AdmiralSir Dudley Burton Napier North, GCVO, CB, CSI, CMG (25 November 1881 – 15 May 1961) was a Royal Navy officer who served during First and Second World Wars. He was relieved of his command in 1940 in controversial circumstances.
Naval career
The son of Colonel Roger North of the Royal Artillery, Dudley North entered the Royal Navy as a cadet in 1896, passed out of HMS Britannia in 1897, and was confirmed as sub-lieutenant on 15 March 1901.[2] He was appointed to HMS Charger on 31 December 1902, while she was serving the Devonport instructional flotilla.[3]
Two months later, on 11 September 1940, North did not challenge a Vichy French squadron of three cruisers and three destroyers transited through the Strait of Gibraltar from Toulon to Dakar. North had ambiguous instructions as to whether he should challenge the French squadron.[9] Owing to mistakes in the handling of signals, the Admiralty's instructions to North were not sent.[9]
As a consequence of his actions, the Admiralty decided to relieve North of his command in October, though the changeover did not take place until December 1940. Vice-Admiral Sir James Somerville wrote to the Admiralty to take responsibility for the failure to act, but the Admiralty absolved him of any blame.[9] After his relief, North retired on 25 December 1941. He served for a time in the Home Guard, then was appointed Flag Officer-in-Charge, Great Yarmouth in 1943, for which service he was appointed a Commander of the US Legion of Merit.[9][11]
He attempted to clear his name, and requested a court of inquiry or court-martial on numerous occasions. In 1955, five admirals of the fleet signed a letter supporting North, and in 1957 four of them visited prime minister Harold Macmillan, urging him to clear North's name.[9] There was also debate in Parliament, with speakers from both sides. Viscount Alexander of Hillsborough, who had been First Lord of the Admiralty at the time of North's relief, opposed any review of his case in the House of Lords.[9] Among North's defenders was also Ludovic Kennedy, who considered the failure to challenge the squadron the fault of people in London, not North.[12] In 1957, Macmillan partially, though not entirely, exonerated North of blame.[9]
Personal life
North married Eglantine Campbell in September 1909 in Sydney, where he was serving on HMS Powerful.[13] Eglantine died in 1917 of pernicious anaemia. North later married Eilean Graham in 1923 and they had four children. Their daughter Elizabeth was a novelist.[14]
^ abcdefghRose, Susan; Brodhurst, Robin; Simpson, Michael (eds.). "The Relief of Admiral North from Gibraltar in 1940". The Naval Miscellany: Volume VII. Routledge. pp. 463–510.