Philip Nelson-Ward
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Admiral Philip Nelson-Ward, C.V.O., Royal Navy, Retired (29 June, 1866 – 27 June, 1937) was an officer of the Royal Navy.
Life & Career
Nelson-Ward was promoted to the rank of Captain on 1 January, 1905.[1]
First World War
While reforming an HH convoy on 10 October, 1917, Nelson-Ward's ship, the Bostonian, was struck at 17:22 by two torpedoes fired from within the destroyer screen. The ship sank so quickly by the stern that the foremost Starboard boat, which Nelson-Ward was in, was swamped and when he came to the surface he saw the bows of the ship standing vertically. The Bostonian disappeared at 17:28, six minutes after the first torpedo hit, with one hundred and five saved, and four men from the stokehold lost.[2]
Footnotes
- ↑ London Gazette: no. 27750. p. 25. 3 January, 1905.
- ↑ Newbolt. Naval Operations. V. p. 163.
Bibliography
- "Admiral Nelson-Ward" (Obituaries). The Times. Monday, 28 June, 1937. Issue 47722, col C, pg. 16.
- Newbolt, Henry (1931). Naval Operations. Vol. V. London: Longmans, Green and Co..
Service Record
- The National Archives. ADM 196/42.
Categories:
- 1866 births
- 1937 deaths
- Personalities
- H.M.S. Britannia (Training Ship) Entrants of July, 1879
- Royal Navy Navigating Officers
- Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Enchantress (1903)
- Commanding Officers of H.M.S. Formidable (1898)
- Assistant Hydrographers of the Navy (Royal Navy)
- Directors of Navigation (Royal Navy)
- Royal Navy Admirals
- Royal Navy Flag Officers