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Reginald Hall

Admiral Sir William Reginald Hall KCMG CB (28 June 1870 – 22 October 1943), known as Blinker Hall, was the British Director of Naval Intelligence (DNI) from 1914 to 1919. Together with Sir Alfred Ewing he was responsible for the establishment of the Royal Navy's codebreaking operation, Room 40, which decoded the Zimmermann telegram, a major factor in the entry of the United States into World War I.

Sir Reginald Hall
Admiral Hall in 1919
Nickname(s)Blinker
Born28 June 1870
Britford, Wiltshire
Died22 October 1943 (aged 73)
Allegiance United Kingdom / British Empire
Service/branch Royal Navy
Years of service1884–1919
Battles/warsWorld War I
AwardsKnight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
Companion of the Order of the Bath
Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star

Royal Navy career edit

Reginald Hall was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, eldest son of Captain William Henry Hall, the first head of Naval Intelligence, who married the daughter of the Reverend George Armfield from Armley, Leeds. Hall decided on a naval career for himself when taken on a cruise on board HMS Flamingo by his father. He joined the training ship HMS Britannia in 1884 and two years later was appointed to the armoured cruiser Northampton. After a year he was transferred to the ironclad battleship Bellerophon which was part of the North American Station. In 1889 he became acting sub-lieutenant before attending courses for his Lieutenant's examinations at Greenwich, the gunnery school and torpedo school, where he achieved first class grades in all five of the subjects. Now as Lieutenant he was posted to the China Station where he served on the flagship, the armoured cruiser Imperieuse. In 1892 he was recommended to train as a gunnery officer, which involved a course in mathematics at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich, followed by a year's course at the gunnery school at HMS Excellent, a shore establishment at Whale Island, Portsmouth. Having qualified, he remained for a year on the staff.[1]

In 1894 Hall married Ethel Wootton de Wiveslie Abney, daughter of Sir William.[2] The engagement had begun when he was aged 19, five years before, but at the time this was still considered a young age for a naval officer to get married. In 1895 he was appointed as gunnery lieutenant on the cruiser Australia where he served for two years before being appointed to the senior staff at Whale Island. He was promoted to commander 1 January 1901, in recognition of services with naval forces in South Africa,[3] and later served on the battleship Magnificent, flagship of the second in command of the Channel Fleet.[4]

In 1904 he became commander of the pre-dreadnought battleship Cornwallis which was commissioning with a new crew to operate in the Mediterranean. Hall had a reputation as a strict disciplinarian with an ability to get the best out of a crew, so he was given some of the worst sailors to bring up to scratch. A trick of disaffected sailors was to remove gunsights and throw them overboard, and indeed this happened. Hall instructed the master at arms to look out for two sailors who had previously been friends but who now avoided each other. He took one, told him that the other had confessed they had removed the sights, and the sailor duly confessed. Behaviour on board improved. Although Hall imposed discipline strictly, he also showed concern for the men he commanded and for their welfare, which was unusual for that time. He took particular care for the boys and junior seamen.[5]

In December 1905 he was promoted to captain and appointed by the First Sea Lord, Sir John Fisher, as Inspecting Captain of the new Mechanical Training Establishments, which Fisher had established to give engineering training to ordinary sailors (1906–7). He was next appointed captain of the cadet training ship HMS Cornwall. Although not a conventional warship, this now involved Hall in intelligence work. The ship visited foreign ports, particularly in Germany which was now seen as the navy's greatest potential enemy, and Hall started the tour with a long list of places to investigate. In Kiel he was tasked with discovering how many slips had been constructed for building large vessels. To do this he devised a ruse with the help of the Duke of Westminster, who was visiting the port and agreed to lend his motor boat for the task. Hall and a couple of officers dressed down as sailors and took the yacht on a full speed circuit of the harbour, pretending to break down by the naval dockyard. A concealed camera was then used to take photographs of the installations. More information was discovered by careful questions ashore.[6]

