Arthur Knyvet Wilson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir Arthur Knyvet Wilson, VC , GCB , OM , GCVO (March 4, 1842May 25, 1921), was an English Admiral and First Sea Lord. He received the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces during the war in Sudan.

He was born on 4 March 1842 in Swaffham in Norfolk, the son of Rear-Admiral George Knyvet Wilson. He was the nephew of Major-General Sir Archdale Wilson of Delhi.

In the Royal Navy he saw action during the Crimean War followed by the China War (1858), the Egyptian Campaign (1882) and the Sudan Campaign (1884).

He was 41 years old, and a captain in the Naval Brigade, during the Sudan Campaign when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC.

On 29 February 1884 at the Battle of El Teb, Sudan, Captain Wilson of HMS Hecla attached himself, during the advance, to the right half-battery, Naval Brigade, in place of a lieutenant who was mortally wounded. As the troops closed on the enemy battery, the Arabs charged out on the detachment which was dragging one of the guns, whereupon Captain Wilson sprang to the front and engaged in single combat with some of the enemy, and so protected the detachment until men of the 1st Bn , York and Lancaster Regiment came to his assistance.

He was called to the Admiralty in 1897 as Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty and Comptroller of the Navy. From 1901 to 1903 he was in command of the Channel Squadron. From 1903 he was Commander-in-Chief of the Home and Channel Fleets. He reached the rank of Admiral of the Fleet in 1907 and became First Sea Lord in 1909. He retired in 1912 and received the Order of Merit

He died in Swaffham and is buried in the churchyard of St Peter and St Paul's. His medal was donated to the Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth.

His full medal list runs as follows:

  • Victoria Cross
  • Knight Grand Cross, The Most Honourable Order of the Bath ( GCB )
  • Order of Merit ( OM )
  • Grand Officer, Legion d'Honneur ( France )
  • Knight Grand Cross, The Royal Victorian Order ( GCVO )
  • Crimea Medal - ( 1854-56 ) clasp "Sebastopol"
  • 2nd China War Medal - ( 1857-60 ) clasps "Canton 1857", "Taku Forts 1858"
  • Egypt Medal - ( 1882-89 ) with clasps for "Alexandria 11 July", "Suakin 1884", "El Teb"
  • Queen Victoria Golden Jubilee Medal 1897
  • King Edward VII Coronation Medal 1902
  • King George V Coronation Medal 1911
  • Order of the Medjidieh: 3rd Class ( Turkey )
  • Order of Naval Merit: Grand Cross ( Spain )
  • Khedive's Star 1882 ( Egypt )
  • Turkish Crimea Medal - ( 1855-56 )
  • Order of Dannebrog: Grand Cross ( Denmark )
  • Order of the Lion: Grand Cross ( The Netherlands )

Military Offices
Preceded by
John Fisher
First Sea Lord
1910–1911
Succeeded by
Francis Bridgeman
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