Horace Law
Admiral Sir Horace Rochfort Law, GCB, OBE, DSC (23 June 1911 – 30 January 2005) was Commander-in-Chief, Naval Home Command. Naval careerEducated at Sherborne School and the Royal Naval College Dartmouth,[1] Law joined the Royal Navy in 1929.[2] He became a Gunnery specialist in 1937.[2] War serviceLaw served in World War II in the anti-aircraft cruiser HMS Cairo in 1939, the cruiser HMS Coventry in 1940 and the cruiser HMS Nigeria in 1942.[2] He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his role in the British landings in Greece and the subsequent evacuations from Greece and Crete.[1] He served in the Korean War arranging naval gunfire support for the Korean Army.[1] Post-war serviceHe was appointed commanding officer of the destroyer HMS Duchess in 1951[1] and the carrier HMS Centaur in 1958[2] and then made Commander of Britannia Royal Naval College in 1960.[2] He went on to be Flag Officer Sea Training in 1961, Flag Officer Submarines in 1963 and Controller of the Navy in 1965.[2] He was made Commander-in-Chief Naval Home Command and Flag Officer, Portsmouth Area in 1970.[2] He was also First and Principal Naval Aide-de-camp to the Queen from 1970 to 1972.[2] He retired in 1972.[2] RetirementIn retirement he became Chairman of Hawthorn Leslie and Company[1] and was a member of Security Commission from 1973 to 1982.[2] In 1979 he was invited to deliver the MacMillan Memorial Lecture to the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland. He chose the subject "Belief and Discipline in a Free Society".[3] Personal lifeIn 1941 he married Heather Coryton: they went on to have two sons and two daughters.[1] Law was a resident of South Harting, West Sussex, where he was a lay preacher at the parish church; a room at the church is named after him. He was president of the Officers' Christian Union and chairman of the Church Army Board during the 1970s and 1980s.[4] He was a Governor of Monkton Combe School from 1969 to 1994.[5] References
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