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Francis Harvey (disambiguation)

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33-742: Francis Harvey (1873–1916) was an officer of the British Royal Marine Light Infantry during the First World War. Francis Harvey or Frank Harvey may also refer to: Francis Harvey Major Francis John William Harvey , VC (29 April 1873 – 31 May 1916) was an officer of the British Royal Marine Light Infantry during the First World War . Harvey was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross ,

66-415: A Royal Marines officer cadet, Harvey graduated in 1892 and the following year was made a full lieutenant , joining HMS  Wildfire for his first seagoing commission. After just a year at sea, Harvey was back on shore attending gunnery courses at HMS  Excellent , qualifying in 1896 as an instructor first class in naval gunnery. Harvey was appointed to the cruiser HMS  Phaeton when she

99-693: A German force at the Battle of Dogger Bank . Over the previous months, a German battlecruiser squadron under Rear-Admiral Hipper had crossed the North Sea and bombarded British coastal towns on several occasions. On 24 January 1915 another attempt was made, but this time British signals analysts had detected the German movement and using this information the Admiralty dispatched Beatty's force to intercept and destroy them. Beatty and Hipper's squadrons collided at 09:00 and during

132-507: A proj [projectile] does hit one's turret it will in all probability come right in and send one to glory. Beatty's battlecruisers led the British fleet in its attack, casting southward into the North Sea to find the enemy during the afternoon of 31 May 1916. At 14:15, scouting cruisers spotted the German vanguard and Beatty closed to attack the enemy with his main force. Given time to prepare, Hipper

165-465: A puffball" in one huge column of grey smoke, killing 1,275 sailors. Hours later during the main battlefleet engagement, Rear-Admiral Horace Hood 's flagship HMS  Invincible was destroyed with 1,032 lives. All three ships were lost as the result of magazine explosions similar to the one narrowly avoided on Lion . Harvey's charred corpse was taken from the wreckage of Q turret in the aftermath of battle and buried at sea with full honours alongside

198-524: The Channel Fleet , aboard HMS  Edgar and HMS  Diadem , practising and instructing in gunnery. On 28 January 1900 he was promoted to captain . In 1903 he was posted aboard HMS  Royal Sovereign , the first of a string of big ship appointments teaching gunnery to the heavy units of the Channel Fleet. By 1909, Harvey had served on HMS  Duke of Edinburgh , HMS  St George and

231-519: The First World War , his first military campaign. Harvey did not have to wait long to see action, seeing combat for the first time at the Battle of Heligoland Bight just weeks into the war. On 28 August 1914, Lion and her squadron of HMS  Queen Mary and HMS  Princess Royal , swept into the Heligoland Bight where German and British cruiser forces were already engaged in a bitter struggle. One German cruiser had already been sunk by

264-645: The Glorious First of June in 1794 and his great-grandfather Admiral Sir Edward Harvey and grandfather Captain John Harvey of the 9th Regiment of Foot were also prominent military figures. After leaving school, Harvey chose a military career and was accepted by both the Royal Military College, Sandhurst , and the Royal Naval College, Greenwich , for officer training. Choosing the latter school as

297-620: The King's Regiment in 1973. Harvey's name is inscribed on the Chatham Naval Memorial to those with no known grave, administered by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission . Major Francis John William Harvey, R.M.L.I. Recommended for posthumous Victoria Cross. Whilst mortally wounded and almost the only survivor after the explosion of an enemy shell in "Q" gunhouse, with great presence of mind and devotion to duty ordered

330-457: The German flagship only surviving due to the actions of sailor Wilhelm Heidkamp , who wrenched open the magazines' water valves despite them glowing red hot. Lion was badly damaged in the action by shells from the passing SMS  Derfflinger and with her engines failing, dropped back to engage the already sinking SMS  Blücher . Misread signals resulted in the rest of the British fleet returning to support Lion in this task, allowing

363-463: The Germans found the range better and faster than the British, who were silhouetted against the sun. As a result, German shells pounded the British ships while the German ships remained untouched for the first 10 minutes of the engagement. During this stage of the battle Lion was hit by nine shells from SMS  Lützow . One shell at 16:00 struck the right upper corner of the left hand gun port at

