1st Edition

Wisdom and War The Royal Naval College Greenwich 1873–1998

By Harry Dickinson Copyright 2012
324 Pages
by Routledge

324 Pages
by Routledge

324 Pages
by Routledge

Opened in 1873, in buildings constructed by Charles II to house retired sailors, the Royal Naval College was founded with the aim of providing officers with 'the highest possible scientific instruction in all branches of study bearing upon their profession'. For more than 125 years it taught officers ranging in rank from Sub Lieutenants to Vice Admiral, providing the technical instruction that... Read more
Contents: Introduction; Palace, hospital, college; A faltering start 1869-1877; Retrenchment and reform 1877-1900; Golden years 1901-1914; The college at war 1914-1918; Under the White Ensign 1919-1926; Parsimony and pageant 1927-1939; Gentlemen (and ladies) at arms 1939-1945; Post-war prospects 1946-1958; Going nuclear 1959-1972; A second century 1973-1987; Final years 1988-1998; Appendices; Bibliography; Index.

Biography

Harry Dickinson is a Senior Lecturer in the Defence Studies Department, Kings College, London. He taught previously at the Royal Naval Colleges at Greenwich and Dartmouth and in the History Department of the United States Naval Academy. An MA and PhD graduate of the University of London, he was awarded the Julian Corbett Prize for Modern Naval History by the Institute of Historical Research in 1996. He has written widely on various aspects of naval history, particularly officer education and training.

'Wisdom and War provides a well paced, detailed and interesting narrative of the 125-year history of one of the Royal Navy’s best known training establishments, but it is also of wider interest, for throughout developments at Greenwich are carefully related to the wider naval, strategic, political and economic context.' International Journal of Maritime History '... a good overall historical summary for close study of the curriculum and doctrine taught at the single service college - good and bad - before closing.' The Northern Mariner