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fPage 551: History section précis of correspondence 15 September 1914 to 4 October...

Catalogue reference: ADM 137/9/12

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This record is about the fPage 551: History section précis of correspondence 15 September 1914 to 4 October... dating from 1914 in the series Admiralty: Historical Section: Records used for Official History, First World War. It is held at The National Archives, Kew.

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Full description and record details

Reference
ADM 137/9/12
Date
1914
Description

fPage 551: History section précis of correspondence 15 September 1914 to 4 October 1914 concerning Kinfauns Caste, Astraea and Hyacinth, provision of guns and ammunition. (M no number). Original papers in HS10 p367.

Page 552: Harcourt to High Commissioner of South Africa 22 September 1914: Undesirable to have Belgians taking part against Germans. Discourage such action.

Page 553: Minister foreign affairs Paris to French Ambassador 22 September 1914: Presence of Konigsberg presents danger to mail steamer Melbourne.

Page 554: Admiralty to Governor Seychelles 22 September 1914: French Government wishes Melbourne to be warned of danger of Konigsberg.

Pages 555-556: Buxton to S of S Colonies 22 September 1914: Summary of Bulletin communicated to me by Defence Department regarding operations against German South West Africa, (paper M02156/14) Page 558: Cape Town to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Konigsberg between Zanzibar and Mombasa.

Page 559: Admiralty to various stations 23 September 1914: Serious lesson to learn from loss of Cressy and Hogue.

Page 560: Buxton to Secretary of State Colonies 23 September 1914: Not prepared to take responsibility of publication of passing proposed Reuters message. Suggest consult Admiralty. (For paper M 01257/14 see HS8 pp170 to 177) Page 561: HMS Hyacinth to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Position course and speed.

Page 562: Governor Seychelles to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Melbourne left Seychelles 19 September.

Page 563: War office to GOC Mauritius 23 September 1914: Captains Gem and Rogers to rejoin units in India. Embarked on SS Elele. Elele must not leave Mauritius with troops without escort.

Page 564: Harcourt to High Commissioner South Africa 23 September 1914: Convey thanks of HM Governmennt for offer of troops for Europe. Feel local requirements should have priority.

Page 565: Cape Town to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Armadale Castle arrived.

Page 566: Buxton to Secretary of State Colonies 23 September 1914: Summary of defence Department Bulletin.

Page 567: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Details of guns and men for St Helena and Cape. (see also HS8 pp231 to 242).

Page 568: Hyacinth to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Position and speed.

Page 569: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Sailing of convoy postponed until 1 October owing to Luderitz. Hyacinth ordered direct to Simonstown.

Page 570: Cape town to Admiralty 23 September 1914: Intercepted message by w/t Konigsberg to Niagra, Scandia and others with new rendezvous.

Page 572: Admiralty to Commander in Chief Cape 25 September 1914: Crew of Pegasus to return to England. Reply that Commander in Chief East Indies requires survivor for commissioning auxiliary cruiser.

Page 573: Harcourt to Gov Gen South Africa 24 September 1914: Approve action on Reuter message. Cannot provide any more cruisers.

Page 573a: High Commissioner South Africa (Buxton) to S of S Colonies 24 September 1914: German post Shuckmannsburg surrendered 21 September.

Page 574: Buxton to S of S Colonies 24 September 1914: Continuation of summary of bulletin, (paper M 02209/14) see also page 566.

Page 575: Admiralty to Commander in Chief Cape 24 September 1914: Batteries and rounds being shipped Balmoral Castle.

Page 576: Handwritten (by ?) Extract from letter from Lord Buxton to Mr Harcourt dated 24 September 1914 concerning offer of guns.

Page 578: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 25 September 1914: Astraea left Luderitz for Cape Town.

Page 579: Admiralty to Commander in Chief Cape and OC Troops St Helena 25 September 1914: Captain Mathew and original naval garrison to remain St Helena.

Page 580: Buxton to S of S Colonies 25 September 1914: Summary of bulletin, (paper M 02214/14).

Page 581: History section précis of correspondence 23-26 September 1914 concerning forces, personnel and guns. (M no number). Original papers in HS8 pp230-242.

Page 582: note undated from unnamed admiral concerning officers, NCO’s and men for manning guns.

Page 583: Admiralty to Gibraltar, St Vincent, Cape Town, Colombo 25 September 1914: Reason to believe German merchant vessels in Portuguese ports may seek safety in Spanish ports.

Page 583a: Admiralty to Commander in Chief Cape town 25 September 1914: Crew of Pegasus to return to England first opportunity.

Page 584: Cape Town to Admiralty 26 September 1914: Armadale Castle sailed for Simonstown. From Commander in ChiefSimonstown; Armadale Castle has arrived.

Page 585: Hyacinth to Admiralty 26 September 1914: Sailed.

Pages 586-587: Intercepted message Reuter London to Reuter Cape Town 25 September 1914: Surrender of Luderitzbucht. Various individuals military and civilian named.

Page 588: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 26 September 1914: Vessel carrying seaplane reported Cape Agulhas. Armadale Castle sent to search. Astraea arrived.

Page 589: Buxton to S of S Colonies 26 September 1914: Continuation of summary of bulletin. See also page 580.

Page 591: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 27 September 1914: May I be informed names of three cruisers named in 179 telegram. Where are they ordered to. Reply. Sent to Aden. Your 236.

Page 592: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 27 September 1914: May I be informed enemy’s armed mercantile cruisers at large in Atlantic. Wireless station Windhoek in direct communication with Berlin. Invasion may be long and arduous.

Page 593: Governor of St Helena to Admiralty 27 September 1914: Is it intended Capt Mathew and Naval Garrison come under orders of OC garrison.

Pages 594-595: Admiralty to Commander in Chief Cape 27 September 1914: Three cruisers are Chatham, Dartmouth and Weymouth. Chatham has arrived Mombasa. Dartmouth in convoy with Fox. Should arrive Mombasa 1 October. Dartmouth then hunts Konigsberg. Weymouth leaves Suez today. Emden being hunted by Hampshire, Yarmouth and Japanese Chikuma.

Pages 596-598: Commander in Chief Cape to Admiralty 27 September 1914: Comment on operations against German SW Africa.

Pages 599-600: Handwritten note (by ?) undated commenting on telegram on pp 596-597.

Held by
The National Archives, Kew
Legal status
Public Record(s)
Closure status
Open Document, Open Description
Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C10744514/

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Series information

ADM 137

Admiralty: Historical Section: Records used for Official History, First World War

See the series level description for more information about this record.

View series description

Catalogue hierarchy

Over 27 million records

This record is held at The National Archives, Kew

2,474,034 records

Within the department: ADM

Records of the Admiralty, Naval Forces, Royal Marines, Coastguard, and related bodies

5,287 records

Within the series: ADM 137

Admiralty: Historical Section: Records used for Official History, First World War

14 records

Within the piece: ADM 137/9

Cape Telegrams, Part 1, 27 July-1 October 1914. (Described at item level).

You are currently looking at the item: ADM 137/9/12

fPage 551: History section précis of correspondence 15 September 1914 to 4 October...

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