Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Home Fleet

Former naval fleet of the Royal Navy


Former naval fleet of the Royal Navy

FieldValue
unit_nameHome Fleet
imageHome Fleet 1904-05.jpg
image_size300px
captionHMS Neptune leading the Home Fleet before the First World War
dates1902–1904, 1907–1914, 1932–1967
country
branch[[Image:Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg23px]] Royal Navy
typeFleet
notable_commandersGeorge Callaghan, John Tovey, Bruce Fraser

The Home Fleet was a fleet of the Royal Navy that operated from the United Kingdom's territorial waters from 1902 with intervals until 1967. In 1967, it was merged with the Mediterranean Fleet creating the new Western Fleet.

Before the First World War between 1902 and 1904 the Admiralty reorganised its ships in home waters into a permanent force called the Home Squadron. At the beginning of 1905, it was renamed the Channel Fleet. In 1907 a new Home Fleet was formed from ships in reserve and new ships, and in 1909 the Channel Fleet was merged into it, forming the principal fleet in British waters. In 1912 it was renamed the Home Fleets, formed of the First, Second and Third. On the outbreak of the First World War the First Fleet became the Grand Fleet. When the Grand Fleet was redistributed after the war, the reserve fleet was briefly named Home Fleet in 1919 before being renamed, and after the Invergordon Mutiny in 1931 the Atlantic Fleet was renamed Home Fleet in 1932. During the Second World War, it was the Royal Navy's main battle force in European waters.

Pre-First World War

In the first years of the 20th century, the Royal Navy had four 'Port Guard' ships, stationed in the major naval bases, partially to act as flagships for the admirals commanding at those ports. These vessels appear to have been stationed at the Nore, Portsmouth, and Plymouth, as well as one other major base.

On 1 October 1902, the Admiral Superintendent Naval Reserves, then Vice-Admiral Gerard Noel, was given the additional appointment of Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet, and allotted a rear-admiral to serve under him as commander of the Home Squadron. "... the nucleus of the Home Fleet would consist of the four Port Guard ships, which would be withdrawn from their various scattered dockyards and turned into a unified and permanent sea-going command – the Home Squadron – based on Portland. Also under the direction of the commander-in-chief of the Home Fleet would be the Coast Guard ships, which would continue to be berthed for the most part in their respective district harbours in order to carry out their local duties, but would join the Home Squadron for sea work at least three times per year, at which point the assembled force – the Home Squadron and the Coast Guard vessels – would be known collectively as the Home Fleet." Rear-Admiral George Atkinson-Willes was Second-in-Command of the Home Fleet, with his flag in the battleship HMS Empress of India, at this time. In May 1903 Noel was succeeded as Commander-in-Chief by Vice-Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson.

On 14 December 1904, the Channel Fleet was re-styled the Atlantic Fleet and the Home Fleet became the Channel Fleet. In 1907, the Home Fleet was reformed with Vice-Admiral Francis Bridgeman in command, succeeded by Admiral Sir William May in 1909. Bridgeman took command again in 1911, and in the same year was succeeded by Admiral Sir George Callaghan. On 29 March 1912, a new structure of the fleet was announced, which came into force on 1 May 1912. The former Home Fleet, which was organised into four divisions, was divided into the First, Second and Third Fleets as Home Fleets. The Home Fleets were the Navy's unified home commands in British waters from 1912 to 1914. On 4 August 1914, as the First World War was breaking out, John Jellicoe was ordered to take command of the Fleet, which by his appointment order was renamed the Grand Fleet.

Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet

''Post holders during the pre-war period were:'''

RankFlagNameTerm
Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet
1Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Gerard Noel
2Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Arthur Wilson
RankFlagNameTerm
Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet
1Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Francis Bridgeman
2Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir William May
3Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Francis Bridgeman
4Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir George Callaghan

Second in command

Post holders included:

RankFlagNameTerm
Second-in-Command, Home Fleet
1Rear-Admiral[[File:Flag of Rear-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]George Atkinson-Willes
2Rear-Admiral[[File:Flag of Rear-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Edmund Poë
3Rear-Admiral[[File:Flag of Rear-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Charles Barlow

Chief of staff

Post holders included:

RankFlagNameTerm
Chief of Staff, Home Fleet
1Rear-Admiral[[File:Flag of Rear-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Alexander Bethell

Three Home Fleets, 1912–1914

The Home Fleets were a new organisation of the Royal Navy's unified home commands (First, Second and Third Fleets) instituted on 31 July 1912 to December 1914.

Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleets

RankFlagNameTerm
Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleets/First Fleet
1Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir George Callaghan

On 8 August 1914 units of the Home Fleets were distributed in accordance with Admiralty Fleet Order the majority of elements formed the new Grand Fleet others were assigned to the following units: Channel Fleet, Northern Patrol-Cruiser Force B, 7th Cruiser Squadron-Cruiser Force, 11th Cruiser Squadron-Cruiser Force E, Dover Patrol, Harwich Flotillas, 7th Destroyer Flotilla, 8th Destroyer Flotilla, 9th Destroyer Flotilla, 5th Submarine Flotilla, 6th Submarine Flotilla, 7th Submarine Flotilla and the 8th Submarine Flotilla.

Inter-war period

When the Grand Fleet was disbanded in April 1919, the more powerful ships were grouped into the Atlantic Fleet and the older ships became the "Home Fleet"; this arrangement lasted until late 1919, when the ships of the Home Fleet became the Reserve Fleet.

The name "Home Fleet" was resurrected in March 1932, as the new name for the Atlantic Fleet, following the Invergordon Mutiny. The Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet in 1933 was Admiral Sir John Kelly. The Home Fleet comprised the flagship leading a force that included the 2nd Battle Squadron (five more battleships), the Battlecruiser Squadron ( and ), the 2nd Cruiser Squadron (Vice-Admiral Edward Astley-Rushton) aboard (three cruisers), three destroyer flotillas (27), a submarine flotilla (six), two aircraft carriers and associated vessels.

Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet

Post holders during the inter-war period were:

RankFlagNameTerm
Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet
1Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir John Kelly
2Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir William Boyle
3Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Roger Backhouse

Second World War

The two most surprising losses of the Home Fleet during the early part of the war were the sinking of the battleship by the German submarine while supposedly safe in Scapa Flow, and the loss of the pride of the Navy, the battlecruiser , to the German battleship . 2nd Battle Squadron under Admiral Blagrove was effectively disestablished when he died in the sinking of Royal Oak.

The Home Fleet was used extensively in the protection in PQ, QP, JW and RA convoys from the UK and Iceland to Russia and vice versa. One of the Home Fleet's biggest successes along the Arctic Convoys was the sinking of the German battleship Scharnhorst while protecting convoy JW55B under the command of Sir Bruce Fraser, who was sailing in HMS Duke of York. The growing intensity of the Battle of the Atlantic led to the creation of Western Approaches Command. Only with the destruction of the German battleship in 1944 did the Home Fleet assume a lower priority, and most of its heavy units were withdrawn to be sent to the Far East.

RankFlagNameTerm
1Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Charles Forbes
2Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir John Tovey
3Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Bruce Fraser
4Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Henry Moore

Post holder sources for the Second World War:

Second in command

Post holders included:

RankFlagNameTerm
Second-in-Command, Home Fleet
1Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Alban Curteis
2Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Bruce A. Fraser
3Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Henry R. Moore
4Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Frederick Dalrymple-Hamilton
5Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Rhoderick McGrigor
6Vice-Admiral[[File:Flag of Vice-Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Angus Cunninghame Graham

Post-Second World War

As the Cold War began, greater emphasis was placed on protecting the North Atlantic sea lanes from the Soviet Union in concert with other Western countries. Admiral Sir Rhoderick McGrigor supervised combined Western Union exercises involving ships from the British, French, and Dutch navies in June–July 1949. Admiral McGrigor flew his flag from the aircraft carrier . Also taking part in the exercises were and , along with cruisers and destroyers. During the exercise, the combined force paid a visit to Mount's Bay in Cornwall from 30 June – 4 July 1949.

