Coloured squadrons of the Royal Navy
His Majesty's Naval Service of the British Armed Forces |
---|
Components |
|
History and future |
Ships |
Personnel |
|
Auxiliary services |
The Coloured Squadrons of the Royal Navy
History
Historically, the English fleet was first divided into three squadrons distinguished by colour in 1558, the Admiral of the English fleet, the Lord Admiral of England's squadron, flew a plain red flag as its ensign. The Vice-Admiral of the fleet, or Vice-Admiral of England, flew a plain blue flag, and the Rear-Admiral of the fleet flew a plain white flag. Order of precedence was red, blue, and white until May 1596.[4]
In June 1596 the English fleet was divided into four squadrons for the expedition for the
In 1620 these squadrons had grown to the point where they could not be managed effectively by one admiral alone. This led to the introduction of a new system whereby squadrons were further subdivided into three subdivisions, each then led by three admirals of different ranks. Admiral was the senior rank, followed by Vice-Admiral and Rear-Admiral. In 1620 flag ranks were formally established in terms of promotion.[5] From 1620 until 1652 the order of precedence of the squadrons was Red, Blue and White, until 1653, when the order of precedence was changed to red, white, and blue. In 1688 the permanent rank of Admiral of the Fleet was created, replacing the Lord High Admiral England operationally as commander-in-chief.[4]
In 1805, after the battle of Trafalgar, the rank of Admiral of the Red was introduced. It became the highest rank that an Admiral could attain until 1862, when an allowance was made for more than one Admiral of the Fleet to be appointed. In 1864 the colour squadron organisation was abolished and the Royal Navy adopted the White Ensign of the former White Squadron. The Red Ensign of the Red Squadron became the ensign of the British Merchant Navy, and the Blue Ensign of the Blue Squadron became the ensign of the Auxiliary Fleet.[4][6]
Squadron colours (1558–1596)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the English fleet 1545–1558
-
Flag of the Red Squadron (centre) 1558–1596
-
Flag of the Blue Squadron (van) 1558–1596
-
Flag of the White Squadron (rear) 1558–1596
Squadron colours (1596)
During expedition to capture Cadiz with the aid of the Dutch (in 1 squadron) in June 1596 the English fleet was divided into 4 squadrons which had joint commander in chiefs naval forces were commanded by the Lord Admiral whilst land forces were commander by the General of the Army each allocated corresponding flags to differentiate them as shown below.[4]
Lord Admirals squadron (centre)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the Lord Admiral
-
Flag of the Vice and Rear Admirals in this squadron
General of the Army's squadron (centre)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the General of the Army
-
Flag of the Vice and Rear Admirals in this squadron
Vice-Admiral of England's squadron (van/front)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the Vice-Admiral of England
-
Flag of the Vice and Rear Admirals in this squadron
Rear-Admiral of the Fleet's squadron (wyng/rear)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the Vice-Admiral of England
-
Flag of the Vice and Rear Admirals in this squadron
Red squadron centre (1596-1864)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the Red Squadron 1558–1595, 1596–1603
-
Flag of the Red Squadron 1620–1707
-
Flag of the Red Squadron 1707–1800
-
Flag of the Red Squadron 1801–1864
The senior (red) squadron was usually placed in the centre of the
# | Flag officer | Notes |
---|---|---|
1 | Lord Admiral of England |
Commanded red squadron until 1688 |
2 | Admiral of the Fleet | Commanded red squadron from 1688–1804 |
3 | Admiral of the Red | Commanded red squadron from 1805–1864 |
6 | Vice-Admiral of the Red | Second in command red squadron 1620–1864 |
9 | Rear-Admiral of the Red | Third in command red squadron 1620–1864 |
White squadron van/front (1596–1864)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the White Squadron 1558–1595, 1596–1603
-
Flag of the White Squadron 1620–1702
-
Flag of the White Squadron 1702–1707
-
Flag of the White Squadron 1707–1800
-
Flag of the White Squadron 1801–1864
The white squadron, ranked second and generally placed in the van, would be commanded by the Admiral of the White, and its subdivisions would be led by a Vice Admiral of the White (van), and a Rear Admiral of the White (rear).[7]
