British Royal Navy admiral & politician (1874-1955)
Sir Percy Royds
Royds (in a long duffel coat) with his dog, on the bridge of the Canterbury during the raid on Zeebrugge in 1918
In office 1937–1945
Born Percy Molyneux Rawson Royds
(1874-04-05 ) 5 April 1874Rochdale , Lancashire , EnglandDied 25 March 1955(1955-03-25) (aged 80) Spouse
Florence Yarrow
(
m. 1898; died 1948)
Relatives Charles Royds (brother)Occupation Royal Navy officerAllegiance United Kingdom Service / branch Royal Navy Years of service 1887-1927 Rank Admiral Battles / wars Awards Mentioned in dispatches Rugby player
Admiral Sir Percy Molyneux Rawson Royds CB CMG ADC (5 April 1874 – 25 March 1955) was a British admiral and politician .
Naval career
Royds was born in Rochdale , the son of Ernest Royds and the older brother of Charles Royds , also later an admiral. He was educated at Eastman's Royal Naval Academy in Southsea and joined HMS Prince of Wales , Dartmouth as a Naval Cadet in 1887. He was promoted lieutenant in 1895 and joined HMS Excellent as a gunnery officer. In 1899 he served in the Boxer Rebellion in China as the first lieutenant of HMS Arethusa .
In 1904, Royds joined Devonport Barracks as a gunnery officer. In 1905 he was promoted commander at the unusually early age of thirty and joined the cruiser HMS Europa . He later transferred to another cruiser, HMS Argyll . In 1908, he was appointed Superintendent of Physical Training at Portsmouth . This was appropriate, since he had once played rugby union for Blackheath , the Barbarians and the Royal Navy and had appeared three times for England .[ 1] In 1910 he was elected naval representative on the Rugby Football Union and served for many years, latterly as a selector representing Kent . He also served on the committee of the Royal Tournament and the Olympic Council .
In 1912, he was promoted captain and took a course at the Royal Naval War College in Portsmouth. The following year he took command of the light cruiser HMS Bellona . He was still commanding her when the First World War broke out, and later transferred to the light cruiser HMS Canterbury , which he commanded at the Battle of Jutland on 31 May – 1 June 1916. For this action, he was mentioned in dispatches and made a Companion of St Michael and St George (CMG). On St George's day, 23 April 1918, he was present at the great naval raid on Zeebrugge and Ostend .[ 2]
After the war, Royds was appointed Captain-in-Charge of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich . In 1920 he became the Royal Navy's first Director of Physical Training and Sports. In 1921 he was succeeded in this post by his younger brother, Captain Charles Royds, and took command of the battleship HMS Malaya in the Atlantic Fleet . On 19 June 1921 he was appointed an ADC to the King .
He only remained in command of Malaya until 22 April 1922 and was promoted to rear-admiral on 12 May 1922.
In 1922 he was elected president of the Royal Navy and Royal Marines Rugby Union.
On 1 December 1923 he became Admiral-Superintendent of Chatham Dockyard . He was created a Companion of the Bath (CB) in 1924. He relinquished the appointment of Admiral-Superintendent on 7 December 1925. On 1 August 1927 he was promoted vice-admiral and retired the following day.
In 1927 he was made president of the Rugby Football Union .[ 1]
In 1932 he was promoted admiral on the retired list.
Political career
On 1 July 1937, Royds was elected at a by-election as the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Kingston-upon-Thames in a by-election , having been president of the local Conservative and Unionist Association for several years. He was knighted for political and public services on 1 January 1938 and retired in 1945. He also served on Surrey County Council for some years.
Family
In 1898, Royds married Florence Yarrow (died 1948). They had one son and three daughters.
References
Notes
^ a b Owen, O.L., ed. (1956). Playfair Rugby Football Annual 1955-56 . London: Playfair Books Ltd. p. 77.
^ "Zeebrugge Raid 1918" . Imperial War Museum . Retrieved 25 March 2018 .
External links
To 1900 To the First World War To the Second World War To the professional era To the present day