In 1910 two officers, Lieutenant Brandon and Captain Trench, who had been part of Hall's crew gathering intelligence, were sent on a 'holiday' in Germany to collect information about coastal defences by Captain Regnart of the intelligence division. The two were captured and served two-and-a-half years of a four-year sentence, before being pardoned in May 1913 as part of a visit by King George V to Germany. The admiralty then denied any responsibility for what had happened to the pair and their considerable financial loss as a result. When appointed director of intelligence, Hall arranged for them to be compensated.[7]

Hall was appointed to the armoured cruiser Natal following the death of her captain, F.C.A. Ogilvy. Ogilvy had obtained a high reputation for his ship which had beaten all records at gunnery but Hall managed to step into Ogilvy's place, retaining the confidence of the crew and bettering the gunnery record the following year. His reputation for unorthodox treatment of his men continued to grow, making it his business to reform recalcitrant sailors rather than simply punishing them. He had the knack of threatening men with punishments he could not deliver (such as dismissal from the service) if they did not reform, and succeeded. Natal was called upon to assist a sailing ship, the Celtic Race, which had lost most of her sails in a storm and was in danger of sinking. Despite the risk to his own ship, he escorted Celtic Race into Milford Haven. He was rewarded by the owners and underwriters, being presented with a silver table centrepiece by the Lord Mayor of Liverpool on their behalf.[8]

From 1911 to 1913 he served as assistant to the Controller of the Royal Navy.

In 1913 he became captain of the battle cruiser Queen Mary. When he took over he was asked to take part in an experiment by the Admiralty to dispense with ships' police, transferring their duties to petty officers. He also introduced an innovation of his own, to divide the ship's crew into three watches rather than the customary two. Hall believed that in the war with Germany which he expected, it would be impossible to run a ship continuously with just two watches. The change attracted much ridicule but when war came it was adopted on all large ships. A religious man, he arranged that a chapel was provided on board the ship, and this innovation too was adopted generally. He felt it important that the authority of petty officers should be boosted, and he did this by improving their quarters. He arranged for washing machines on board, for the convenience of the officers who no longer had to pay for laundry ashore, and to the benefit of sailors who were 'tipped' to carry out the washing. He introduced a bookshop on board, and the navy's first shipboard cinema. Inadequacies in the water supply meant that it took an hour for all the stokers to finish washing after duty: Hall insisted that his engineers find a solution to provide enough hot water that they could all wash in 15 minutes, giving them more free time. These changes too became standard. Hall was criticised for being too soft with his crews, but his requirements for discipline were not relaxed. Rather, he believed that reward was necessary as well as punishment. Living conditions in society were improving generally and he believed the Navy must keep pace with standards ashore.[9]

Queen Mary took part in the battlecruiser squadron's visit to Cronstadt, where the fleet officers and sailors were entertained by the Russian royal family, and a lavish ball was held on board ship as the culmination of the visit. It was the last such visit before World War I commenced and the battlecruisers transferred to their initial wartime base at Scapa Flow. Ships spent long periods at sea, before the strategic situation became clearer and the fear of immediate German raids diminished. Queen Mary took part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight, where the battlecruisers were called upon to support a raid by destroyers and cruisers against German patrol ships operating off Heligoland. The raid was hailed as a British success, although behind the scenes it was marred by poor communications between the British forces involved.[10]

Hall's health had deteriorated under the stress of continuous sea service, and after three months matters had reached the point where he was obliged to request posting away from the ship.

Director of the Intelligence Divisions edit

His seagoing career cut short by ill-health, Hall was appointed Director of the Intelligence Division (DID) by the Admiralty in October 1914, replacing Captain Henry Oliver. According to Oliver, Hall's wife wrote to him on behalf of her husband requesting that he replace Oliver in the Intelligence Division.[11] Hall served as DID (the title eventually reverted to the pre-1911 "DNI") until January 1919, when he retired from active duty. It turned out to be a fortunate appointment, for he was responsible for building up the naval intelligence organization during the war, encouraged codebreaking and radio-intercept efforts, and provided the fleet with good intelligence, making the division the pre-eminent British intelligence agency during the war. He also encouraged cooperation with other British intelligence organizations, such as MI5 (under Vernon Kell), MI6 (under Mansfield Smith-Cumming) and the Special Branch of Scotland Yard (under Basil Thomson).

