- Nore Command
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=Nore Command
caption=
dates=17th Century-1961
country=United Kingdom
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branch=Royal Navy
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notable_commanders=Bertram Ramsay
John Tovey (1943/46)
anniversaries=The Nore Command was a major operational command of the
Royal Navy for several hundred years until it was disbanded in the 1960s. At its height, it was commanded by an officer of the rank ofAdmiral and was one of the most important commands for the defence of theUnited Kingdom .The Nore is the anchorage at the mouth of theRiver Medway and became an important place of naval assembly duringAnglo-Dutch Wars . The command established there was responsible for the River Medway, the dockyards atSheerness and Chatham and, during most of its history, the entireNorth Sea . Smaller subordinate commands were later established atGreat Yarmouth ,Ramsgate (sometimes known as North Sea) andLeith during theNapoleonic Wars and later became independent for a while, but were eventually placed again under the control of the Nore.During
World War II , the station assumed great importance, with its site at the entrance to theRiver Thames . It was used to guard the coastal shipping route to the ports of North Eastern England. It assumed even greater importance as a supply staging post for the Allied armies in North Western Europe after the invasion of 1944.With the onset of the
Cold War , the station and command diminished in importance as the navy decreased in size. The Nore Command was finally closed onMarch 31 ,1961 .
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