Milton Public Library

The great Edwardian naval feud, Beresford's vendetta against Fisher, Richard Freeman

Label
The great Edwardian naval feud, Beresford's vendetta against Fisher, Richard Freeman
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The great Edwardian naval feud
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Richard Freeman
Sub title
Beresford's vendetta against Fisher
Summary
This is the story of the clash between two gigantic personalities in the early years of the twentieth century.On one side was Admiral Lord Charles Beresford. Physically strong, courageous and hot-headed, he was the most popular admiral in the navy. Addicted to the sound of his own voice, he drew crowds of thousands whenever he spoke in public. On the other side was the First Sea Lord, Admiral Sir John Fisher. Of humble origin, he had risen through hard work and genius to become the greatest naval reformer that Britain has ever known.Both men wished to be First Sea Lord. When the prize went to Fisher, Beresford determined to unseat him at any cost. He launched attacks in Parliament, he plotted with Unionist politicians, he leaked state secrets and he courted public opinion. As a popular public figure, no one dared act against him until he finally overstepped the mark and viciously hounded a rear-admiral out of his fleet.A Cabinet inquiry followed, sitting for fifteen days. Its five members listened to Beresfords incoherent account of his eight charges. In the end, they dismissed the charges, but failed to show any warm support for either man. Fishers resignation followed and Beresfords career came to an end
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

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