Ireland edit

Easter Rising edit

Thanks to intercepts from Room 40, Hall was instrumental in the interception of the steamer Aud on 21 April 1916 by HMS Bluebell, which was carrying German arms to Ireland. That morning the man who had organised the arms shipment, Sir Roger Casement, was arrested in Tralee Bay after disembarking from a German U-Boat. Hall was aware of the upcoming Easter Rising in Dublin, but refused to reveal his sources, so that when information of the rising did reach the government, its authenticity was questioned. Hall interrogated Casement and allegedly refused Casement the opportunity of making a public demand for the cancellation of the uprising.[12]

'German Plot' edit

When the United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany, intercepted traffic between the US German legation and Berlin dried up as a key source of British intelligence. Less reliable information was used by intelligence chiefs including Admiral Hall, such as 'spy-obsessed loyalist residents in Ireland'. The mass arrests of known Sinn Féin activists, following the discovery of a spurious 'German Plot' in Ireland has been interpreted as:

a striking illustration of the apparent manipulation of intelligence in order to prod the Irish authorities into more forceful action...when the British Government was unable to provide convincing evidence of a 'German Plot', nationalist Ireland concluded that it had been invented as retribution for the defeat of conscription.'

In that analysis, Irish public opinion was wrong. Based on the faulty intelligence information made available to them, 'British ministers sincerely believed the threat was real'.[13]

German counter-intelligence edit

Room 40's decryptions also led to the capture of Captain Franz von Rintelen, a veteran field agent in the intelligence wing of the German Imperial Navy, who had operated covertly in the still neutral United States and, among many other things, had financed and encouraged strikes by anti-war labor unions, attempted a hostile takeover of the Du Pont corporation, and firebombed munitions ships and armaments factories.

In 1917, Hall was awarded the Japanese Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star, which represents the second highest of eight classes associated with the award.[14] In that same year, he was promoted to rear-admiral. He was knighted in 1918 and was promoted to vice-admiral in 1922 and to full admiral in 1926, both on the retired list.

Political career edit

Upon retirement Hall served as a Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Liverpool West Derby from 1919 to 1923, then for Eastbourne 1925–1929. As an MP, in 1919 he and a group of industrialists founded a group to counter subversive actions against free enterprise known as National Propaganda, which was later renamed the Economic League. Even in the House of Commons he was still said to be involved in the Zinoviev letter affair in 1924, which led to the victory of the Conservatives in the general election of that year. In the 1920s and 1930s he travelled extensively in the United States to give lectures on intelligence gathering matters. Too old to return to active service on the outbreak of World War II, Hall nevertheless served in the British Home Guard until his death.

Despite his retirement from military and political life, Hall by the late 1930s had been identified as an important target person by the National Socialist police apparatus: in early 1940 the Reichssicherheitshauptamt in Berlin, the headquarters of the intelligence service of the SS, added his name to the Sonderfahndungsliste G.B., a list of people residing in the UK, whom the Nazi leadership and/or its intelligence service regarded as particularly important or (from their point of view) dangerous and who for that reason were slated to be tracked down and apprehended with heightened priority by special task forces of the SS, that were to follow on the heels of the occupying forces in case of a successful invasion of the British islands by the Wehrmacht.[15]

Hall was described by the U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James's Walter Page as a "clear case of genius", while American attaché Edward Bell described him as "a perfectly marvelous person but the coldest-hearted proposition that ever was – he'd eat a man's heart and hand it back to him."