Admiral Sir Philip Vian, Commander-in-Chief from 1950 to 1952, flew his flag in . In late 1951, joined the fleet as flagship of the 3rd Aircraft Carrier Squadron.

From 1947 to 1957 superfluous battleships and aircraft carriers were assigned to the Training Squadron, Home Fleet headquartered at Portland to provide basic training. The carriers stationed here were mobilised as helicopter carriers for the Suez operation in 1956. In December 1951 the Admiralty authorised the creation of a new Heavy Squadron to be assigned to the Home Fleet, consisting of the battleship Vanguard, aircraft carriers, and cruisers. Its commanding officer was known as Flag Officer, Aircraft Carriers who had administrative responsibility for all the operational carriers; the squadron was disbanded in October 1954.

After the Second World War, the Royal Navy's geographic commands were gradually merged into fewer but larger formations (1954 to 1971). After 1951 the term flotilla applied to the higher command organisation of squadrons in the Home and Mediterranean Fleets. The squadrons of the Home Fleet were grouped under a Flag Officer, Flotillas, Home Fleet, who became the main seagoing flag officer. A similar arrangement applied to the Flag Officer, Flotillas, Mediterranean Fleet. In the Far East the Flag Officer 5th Cruiser Squadron became Flag Officer Second in Command Far East Fleet with similar seagoing duties. Increasingly the term 'Submarine Flotilla' was used to describe the squadrons under command of the Flag Officer Submarines.

The Commander-in-Chief, Home Fleet, gained an additional NATO responsibility as Commander-in-Chief, Eastern Atlantic (CINCEASTLANT), as part of Allied Command Atlantic, when the NATO military command structure was established in 1953. CINCEASTLANT was set up at the Northwood Headquarters in northwest London. The Commander-in-Chief Home Fleet still flew his flag however in at Portsmouth. During Exercise Mainbrace in 1952, NATO naval forces came together for the first time to practice the defence of northern Europe, Denmark and Norway. The resulting McMahon Act difficulties caused by potential British control of the United States Navy's attack carriers armed with nuclear weapons led to the creation of a separate Striking Fleet Atlantic, directly responsible to the commander of the U.S. Navy's Atlantic Fleet, in his NATO position as SACLANT, by the end of 1952. The submarine tender was the fleet's flagship in 1956.

In the spring of 1960, C-in-C Home Fleet moved permanently ashore to Northwood, while Flag Officer, Flotillas, Home, retained effective control at sea as the C-in-C's deputy. Cecil Hampshire writes that the ships with the fleet in 1960 included the flagship Tyne, a destroyer depot ship which by then was more than 20 years old; carriers Victorious and ; fast minelayer Apollo; seventeen destroyers and frigates; and sixteen submarines. Another aircraft carrier, cruisers Lion and Blake; the first four guided missile destroyers, and other ships were under construction.

In February 1963 all remaining frigate and destroyer squadrons in the Home, Mediterranean and Far East Fleets were merged into new Escort Squadrons. In April 1963, the naval unit at the Northwood Headquarters, in northwest London, was commissioned as under the command of the then Captain of the Fleet.

From 1966 to 1967, then-Rear Admiral Sir Michael Pollock was listed as Flag Officer Second in Command, Home Fleet.

In December 1966, all remaining squadrons in the Home Fleet were disbanded. In 1967 the Home Fleet was amalgamated with the Mediterranean Fleet and redesignated the Western Fleet.

Commanders-in-Chief

RankFlagNameTerm
Commanders-in-Chief, Home Fleet 1945–67
1Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Neville Syfret
2Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Rhoderick McGrigor
3Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Philip Vian
4Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir George Creasy
5Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Michael Denny
6Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir John Eccles
7Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir William Davis
8Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Wilfrid Woods
9Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir Charles Madden, 2nd Baronet
10Admiral[[File:Flag of Admiral - Royal Navy.svg25px]]Sir John Frewen

Source for post holders after the Second World War:

Notes

Sources

  • Lovell. Tony and Harley, Simon; (2015) "Home Fleet (Royal Navy) - The Dreadnought Project". www.dreadnoughtproject.org.
  • Mackie, Colin. (2017) "Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865" (PDF). gulabin.com.
  • Maloney, Sean. (1992), Securing Command of the Sea, Masters' thesis, University of New Brunswick. Canada.