# | Flag officer | Notes |
---|---|---|
4 | Admiral of the White | Commanded white squadron from 1620–1864 |
7 | Vice-Admiral of the White | Second in command white squadron from 1620–1864 |
10 | Rear-Admiral of the White | Third in command white squadron from 1620–1864 |
Blue squadron wyng/rear (1596–1864)
Included:[4]
-
Flag of the Blue Squadron 1558–1596, 1596–1603
-
Flag of the Blue Squadron 1620–1707
-
Flag of the Blue Squadron 1707–1800
-
Flag of the Blue Squadron 1801–1864
The blue squadron, ranked third or junior, was similarly commanded with an Admiral, Vice Admiral and Rear Admiral of the Blue, each flying a blue ensign.[7]
# | Flag officer | Notes |
---|---|---|
5 | Admiral of the Blue | Commanded blue squadron from 1620–1864 |
8 | Vice-Admiral of the Blue | Second in command blue squadron from 1620–1864 |
11 | Rear-Admiral of the Blue | Third in command blue squadron from 1620–1864 |
Flag officers and commodores promotion pathway within squadrons
Promotion of Admirals also took place in this order - a Rear-Admiral of the Blue on promotion became a Rear-Admiral of the White as his first flag promotion. Once he had reached Rear-Admiral of the Red, on his next promotion he became a Vice-Admiral of the Blue and so on, until he finally became an Admiral of the White. It was only in the Red squadron that the hierarchy was not followed. There was no Admiral of the Red since this would be deemed as being in overall command of the whole fleet until the rank was introduced in 1805. Until 1862 there could only be one Admiral of the Fleet.[4][7]
- Rear-Admiral of the Blue became Rear-Admiral of the White as his next promotion
- Rear-Admiral of the White became Rear-Admiral of the Red as his next promotion
- Rear-Admiral of the Red became Vice-Admiral of the Blue as his next promotion
- Vice-Admiral of the Blue became Vice-Admiral of the White as his next promotion
- Vice-Admiral of the White became Vice-Admiral of the Red as his next promotion
- Vice-Admiral of the Red became Admiral of the Blue as his next promotion
- Admiral of the Blue became Admiral of the White as his next promotion
- Admiral of the White became Admiral of the Red as his next promotion (until 1804 Admiral of the Fleet)
- Admiral of the Red became Admiral of the Fleet as his next promotion (from 1805)
See also
Footnotes
- ISBN 9781783035588.
- ^ "The National Archives:Trafalgar Ancestors, Glossary, Admiral". www.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Kew, London, England: The National Archives UK. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
- ^ "Information sheet no 55 Squadron Colours" (PDF). National Museum of the Royal Navy. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 November 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Perrin, W. G. (William Gordon) (1922). "Flags of Command". British flags, their early history, and their development at sea; with an account of the origin of the flag as a national device. Cambridge, England: Cambridge : The University Press. pp. 85–99.
- ^ "Naval Ranks". www.nmrn-portsmouth.org.uk. National Museum of the Royal Navy. 2015. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- ^ The Orders in Council for the Regulation of the Naval Service. London, England: Harrison and Sons. 28 July 1864. p. 45.
- ^ ISBN 9781473812703.
Bibliography
- Heathcote, T. A. (2002). British Admirals of the Fleet: 1734-1995. Barnsley, England: Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473812703.
- Information sheet no 55 Squadron Colours" (PDF). National Museum of the Royal Navy. 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- "Naval Ranks". www.nmrn-portsmouth.org.uk. National Museum of the Royal Navy. 2015. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- Perrin, W. G. (William Gordon) (1922). "Flags of Command". British flags, their early history, and their development at sea; with an account of the origin of the flag as a national device. Cambridge, England: Cambridge : The University Press.
- The National Archives:Trafalgar Ancestors, Glossary, Admiral. www.nationalarchives.gov.uk. Kew, London, England: The National Archives UK.
- The Orders in Council for the Regulation of the Naval Service. (1864). London, England: Harrison and Sons.
- Wragg, David (2012). "National Entries". The World Sea Power Guide. Barnsley, England: Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781783035588.