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Part III - First Sea Lord
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SECTION A
APPOINTMENT
SEPTEMBER 1943–MARCH 1944
It might be thought that Cunningham succeeded to the First Sea Lord's post by divine right and with the smoothness of a calm sea; that, it seems, is what the Navy as a whole expected and wanted. The actual transfer of power from the fading Pound, who was effectively out of the frame in September 1943, eventually dying on Trafalgar Day (21 October 1943), to the new man was, however, protracted because of Churchill's disinclination to accept Cunningham [150–1, 153]. He raised a smokescreen of reasons not to have him and actually summoned to London Admiral Sir Bruce Fraser, C-in-C, Home Fleet, who had become well known to the Prime Minister while serving at the Admiralty as Controller and Third Sea Lord. He offered Fraser the post but the latter, in an act of magnanimity rarely paralleled, declined in favour of Cunningham [152]. Churchill had no choice but to interview Cunningham, whom he said was in accord with his own aims; that was surely an attempt to put the best possible construction on the appointment of someone he feared would prove obstructive and out of sympathy with his grandiose strategic vision. He had to take the advice of the First Lord, A. V. Alexander, in turn advised by the Naval Secretary, Rear Admiral Freddy Dalrymple-Hamilton, who put the case for Cunningham deftly, while Alexander showed unusual force and persistence in favouring the C-in-C, Mediterranean [141–6].
Fraser would have proved a suitable candidate, for he was an officer of wide experience and, as a result of serving as Controller, knew his way round the Whitehall jungle and was adept at inter-service politics. He was relatively young, pleasant and sharp, technically proficient, open to new ideas, and had spent a year with the Home Fleet, gaining its confidence. The other possible contenders received hardly a mention by anyone. Sir John Tovey, Fraser's predecessor as C-in-C, Home Fleet, and now C-in-C, The Nore, had crossed swords with Churchill on several occasions, while Sir Max Horton, C-in-C, Western Approaches, and Sir James Somerville, C-in-C, Eastern Fleet, though spoken of occasionally elsewhere, seem not to have entered Whitehall discussions [141].
Cunningham was viewed by Churchill as a dinosaur of the battleship age, unable and unwilling to adapt to aviation-led and small ship naval warfare.
Glossary of Abbreviations
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Acknowledgements
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Part VI - Edging towards an Alliance, 1937–1939
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British readers, accustomed to discussions about the coming of war between 1937 and 1939, and to accounts of the great Anglo-American operations after December 1941, might be surprised that the majority of documents in this Part concern Anglo-American co-operation before the Second World War and in the Far East. This is because the first test of the inter-war peace came in China in 1931 and the democracies were faced subsequently with an aggressive autocracy, especially after the ‘incident’ at the Marco Polo Bridge near Beijing in July 1937, which was followed by a full-scale war between China and Japan. Though part of the cause was Japanese aggrandisement, the forces of Nippon were responding also to burgeoning Chinese nationalism; moreover, there was little love lost between the Western powers and the government of Chiang Kai-Shek. The Western powers, with long-established (if small-scale) trading operations and a considerable missionary presence in China, had a common interest in protecting their merchants, missionaries, ships and commercial enterprises from the savage and, at times, indiscriminate warfare between China and Japan. There was a sub-text to their endeavours, as some elements in the Japanese hierarchy were intent on driving them out of China. In that drive the British were ‘kicked and cuffed incessantly’ as the Japanese sensed that one Empire was on the way down as its own Empire rose, with the battleground being a third ancient Empire [208]. The British, in fact, blew hot and cold in their struggle with Japan, alternating between apparent appeasement and stout assertion of their historic position. That was because the topsy-turvy situation in Europe affected their power to defend themselves in the Far East – and they could not rely on American help if it came to shooting. The American Admiral on the spot, Harry E. Yarnell, Commander-in- Chief of the Asiatic Fleet, who was strongly pro-British, did his best to support his British friends and got on well with the successive British Commanders-in-Chief of the China Station, Admirals Sir Charles Little and Sir Percy Noble. He was seconded by the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral William D. Leahy, also pro-British, who hankered after a definite arrangement for joint action. Yarnell, Little and Noble exchanged information, engaged in joint protests and made contingency plans to safeguard civilians [180–85, 187–9, 191, 192, 194, 197–9, 202, 203, 206–8].
