Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland explained

Unit Name:Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland
Dates:1913–2020
Country: United Kingdom
Type:Command (military formation)
Command Structure:Navy Command
Garrison:HM Naval Base Clyde

The Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland (FOSNI) was a senior post in the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom. It was based at HM Naval Base Clyde, and the holder of the post was the Royal Navy’s senior officer in Scotland.[1] The post of FOSNI, dating from 1946, was re-scoped and re-named in 1994 to Flag Officer Scotland, Northern England & Northern Ireland (FOSNNI), then named back in 2015, before being dis-established in 2020.

History

The Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland was the most senior naval position in Scotland and is the successor to appointments starting with the Senior Officer on the Coast of Scotland, established in 1913, just prior to the outbreak of the First World War. The title was altered to Commander-in-Chief, Rosyth in 1916. From 1946 the post became the Flag Officer Scotland & Northern Ireland. Between 1961 and 1994 the Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland was triple-hatted as Commander Northern Sub-Area (NORLANT) of Allied Command Atlantic (ACLANT), and as Commander Nore Sub-Area Channel (NORECHAN) of Allied Command Channel. Based at RAF Pitreavie Castle, NORECHAN was tasked to prevent Soviet Navy ships and submarines from entering the North Sea. When the command moved from Rosyth to HMNB Clyde in 1994, it took responsibility for a larger area, becoming the Flag Officer Scotland, Northern England and Northern Ireland.[2] In 2015 the post reverted to Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland. The post was removed under the Royal Navy's Navy Command Transformation Programme and renamed Commodore Submarine Service (COSM).[3]

Major subordinate stone frigates under C-in-C Rosyth on the outbreak of the Second World War included HMS Flora at Invergordon; HMS Bacchante (a shore establishment) at Aberdeen, HMS Claverhouse at Leith, and HMS Calliope on the Tyne.[4] Bacchante had been commanded by the Senior Naval Officer, Aberdeen from 1915 to 1919 [5] and then the Flag Officer-in-Charge, Aberdeen from 1942 to 1945.[6] Wartime subsidiary bases included Aultbea on Loch Ewe.[7] Facilities at Aultbea were established in February 1915 during World War I and partially deactivated in April 1919. Aultbea was reactivated during World War II in 1940 following the German attack on Scapa Flow and subsequent sinking of HMS Royal Oak, when the Home Fleet was temporarily based there.[8] It was also a staging point for arctic convoys that operated out of Loch Ewe. It remained in operation until October 1967.[9]

Admirals Commanding

Flag Officers have been:[10]

Admiral Commanding on the Coast of Scotland; 1913–1916

Included:[11]

Commander-in-Chief, Rosyth; 1913–1919

S.NoNameRankAssumed officeLeft office
1Sir Frederick HamiltonAdmiral
2Sir Cecil BurneyAdmiral

Commander-in-Chief, Coast of Scotland; 1919–1939

S.NoNameRankAssumed officeLeft office
1Sir Herbert HeathAdmiral
2Sir John GreenVice-Admiral
3Sir Reginald Tyrwhitt, Bt.Rear-Admiral
4Sir Walter CowanVice-Admiral
5Humphrey BowringRear-Admiral
6John CameronRear-Admiral
7Theodore HallettRear-Admiral
8the Hon. William Leveson-GowerVice-Admiral
9Everard Hardman-JonesRear-Admiral
10Robert DavenportRear-Admiral
11Evelyn ThomsonVice-Admiral

Commander-in-Chief, Rosyth; 1939–1946

S.NoNameRankAssumed officeLeft office
1Sir Charles RamseyAdmiral
2Sir Wilbraham FordAdmiral
3Sir William WhitworthAdmiral

Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland; 1946–1994

S.NoNameRankAssumed officeLeft office
1Sir Frederick Dalrymple-HamiltonAdmiral
2Sir Ernest ArcherVice-Admiral
3Sir Angus Cunninghame GrahamVice-Admiral
4John CrombieRear-Admiral
5Sir Geoffrey RobsonVice-Admiral
6Sir John CuthbertVice-Admiral
7David LuceVice-Admiral
8Sir Royston WrightVice-Admiral
9Sir Arthur HezletVice-Admiral
10Sir David GregoryVice-Admiral
11Sir John HayesVice-Admiral
12Sir Ian McGeochVice-Admiral
13David Dunbar-NasmithRear-Admiral
14Martin LuceyRear-Admiral
15Sir Anthony TroupVice-Admiral
16Sir Cameron RusbyVice-Admiral
17Sir Thomas BairdVice-Admiral
18Robert SquiresVice-Admiral
19Sir Nicholas HuntVice-Admiral
20Sir George VallingsVice-AdmiralMay 1985October 1987
21Sir Jock SlaterVice-Admiral
22Sir Michael LivesayVice-Admiral
23Sir Hugo WhiteVice-Admiral
24Sir Christopher MorganVice-Admiral

Flag Officer Scotland, Northern England, Northern Ireland; 1994–2015

Note: From 2005, the post holder also held the title of Flag Officer, Reserves and Flag Officer Regional Forces.[12]

S.NoNameRankAssumed officeLeft office
1John TolhurstRear-Admiral
2Michael GregoryRear-Admiral
3Derek AnthonyRear-Admiral[13]
4Nick HarrisRear-Admiral
5Philip WilcocksRear-Admiral
6Tony Johnstone-BurtRear-Admiral
7Philip JonesRear-Admiral[14]
8Martin AlabasterRear Admiral
9Christopher HockleyRear-Admiral
10John ClinkRear-Admiral

Flag Officer Scotland and Northern Ireland; 2015–2020

Notes and References

  1. http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/operations-and-support/establishments/naval-bases-and-air-stations/hmnb-clyde/fosnni/index.htm Royal Navy official site, FOSNNI
  2. Army Quarterly and Defence Journal, Volume 124, page 230 (West of England Press, 1994).
  3. News: . Submariners Association Newsletter In Depth 68. Submariners Association . 1 April 2020 . 13 June 2020 .
  4. Web site: Watson. Graham. Royal Navy Organisation in World War 2, 1939–1945. www.naval-history.net. Graham Smith, 19 September 2015. 30 December 2017.
  5. Book: Admiralty . Great Britain . Navy List . December 1919 . HM Stationery Office . London England . 699 . Other Senior Naval Officers or Officers in Charge at Ports in the United Kingdom.
  6. Book: Admiralty . Great Britain . Navy List . December 1942 . HM Stationery Office . London England . 1336 . Flag Officers in Commission.
  7. Book: Admiralty . Great Britain . Navy List . January 1919 . HM Stationery Office . London England . 769 . The Royal Navy.
  8. Book: Smith . Peter C. . The Great Ships: British Battleships in World War II . 2008 . Stackpole Books . Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, United States . 9780811749350 . 70 . en.
  9. Web site: Archives . The National . Aultbea Naval Base, Loch Ewe, Ross and Cromarty: a short history. With photographs and plan . discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk . The National Archives . 19 October 2018 . London England . 1940–1967 . ADM 1/31049.
  10. http://www.gulabin.com/armynavy/pdf/Senior%20Royal%20Navy%20Appointments%201900-.pdf Listing compiled by historian Colin Mackie
  11. Admiralty. British. (November 1914). The Navy List. List of Admirals by Seniority. Admirals. H.M.S.O. London. England. p86.
  12. Book: Committee . Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Defence . House of Commons - Defence Committee: The Defence Implications of Possible Independence - Volume I: HC 198: Sixth Report of Session 2013-14, Vol. 1: Report, Together with an Appendix, Formal Minutes and Oral Evidence . 2013 . The Stationery Office . London . 978-0-215-06246-8 . 15 . en.
  13. http://www.warshipsifr.com/LegacySite/interview_derekAnthony.html Warships Magazine, FLAG OFF SCOTLAND SPECIAL
  14. http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/operations-and-support/establishments/naval-bases-and-air-stations/hmnb-clyde/news/base-braves-the-elements-to-wave/ Royal Navy official site Base Braves the Elements to Wave Fond Farewell to Admiral, Tuesday, 6 September 2008
  15. http://thelochsidepress.com/2015/07/27/new-admiral-takes-the-helm-at-faslane/ Lochside Press, New admiral takes the helm at Faslane, 27 July 2015