References

  1. David Morgan-Owen, A Revolution in Naval Affairs? Technology, Strategy and British Naval Policy in the ‘Fisher Era’, Journal of Strategic Studies, 10.1080/01402390.2015.1005440, 38, 7, (944-965), (2015).
  2. Smith.2015.
  3. Seligmann 2010, 508.
  4. Seligmann 2010.
  5. Seligmann 2010, drawing upon T.N.A.: P.R.O., ADM 1/7606, docket Coast Guard, 24 March 1902, proposal by Sir Gerard Noel, 14 May 1902, and memorandum by Lord Walter Kerr, 17 May 1902.
  6. Seligmann 2009
  7. Heathcote, p. 195
  8. "Home Fleets (Royal Navy) – The Dreadnought Project". Harley & Lovell, 22 August 2017.
  9. "Home Fleet (Royal Navy) – The Dreadnought Project". Harley & Lovell, 12 May 2015.
  10. (October 1913). "The Navy List". H.M. Stationery Office.
  11. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments". Colin Mackie December 2107.
  12. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments". Colin Mackie. p.134. December 2107.
  13. "Royal Navy Organisation and Ship Deployment, Inter-War Years 1914–1918: The Home Fleets were distributed in accordance with Admiralty Fleet Order dated 8th August 1914". Graham Smith, 27 October 2015.
  14. "Royal Navy Organisation and Ship Deployment, Inter-War Years 1919–1939". Gordon Smith, 2 September 2015.
  15. (2015). "From the Dardanelles to Oran: Studies of the Royal Navy in War and Peace 1915–1914". Seaforth Publishing.
  16. [https://web.archive.org/web/20040517060928/http://www.geocities.com/scs028a/HomeFleet.html Home Fleet listing for 1933]
  17. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865". Colin Mackie, December 2017.
  18. "Royal Navy Organisation in World War 2, 1939–1945". Graham Smith, 19 September 2015.
  19. Leo Niehorster, [http://niehorster.org/017_britain/39_navy/home-fleet.html Home Fleet, 3 September 1939], accessed January 2009
  20. Whitaker's Almanacks 1939–1945
  21. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865". Colin Mackie, December 2017.
  22. [http://www.unithistories.com/units_british/RN_HomeFleet.html Unit Histories], accessed July 2009
  23. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments". Colin Mackie, p.133, December 2107.
  24. Watson 2015.
  25. [http://freepages.family.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~treevecwll/visitorswuf.htm Visit of the Combined Western Union Fleet to Mount’s Bay 30 June to 4 July]
  26. [http://www.royalnavalmuseum.org/info_sheets_philip_vian.htm Biography: Philip Vian] {{webarchive. link. (15 July 2008 Royal Naval Museum, accessed November 2009)
  27. Naval-history.net, [http://www.naval-history.net/xGM-Chrono-04CV-Theseus.htm HMS Theseus], accessed October 2011
  28. "Royal Navy Organisation and Ship Deployment 1947–2013". Gordon Smith, 12 July 2015.
  29. (12 July 2015). "Royal Navy Organisation and Ship Deployment 1947–2013: Summary of Fleet Organization 1972–1981". Gordon Smith.
  30. Sean Maloney, Securing Command of the Sea, Masters' thesis, University of New Brunswick, 1992, p.234-247
  31. A. Cecil Hampshire. (1975). "The Royal Navy Since 1945". William Kimber & Co. Ltd.
  32. Watson.2015.
  33. "Royal Navy (RN) Officers 1939-1945: PLAC to PUXL".
  34. "Royal Navy Senior Appointments from 1865". Colin Mackie December 2017.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Home Fleet — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report