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396-400: The I of G". The strength of this report gained Harvey a position as senior marine officer aboard HMS  Lion , the 27,000 ton flagship of the British battlecruiser fleet. Lion had eight 13.5-inch guns and Harvey was stationed in Q turret directing their operation and fire. Under her new commander, Rear-Admiral David Beatty , Harvey served as the senior marine officer on board into

429-532: The bridge and notified the captain of Harvey's actions before being taken below to have his wounds dressed. In the Transmitting Station below the armoured deck, Stoker 1st Class William Yeo was entrusted with passing on Harvey's last orders. The magazine was consequently flooded and locked up within minutes of the hit. However the cordite charges which had fallen down from gun house after the hit were not removed to safety, and there were still ready charges in

462-426: The engagement that followed, Lion was left exposed by mis-communication between the ships, which led to HMS  Tiger engaging the wrong ship, leaving SMS  Moltke uncovered and so able to fire more accurately. The British flagship was hard pressed until one of Lion ' s shots penetrated one of Seydlitz ' s turrets. A huge explosion destroyed the neighbouring turret as well and killed 160 men,

495-408: The flagship of the British battlecruiser fleet, Harvey fought at the battles of Heligoland Bight , Dogger Bank and Jutland . At Jutland, Harvey, although mortally wounded by German shellfire, ordered the magazine of Q turret on the battlecruiser Lion to be flooded. This action prevented the tons of cordite stored there from catastrophically detonating in an explosion that would have destroyed

528-421: The highest military award for gallantry in the face of the enemy given to British and Commonwealth forces, for his actions at the height of the Battle of Jutland . A long-serving Royal Marine officer descended of a military family, during his career Harvey became a specialist in naval artillery , serving on many large warships as gunnery training officer and gun commander. Specially requested for HMS  Lion ,

561-415: The junction of the face plate and the roof, and punched a piece of the 9-inch face plate into the turret before detonating, blowing off the armoured roof of the turret and starting a fire, which a damage control party working from outside the turret fought to put out. The initial explosion killed or wounded everyone stationed in the gun house itself. Harvey, despite severe wounds and burns, gave orders down

594-518: The magazine to be flooded, thereby saving the ship. He died shortly afterwards. London Gazette , 15 September 1916 HMS Diadem (1896) HMS Diadem was the lead ship of the Diadem -class of protected cruiser in the Royal Navy . Diadem was built by Fairfield Shipbuilding & Engineering Co Ltd at Govan . She was laid down on 23 January 1896, and launched on 21 October 1896, when she

627-546: The main body of the German High Seas Fleet at the Battle of Jutland . Just after Dogger Bank, Harvey had written to a fellow RMLI officer in HMS ; Orion describing his experiences: As to the fighting in a turret, one doesn't suffer any discomfort and my chief feeling has been of 'curiosity' mixed with the idea that whoever else is coming to grief, oneself will be all right. I am under no delusion though, that if

660-467: The new battlecruiser HMS  Inflexible . In 1910 Harvey became Instructor of Gunnery at Chatham Dockyard and the following year was promoted to major , a report on the gunnery school commenting "Degree of efficiency in Gunnery Establishment at Chatham is very high both as regards general training and attention to detail. Great credit is due all concerned particularly to Major F.J.W. Harvey,

693-609: The other 98 fatal casualties Lion had suffered. His bravery in the face of certain death did not go unnoticed; he was mentioned by name in Admiral Jellicoe's post-battle dispatch and he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross . Harvey's widow Ethel was presented with the award at Buckingham Palace by King George V on 15 September 1916. His medal group was later loaned to the Royal Marines Museum , Eastney Barracks by his son Lieutenant-Colonel John Malcolm Harvey of

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726-437: The precautions taken in hand, the magazine doors were later found to be severely buckled – only the seawater in the magazine behind it prevented the blast reaching inside. Other ships of the battlecruiser fleet were less lucky; at about the same time as Harvey's death, HMS  Indefatigable was torn to pieces by a series of magazine explosions that claimed 1,013 lives and just minutes after that HMS Queen Mary exploded "like

