset, and his wife Ellen Somerville (née Sharland, daughter of William Stanley Sharland of New Norfolk, Tasmania).[1] His father had studied at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, was called to the bar as a barrister in 1875 and had then become a Recorder of Wells, Somerset in 1916 and had served as President of the Somerset Archaeological Society.[2] Somerville was descended in the male-line from the Fownes family of Nethway and Kittery Court, his ancestors being John Fownes the younger and John Fownes the elder were Members of Parliament for Dartmouth in the early eighteenth century and another ancestor went on to marry an heiress of the Somerville family of Dinder House, changing their surname to Somerville in 1831 in honour of this connection.[3] Through his paternal grandmother, he was descended from the Hood family, which had a long tradition of naval service and which counted as members Vice Admiral Sir Samuel Hood, 1st Baronet, and Admiral Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood.[4]
In 1913, Somerville married Mary Main; they had a daughter and a son.[5] His son Lieutenant-Commander John Arthur Fownes Somerville, CB, CBE served in the Royal Navy and became the deputy director of GCHQ.[6] The news reader Julia Somerville is one of their granddaughters.[7]
Naval career
[edit]Early career
[edit]Somerville joined the training ship HMS Britannia as a cadet on 15 January 1897 and served as midshipman in the cruiser HMS Royal Arthur in the Channel Fleet and then in the cruiser HMS Warspite on the Pacific Station.[5] He was promoted to sub-lieutenant on 15 December 1901[8] and to lieutenant on 15 March 1904[9] before joining the armoured cruiser HMS Sutlej on the China Station.[5] He attended the torpedo school HMS Vernon in 1907 and then remained there to work on the development of wireless telegraphy.[5]
Somerville served in the Royal Navy in the First World War, initially as a wireless officer in the battleship HMS Marlborough in the Grand Fleet and then as fleet wireless officer for the Mediterranean Fleet serving in the battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth, then the battlecruiser HMS Inflexible and then the cruiser HMS Chatham.[5] In HMS Chatham he was involved in providing naval support for the Gallipoli Campaign.[5] He was promoted to commander on 31 December 1915,[10] and awarded the Distinguished Service Order and Mentioned in Despatches on 14 March 1916.[11][12] He transferred to the battleship HMS King George V in the Grand Fleet in January 1917 and then joined the signals school at Portsmouth at the end of the year.[5]
Somerville stayed in the service after the war, becoming Executive Officer in the battleship HMS Ajax in the Mediterranean Fleet in March 1920 and then Executive Officer in the battleship HMS Emperor of India also in the Mediterranean Fleet.[13] Promoted to captain on 31 December 1921,[14] he joined the Admiralty as Deputy Director of Signals in early 1922, before becoming Flag Captain to Sir John Kelly, commanding the 4th Battle Squadron, in the battleship HMS Benbow in August 1922.[13] He returned to the Admiralty as Director of Signals in February 1925 before becoming Flag Captain to Sir John Kelly in his new role as Commander of the 1st Battle Squadron in early 1927, first in the battleship HMS Warspite and then, after the Warspite struck a rock, in the battleship HMS Barham.[13] He joined the directing staff at the Imperial Defence College in 1929 and became commanding officer of the cruiser HMS Norfolk in the Home Fleet in December 1931.[13] Promoted to commodore on 14 October 1932, he became commander of the Royal Navy Barracks at Portsmouth later that month and then, after promotion to rear admiral on 12 October 1933, he became Director of Personnel Services at the Admiralty in May 1934.[13] As Director of Personnel Services he introduced a seaman's welfare scheme following the Invergordon Mutiny.[13] He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath on 1 January 1935.[15]
Somerville became Flag Officer Destroyers in the Mediterranean Fleet in March 1936 and during the Spanish Civil War commanded an international force in the area of Majorca when Palma was threatened with bombardment by Republican forces.[16] Promoted to vice admiral on 11 September 1937, he became Commander-in-Chief, East Indies, with his flag in the cruiser HMS Norfolk in July 1938.[13] He retired with suspected tuberculosis in early 1939 but was still advanced to Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath on 8 June 1939.[17]
European operations, 1939–1942
[edit]With the approach of the Second World War, Somerville was recalled to duty on special service to the Admiralty later in 1939 and performed important work on naval radar development.[16] In May 1940, Somerville served under Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay, helping organize the Dunkirk evacuation.[13] His next major assignment was as commander of the newly formed Force H based in Gibraltar, with his flag in the battlecruiser HMS Hood.[13] After the French armistice with Germany on 22 June 1940, Winston Churchill gave Somerville and Force H the task of neutralizing the main element of the French battle fleet, then at Mers El Kébir in Algeria. They were to attack and destroy the French ships if all other options failed. Churchill wrote to him:
