- Ian Hogg (Royal Navy officer)
Infobox Military Person
name=Sir Ian Hogg
caption=
born=May 30 ,1911
died=March 2 ,2003
placeofbirth=India
placeofdeath=
nickname=
allegiance=
branch=Royal Navy
serviceyears= 1929 - 1970
rank=Vice Admiral
unit=
commands=
battles=World War II
awards=Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath
Distinguished Service Cross & Bar
relations=
laterwork=Vice Admiral Sir Ian Leslie Trower Hogg KCB DSC & Bar, RN (May 30 ,1911 -March 2 ,2003 ) was aRoyal Navy officer whose service extended the late 1920s through the early 1970s. He received several medals for his service as a navigator duringWorld War II . From 1967-1970 he served asVice-Chief of the Defence Staff .Early life and career
Ian Leslie Trower Hogg, the son of an Indian Army
colonel , was born inIndia on May 30, 1911. His mother died atDehra Dun two months after his birth. He was educated atCheltenham College and joined the Navy in 1929 as a Special Entry — or ex-public school — cadet, earning a first-class certificate on graduation from the training ship HMS "Erebus".He subsequently served in the battleships HMS "Barham" and HMS "Valiant" and the cruiser HMS "Effingham" on the
East Indies Station . His aptitude for navigation was shown early when alieutenant in the destroyer HMS "Acheron" in theMediterranean in 1934 and thedispatch vessel HMS "Bideford" in thePersian Gulf . His confidential reports during this period describe a capable leader, with a markedly beneficial influence over junior officers and the ship’s company.Qualifying as a specialist
navigator in 1937, he was appointed to the cruiser HMS "Southampton". His war started in the obsolete light cruiser HMS "Cardiff" on the arduous northern blockade patrol that deprived Germany of imports, and it continued briefly in the cruiser HMS "Penelope" where his “somewhat casual manner” was perceptively diagnosed as “liable to mislead”. His war career showed that he was clearly able to differentiate the important from the unimportant and to “bear an even strain” under testing circumstances.World War II service
Ian Hogg was awarded the first of his two DSCs for his efficiency and coolness as a navigator under the trying circumstances of the evacuation of
Crete in May and June 1941. The Germans had intended to take Crete with combined airborne and seaborne attacks. Although theRoyal Navy was able virtually to annihilate the seaborne component, which carried much equipment in local caïques, the German paratroops — though at great loss to themselves — forced the under-equipped British forces, many of whom were still in shock after being driven out ofGreece , into another evacuation.Air attacks by an almost unopposed and expert
Fliegerkorps VIII around Crete cost the British threecruiser s and sixdestroyer s sunk, with threebattleship s, anaircraft carrier , six cruisers and seven destroyers badly damaged, bringing the Mediterranean Fleet almost to breaking point. TheCommander-in-Chief ,Admiral Andrew Cunningham, was adamant that while ships were replaceable, the reputation of the Royal Navy was not, and that the evacuation of soldiers should continue to the limit. In the event 15,000 troops, including 2,000 Greeks, were rescued.As the
flotilla operations and navigating officer toCaptain Stephen Arliss in theRoyal Australian Navy destroyer Napier, Hogg was responsible on May 28–29 for organising hazardous feats of navigation on an unlit and badly charted coast nearSfakia in southwest Crete for his ship and the destroyers HMS "Nizam", HMS "Kelvin" and HMS "Kandahar". Only twomotorboat s and four unpoweredwhaler s were available to embark 700 men and, at the same time, land 15,000 badly needed rations for those troops still fighting onshore.The need to make best use of available darkness required the anchorage for this operation to be perilously close inshore. On
May 30 , reduced to only two ships through damage and defects but using abandoned landing craft to supplement these, "Napier" and "Nizam" saved more than 1,400 troops. Hogg received praise for his cool, calm and cheerful demeanour and his very good advice when the force came under intensive air attack onMay 31 , during which "Napier" was damaged in the engine room by a near miss.Hogg stayed with the "Napier" as the senior staff officer to Captain Arliss, who became the commodore in command of Admiral Somerville’s
Eastern Fleet destroyers, based inCeylon , until early 1944.As the navigating and signals officer of the cruiser HMS "Mauritius" in August 1944, Hogg was awarded a second DSC for his outstanding zeal during prolonged and violent night actions against escorted enemy convoys close inshore near
La Rochelle and theIle d'Yeu . His captain remarked that Hogg was “cool, calm and collected and afforded advice that enabled us to take risks which with a less resolute and skilful officer would not have been justified”.Hogg was known as a very good-looking man. It is recorded that during the war when Mauritius was refitting in
Liverpool and a drink was difficult to come by, his companions would always “put Ian into bat first with the barmaid” — with invariably satisfactory results. In 1945 he married Mary Marsden within three months of having met her in Liverpool on a Monday and becoming engaged on the Saturday.Post-war service
After completing the staff course Hogg was appointed to the staff of the C-in-C
Home Fleet from September 1945, the task offleet navigator carrying the ancient title ofMaster of the Fleet . He was promoted tocommander in 1947 and sent to Washington as staff officer (plans) in theBritish Joint Services Mission until 1949.Command of the destroyer Sluys followed, his ship being noted for her good spirit and efficient gunnery. He was then selected as staff officer (plans) and
fleet navigating officer in the Mediterranean where Admiral theEarl Mountbatten of Burma appointed him as special assistant to the newly created Chief ofNATO ’s Allied Staff. On his promotion to captain, Mountbatten wrote of him: 'He was doing a job originally intended for captain’s rank and doing it brilliantly'.After another staff tour in Washington and at the
Admiralty , Hogg was appointed toCyprus as the senior naval officer.Flag-rank assignments
Hogg was promoted to
rear-admiral in 1962 and wasFlag Officer Medway andAdmiral Superintendent Chatham Dockyard . He was appointed CB in 1964.As a
vice-admiral he was theDefence Services Secretary for two years, managing the relationship between the Ministry of Defence and theRoyal Family and also maintaining the balance of appointments of senior officers to tri-service “defence department” posts — those posts which are rotated between the services. His final tour before retirement in 1970 was asVice-Chief of the Defence Staff during a difficult period of retrenchment in the defence sector. He was appointed KCB in 1968.Retirement and last years
From 1971 until 1974 Hogg was the
Comptroller of theRoyal Society of St George , an institution founded in 1894 with the object of promoting the English way of life.He died on
March 2 ,2003 , aged 91.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.