759-408: The rest of the battered German fleet to retire as the British destroyed the hapless Blücher and 792 of her crew. Following the battle, Harvey remained aboard Lion at Rosyth for the whole of 1915 and the first five months of 1916, continuing his gunnery training and preparations for major fleet action. His preparations came to fruition on the last day of May, when the British fleet sailed to engage

792-501: The same year she again escorted the royal yacht from St Vincent to Halifax, Nova Scotia . In January 1902 it was announced that she would be put out of commission due to "defects which will take some time to remedy" . She was paid off at Chatham on 11 February 1902, and in May transported to Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company in Glasgow for repairs to her hull and machinery. She

825-430: The son of Commander John William Francis Harvey, a Royal Navy officer, and Elizabeth Edwards Lavington Harvey ( née Penny). In 1884, at age 11, Harvey moved with his family to Southsea and he attended Portsmouth Grammar School , achieving excellent academic results and showing proficiency in languages and debating. Harvey was descended from a military family; his great-great-grandfather John Harvey had been killed in

858-402: The time Beatty's force arrived, but the German flagship SMS  Cöln and cruiser SMS  Ariadne were surprised in the fog and destroyed by heavy calibre shells from Beatty's battlecruisers. German Konteradmiral Leberecht Maass and over 1,000 of his sailors were killed, Harvey's guns scoring several hits on the cruisers. Six months later, Harvey's guns again caused severe damage to

891-518: The vessel and all aboard her. Although he succumbed to his injuries seconds later, his dying act may have saved over a thousand lives and prompted Winston Churchill to later comment: "In the long, rough, glorious history of the Royal Marines there is no name and no deed which in its character and consequences ranks above this". Francis Harvey was born in Upper Sydenham , Kent , on 29 April 1873,

924-461: The voice pipe for the magazine doors to be closed and the magazine compartments to be flooded, an action which would prevent the cordite in the magazines detonating. Turning to his sergeant, the one man still standing, Harvey instructed him to proceed to the bridge and give a full report to the ship's captain Ernle Chatfield (a standard drill in damage exercises). The sergeant went immediately to

957-419: The working chamber. A large number of crewmen still remained in the shell room, magazine handing room and working chamber. The fire which was thought to have been put out after the hit on the turret gained strength and ignited the remaining cordite charges, setting off a large explosion at 16:28 which killed the turret crewmen, the flame of the explosion reaching as high as the top of the ship's masts. Even with

990-559: Was back at Sheerness in early December 1902. The ship was reactivated and sent to China Station where Diadem became the flagship of the vice-admiral until 1907. The vessel then returned home and was paid off in April 1907. She was then assigned to the Home Fleet based at Portsmouth from 1907–1912 before transferring to the Third Fleet . The ship was refitted in 1909. Diadem served in

1023-560: Was commissioned at Devonport on 8 June 1897 for service on the Pacific Station. In 1898, whilst on the Phaeton , he was thanked by the Admiralty for a report he rendered on San Diego Harbour. Returning home the same year, Harvey was given the position of Assistant Instructor for Gunnery at Plymouth Division. During this period, Harvey married Ethel Edye and had one son, John. Between 1898 and 1904, Harvey spent much of his time attached to

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1056-902: Was named by Lady Currie, wife of Castle Line shipowner Sir Donald Currie . She served in the Easter Division of the Channel Squadron under the command of Captain Harry Seawell Niblett , and was briefly docked at Chatham in January 1900 to make good defects. In March 1901 Diadem was one of two cruisers to escort HMS Ophir , commissioned as royal yacht for the World tour of the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York (later King George V and Queen Mary ), from Spithead to Gibraltar , and in September

1089-417: Was ready for Beatty with his battlecruisers in line to face Beatty's approaching ships with their full broadsides. Hipper was also encouraged by the main German battleship fleet under Vice-Admiral Reinhard Scheer , which was steaming northwards close behind him. At 15:45 Beatty came within range of the German fleet and the vanguards engaged one another with their opening fusillades. As the two squadrons closed,

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