Mary I (1553-8)
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The queen’s mandate for the convocation
Maria, Dei gratia Angliae, Franciae et Hiberniae regina, fidei defensor, in terra ecclesiae Anglicanae et Hibernicae supremum caput, reverendissimo in Christo patri Roberto, eadem gratia Eboracensi archiepiscopo, Angliae primati et metropolitano, salutem. Quibusdam arduis et urgentibus negotiis nos securitatem et defensionem Ecclesiae Anglicanae in pacem et tranquillitatem, bonum publicum et defensionem regni nostri et subditorum nostrorum eiusdem concernentibus vobis in fide et dilectione quibus nobis tenemini rogando, mandamus quatenus praemissis debito intuitu attentis ponderatis, universos et singulos episcopos vestrae provinciae ac decanos ecclesiarum cathedralium necnon archidiaconos capitula et collegia totumque clerum cuiuslibet dioecesanum eiusdem provinciae ad comparendum coram vobis apud ecclesiam metropoliticam Sancti Petri Eboracensis sexto die Octobris proximo futuro [6 October 1553] modo debito convocari faciatis ad tractandum, consentiendum, considerandum super praemissis et aliis quae sibi clarius exponent tune ibidem ex parte instante et hoc sicut nos et statum regni nostri ac honorem et utilitatem gestendam ecclesiae praedictae diligitis nullatenus omittatis, per me ipsa apud Beechmount decimo quarto die Augusti anno regni nostri primo [14 August 1553].
Quocirca tenore praesentium peremptorie vos citamus ac decanum ecclesiae cathedralis Dunelmensis et capitulum eiusdem, ac etiam archidiaconos et collegia totumque clerum vestrae dioecesis, exemptos et non exemptos, qui ab antiquo vocari, citari seu moneri solebant facere per vos citari volumus et mandamus quod vos, reverende pater, dictique decani, et archidiaconi Dunelmensis etNorthumbriae personaliter, capitulum vero ecclesiae Dunelmensis huiusmodi per procuratorem suum sufflcientem, clerusque Dunelmensis dioecesis per duos sufficientes procuratores pro clero cuiuslibet archidiaconatus archidiaconatuum praedictorum ab ipsis sufficientes et legitime respective deputatos in ecclesia cathedrali et metropolitica Eboracensi sexto die Octobris proximo futuro post datum praesentium [6 October 1553] inter horas octavam et decimam ante meridiem eiusdem diei, cum continuatione et prorogatione dierum tune sequentium si opus fuerit, et locorum, coram dicto reverendissimo in Christo patre aut eius locum tenentibus, commissariis sive commissario, pluribus aut uno, in ea parte deputatis aut deputandis, compareatis et compareat quilibet eorundem, super his quae statum, securitatem et defensionem Ecclesiae Anglicanae ac pacem, tranquillitatem, bonum publicum et defensionem regni nostri et subditorum nostrorum eiusdem, ac praesertim statum, honorem et utilitatem civitatis, dioecesis et provinciae Eboracensium concernunt et ibidem exponi contigerint, una cum dicto reverendissimo patre sive eius locum tenentibus, commissariis sive commissario huiusmodi aliisque praelatis dictarum civitatis, dioecesis et provinciae tractaturi, vestrum et suum sanum consilium super praemissis et ea concernentibus impensuri, his etiam quae ibidem ordinari contigerint consensuri seu dissensuri,
Part I - The High Command
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The grand strategy for the winning of the Second World War was the responsibility of the elected heads of state of the three Atlantic powers – Franklin D. Roosevelt, the President of the United States of America, Winston Churchill, the Prime Minister of Great Britain, and Mackenzie King, the Prime Minister of Canada. In practice major decisions were made by the two senior figures, though King made adroit use of his association with the two great leaders, notably at the summit conferences held at the Château Frontenac in Quebec in 1943 and 1944.
Roosevelt had begun the war-long, fruitful and ultimately triumphant partnership with Churchill by writing to him on 11 September 1939, shortly after Churchill had returned to office as First Lord of the Admiralty. FDR, ever the shrewd politician, foresaw that if the war continued for more than a year, or went badly for the Allies, Churchill might well become Prime Minister. Roosevelt told his Ambassador in London, Joseph Kennedy, that he ‘wanted to get his hand in now’. During the years from the autumn of 1939 to the autumn of 1943, they corresponded almost daily, met several times, and sent emissaries when they could not travel themselves; Harry Hopkins, the President's most trusted aide, was a frequent ‘go-between’.
Roosevelt and Churchill had developed a firm working relationship by the latter part of 1943. It was based on a genuine but not truly intimate friendship and, like most relationships, it had its differences, though these were largely political rather than strategic. On grand strategy, they were agreed that their immediate effort must be devoted to overcoming the most serious threat to themselves and their Soviet ally – Hitler's Germany. The ‘Europe-first’ strategy was encapsulated in Admiral Harold R. Stark's ‘Plan Dog’ of October 1940.
Their principal military advisors were the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS), which was composed of the British Chiefs of Staff (COS) and the American Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS). Whereas the British Chiefs had a pedigree going back to 1924, the JCS was newly formed. The CCS, the apex of the military co-operation hierarchy, began during the December 1941–January 1942 meeting of Churchill and Roosevelt in Washington (ARCADIA).
Acknowledgements
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Preface
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The Tudor Navy featured prominently in the Society's early publishing programme. Sir John Laughton's two inaugural volumes on the Armada were soon followed by Sir Julian Corbett's work on the preceding campaigns; meanwhile Michael Oppenheim and Alfred Spont had documented the other end of the Tudor age. Since then, however, only one volume in the main series has been wholly devoted to the period, returning to the Spanish war. The middle years of the sixteenth century have featured in three of the seven volumes of The Naval Miscellany and in the Society's all-embracing Centenary volume. A few papers from these years are also printed in works of wider scope. It was only by way of celebrating the Millennium that the Society finally published the great illuminated inventory of Henry VIII's fleet, an undertaking first planned in 1895. Though more interest in the late Henrician navy has developed as a result of the recovery of the Mary Rose, the reigns of Edward VI and Mary I, and the early years of Elizabeth I, remain largely bypassed in naval history. This neglect is not wholly surprising, for it is a period neither marked by a great maritime victory, nor associated with any famous commander. Yet this was a vital time for the administration of the navy, set up at the very end of Henry's reign, and it saw the apprenticeship of many who would lead the service in Elizabeth's later years. There is therefore a gap in the Society's coverage, which is now to be filled in two linked volumes. The second, Elizabethan Naval Administration, is built round a single large document, the Navy Treasurer's Quarter Book account for 1562–63; it is otherwise selective of a very large mass of material. Nothing so extensive exists before 1558, but this means that for the reigns of Edward and Mary the collection can be much more comprehensive. In particular, we are able to include all the extant Treasurer's and Victualler's accounts for the two reigns, printed here for the first time from the original rolls in the Public Records. Entries taken verbatim from the State Papers augment the calendar summaries previously published, and correct a good many errors.
Part III - Jamaica, 1795–1797
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Jamaica, as a British naval station, was in the 1790s concerned above all with the French in St Domingue, the western half of Hispaniola (the modern Haiti). The French revolutionary rhetoric of freedom had reached the slaves. Legally freed by the revolutionary regime in 1791, they had then risen in rebellion against their owners, who in their turn had been less than enthusiastic for the changes. The fighting was confused and savage, the slaves turning quickly to murdering their owners, and to destroying the plantations where they had suffered; the owners replied in kind. From the base at Jamaica, where a rebellion by escaped slaves (maroons) was finally suppressed late in 1795, the British naval forces had established a blockade around the colony, and a British Army invaded the rebellious island.
Duckworth was sent to Jamaica in command of the reinforcing force dispatched in May 1795 – three line-of-battle ships, Leviathan, Hannibal, and Swiftsure [77]. The commander-in-chief, Rear-Admiral William Parker (no relation to Duckworth's ward) remained mainly in Jamaica, and Duckworth was his second-in-command, and took command of operations on the coast of St Domingue as soon as he arrived [83–88]. The bases they used were at the ends of the peninsulas, at Cape Nicholas Mole, and at Jeremie, but any places along the coast were a target. It may have been resentment at this assertiveness, but Parker soon fell into a dispute with Duckworth over a trifling matter of seamanship, but Duckworth's determined stand against what he saw as an unjust accusation of negligence seems to have been sufficient to persuade Parker to trust him [91, 92], and a fortnight later Parker was consulting him about what to do [93, 94]. Parker appears to have withdrawn once more to Jamaica [97].