He was known as "Blinker" on account of a chronic facial twitch, which caused one of his eyes to "flash like a Navy signal lamp". His daughter attributed this to childhood malnutrition. (He had attended a military boarding school in which the boys had to fill their bellies by stealing turnips from neighbouring farms). Today, such a twitch is also thought to be symptomatic of a mild form of Dyspraxia.

Honours and awards edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ James p. 2-5
  2. ^ James, William Milbourne (1956). The code breakers of Room 40: the story of Admiral Sir William Hall, genius of British counter-intelligence (Reprint ed.). St. Martin's Press. p. 5. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  3. ^ "No. 27263". The London Gazette. 4 January 1901. p. 82.
  4. ^ James p.5
  5. ^ James p. 5-6
  6. ^ James p.7-8
  7. ^ James p.8
  8. ^ James p.10-14
  9. ^ James p. 14-18
  10. ^ James p. 20
  11. ^ Beesly. Room 40. p. 36.
  12. ^ Andrew (2004). "Her Majesty's Secret Service". Scientific American. 291 (5): 247. Bibcode:2004SciAm.291e..28M. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1104-28b.
  13. ^ McMahon, Paul (2008). British spies and Irish rebels: British intelligence and Ireland, 1916–1945. Vol. 1 History of British intelligence. Boydell Press. pp. 23–24. ISBN 978-1-84383-376-5.
  14. ^ Order of the Rising Sun, conferred 1917 -- "No. 30363". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 October 1917. p. 11322.
  15. ^ Entry on William Reginald Hall on the Sonderfahndungsliste G.B. (reproduced on the website of the Imperial War Museums in London).
  16. ^ a b c d Smith, Gordon (29 December 2010). "FOREIGN DECORATIONS AWARDED TO ROYAL NAVY, London Gazette editions January 1918-December 1920". Naval-History.Net. Retrieved 1 July 2011.

References edit

  • Andrew, Christopher (1986). Her Majesty's Secret Service: The Making of the British Intelligence Community. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-80941-1.
  • Beesly, Patrick (1982). Room 40: British Naval Intelligence 1914–1918. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-281468-0.
  • James, Admiral Sir William (1955). The Eyes of the Navy: A Biographical Study of Admiral Sir Reginald Hall. London: Methuen & Co.
  • Ramsay, David (2008). 'Blinker' Hall: Spymaster: The Man who Brought America into World War I. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-86227-465-5.
  • A Clear Case of Genius: Admiral Sir Reginald 'Blinker' Hall's Autobiography'. Stroud: The History Press. 2017.

External links edit

  • The Papers of William Reginald Hall are held at Churchill Archives Centre in Cambridge and are accessible to the public.
  • The Dreadnought Project: Reginald Hall
  • First World War.com - Who's Who entry
  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Sir William Hall
Military offices
Preceded by Director of Naval Intelligence
1914–1919
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Liverpool West Derby
19191923
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Eastbourne
19251929
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Principal Agent of the Conservative Party
1923 – 1924
Succeeded by

