Jump to content

Stephen Roskill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Stephen roskill)


Stephen Roskill

Birth nameStephen Wentworth Roskill
Born1 August 1903
London, England
Died4 November 1982 (aged 79)
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service / branch Royal Navy
Years of service1917–1949
RankCaptain
Battles / warsSecond World War
AwardsCommander of the Order of the British Empire
Distinguished Service Cross
RelationsEustace Roskill, Baron Roskill
Other workRoyal Navy Official Historian of the Second World War
Senior Research Fellow at Churchill College, Cambridge University

Stephen Wentworth Roskill (1 August 1903 – 4 November 1982) was a senior career officer of the Royal Navy, serving during the Second World War and, after his enforced medical retirement, served as the official historian of the Royal Navy from 1949 to 1960. He is now chiefly remembered as a prodigious author of books on British maritime history.

[edit]

The son of John Henry Roskill, K.C. a barrister, and Sybil Dilke, Stephen Roskill was born in London, England and joined the Royal Navy in 1917, attending the Royal Naval College at Osborne House and then the Britannia Royal Naval College at Dartmouth, Devon. As a midshipman Roskill served on the light cruiser Durban on the China Station before returning to practise gunnery at Greenwich and Portsmouth.

On 22 October, 1926, when he was a Sub-Lieutenant of HMS Wistaria (since 29 June, 1925), based at the Royal Naval Dockyard in the Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda on the America and West Indies Station, Roskill assisted in rescuing HMS Calcutta from almost certain destruction during the 1926 Havana–Bermuda hurricane. The dockface (or the wall) in the South Yard and old North Yard of the Bermudian dockyard are on the eastern (Great Sound) shore of the island of Ireland (with the western shore on the open North Atlantic). Calcutta was tied (bow to the North) to the wall at the oiling wharf (at the northern end of the South Yard), where, during an unusually high tide, she was more exposed to the wind blowing eastward over the island, than she would have been in the more sheltered North Yard (where HMS Capetown tore up two bollards but otherwise rode out the storm safely), so forty hawsers were used to lash her to the shore, but all snapped when the windspeed reached 138 mph (the highest speed recorded before the storm destroyed the dockyard's anemometer). Fortunately, the bow anchor had been dropped, and held as the stern was swung around to the westward, into the channel (the entrance to the dockyard from the Great Sound) between the two breakwaters that protected the two sections of the dockyard, and the starboard beam of the ship contacted the end of the northern breakwater. Calcutta used her propulsion system to fight the wind that would have driven her backwards into the sound, and Executive Officer Commander HM Maltby and fifty other crew members jumped onto the breakwater and lashed the ship to the end of the breakwater, while Roskill, and Sub-Lieutenant Conrad Byron Alers-Hankey (a cousin of Alexander Maurice Alers Hankey, and brothers Maurice Pascal Alers Hankey, 1st Baron Hankey (the creator of the modern UK Cabinet Office) and Donald William Alers Hankey, and descendant of the Reverend William Alers Hankey (1771–1859), an ex-banker and the secretary of the London Missionary Society (LMS) for whom the town of Hankey, South Africa was named) of Capetown, swam to attach two more lines to the oil wharf.[1] The hurricane also sank the sister-ship of Wistaria, the sloop Valerian, which was trapped outside of Bermuda's reefline when the storm arrived.[2] [3][4][5]

In 1930, he married Elizabeth Van den Bergh, with whom he had seven children. Roskill served at sea as gunnery officer of the carrier Eagle on the China Station from 1933 to 1935. Afterwards he instructed at the gunnery school HMS Excellent, and in 1936 he was given the prize gunnery appointment in the navy, that of the newly reconstructed dreadnought Warspite till 1939, was a member of the Naval Staff, 1939–1941, then served as executive officer of HMNZS Leander in 1941–1944.[Note 1]

On 13 July 1943 Leander was part of a task group of predominantly American warships off the Solomon Islands, when they engaged a force of Imperial Japanese Navy ships. During the action, Leander was torpedoed and severely damaged. For his actions in helping keep the ship afloat, Roskill was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. In March, 1944 he was promoted acting captain and sent to join the British Admiralty delegation in Washington, D.C. as chief staff officer for administration and weapons. He was the senior British observer at the Bikini Atomic tests in 1946, and served as Deputy Director of Naval Intelligence, 1946–48 before retiring as a captain, due to increasing deafness caused by exposure to gun detonations.

Career as a naval historian

[edit]

On retiring from active service in 1948, Roskill was appointed by the Cabinet Office Historical Section to write the official naval history of the Second World War. His three-volume work The War at Sea was published between 1954 and 1961.

In 1961, Roskill was elected a senior research fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge, where he was instrumental in the foundation of the Churchill Archives Centre. The centre holds 300 boxes of Roskill's personal and research papers.[6] After retirement, he was a visiting lecturer at several universities, including being Lees Knowles Lecturer in 1961, the distinguished visiting lecturer at the U.S. Naval Academy in 1965, and Richmond Lecturer at Cambridge University in 1967. He was elected a vice president of the Navy Records Society in 1964 and an honorary vice president in 1974.

Honours and awards

[edit]

Roskill was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross on 21 March 1944 as commander in HMNZS Leander when she was torpedoed in the Pacific. In 1946 he was awarded the American Legion of Merit. He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1971 New Year Honours and received an honorary Doctor of Literature degree from Cambridge University in 1970, from the University of Leeds in 1971, and from Oxford University in 1980. He was elected a Fellow of The British Academy.