You are charged with one of the most disagreeable tasks that a British Admiral has ever been faced with, but we have complete confidence in you and rely on you to carry it out relentlessly.[18]
Although Somerville privately felt that such an attack would be a mistake, he carried out his orders. The French refused to comply with British conditions and so on 3 July 1940, Force H attacked French ships at Mers-el-Kébir. Somerville's forces inflicted severe damage on their erstwhile allies, most notably sinking the battleship Bretagne with heavy loss of life. Several other major French ships were damaged during the bombardment. The operation was judged a success, but he admitted privately to his wife that he had not been quite as aggressive in the destruction as he could have been.[19] He was Mentioned in Despatches on 16 August 1940.[20]
Somerville transferred his flag to the battlecruiser HMS Renown in August 1940 and led the British forces in the Battle of Cape Spartivento in November; Churchill was outraged at Somerville for not continuing the pursuit of the Italian Navy after that battle and dispatched the Earl of Cork to conduct an inquiry, but Cork found that Somerville had acted entirely appropriately.[21] Force H bombarded Genoa on 9 February 1941, and Somerville, still in HMS Renown in May 1941, also played an important role in the pursuit and sinking of the German battleship Bismarck later that month.[21] Somerville transferred his flag to the battleship HMS Nelson in August 1941 and also played a major role in protecting Malta from enemy attack in autumn 1941.[22] He transferred his flag to the battleship HMS Rodney and then to the battleship HMS Malaya.[21] He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his service with Force H on 21 October 1941.[23]
Indian Ocean, 1942–1944
[edit]Somerville became Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Fleet with his flag in the battleship HMS Warspite in March 1942 and was promoted to full admiral on 6 April 1942.[24] Following the fall of Singapore, Somerville transferred his fleet headquarters from Trincomalee in Ceylon to Kilindini in Kenya.[21] In April 1942 Admiral Chūichi Nagumo's powerful 1st Air Fleet (Kidō Butai) centered around five fleet carriers launched the Indian Ocean raid that inflicted heavy losses on Somerville's fleet including a light aircraft carrier, two heavy cruisers, two destroyers, one corvette, five other vessels, and 45 aircraft. The damage inflicted upon Royal Navy and allied Commonwealth forces in the Indian Ocean was nonetheless minimized, being forewarned by intelligence so their heavy units sailed from their bases prior to the Japanese air attacks. Somerville avoided a direct confrontation with the Imperial Japanese Navy, preserving the Eastern Fleet's two fleet carriers and one battleship.[25]
For most of the rest of 1942, Somerville's fleet avoided any major operations against the Japanese, barring a brief sortie into the Bay of Bengal in late July and early August 1942 during which he turned back after being spotted by a Japanese flying boat on 2 August 1942. Somerville's unwillingness to risk his ships in a diversionary attack against the Japanese in Southeast Asia during mid- and late 1942, which he saw as necessary to preserve its precariously limited strength and its ability to guard merchant convoys in the Indian Ocean, was met with derision by US Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Ernest J. King, as King believed that the Eastern Fleet doing so would greatly assist the Americans in their own operations against the Japanese as they clashed at the Battles of the Coral Sea and Midway and throughout the Guadalcanal campaign.[26]
In Spring 1944, with reinforcements, Somerville was able to go on the offensive in a series of aggressive air strikes in the Japanese-occupied Dutch East Indies: these included attacks on Sabang in April and May 1944 and on Surabaya in May 1944.[21] He was also advanced to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath on 22 August 1944.[27]
Later career
[edit]Somerville was placed in charge of the British naval delegation in Washington, D.C. in October 1944 where he managed—to the surprise of almost everyone—to get on very well with the notoriously abrasive and anti-British Admiral Ernest King, the United States' Chief of Naval Operations.[22] He became Deputy Lieutenant of Somerset on 8 November 1944,[28] was promoted to Admiral of the Fleet on 8 May 1945 and was advanced to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire on 1 January 1946.[29] He was also appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau by the Netherlands government and a Commander of the Legion of Merit by the United States.[30]
Later life
[edit]In retirement Somerville became Lord Lieutenant of Somerset in August 1946 and was appointed a Knight of the Venerable Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem on 23 December 1946.[31] He lived at the family seat of Dinder House in Somerset where he died of coronary thrombosis on 19 March 1949.[21] His body was buried in the churchyard of St Michael and All Angels Church at Dinder.[22]
Citations
[edit]- ^ Fox-Davies (1905), p. 1203; Venn (1953), p. 159 for her father's full name.
