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William Wordsworth Fisher

Royal Navy admiral (1875–1937)


Summary

Royal Navy admiral (1875–1937)

FieldValue
honorific_prefixAdmiral
nameSir William Wordsworth Fisher
honorific_suffix
imageWilliam Wordsworth Fisher in 1930.jpg
captionFisher in 1930
birth_date
death_date
placeofburial_coordinates
allegianceUnited Kingdom
branch
rankAdmiral
commands
Mediterranean Fleet
Portsmouth Command
battlesWorld War I
awardsKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order

Mediterranean Fleet Portsmouth Command Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order

Admiral Sir William Wordsworth Fisher (26 March 1875 – 24 June 1937) was a Royal Navy officer who captained a battleship at the Battle of Jutland and became Commander-in-Chief of the Mediterranean Fleet. Arthur Marder wrote that he was "the outstanding admiral of the inter-war period".

Family

Fisher married Cecilia Warre-Cornish (1 May 1886 – 30 January 1965), daughter of Francis Warre-Cornish, on 21 December 1907. Their daughter Cecilia Rosamund Fisher married Captain Richard Coleridge, 4th Baron Coleridge, of the Royal Navy on 28 August 1936; they had issue, two sons, including the present peer. Another daughter, Horatia Mary Fisher, married Group Captain Geoffrey Mungo Buxton, a grandson maternally of the 3rd Earl of Verulam, and had three surviving daughters.

Fisher was the brother of H. A. L. Fisher, Edmund Fisher, Charles Fisher, Florence Henrietta Darwin and Adeline Vaughan Williams. His sister Cordelia Fisher married the author, critic and journalist Richard Curle and was the mother of the academic Adam Curle.

He was related to the Stephen family, and in 1910 his ship was targeted in the Dreadnought hoax by Adrian Stephen, his sister Virginia Stephen (later Virginia Woolf) and others.

References

Bibliography

  • Admiral Sir William Fisher by Admiral Sir William James (biography – published by Macmillan, 1943)

References

  1. "The Papers of Admiral Sir William Fisher {{!}} ArchiveSearch".
  2. [http://www.kcl.ac.uk/lhcma/locreg/FISHER3.shtml Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives]
  3. (8 April 2010). "Dedication to Admiral Sir William Fisher".
  4. "Marriages." Times [London, England] 25 December 1907: 1. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 29 May 2012
  5. "The Adam Curle Archive". [[Archives Hub]].
Wikipedia Source

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