Admiralty Naval Staff

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Admiralty Naval Staff

The Admiralty Naval Staff

British Admiralty. It was established in 1917 and existed until 1964 when the department of the Admiralty was abolished. It was replaced by the Ministry of Defence (Naval Staff) as part of the Ministry of Defence Navy Department.[2]

History and development

In December 1916,

Second World War
. After the war the divisions were once again downsized.

Duties

The term 'Naval Staff' does not mean all Naval Officers serving in the former Admiralty Department, it means the divisions that are responsible under the Office of the Chief of Naval Staff and including his deputy, vice and assistant chiefs of the staff for the formulation of naval strategy including strategic planning, conduct of operations, implementation of naval policy, application of tactical doctrines, the collection and dissemination of intelligence and for stating the broad naval requirements, including the quantities and specification of ships, naval aircraft, armament and equipment the Naval Staff also included some civilian members.

Admiralty departments

The admiralty divisions should be not confused with its departments which were distinct and separate from the function of the naval staff in that they were superintended by the

offices of the various Sea Lords
responsible for them and were primarily administrative and logistical support bodies.

Members of the naval staff

Board of Admiralty member (*)

Structure of the naval staff

May 1917

The Naval Staff was organised by

Admiral of the Fleet Sir John Jellicoe as follows:[3]

June 1917

The Naval Staff was organised as follows:[3]

December 1917

The Naval Staff was organised as follows:[3]

1918 to 1919

The Naval Staff was re-organised under Admiral of the Fleet Sir Rosslyn Wemyss as follows:[3][4]

1920

The Naval Staff was re-organised under Admiral of the Fleet Sir David Beatty, as follows:

1921 to 1926

The Naval Staff was re-organised during the early

inter-war years
, and the post Deputy First Sea Lord is abolished:

1927 to 1929

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Charles Madden re-structured the Naval Staff as follows:[5]

1932

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Frederick Field organised the Naval Staff as follows:[6]

1935

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Ernle Chatfield kept the Naval Staff as follows:[7]

1941

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Dudley Pound re-organised, the Naval Staff as follows:[8]

1945

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Andrew Cunninghamre-organised the Naval Staff, as follows:

1951

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Bruce Fraser re-organised the Naval Staff, as follows:[10]

1956

Admiral of the Fleet Earl, Louis Mountbatten, re-organised the Naval Staff, as follows:[11]

1958

Admiral of the Fleet Earl, Louis Mountbatten, re-organised the Naval Staff, as follows:[12]

1962

Admiral of the Fleet Sir Caspar John, First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff re-organised the Naval Staff, as follows:[13]

1964

Admiral Sir David Luce as First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff organised the Naval Staff in July 1964 as follows:[14]

Post 1964

Following the merger within the Ministry of Defence until 1971 former naval staff divisions were renamed as directorates as well as new ones being established for specific purposes some other notable changes during this period included the commandant general, and the hydrographer of the navy now as part of the naval staff as follows:[15]

  1. Defence Intelligence – (former naval intelligence division)
  2. Directorate of Naval Plans – (former plans division)
  3. Directorate of Defence Plans (Navy) – (new directorate as part of MOD)
  4. Directorate of Naval Administrative Planning – (former administrative planning division)
  5. Directorate of Naval Air Warfare – (former naval air division)
  6. Directorate of Naval Operations and Trade – (former operations and trade division)
  7. Directorate of Naval Signals – (former signals division)
  8. Directorate of Naval Tactical and Weapons Policy – (former tactical and weapons policy division)
  9. Directorate of Operational Analysis (RN) – (new directorate)
  10. Directorate of Surface Warfare (Naval) – (new directorate)
  11. Directorate of Under Sea Warfare (Naval) – (former under sea warfare division)
  12. Directorate of Navigation and Tactical Control (Naval) – (former navigation and direction division)

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Stationery Office, H.M. (31 October 1967). The Navy List. Spink and Sons Ltd, London, England. pp. 524–532.
  3. ^ a b c d Smith, Gordon. "British Admiralty World War 1". naval-history.net. naval-history.net, 21 October 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  4. ^ Black, Nicholas Duncan (2005). 'The Admiralty War Staff and its influence on the conduct of the naval between 1914 and 1918.', Ph.D. Thesis. University College University of London. pp. 250 to 251.
  5. .
  6. ^ Svonavec, Stephen. "Royal Navy October 1932 - Admiralty". fleetorganization.com. Svonavec Stephen, (2001-2014). Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  7. ^ Stationery Office, H.M. (18 September 1935). The Navy List. Sprink and Sons Ltd, London, England. pp. 414–415.
  8. ^ Clancy, Patrick; Straka, William. "HyperWar: War at Sea 1939-1945, I: The Defensive [Chapter 1]". ibiblio.org. HyperWar Foundation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  9. ^ Archives, The National. "Torpedo, Anti-Submarine and Mine Warfare Division, Naval Staff, Admiralty: The tactical employment of patrol groups". discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk. National Archives, ADM 1/31013, 1948. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  10. ^ Stationery Office, H.M. (18 April 1951). The Navy List. Spink and Son Ltd, London, England. pp. 326–327.
  11. ^ Stationery Office, H.M. (18 April 1956). The Navy List. Spink and Son Ltd, London, England. pp. 1239–1241.
  12. ^ Stationery Office, H.M. (18 January 1958). The Navy List. Spink and Son Ltd, London, England. pp. 1227–1229.
  13. ^ Stationery Office, H.M. (Spring 1962). The Navy List. Spink and Son Ltd, London, England. pp. 906–908.
  14. ^ Admiralty, Great Britain (July 1964). Navy List. London England: HM Stationery Office. pp. 907–908.
  15. ^ Admiralty, Great Britain (April–June 1968). "Navy Department: Naval Staff". Navy List. London England: HM Stationery Office. pp. 525–528.

Attribution

Primary source for this article is by Harley Simon, Lovell Tony, (2014), Naval Staff (Royal Navy), dreadnoughtproject.org, http://www.dreadnoughtproject.org.

Sources

External links