Frank Forrester Rose
Vice Admiral Sir Frank Forrester Rose KCB DSO (7 February 1878 – 3 March 1955) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to be commander-in-chief of East Indies Station.[3] Early life and educationRose was born in Sicily, the son of British parents William Rose, a merchant, and Martha Gardner.[4] He was educated at Stubbington House School in Fareham and on HMS Britannia.[3] Naval careerRose served in World War I initially as commander of HMS Laurel taking part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight in August 1914.[5] Promoted to rear admiral in 1929,[6] he was appointed rear admiral commanding the destroyer flotillas in the Mediterranean Fleet in 1931[7] and then became commander-in-chief of East Indies Station in 1934[8] before being replaced due to illness in 1936.[9] Personal lifeHe initially married Freda Edith Gordon, daughter of Walter Alwynne Gordon. They had one son, Hugh William Mackenzie Rose, who died aboard HMS Cossack in 1941.[10][11] In 1923, Sir Frank Forrester Rose remarried to Dorothy Maud Kay.[12] References
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