Dates of rank

[edit]
  • Midshipman - 15 September 1921[7]
  • Sub-lieutenant - 30 July 1924
  • Lieutenant - 30 August 1925[7]
  • Lieutenant-commander - 30 August 1933[7]
  • Commander - 31 December 1938[7]
  • Captain - 30 June 1944[7]

Published works

[edit]
  • Escort. The Battle of the Atlantic by Denys Arthur Rayner and edited by S. W. Roskill (1955)
  • HMS Warspite. The story of a famous battleship (1957) - HMS Warspite
  • The Secret Capture. (On the capture of the German submarine U-110 (1940) during the Second World War). (1959)
  • The War at Sea, 1939–1945 Three volumes published from 1954–61 of the British official history series, the History of the Second World War, all edited by J. R. M. Butler
    • Volume 1: The Defensive (1954)
    • Volume 2: The Period of Balance (1956)
    • Volume 3: The Offensive, Part 1 (1960)
    • Volume 3: The Offensive, Part 2 (1961)
  • The Navy at War, 1939–1945 Published in the US as The White Ensign: The British Navy at War, 1939–1945 (1960)
  • The Strategy of Sea Power. Its development and application. Based on the Lees-Knowles Lectures ... 1961 (1962)
  • A Merchant Fleet in War. Alfred Holt & Co., 1939–1945. (1962)
  • The Strategy of Sea Power (1962, 1984)
  • The Art of Leadership (1964)
  • Naval Policy Between the Wars.
    • Vol. 1, The period of Anglo-American antagonism, 1919–1929
    • Vol. 2, The period of reluctant rearmament, 1930–1939 (1968, 1976)
  • Documents relating to the Royal Naval Air Service (1969)
  • Hankey: Man Of Secrets (1877–1918). Vol. I. Collins. 1970. ISBN 0-00-211327-9.
  • Hankey: Man Of Secrets (1919–1931). Vol. II. Collins. 1972. ISBN 0-00-211330-9.
  • Hankey: Man Of Secrets (1931–1963). Vol. III. Collins. 1974. ISBN 0-00-211332-5.
  • The eventful history of the mutiny and piratical seizure of HMS Bounty, its causes and consequences by Sir John Barrow - edited with an introduction by S. W. Roskill (1976)
  • Churchill and the admirals (1977, 2004)
  • Admiral of the Fleet Earl Beatty: The Last Naval Hero: An Intimate Biography (1980)

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The executive officer (XO) and second-in-command of a capital ship was known as "the commander".

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Stranack, Royal Navy, Lieutenant-Commander B. Ian D (1977). The Andrew and The Onions: The Story of The Royal Navy in Bermuda, 1795–1975. Bermuda: Island Press Ltd, Bermuda, 1977 (1st Edition); Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda, Ireland Island, Sandys, Bermuda, 1990 (2nd Edition). p. 113. ISBN 9780921560036.
  2. ^ Stranack, Royal Navy, Lieutenant-Commander B. Ian D (1977). The Andrew and The Onions: The Story of The Royal Navy in Bermuda, 1795–1975. Bermuda: Island Press Ltd., Bermuda, 1977 (1st Edition); Bermuda Maritime Museum Press, Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda, Ireland Island, Sandys, Bermuda, 1990 (2nd Edition). ISBN 9780921560036.
  3. ^ "SAVED THE FLAGSHIP". Edinburgh Evening News. Edinburgh. 7 October 1943. p. 4. On the day that Admiral Cunningham took over his new job as First Sea Lord one of his young officers of early years was distinguishing himself off the coast of France. Commander Conrad Alers-Hankey was in command of the light forces which routed enemy destroyers off the Sept Isles early on Tuesday.
    Alers-Hankey won the D.S.C. at Dunkirk when in command of the destroyer Vanquisher. Since then he has been twice mentioned in dispatches.
    As a sub-lieutenant in the West Indies he once had the distinction of saving the flagship, the cruiser Calcutta. A hurricane parted all the wires securing the Calcutta to the centre mole, and the ship was being swept down on to the jetty. Alers-Hankey dived overboard with a rope secured to a stout hawser. He made fast the hawser, which finally stopped the ship's way. The captain of the Calcutta was Capt. A. B. Cunningham.
  4. ^ Mason, Geoffrey B. "HMS Calcutta - World War 1 C-type light cruiser: including Convoy Escort Movements". Service Histories of Royal Navy Warships in World War 2. Naval-history.net. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  5. ^ "The Hurricane: End of H.M.S. Valerian". The Daily Standard. Brisbane. 26 October 1926. p. 4.
  6. ^ "The Papers of Stephen Roskill | ArchiveSearch". archivesearch.lib.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Royal Navy (RN) Officers 1939–1945". World War II Unit histories and officers. Hans Houterman & Jeroen Koppes. Retrieved 5 October 2021.

References

[edit]
  • Barnett, Correlli (2004). in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
  • Gough, B. M. (2010). Historical Dreadnoughts: Arthur Marder, Stephen Roskill and Battles for Naval History. Barnsley: Seaforth (Pen and Sword). ISBN 978-1-84832-077-2.
  • Eugene L. Rasor, English/British Naval History since 1815. New York: Garland, 1990, pp. 38–41.
[edit]