- ^ Venn (1953), p. 591
- ^ According to Venn (1953), p. 591, Arthur Fownes Somerville was the son of James Curtis né Fownes (later Somerville); born in 1807, he was the son of James Somerville né Fownes (later Somerville), JP (see Venn (1944)); Burke (1847), p. 1262, then states that this James Somerville Somerville was the son of the Rev. Thomas Fownes, son of John Fownes, MP for Dartmouth from 1715 to 1722, who was son of John Fownes, MP for the same from 1714 to 1715. Burke, ibid., also states that the Rev. Thomas married a daughter and heiress of the Hon. George Somerville of Dinder House, and describes the inheritance of that estate as well as the name change.
- ^ Simpson (2004) ; Venn (1953), p. 159 gives his mother as Emily Piriam Hood, daughter of Sir Alexander Hood, Baronet. He was the second Baronet and his family is outlined in Burke (1865), pp. 583–584, which also refers to the connection with the Viscounts Hood.
- ^ a b c d e f g Heathcote, p. 231
- ^ "John Somerville". The Times. 1 December 2005.
- ^ Morris, p. 33
- ^ "No. 27549". The London Gazette. 5 May 1903. p. 2841.
- ^ "No. 27659". The London Gazette (Supplement). 18 March 1904. p. 1791.
- ^ "No. 29423". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 1915. p. 90.
- ^ "No. 29507". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 March 1916. p. 2872.
- ^ "No. 29507". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 March 1916. p. 2869.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Heathcote, p. 232
- ^ "No. 32563". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1921. p. 10719.
- ^ "No. 34119". The London Gazette (Supplement). 28 December 1934. p. 3.
- ^ a b "Admiral Sir James Somerville, 1882–1949". History of War. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
- ^ "No. 34633". The London Gazette (Supplement). 6 June 1939. p. 3853.
- ^ Holland, p. 454
- ^ "Mers-el-Kebir: A Battle Between Friends". Military History Online. Archived from the original on 12 March 2016. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
- ^ "No. 34925". The London Gazette. 16 August 1940. p. 5068.
- ^ a b c d e f Heathcote, p. 233
- ^ a b c "Sir James Somerville". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36191. Retrieved 31 August 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ "No. 35317". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 October 1941. p. 6099.
- ^ "No. 36734". The London Gazette. 6 October 1944. p. 4592.
- ^ "Leonard Birchall and the Japanese raid on Colombo". National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces. Archived from the original on 10 August 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
- ^ Williamson, Corbin (2 July 2020). "A One-way Street? Admiral James Somerville and Anglo-American Naval Relations, 1942". The Mariner's Mirror. 106 (3): 307–319. doi:10.1080/00253359.2020.1778303. ISSN 0025-3359. Retrieved 15 April 2024 – via Taylor and Francis Online.
- ^ "No. 36666". The London Gazette (Supplement). 18 August 1944. p. 3887.
- ^ "No. 36800". The London Gazette. 17 November 1944. p. 5293.
- ^ "No. 37407". The London Gazette. 28 December 1945. p. 13.
- ^ "Sir James Somerville". Unit Histories. Archived from the original on 8 April 2018. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
- ^ "No. 37842". The London Gazette. 3 January 1947. p. 122.
Cited sources
[edit]- Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1905). Armorial Families. London: Hurst & Blackett.
- Heathcote, Tony (2002). The British Admirals of the Fleet 1734–1995. Pen & Sword Ltd. ISBN 0-85052-835-6.
- Holland, James (2011). The Battle of Britain. Corgi. ISBN 978-0552156103.
- Morris, Oswald (2006). Huston, We Have a Problem: A Kaleidoscope of Filmmaking Memories. Rowman & Littlefield Education. ISBN 978-0810857063.
- Venn, J. A. (1944). Alumni Cantabrigienses, part ii, volume ii. University of Cambridge.
- Venn, J. A. (1953). Alumni Cantabrigienses, part ii, volume v. University of Cambridge.
Further reading
[edit]- Burke, B (1865). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire. Harrison.
- Burke; Burke, J.B (1847). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland volume ii. Henry Colburn.
- MacIntyre, Donald (1961). Fighting Admiral: The Life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Somerville. Evans Brothers, London.
- Somerville, James (1996). The Somerville Papers: Selections from the Private and Official Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Somerville, GCB, GBE, DSO. Navy Records Society, London. ISBN 978-1859282076.
External links
[edit]- A biography of Admiral Somerville (H.M.S. Hood Association web site).
- Transcription of official service record (admirals.org.uk)
- British Admiralty document on Mer-el-Kebir Action
- Transcription of Force H War Diary.
- Newsreel footage of Admiral Somerville on a destroyer, early in WW2 Archived 11 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- James Somerville at Unit Histories Archived 8 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- The Dreadnought Project: James Somerville
- The Papers of Admiral Sir James Somerville held at Churchill Archives Centre
- 1882 births
- 1949 deaths
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