Sir William Fane De Salis | |
---|---|
Born | 21 July 1858 Fringford |
Died | 23 January 1939 Roche Court, Fareham |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/ | Royal Navy |
Years of service | 1871–1913 |
Rank | Admiral |
Commands held | HMS Orion HMS Juno HMS Revenge HMS Jupiter HMS Russell |
Battles/wars |
Admiral Sir William Fane De Salis, KBE, MVO, JP (21 July 1858 – 23 January 1939),[1][2] was a Royal Navy admiral during the early years of the First World War.
Background
A nephew of William Fane de Salis and third of the four sons of Rev. Henry Jerome Fane De Salis of Portnall Park (the seventh son of the 4th Count de Salis), his brothers were Rodolph Fane De Salis, Cecil Fane De Salis and Charles Fane De Salis.
Naval career
de Salis entered the Royal Navy, HMS Britannia, in 1871;[3][4] and served in the Niger (1886) and the Ogaden Somali expeditions (1901). After promotion to captain on 30 June 1901,[5] he was on 5 September 1902 appointed in command of the ironclad HMS Orion, depot-ship for at Malta for torpedo-boats in the Mediterranean Fleet.[6]
He was naval ADC to Kings Edward VII and George V, 1909-1910, was promoted to rear-admiral in 1911, and retired from the navy in 1913. He served as a captain in the Royal Naval Reserve's Yacht Patrol, 6 March 1915 – 1916;[7] Vice-Admiral, Head of Mission to Portugal, 9 June 1916.[8] He served on the following: HMS Russell; HMS Jupiter; HMS Revenge; HMS Gladiator; HMS Blake; HMS Juno; HMS Mersey; HMS Scout; HMS Haughty; and HMTB 87.[9]
de Salis was appointed a Member of the Royal Victorian Order in 1904, and knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1922. He received the Prussian Order of the Red Eagle in 1904 (2 class) and the Portuguese Order of the Tower and Sword in 1916. He was Justice of the peace (JP) of Hampshire from 1904.
Marriages and family
- ∞ I. 14.5.1889, Eliza Jesser Coope, (Falmouth,[10] 1867, † Chichester, 29.10.1919), elder daughter of Captain William Jesser Coope,[11] of Claremont, Mayfield, Sussex, and Rouwkoup House, Rondebosch, Cape Colony;[12][13]
- ∞ II. St. Stephen Walbrook, London, 20.2.1924, Mabel Dorothy Rawstorne, of Roche Court, (20.3.1889, †Roche Court, Fareham, 15.1.1936),[14][15] daughter and heir of Henry Feilden Rawstorne (*1859-†24.6.1924) of Roche Court, north Fareham, Hants., England, (second son of Ven. Archdeacon Robert Atherton Rawstorne, (1824 - 1902), of Balderstone Grange, Lancs.),[16] by (∞1887) Mabel Katharina (†1892) only child and heir of Sir John Brocas Whalley-Smythe-Gardiner, 4th & last Bart. of Roche Court (†1868).[17]
Issue:
- Rodolph Henry, (Portnall 25.5.1890, † Sussex 1.6.1972), DSC; Deputy-Lieutenant (West Sussex); CBE; OBE; Dover Patrol and Heligo Bight; with Admiral Jellicoe 1919. Despatches (twice). Married, ∞Rosyth, 14.9.1920, Madelaine Marion Catherine Heath, (Malta ... 2.1892, † Up Marden 29/30.3.1978), daughter of Admiral Sir (Herbert) Leopold Heath, KCB, MVO. Madelaine served in No.8 Stationary Hospital Wimereux & B.R.C.S. motor ambulance convoy at Étaples.[18]
- Ursula Eva, (Stoke Damerel 21.3.1892, † Hampstead 22.11.1981), married, Frederic Newton Attwood, CBE (1941), of Burchetts, Milford, Surrey; (†Milford 21.10.1973); Rear-Admiral, RN 1904, served 1914-1918, & 1939-45.
- Antony, (Sheerness 11.5.1896, † Wentworth, Surrey, 6.1.1976), Captain, Royal Navy, DSO; (at Jutland); of Fair Winds, Virginia Water. Married, ∞ firstly, 3.10.1925, (Margaret) Honor Bindloss, (bapt. 1.5.1901, † ... 8.7.1926), daughter of Dr. (Major) Arthur Henry Bindloss, (*Russia 1864-?) physician & surgeon, of The Old house, Harrow-on-the-Hill; he married secondly, 10.9.1948, Phyllis Marion Dicks, (Portsea Island, 1900, † Virginia Water, 19.7.2002 (aged 102)).
References
- ↑ Buried East Marden, where he had Battine House
- ↑ Roche Court is now Boundary Oak School
- ↑ Who's Who
- ↑ "William Fane De Salis". www.dreadnoughtproject.org. Retrieved 2018-06-06.
- ↑ "No. 27335". The London Gazette. 19 July 1901. p. 4780.
- ↑ "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times. No. 36866. London. 6 September 1902. p. 8.
- ↑ From Alistair Wilson, via the Kipling Society, 2007: On the yacht Iolaire, at this time based at Yarmouth, but working along the east coast, and in particular in the shepherding and protecting of the North Sea fisheries which continued to operate (but at a much reduced level, since most of the boats were in Admiralty service). Iolaire had belonged to Sir Donald Currie, the millionaire ship-owner who created the Union Castle line; when he died in 1909, it passed to his widow, who offered it to the Admiralty in 1914.
- ↑ Lieutenant 1882; Commander 1895; Captain 1901; Rear-Admiral 1911.
- ↑ "The Dreadnought Project". www.dreadnoughtproject.org. Retrieved 2018-06-06.
- ↑ Probably Gyllyngdune Gardens.
- ↑ Late of the Royal Fusiliers, and a connection of Octavius Coope.
- ↑ Burke's Landed Gentry, edited by Peter Townend, eighteenth edition, volume one, London, Burke's Peerage, 1965, (pages 251-253).
- ↑ A He was a member of the United Service Club (building and portraits now possessed by Institute of Directors. He also lived at Brookfield, Alverstoke, Hampshire. In 1919 he was living at the Battine House, East Marden.
- ↑ ... after a very short illness
- ↑ Roche Court's telephone number was Fareham 9.
- ↑ Cousin of Atherton Rawstorne.
- ↑ In the 1930s Lady de Salis left Roche Court’s Brocas and Whalley-Smythe-Gardiner family portraits to her third cousin George, 2nd Earl Jellicoe, aka Viscount Brocas.
- ↑ Heath-Caldwell, JJ. "Madeline Marion Heath 1892-1978 who married Capt Rodolph de Salis". www.jjhc.info. Retrieved 2018-06-06.