Percy Grant (Royal Navy officer)

Sir Percy Grant
Born (1867-09-23)23 September 1867
Died 8 September 1952(1952-09-08) (aged 84)
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service 1881–1928
Rank Admiral
Commands held Admiral Superintendent Portsmouth Dockyard (1922–25)
Chief of the Australian Naval Staff (1919–21)
HMS Ramillies (1917–19)[1]
HMS Marlborough (1914–15)
HMS King Edward VII (1913–14)[1]
HMS Falmouth (1911–13)[1]
HMS Gibraltar (1910–11)[1]
HMS Arrogant (1910)[1]
HMS Halcyon (1906–08)[1]
Battles/wars Anglo-Egyptian War
Brazilian Naval Mutiny
First World War
Second World War
Awards Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order
Companion of the Order of the Bath

Admiral Sir Edmund Percy Fenwick George Grant, KCVO, CB (23 September 1867 – 8 September 1952) was a Royal Navy officer who served as First Naval Member and Chief of the Australian Naval Staff from 1919 to 1921.

Grant saw service in the Egyptian War of 1882 as well as the Brazilian Naval Mutiny in 1893.[2] He was promoted to lieutenant on 1 October 1890,[3] posted as a lieutenant for navigation on the battleship HMS Mars, and promoted to commander (Navigation) on 26 June 1902.[4] He went on to serve during the First World War initially as Flag Captain to Vice Admiral Sir Lewis Bayly in HMS Marlborough and then as Flag Captain and Chief of Staff to Admiral Sir Cecil Burney who was then Second in Command of the Grand Fleet.[2] In that capacity he saw his ship torpedoed and crippled at the Battle of Jutland in 1916.[5]

After the war he was appointed First Naval Member and Chief of the Australian Naval Staff.[2] In this role, he served as defence advisor to Billy Hughes, Prime Minister of Australia at the Empire Conference in London in 1921.[2] He was appointed Admiral Superintendent at Portsmouth Dockyard in 1922 and retired in 1928.[2] He was recalled during the Second World War to serve as Captain at the Port of Holyhead.[2]

References

Military offices
Preceded by
Rear Admiral Sir William Creswell
Chief of the Australian Naval Staff
1919–1921
Succeeded by
Vice Admiral Sir Allan Everett
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