Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Robert Raikes (Royal Navy officer)

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Years of service
  
1900–1944

Died
  
1953

Role
  
Royal Navy officer

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Name
  
Robert Raikes

Rank
  
Admiral

Service/branch
  
Royal Navy


Battles/wars
  
World War I World War II

Awards
  
Order of the Bath, Royal Victorian Order, Distinguished Service Order

Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II

Commands held
  
South Atlantic Station

Admiral Sir Robert Henry Taunton Raikes KCB CVO DSO (1885–1953) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to be Commander-in-Chief, South Atlantic Station.

Contents

Raikes joined the Royal Navy in 1900. He served in World War I, earning the DSO in 1916, and went on to be Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth before becoming Director of the Royal Navy Staff College at Greenwich in 1932. He was made Chief of Staff of the Mediterranean Fleet in 1934 and Admiral in charge on a temporary basis at Alexandria in Egypt during the Abyssinian war in 1936 before becoming Rear Admiral Submarines in 1936. He served in World War II initially as Vice Admiral commanding the Reserve Fleet destroyers on the Northern Patrol before becoming Commander-in-Chief, South Atlantic Station in 1940. He went on to be Flag Officer, Aberdeen from 1942 to 1944.

He lived at Mantyley Chase in Newent in Gloucestershire.

Family

He married Ida Guinevere Evans. His son, Iwan Raikes, also served in the Royal Navy and became Flag Officer, Submarines. His nephew, Dick Raikes, also served in the Royal Navy and launched the Cockleshell heroes on their raid in canoes against German shipping in the Gironde estuary in 1942.

References

Robert Raikes (Royal Navy officer) Wikipedia