Difference between revisions of "Transport Department (Royal Navy)"
From The Dreadnought Project
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<div name=fredbot:officeNDT otitle="Naval Assistant Director of Transports" nat="UK"> | <div name=fredbot:officeNDT otitle="Naval Assistant Director of Transports" nat="UK"> | ||
+ | {{Tenure|rank={{CaptRN}} (retired)|name=Hubert Stansbury|nick=Hubert Stansbury|appt=1 April, 1915|end=early 1917}} | ||
{{Tenure|rank={{Com2RN}}|name=George Parker Bevan|nick=George P. Bevan|appt=1 April, 1918|end=November, 1919}} | {{Tenure|rank={{Com2RN}}|name=George Parker Bevan|nick=George P. Bevan|appt=1 April, 1918|end=November, 1919}} | ||
</div name=fredbot:officeNDT> | </div name=fredbot:officeNDT> |
Latest revision as of 08:14, 24 August 2018
The Transport Department was the name given to the logistical branch of the Royal Navy. At its highest level, it was managed by civil authorities.
Management of the warfighting effort was by nature an evolution, with various ports and cities receiving a Principal or Divisional Naval Transport Officer – positions often filled by a retired officer – as conditions required.
Contents
Director of Transports
Graeme Thompson, Esq., C.B. held this position in December 1918.
- Captain (retired) Hubert Stansbury, 1 April, 1915 – early 1917
- Commodore, Second Class George P. Bevan, 1 April, 1918 – November, 1919
Stations and Ports
- Cardiff
- Mudros
- Southampton
- Salonika
- Newcastle
- Newhaven
- Port of London
- Avonmouth
- Dieppe
- Rouen
- Taranto
- Dunkirk
- Liverpool
Footnotes