Varyl Begg
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Sir Varyl Begg | |
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1908 – 1995 | |
Admiral of the Fleet Rank Insignia |
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Place of birth | Kensington, London |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/branch | Royal Navy |
Rank | Admiral of the Fleet |
Commands | First Sea Lord |
Battles/wars | Second World War: Norwegian campaign, Suda Bay , Korean War: Battle of Inchon, |
Awards | DSO, DSC |
Admiral of the Fleet His Excellency, Sir Varyl Cargill Begg (1908 - 1995), DSO, DSC, was the British First Sea Lord of the Royal Navy from 1966 to 1968. He saw action in both the Second World War and the Korean War and served as the governor and commander-in-chief of Malta[1] in 1968 until the mid 1970s. His name is given to the large offical government estate in Gibraltar.[2] He also opened the Gibraltar House of Assembly on 28th August 1969.[3]
Contents |
[edit] Early Life
He was born in Kensington, London, on 1 October 1908, the son of Francis Cargill Begg, and his wife, Muriel Clare Robinson. He was educated at St Andrews School, Eastbourne, and Malvern College, before joining the navy as a special entry cadet in September 1926. He served onboard the HMS Durban, HMS Marlborough, and HMS Shropshire, before being transferred to HMS Excellent, the gunnery school at Whale Island, Portsmouth.
[edit] Second World War
In 1934 he qualified as a gunnery specialist. He was then made second gunnery officer of the Battleship HMS Nelson, flagship of the Home Fleet, before returning to Whale Island on the experimental staff in 1936. He was appointed flotilla gunnery officer in the destroyer HMS Cossack in 1937, and two years later was gunnery officer of the 6-inch-gun cruiser HMS Glasgow. It was onboard the Glasgow that Begg saw action in the Second World War. The Glasgow participated in north Atlantic convoys, the Norwegian campaign, and the occupation of Iceland, before being badly damaged in a torpedo attack by Italian aircraft in Suda Bay, Crete.
In 1940 Begg was appointed gunnery officer of the battleship HMS Warspite in the Mediterranean when it was flagship of the commander-in-chief, Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham (soon to be First Sea Lord himself). Begg was in charge of Warspite's main 15 inch guns during the battle off Cape Matapan on the night of 28 March 1941. It was an engagement in which the ships Warspite, Barham, and Valiant were caught by the Italian heavy cruisers Fiume and Zara by surprise, with their guns still trained fore and aft, and sank them both in a brutally short action of less than two minutes. A third heavy cruiser, Pola, and two Italian destroyers were also sunk in the engagement. Begg was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross (UK) for his part in the action. He was promoted commander in December 1942 and then went to the gunnery division in the Admiralty, where he was involved in the development of gun design and tactics until after the war. On 7 August 1943 he married Rosemary Cowan. They had two sons, Timothy (b. 1944) and Peter (b. 1948).
[edit] Captain and Korea
Begg was promoted captain in 1947 and was staff officer (operations) to a rear-admiral in the Mediterranean. From 1948 to 1950 he was captain in charge of the gunnery school at Chatham. In the latter year he joined the destroyer HMS Cossack again, this time in command and as captain of the 8th destroyer flotilla. The Cossack served in the first two years of the Korean War, and with other Commonwealth ships carried out blockading patrols of the west coast of Korea as far north as the Yalu River; it was also in the bombarding force of cruisers and destroyers for the crucial Inchon landings in September 1950, which turned the tide of the war in the United Nations' favour, and went on to make many bombardments in support of UN forces ashore. For his service in Korea, Begg was mentioned in dispatches in 1951 and appointed a DSO in 1952. From 1952 to 1955 he was captain of HMS Excellent.
[edit] Rear Admiral and Vice Admiral
He commanded the aircraft carrier HMS Triumph from 1954 to 1956, when it was a cadet training ship. Promoted to rear-admiral in 1957, he was chief of staff to the commander-in-chief, Portsmouth, from 1957 to 1958, and then flag officer, second in command, Far East Fleet, from 1958 to 1960.[4]
Begg was promoted vice-admiral in 1960 and went to the Admiralty in 1961 as a lord commissioner of the Admiralty and vice-chief of naval staff. At this time the first sea lord was Caspar John, the first naval aviator to hold the office. They both worked together in the reduction of the three fleet system in the Royal Navy as well as the difficult decision to disband the fleet in the Mediterranean.
In 1963 Begg went out to the Far East again as a full Admiral, commander-in-chief of British forces in the Far East, and British military adviser to the South East Asia Treaty Organization, at a time of undeclared war between Malaysia, a newly independent state, and Indonesia.
[edit] Trivia
In 1966 he was the official prizegiver at the Henley Royal Regatta [5]
[edit] References
Military Offices | ||
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Preceded by David Luce |
First Sea Lord 1966–1968 |
Succeeded by Michael Le Fanu |
Richard Howe, 1st Earl Howe • Sir Peter Parker • Prince William, Duke of Clarence • Sir George Cockburn • Sir Thomas Hardy • The Hon. George Heneage Dundas • Charles Adam • Sir Charles Adam • Sir William Parker • Sir Charles Adam • James Whitley Deans Dundas • Hyde Parker • The Hon. Maurice Fitzhardinge Berkeley • William Fanshawe Martin • The Hon. Sir Richard Saunders Dundas • The Hon. Sir Frederick Grey • Sir Sydney Dacres • Sir Alexander Milne • Sir Hastings Yelverton • George Wellesley • Sir Astley Cooper Key • Sir Arthur Acland Hood • Lord John Hay • Sir R. Vesey Hamilton • Sir Anthony Hoskins • Sir Frederick Richards • Lord Walter Kerr • Sir Jackie Fisher • Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson • Sir Francis Bridgeman • Prince Louis of Battenberg • Sir Henry Jackson • Sir John Jellicoe • Sir Rosslyn Wemyss • The Earl Beatty • Sir Charles Madden, Bt • Sir Frederick Field • The Lord Chatfield • Sir Roger Backhouse • Sir Dudley Pound • The Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope • Sir John Cunningham • The Lord Fraser of North Cape • Sir Rhoderick McGrigor • The Earl Mountbatten of Burma • Sir Charles Lambe • Sir Caspar John • Sir David Luce • Sir Varyl Begg • Sir Michael Le Fanu • Sir Peter Hill-Norton • Sir Michael Pollock • Sir Edward Ashmore • Sir Terence Lewin • Sir Henry Leach • Sir John Fieldhouse • Sir William Staveley • Sir Julian Oswald • Sir Benjamin Bathurst • Sir Jock Slater • Sir Michael Boyce • Sir Nigel Essenhigh • Sir Alan West • Sir Jonathon Band •