The military campaigns launched against the French were generally indecisive [e.g., 95–98], and much of Duckworth's work was directed to assisting the army on land [99, 102, 103]. There is a notable gap in the documents over the winter of 1795–96, but matters were not improved in the spring, as Duckworth's letter to Edward Baker (the midshipman's father) in June revealed [108]. The enemy was able to receive supplies from the United States, as consular information reported [109, 111].
Introduction
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1. The Man
Admiral John Thomas Duckworth was born in 1747 at Leatherhead in Surrey, attended Eton College briefly, and was sponsored into the Navy by Admiral Boscawen at the age of 13 in the midst of the Seven Years’ War. He served as a captain's servant, then a midshipman, until 1771; he was a lieutenant until 1779, by which time he had been in the Navy for nineteen years. But the American War of Independence brought promotion, to him as to so many others, and he was promoted captain in 1780. He was employed much of the time between these wars, and in the Spanish and Russian crises of 1790–91 commanded the Bombay Castle. When the French Revolutionary War began he commanded Orion in which he fought in the First of June fight.
The decisive change in his service came during his later posting to Jamaica. He was senior captain on the station by that time (1796) and when the Jamaica Station Commander-in-Chief Sir William Parker evacuated himself to England to recover his health, Duckworth was given the temporary rank of Commodore and acting Commander-in-Chief. By acquitting himself well in this role, he made his mark with the Secretary of State Earl Spencer, who became a regular correspondent. His next step up the ladder came with Admiral Earl St Vincent in the Mediterranean in 1798. St Vincent chose him to command the naval part in the conquest of Minorca, for which he was awarded the lucrative sinecure of Colonel of Marines. When St Vincent himself went home sick, Duckworth took over the command at Gibraltar (Nelson in Sicily was technically the Commander-in-Chief in place of St Vincent), and by capturing a rich Spanish convoy he secured his personal prosperity. This was sealed by his command-in-chief of the Leeward Islands station, where he organised the capture of the Danish and Swedish islands in 1801, and gathered considerable further wealth through the prizes captured on his watch.
It is a mark of the Admiralty's confidence in him he was transferred to the Jamaica command directly from the Leewards, when the commander there, ‘Lord’ Hugh Seymour, suddenly died. He remained at Jamaica for nearly four years, and on his return to Britain was employed as second-in-command to Lord Gambier in the Brest blockade. By chasing and destroying an escaped French squadron (Battle of San Domingo) he prevented further Caribbean trouble.
Part II - Return to the Mediterranean
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SECTION A
‘TORCH’:
THE LANDINGS IN NORTH AFRICA JULY 1942–MAY 1943
Operation ‘Torch’, a series of Anglo-American landings in North Africa in November 1942 designed to clear the southern shore of the Mediterranean of Axis forces, was a great success, but its origins were marked by deep division between American and British military leaders. The source of their dispute lay in their nations’ differing strategic traditions. The Americans plunged straight for the enemy's heart but the British preferred an indirect approach, wearing down their opponent in a series of marginal campaigns, which used the superiority of British sea power. In 1942 the Americans, already distracted by a desire to seek vengeance in the Pacific for the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, also sought an early end to the European war. Through operation ‘Bolero’ they proposed to build up forces in Britain with which to invade northern Europe, either in ‘Sledgehammer’, a diversionary invasion of western France in 1942 designed to relieve pressure on a collapsing Soviet Union, or in ‘Roundup’, a full-scale landing across the Channel in 1943, which intended a rapid march on Berlin. The British thought that the German army and air force were too strong for any invasion the western alliance could mount in 1942 or 1943; ministers, military leaders and public opinion feared a repeat of the Western Front's bloody stalemate of 1914–18. They pressed for an attritional campaign which would weaken German military and aerial power, leading to a return to the continent in 1944, when German strength in the air and on the ground would be more manageable. They had invested heavily, in prestige as well as military resources, in the Mediterranean, where their position in the first half of 1942 was parlous; a successful campaign in that region would restore British morale, prestige, control – and her economic and diplomatic position in the post-war Middle East and Balkans. Almost every British minister and service chief supported the idea of an early Mediterranean expedition, Cunningham included [21, 25]. It was President Franklin Roosevelt, interested in securing control of Morocco to aid the Battle of the Atlantic and realising that the British were unalterably opposed to a landing in France in 1942, who tipped the strategic balance in favour of ‘Torch’ in July 1942.
