Friday, 3 May 2013
Sunday, 31 March 2013
Active | 1859 - Present |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Allegiance | HM The Queen |
Branch | Royal Navy |
Role | Reserve Force |
Website | Royal Naval Reserve |
Commanders | |
Commodore-in-Chief | HRH Prince Michael of Kent, GCVO |
Insignia | |
Blue Ensign (1801 – present) |
HMS Flying Fox,Royal Navy Reserve
History of the Royal Naval Reserve
The original Royal
Naval Reserve (RNR) was founded under the Naval Reserve Act in 1859 as a reserve
of professional seamen from the British
Merchant Navy and fishing fleets, who could/would be called upon during
times of war to assist/serve in the regular Navy. The RNR was originally a
reserve of seamen only but in 1862 this was extended to include recruitment and
training of officers. From its creation, RNR officers wore a unique, distinctive
lace consisting of stripes of interwoven chain.
A number of drillships
were established at the main seaports around the coast of Britain and Ireland
and seamen left their vessels in the base ports to undertake gunnery training in
a drillship for a period of one month annually. After initial shore training
officers embarked in larger ships of the fleet (usually battleships or battle
cruisers) for a one-year period to familiarise themselves with gunnery and naval
practice. Although under the operational authority of the Admiral Commanding
Reserves, the RNR was administered jointly by the Admiralty and the
Registrar General of Shipping and Seamen in the Board of Trade throughout its separate
existence. In 1910, the RNR (Trawler Section) was formed to actively recruit and
train fishermen for wartime service in minesweepers and minor war vessels.
Officers and men of the
RNR soon gained the respect of their naval counterparts with their professional
skills in navigation and seamanship and served with distinction in a number of
conflicts including the Boer War and Boxer Rebellion. Prior to the First
World War, 100 RNR officers were transferred to permanent careers in the
regular navy - forever after referred to as "the hungry hundred". In their
professional careers, many RNR officers went on to command the largest passenger
liners of the day and held senior positions in the shipping industry and
government.
On mobilisation in
1914, the RNR consisted of 30,000 officers and men. Officers of the permanent
RNR on general service quickly took up seagoing appointments in the fleet, many
in command, in destroyers, submarines, auxiliary cruisers
and Q ships. Others
served in larger units of the battle fleet including a large number with the West Indies Squadron who
became casualties at the Battle of Coronel and later Jutland. Fishermen
of the RNR(T) section served with distinction onboard trawlers fitted out as
minesweepers for mine clearance operations at home and abroad throughout the war
where they suffered heavy casualties and losses. One such casualty was the H.M.
Armed Naval drifter,
Frons Olivae, which hit a Naval
mine off Ramsgate on the
12/10/1915 in an explosion which killed at least five other seaman. One
casualty, a Canadian national serving with the Royal Naval Reserve, was
subsequently buried in the Hamilton Road Cemetery, Deal,
Kent.[1]
A number of RNR
officers qualified as pilots and flew aircraft and airships with the Royal Naval
Air Service whilst many RNR ratings served ashore alongside the RN and RNVR
contingents in the trenches of the Somme and at Gallipoli with
the Royal Naval Division. Merchant service
officers and men serving in armed merchant cruisers, hospital ships, fleet
auxiliaries and transports were entered in the RNR for the duration of the
war on special agreements.
Although considerably
smaller than both the RN and the RNVR (three times the size of the RNR at the
end of the First World War), the RNR had an exceptional war record being awarded
12 Victoria
Crosses.
On commencement of
hostilities in the Second World War, the RN once again called
upon the experience and professionalism of the RNR from the outset to help them
shoulder the initial burden until sufficient manpower could be trained for the
RNVR and 'hostilities only' ratings. Again, RNR officers found themselves in
command of destroyers, frigates, sloops, landing craft and submarines, or as specialist
navigation officers in cruisers and aircraft carriers. In convoy work, the convoy commodore or escort commander
was often an RNR officer. As in the First World War, the RNR acquitted itself
well, winning four VCs.
During the Second World
War, no more ratings were accepted into the RNVR, which then became the main
route for wartime officer entry. The service was colloquially called the "Wavy
Navy", after the 3/8-inch wavy sleeve 'rings' that RNVR officers wore to
differentiate them from RN/RNR officers. By Command of HM King George VI in 1952,
these were replaced by the straight rank lacing used in the full-time RN, with
the addition of a small 'R' in the centre of the executive curl on cuff and
epaulette insignia. From 30 November 2007, mainly due to increasing involvement
of the RNR in RN operations and deployments, the wearing of the distinctive 'R'
was discontinued for all other than honorary officers. Similarly, RNR ratings no
longer wear RNR shoulder flashes.
As "nominal" members of
the RNR, officers of the Sea Cadet Corps and the RN CCF
Combined Cadet
Force retain the use of the former RNVR 'wavy navy' lace, and are
'appointed' within their respective Corps, rather than commissioned (unless they
also hold a commission as officers within the 'mainstream' RNR).
From 1938 until 1957, the RNVR provided aircrew personnel in the form of their own Air Branch. In 1947, their contribution was cut to anti-submarine and fighter squadrons only. By 1957, it was considered by the UK government that the training required to operate modern equipment was beyond that expected of reservists and the Air Branch squadrons were disbanded. The US government took a different view, and the US Navy and Marine reserve squadrons today still operate front-line types alongside the regular units. The Air Branch was reformed at RNAS Yeovilton in 1980.
The British naval
reserve forces were amalgamated in 1958, and the RNR was absorbed into the much
larger RNVR organisation. After 100 years of proud service, the RNR as a
separate professional naval service ceased to exist. Today the majority of Merchant Navy Officers who
would have joined the original RNR are now encouraged to join the modern RNR’s
Amphibious Warfare (AW) Branch. The centenary of the formation of the RNVR
(formed in 1903) was commemorated by the RNR in London in 2003 with a parade on
Horse Guards, at which HRH Prince Charles took the salute. The
Merchant Navy officers within today's RNR commemorated RNR 150 in 2009.
This left the
mine-warfare, seaman and diving specialists in "limbo" until the second Gulf
War, when the Royal Navy realised it had a pool of reservists with no real sea
post. Echoing the Royal Naval Division in the First World
War, the Above Water Force Protection branch was formed "from RN reservists with
no draft appointment at the outbreak of war." Because of a lack of full-time
personnel, mine-warfare and diving has recently returned (in part) to the RNR.
Officers and ratings currently serve on active service in Full Time Reserve
Service billets throughout the RN, as well as in mobilised posts in Afghanistan,
the Middle East, the Balkans and the UK.
Following the
disbandment of the associated Royal Naval Auxiliary Service
(RNXS) in 1994, the Maritime Volunteer Service (MVS) was
formed as a national maritime training organisation with charitable status. It
has taken over and expanded many RNXS roles.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)