Royal Navy Admiral (1860-1940)
Admiral Sir Richard Henry Peirse, KCB, KBE, MVO, DL (4 September 1860 – 10 July 1940)[2] was a senior Royal Navy officer during the First World War.
Naval career
Peirse joined the Royal Navy in 1873 and,[2] in 1885, developed a new naval director[3] which was to become the fire-control system used in all ships with large guns.[4] Promoted to captain in 1900,[5] he commanded HMS Dido during the Second Boer War.[6]
Promoted to rear admiral in February 1909,[7] Peirse was appointed Commander-in-Chief, East Indies Station in 1913.[8] Then promoted to vice admiral in October 1914,[7][9] he served in the First World War taking part in the attack on Smyrna in 1915,[10] where he outgunned the Turkish Fleet.[11] He continued in his role on the East Indies Station until December 1915.[12][13] He was promoted to admiral in March 1918.[14]
After the war Peirse became Naval Member of the Central Committee of the Board of Invention and Research.[15] He retired from the navy in January 1919.[16]
Personal life
Peirse lived in Upper Norwood in London[17]
and there is a memorial to him in Bedale Parish Church in North Yorkshire.[18]
He and his wife lived for many years at Fiesole on Bathwick Hill in Bath, Somerset before moving to Belmont in Combe Down, where he died in 1940.[19]
His son, Sir Richard Peirse, became air chief marshal.[20]
Awards and decorations
References
External links