Preface
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At the beginning of the 1930s the Mediterranean Fleet, Great Britain's premier naval force, was still operating in the atmosphere of what would soon seem to have been the halcyon days of the 1920s. The fleet in many of its training and exercises seemed to be preparing for a repetition of Jutland with squadrons of heavy warships and massed destroyer flotillas engaged against their enemy counterparts. At the same time, the Navy was endeavouring to integrate new weapons, notably aircraft, into its battle practices. It was, however, a period of world depression and the financial stringency was felt in the fleet, particularly in deferred spending on the defences of the bases of Malta and Gibraltar. It would be difficult to remedy these deficiencies. The world situation was also changing. In 1931 the Japanese, a former ally, embarked on aggressive expansion and in subsequent years became an apparent threat to the British position in the Far East. In the event of war with Japan, the Mediterranean Fleet was designated to move to the Far East. In 1932 the ‘Ten Year Rule’ – that Britain would not face a major war within ten years – was abandoned. In 1933 Hitler and the Nazis came to power in Germany and began policies that would lead to war in less than a decade. The technological progress of aviation also cast a growing uncertainty over traditional naval operations: how well were warships equipped to meet the new threat?
The first major crisis came in 1935 with the Italian invasion of Ethiopia, a member of the League of Nations. There was a very real possibility the Mediterranean Fleet would be engaged in hostilities against the Italians in support of League policies. The lasting effect of the crisis was that Italy went from being a traditional friend to a potential enemy. This had enormous consequences for the Mediterranean Fleet because of Italy's central position in the Mediterranean. The principal base of the Mediterranean Fleet at Malta was now in easy striking distance of the Italian air force. While the exact effectiveness of air power was still uncertain, and possibly underestimated, the potential danger to a fleet caught at anchor in harbour was apparent and the Mediterranean Fleet for the duration of the crisis shifted its major base far eastward to Alexandria.
Part IV - The Mediterranean
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It can be argued that the ‘great days’ of naval warfare, encounters between battle fleets, in the Mediterranean were over for good when our story opens in October 1943; it saw the close of two centuries of major warship engagements, culminating in Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham's command of the Mediterranean Fleet between June 1939 and March 1942, with its high peaks of Taranto (November 1940) and Matapan (March 1941). His leadership of a battle fleet from Alexandria against the size-able and balanced Italian fleet was paralleled by the command of Force H from Gibraltar by his friend and contemporary Admiral Sir James Somer-ville (June 1940 to February 1942). In our period the only capital ships in the middle sea were superannuated dreadnoughts of British, American and French navies (used solely for bombardment of shore targets), for the Italian fleet was, in the words of Cunningham's famous signal, ‘under the guns of the fortress of Malta’; it was defeated, much of it was disarmed and reduced to a care-and-maintenance basis, and a handful of its light forces supplemented those of the Allies in the continuing fight against the Germans. It was, though, a diplomatic football, as President Franklin Roosevelt, eager to establish good relations with the Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, ahead of post-war diplomatic arrangements, had promised rashly to hand over one-third of the Italian fleet to the Soviet navy. He appears to have done this without adequate consultation with Prime Minister Churchill or the Combined Chiefs of Staff; much time and effort was spent trying to row back from this over-hasty commitment [187, 190–91, 194, 201]. In the event, the Soviets were fobbed off with obsolete British and American vessels, pending the end of hostilities worldwide; the Russians received Italian vessels after 1945. Roosevelt's cavalier offer did not take into account Italian pique at the proposed transfer without their consent, the current co-operation of the Italian Navy, the use of its light forces and its dockyards and its mercantile marine, nor the unsuitability of vessels designed for the Mediterranean for service in the Soviet Arctic.
