Charles Dare

British Royal Navy Rear-Admiral (1854–1924) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Admiral Sir Charles Holcombe Dare KCMG CB MVO (9 November 1854 – 6 August 1924) was an English Royal Navy officer. He commanded several ships and shore establishments before and during World War I, and was knighted by King George V.

Born(1854-11-09)9 November 1854
Died6 August 1924(1924-08-06) (aged 69)
Burial place
Suffolk
SpouseEmily Agnes Harper
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Sir Charles Dare
Born(1854-11-09)9 November 1854
Died6 August 1924(1924-08-06) (aged 69)
Burial place
Suffolk
SpouseEmily Agnes Harper
Parent(s)Charles William Dare, Anne Agnes (née Mew)
Military career
AllegianceGreat Britain
United Kingdom
Branch
Royal Navy
Service years
1868–1909, 1915–1919
Rank
Admiral; Captain (RNR)
Close

Family and personal life

Dare was born on 9 November 1854[1] to Charles William Dare, a lawyer with a practice in London, and Anne Agnes (née Mew, from Newport, Isle of Wight) in North Curry, Somerset, one of four brothers and a sister.[2][3] Dare's grandfather, also Charles Holcombe Dare, was a Land Tax Commissioner for North Curry.[4] The family had connections in London and the Isle of Wight.[5] Dare married Emily Agnes Harper, a railway guard's daughter who, unusually for the time, brought an illegitimate daughter, Maud, to the marriage.[2] In 1917, it was noted that Dare had donated a collection of local birds and birds' eggs to the Somerset Archaeological Society.[6]

Early career

Dare enlisted in the Royal Navy as an officer cadet, first serving as a midshipman on HMS Monarch,[2] and was commissioned in 1868.[1] He was a sub-lieutenant until 1879, when he was promoted to lieutenant.[7] In 1893, he was promoted to commander.[8]

Command

three-masted, white-hulled, single-funnelled warship at anchor
HMS Archer in 1888

On his promotion to commander, Dare was given command of HMS Lapwing, a Redbreast-class gunboat, one of the last built of composite materials.[9] In 1898, he was in command of HMS Archer, serving for a time in the Far East.[10] In 1900, he was promoted to full captain,[11] temporary on promotion, in command of the third class cruiser, HMS Bellona.[12]

In 1903, he was given command of HMS Assistance to carry out sea trials off Sheerness; the first of her type, she was a "floating dockyard" designed to go to sea with the fleet, and cost £213,000.[13] In December 1903 he was put in command of the new armoured cruiser HMS Berwick, seeing service with the 2nd Cruiser Squadron; in March 1904 she returned to Chatham from the West Indies for a refit.[14] In September the same year Dare was appointed to the Royal Victorian Order.[15] In 1906, he was in command of HMS Ramillies for six months, following which, in September, he was put in command of the Eastern Coastguard District until April 1909.[16]

In 1908 Dare was awarded a Good Service Pension of £150 per annum.[17]

Flag

In March 1909, Dare was promoted to Rear Admiral on the retirement of Rear Admiral Fegan, conforming to the Navy's regulations on the permitted number of serving senior officers.[18] Four months later, he placed himself on the retired list.[19][16] At this time he was living near Ipswich and a vice-president of Erwarton Quoit Club,[20] and made a speech on the occasion of the rector of Harkstead's 70th birthday.[21]

World War I

Many fishing boats and several large ships moored in a dock
Milford Dock in 1921

On 10 November 1914, Dare was given a temporary commission of commander in the Royal Naval Reserve.[22] A few months after the outbreak of the First World War, having been placed on the retired list as Vice-Admiral,[23] Dare was made a captain in the Royal Naval Reserve and in 1915 took command of HMS Idaho, the shore establishment at Milford Haven,[24] to counter the threat from German U-boats to shipping, including convoys, in the area. In the 1917 Birthday Honours, Dare was made a Companion of the Bath.[25] In the December, Dare and his wife opened the new Trafalgar Institute for Seafarers in Milford Haven, erected and furnished at a cost of £1,548, paying tribute to the Welsh fishermen of the RNR:

If the Grand Fleet did anything the "Daily Mail" would tell them all about it, but about his men, well, wait till after it was all over (applause)[26]

In September 1918, Dare's promotion to full Admiral (retired) was posted.[27] At the end of the war, Dare paid tribute to all who had served at the Milford base.[28]

Post-war

Dare was knighted by King George V in May 1919, the citation reading: For valuable services in command of the important Auxiliary Patrol Base of Milford Haven since February 1915.[29] On 31 July 1919, Dare struck his flag at Milford Haven, the ceremony being performed aboard the trawler Idaho.[30]

Death

Admiral Dare died on 6 August 1924 in Shotley, near Ipswich, aged 69;[1] his death was reported in The Times.[31] His wife survived him and his estate was valued at £2,593.[1] His daughter, Maud G. Dare, left a 1915 family photograph album to The National Maritime Museum.[32]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI