- William Milbourne James
Infobox Military Person
name=Sir William Milbourne James
lived=22 Dec 1881 - 17 Aug 1973
placeofbirth=Hartley Wintney ,Hampshire
placeofdeath=Elie ,Fife
caption=The five year old James in "Bubbles"
nickname=Bubbles
allegiance=United Kingdom
branch=Royal Navy
serviceyears=1901 - 1944
rank=Admiral
commands=HMS "Curlew" {1919 - 1921)Royal Naval College, Greenwich (1925 - 1926)Flag Captain , HMS "Royal Sovereign" (1 Nov 1926 - Jul 1927)Battlecruiser Squadron (18 Aug 1932 - Aug 1934)
Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth Naval Base (30 Jun 1939 - 1 Oct 1942)
Chief of Naval Information (23 Feb 1943 - Jun 1944)
unit=
battles=World War I World War II
awards=GCB (1 Jan 1944)
KCB (1 Jan 1936)
CB (12 Feb 1919)Légion d'honneur (27 May 1919)
laterwork=Member of Parliament (MP),Portsmouth North (18 Feb 1943 -1945)Deputy Lieutenant ,Surrey , (30 Jun 1953 - 1965)
President,Union Jack Club (1955 - 1964)
portrayedby=Admiral Sir William Milbourne James
GCB (22 December 1881-17 August 1973) [cite web
coauthors = Hans Houterman & Jeroen Koppes
title = Royal Navy (RN) Officers 1939-1945
url = http://www.unithistories.com/officers/RN_officersJ.html
accessdate = 2007-12-11] was a British Naval commander, politician and author, most notable for his activities in theNaval Intelligence Division in both world wars.Family
James was the son of Major WC James of the
16th Lancers and his wife Effie, daughter of the painterJohn Everett Millais . He was educated atTrinity College, Glenalmond and HMS "Britannia".Bubbles
As a child his grandfather, Millais, used him as a model in several of his paintings, most famously "Bubbles", in which the five year old William is shown gazing enraptured at a bubble he has just blown. When the painting was used in an advertisement for
Pears soap , it became famous. The image dogged James throughout his life, and he was regularly nicknamed "Bubbles". [ [http://www.hmshood.com/crew/biography/james_bio.htm H.M.S. Hood Crew Information- Biography of Admiral William Milbourne James] ]Naval career
James pursued a career in the Navy, rising to hold a number of important positions. Following his service on the training ship HMS "Britannia", he was promoted to
sub-lieutenant in 1901 andlieutenant in 1902. He achieved the rank ofcommander in 1913. He served asexecutive officer aboard the battlecruiser HMS "Queen Mary".During the
First World War he wasflag officer on HMS "Benbow" from 1916 to 1917. Later in the war he assistedWilliam Reginald Hall , the Director of Naval Intelligence, eventually becoming deputy director. Hall and James worked together in "Room 40 " which decrypted a number of crucial enemy signals relating to theBattle of Jutland , the plans ofRoger Casement and theZimmerman Telegram . At one point James ran Room 40 on Hall's behalf. James related some of the events in his biography of Hall, published in 1955. [James, W, "The Eyes of the Navy. A Biographical Study of Admiral Sir Reginald Hall", Methuen, 1955.]In the inter-war years, James first served in the
China Station as commander of HMS "Curlew" and local chief of staff (1921-1922). From 1923. He was Deputy Director at theRoyal Naval College, Greenwich and Director in 1925. In 1926 he returned asflag captain of HMS "Royal Sovereign". There followed a series of other senior appointments, as Naval Assistant to theFirst Sea Lord ; asRear Admiral ; as Chief of Staff, Atlantic Fleet; as Chief of Staff, Mediterranean Fleet.In 1932 he took command of the
Battlecruiser Squadron , which he controlled from HMS "Hood". He was madeVice Admiral in 1933 and from 1935 to 1938 he was aLord Commissioner of the Admiralty and Deputy Chief of the Naval Staff. He was honoured with a KCB.From 1938 James was a full Admiral.
During
World War II James served as Commander-in-Chief Portsmouth until 1942. He was then appointed as Chief of Naval Information, coordinating intelligence gathering.James retired from the Navy in 1944. He was elected in 1943 as Conservative
Member of Parliament for the constituency ofPortsmouth North , which he held until 1945.Following his retirement from public life, James was active in support for ventures relating to seafaring, supporting clubs such as the Elie and Earlsferry Sailing Club, which named their dingy "Bubbles" in his honour. [ [http://www.eesc.org.uk/first_40_years_of_elie_and%20earlsferry_sailing_club.html Elie and Earelferry Sailing Club] ]
Writings
In addition to his biography of Hall, he published books and articles on other aspects of his wartime experiences, including an account of
Winston Churchill 's attitudes to naval affairs in "Churchill by His Contemporaries". Other publications on naval matters included:"New battleship organisations and notes for Executive Officers" (1916)
"Songs of the sailor men" (1916)
"The British Navy in adversity : a study of the American War of Independence" (1926)
"Blue water and green fields" (1939)
"Admiral Sir William Fisher" (1943)
"The Portsmouth letters" (1946)
"The British Navies in the Second World War" (1946)
"The durable monument: Horation Nelson" (1948)
"The influence of sea power on the history of the British people" (1948)
"Old oak : the life of Sir John Jervis, Earl of Vincent" (1950)
"The sky was always blue" (1951)
"The eyes of the navy : a biographical study of Admiral Sir Reginald Hall" (1955)
"A great seaman : the life of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Oliver" (1956)His most notable non-Naval publication was "The Order of Release, the story of John Ruskin, Effie Gray and John Everett Millais told for the first time in their unpublished letters" (1947), a collection of family letters detailing the romance between his grandparents. His grandmother
Effie Gray had been married toJohn Ruskin when she fell in love with Millais. Her first marriage was annulled, due to non-consummation. James was the first to publish the full details of these events and to vindicate his grandmother, whose victimisation by the Ruskin family he documented. James's book has been the inspiration for at least two plays. [ [http://www.scr.org/season/00-01season/snl00-01/snlss2.html] ; [http://web.ukonline.co.uk/suttonelms/rbrooks.html "The Order of Release"] ; [http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsM/MurphyGregory.htm The Countess] .]References
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