Facebook X YouTube Instagram TikTok

Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon (Hardback)

Driving Change in Naval Technology 1900–1918

Maritime > Naval Maritime > Seaforth Publishing Military > Biographies WWI World History

By David Craddock
Seaforth Publishing
Pages: 352
Illustrations: 40 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036145897
Published: 16th February 2026

in_stock

£18.75 was £25.00

You save £6.25 (25%)


You'll be £18.75 closer to your next £10.00 credit when you purchase Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon. What's this?
+£4.99 UK Delivery or free UK delivery if order is over £40
(click here for international delivery rates)

Order within the next 9 hours, 39 minutes to get your order processed the next working day!

Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates

Other formats available Price
Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon eBook (23.1 MB) Add to Basket £14.99


Reginald Bacon was no Drake, Hawke or Nelson, yet in a naval career that spanned four decades of critical change for the Royal Navy, he was a pivotal figure among Admiral ‘Jacky’ Fisher’s ‘five best brains in the navy’ who revolutionised Britain’s naval warfighting capability between 1900 and the end of the First World War.

This new biography traces Bacon’s remarkable career from his service as a fifteen-year-old Midshipman aboard Sir Geoffrey Hornby’s Mediterranean flagship to his three years in command of the Dover Patrol. A mine and torpedo specialist, he was by turns the father of the Submarine Service, the first captain of HMS Dreadnought and Director of Naval Ordnance at the Admiralty before leaving the Royal Navy for five years to run Coventry Ordnance Works whose fortunes he turned around.

Having ended the war as Controller of Munition Inventions with the rank of Admiral, over the next twenty-five years he re-invented himself as a writer, dividing his time between homes in Hampshire and Italy. No stranger to controversy, having been unwittingly caught in the bitter Beresford/Fisher feud of 1909, he robustly defended Sir John Jellicoe as C-in-C Grand Fleet against accusations of weak and defensive tactics that deprived the nation of a resounding victory at Jutland. He went on to write acclaimed biographies of both Jacky Fisher and Earl Jellicoe besides two novels and two layman’s guides to new technologies, the motor car and the wireless, the latter in his A Simple Guide to Wireless for All Whose Knowledge of Electricity is Childlike. His account of his service in Command of the Dover Patrol is considered a classic of naval reminiscence and reveals undercurrants of contested naval doctrine that resonate today. As war threatened again in the 1930s, he wrote two more books championing the role of the Royal Navy in wartime.

This highly readable biography does justice to both the man – ‘the ablest and cleverest officer I have ever known,’ wrote Admiral of the Fleet Sir Henry Oliver – and his remarkable input into so many aspects of the development of the Navy at a time of exponential change.

Register or Login now to post a review!

"Craddock's book is an excellent addition to the literature of the period, and a good assessment of one of the most influential characters to populate its history."

Warships International Fleet Review - June 2026

"...it introduced me to a gentleman I had never heard about, and it brought back many sympathetic memories of trying to bring about change when those around you are doing their level best to thwart your efforts."

4 Stars

Read the full review here

Army Rumour Service Book Club

"This really is an excellent study of a man who not only saw the need for change but who was not afraid to strive as hard as he could to achieve it, despite opposition from those who failed to grasp its importance. I thoroughly recommend it."

Read the full review here

Australian Naval Institute

"I have not seen the issues of the [Dover] Patrol so clearly explained, and with impressive concision.... Bacon has found a sympathetic interlocutor for the 21st century..."

Prof Andrew Lambert (Author)

About David Craddock

DAVID CRADDOCK began his working life in the Merchant Navy as a cadet with P&O. He came ashore to study graphic design and later a BA in History through the Open University. Over five decades he has combined both interests with a career in exhibition and graphic design specialising in historic interpretation. He is a Trustee of the Britannia Museum at the Royal Naval College Dartmouth and now devotes most of his time to writing. His first book What Ship Where Bound? A History of Visual Communication at Sea was published by Seaforth in February 2021 and was well received on both sides of the Atlantic.

Launch of HMS Dreadnought

10th February 1906

In 1906, HMS Dreadnought was launched. Described as a deadly fighting machine, it transformed the whole idea of warfare and sparked a dangerous arms race. Of which Bacon played a significant role in the design.


View all events View all anniversaries

More titles by David Craddock

Customers who bought this title also bought...

Other titles in Seaforth Publishing...