The modern battleships and aircraft carriers may have departed many months before this story opens and there may have been no actions between surface ships in the last eighteen months of the Mediterranean war but it is not to say that the naval contribution to the fighting was not considerable.
Index
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Frontmatter
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List of Documents and Sources
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Contents
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Appendix: Observations upon the Trade Proposed Between St Domingo and Jamaica
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The date of this document is after the agreement mentioned between General Maitland and Toussaint, which was concluded in 1798. (It is filed at the National Maritime Museum in the Duckworth documents of 1794.) It appears to be a bureaucratic discussion paper concerning the trading conditions between Britain and Jamaica on one side, St Domingo as an independent state on the second, and the United States on the third. The date must therefore be between 1798 and 1802, when the French expedition arrived to attempt to reconquer the former colony. It was a problem which Duckworth as commander-in-chief had to cope with when he first arrived at Jamaica, and for several years afterwards, and this must explain its presence in his documents.
[DUC/2]
[Undated]
The intercourse at present permitted to American vessels with the British colonies in the West Indies is not under the sanction of any law passed for that purpose, but under the authority of the King in Council, and an Act of Parliament passed annually to indemnify all those officers of the Crown who are acting under the same.
The trade permitted to American vessels with the British colonies is to import to them articles the growth or produce of America only, not being manufactures, and to export from the said colonies the produce of them only, excepting dyewoods, mahogany and cotton, which being articles essential to the British manufacturies, are restricted from being sent elsewhere.
Considering America, with relation to St Domingo and the trade about to be opened, between that country, Great Britain and Jamaica, in which America is to partake, the strongest reasons present themselves for America becoming shortly professed thereof, nearly to the exclusion of Great Britain and her colonies.
American vessels navigate at about one half less expense than Brit-ish vessels, and as no restriction can be lain upon their vessels, as to the articles to be by them imported into St Domingo, they will carry the different manufactures of German linen obtained at Hamburgh, (which are more acceptable to the French than goods of British manufacture). These they will carry to St Domingo upon such terms as to undersell the British merchants, importing these articles even direct from Great Britain, and to the exclusion of the English manufactures in a certain degree.
Papers and Correspondence of Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth
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Volume 169 of the Navy Records Society Publications
Introduction
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- The Milne Papers
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Most histories of the Royal Navy, those of the Navy Records Society included, concentrate on the service's wartime activities. This volume does not. Rather, it is centred upon a man who never participated in combat operations during his sixty-year naval career. For an officer during the period 1650–1815, or 1900–1945, this would have been an extraordinary achievement. For Alexander Milne and his contemporaries too young to have served during the Napoleonic Wars, it was the rule, rather than the exception.
In turn, Milne's service career serves as a microcosm for the Navy during the years 1815–1900, often dubbed the Pax Britannica by diplomatic historians. This period witnessed the wholesale transformation of the Navy's materiel, and of many other facets, personnel and administration among them. Those portions of its history have received substantial historical scrutiny, especially in recent years. What the Navy did with its ships and men, however, has attracted much less attention. This volume seeks to address that lacuna.
During the wars of the long eighteenth century, the British government used naval power in ways that repeatedly antagonised not only enemies but neutral states as well. The ‘Rule of 1756’, which prohibited wartime transport of goods to destinations by parties barred from doing so in peacetime, and Britain's unilateral policy regarding visit and search of neutral vessels on the high seas had been major factors in the formation of leagues of armed neutrality in 1780–81 and 1800–1801, and, along with impressment, were among the casus belli of the War of 1812 between Britain and the United States. When the Napoleonic Wars ended in 1815, the Royal Navy was as large as the rest of the world's navies combined and, had it chosen, Britain could have continued to use its power in similarly highhanded fashion. It did not, although the initial omens were hardly encouraging.
During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, as in previous conflicts, British naval power had been employed in combined operations to seize enemy possessions overseas. At the Congress of Vienna the British delegation unilaterally barred any discussion of restitution. Were colonies to be returned to their former rulers, the British alone would make the decision. And, given the Royal Navy's hegemonic position, there was nothing any other European power could do about this fait accompli other than impotently to resent it.