Captain John Alfred Moreton, CMG , DSO , Croix de Guerre (France), Legion d'Honneur (France), Order of Leopold (Belgium), China Medal (Boxer Rising with bar for Taku Forts) was an officer of the Royal Navy active in the First World War. For a short period of time in November, 1919 he was Military Governor of the Latvian city of Riga.
Moreton joined the Royal Navy in 1891, and was promoted to lieutenant on 31 December 1898. [1]
In early August 1902 he was appointed to the submarine depot ship HMS Hazard, to take command of HM Submarine No.3 . [2] His superior was Captain Reginald Bacon (captain of Hazard), who appreciated Moreton and asked to have him as his first lieutenant on HMS Dreadnought.
Promoted to captain on 1 January 1916, he commanded the monitors General Wolfe and Erebus. He took a leading role in the British Campaign in the Baltic 1918-19 as part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. For a short period of time in November 1919, he was Military Governor of the Latvian city of Riga.
Admiral of the Fleet Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson, 3rd Baronet, was a Royal Navy officer. He served in the Anglo-Egyptian War and then the Mahdist War being awarded the Victoria Cross during the Battle of El Teb in February 1884. He went on to command a battleship, the torpedo school HMS Vernon and then another battleship before taking charge of the Experimental Torpedo Squadron. He later commanded the Channel Fleet. He briefly served as First Sea Lord but in that role he "was abrasive, inarticulate, and autocratic" and was really only selected as Admiral Fisher's successor because he was a supporter of Fisher's reforms. Wilson survived for even less time than was intended by the stop-gap nature of his appointment because of his opposition to the establishment of a Naval Staff. Appointed an advisor at the start of World War I, he advocated offensive schemes in the North Sea including the capture of Heligoland and was an early proponent of the development and use of submarines in the Royal Navy.
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