Sea-Power
A naval officer from a generation that could spend an average of between 250 and 300 days a year at sea, Sir Cyprian Bridge (1839–1924) used this extensive experience and the knowledge he gained from wide reading to become a highly respected commander, firm in his beliefs and unafraid to voice them. In retirement he became a vocal critic of the drive to build bigger ships, believing that hardware should be subordinate to tactics. A regular contributor to newspapers, he wrote articles on naval history, tactics and strategy. This collection of articles was published in 1910, and includes his well-known paper, first delivered in 1902, setting out the difficulties in maintaining supplies and communications with a fleet based far from home. This work remains relevant to naval historians, and to those interested in how Britain maintained her maritime supremacy into the twentieth century.
Product details
August 2013Paperback
9781108054201
318 pages
216 × 140 × 18 mm
0.41kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Sea-power
- 2. The command of the sea
- 3. War and its chief lessons
- 4. The historical relations between the navy and the merchant service
- 5. Facts and fancies about the press-gang
- 6. Projected invasions of the British Isles
- 7. Over-seas raids and raids on land
- 8. Queen Elizabeth and her seamen
- 9. Nelson: the centenary of Trafalgar
- 10. The share of the fleet in the defence of the Empire
- 11. Naval strategy and tactics at the time of Trafalgar
- 12. The supply and communications of a fleet
- Index.