reginald, hall, british, endocrinologist, endocrinologist, other, people, named, william, hall, william, hall, disambiguation, admiral, william, kcmg, june, 1870, october, 1943, known, blinker, hall, british, director, naval, intelligence, from, 1914, 1919, to. For the British endocrinologist see Reginald Hall endocrinologist For other people named William Hall see William Hall disambiguation Admiral Sir William Reginald Hall KCMG CB 28 June 1870 22 October 1943 known as Blinker Hall was the British Director of Naval Intelligence DNI from 1914 to 1919 Together with Sir Alfred Ewing he was responsible for the establishment of the Royal Navy s codebreaking operation Room 40 which decoded the Zimmermann telegram a major factor in the entry of the United States into World War I Sir Reginald HallAdmiral Hall in 1919Nickname s BlinkerBorn28 June 1870Britford WiltshireDied22 October 1943 aged 73 Allegiance United Kingdom British EmpireService wbr branch Royal NavyYears of service1884 1919Battles warsWorld War IAwardsKnight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George Companion of the Order of the BathOrder of the Rising Sun Gold and Silver Star Contents 1 Royal Navy career 2 Director of the Intelligence Divisions 2 1 Ireland 2 1 1 Easter Rising 2 1 2 German Plot 2 2 German counter intelligence 3 Political career 4 Honours and awards 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksRoyal Navy career editReginald Hall was born in Salisbury Wiltshire eldest son of Captain William Henry Hall the first head of Naval Intelligence who married the daughter of the Reverend George Armfield from Armley Leeds Hall decided on a naval career for himself when taken on a cruise on board HMS Flamingo by his father He joined the training ship HMS Britannia in 1884 and two years later was appointed to the armoured cruiser Northampton After a year he was transferred to the ironclad battleship Bellerophon which was part of the North American Station In 1889 he became acting sub lieutenant before attending courses for his Lieutenant s examinations at Greenwich the gunnery school and torpedo school where he achieved first class grades in all five of the subjects Now as Lieutenant he was posted to the China Station where he served on the flagship the armoured cruiser Imperieuse In 1892 he was recommended to train as a gunnery officer which involved a course in mathematics at the Royal Naval College Greenwich followed by a year s course at the gunnery school at HMS Excellent a shore establishment at Whale Island Portsmouth Having qualified he remained for a year on the staff 1 In 1894 Hall married Ethel Wootton de Wiveslie Abney daughter of Sir William 2 The engagement had begun when he was aged 19 five years before but at the time this was still considered a young age for a naval officer to get married In 1895 he was appointed as gunnery lieutenant on the cruiser Australia where he served for two years before being appointed to the senior staff at Whale Island He was promoted to commander 1 January 1901 in recognition of services with naval forces in South Africa 3 and later served on the battleship Magnificent flagship of the second in command of the Channel Fleet 4 In 1904 he became commander of the pre dreadnought battleship Cornwallis which was commissioning with a new crew to operate in the Mediterranean Hall had a reputation as a strict disciplinarian with an ability to get the best out of a crew so he was given some of the worst sailors to bring up to scratch A trick of disaffected sailors was to remove gunsights and throw them overboard and indeed this happened Hall instructed the master at arms to look out for two sailors who had previously been friends but who now avoided each other He took one told him that the other had confessed they had removed the sights and the sailor duly confessed Behaviour on board improved Although Hall imposed discipline strictly he also showed concern for the men he commanded and for their welfare which was unusual for that time He took particular care for the boys and junior seamen 5 In December 1905 he was promoted to captain and appointed by the First Sea Lord Sir John Fisher as Inspecting Captain of the new Mechanical Training Establishments which Fisher had established to give engineering training to ordinary sailors 1906 7 He was next appointed captain of the cadet training ship HMS Cornwall Although not a conventional warship this now involved Hall in intelligence work The ship visited foreign ports particularly in Germany which was now seen as the navy s greatest potential enemy and Hall started the tour with a long list of places to investigate In Kiel he was tasked with discovering how many slips had been constructed for building large vessels To do this he devised a ruse with the help of the Duke of Westminster who was visiting the port and agreed to lend his motor boat for the task Hall and a couple of officers dressed down as sailors and took the yacht on a full speed circuit of the harbour pretending to break down by the naval dockyard A concealed camera was then used to take photographs of the installations More information was discovered by careful questions ashore 6 In 1910 two officers Lieutenant Brandon and Captain Trench who had been part of Hall s crew gathering intelligence were sent on a holiday in Germany to collect information about coastal defences by Captain Regnart of the intelligence division The two were captured and served two and a half years of a four year sentence before being pardoned in May 1913 as part of a visit by King George V to Germany The admiralty then denied any responsibility for what had happened to the pair and their considerable financial loss as a result When appointed director of intelligence Hall arranged for them to be compensated 7 Hall was appointed to the armoured cruiser Natal following the death of her captain F C A Ogilvy Ogilvy had obtained a high reputation for his ship which had beaten all records at gunnery but Hall managed to step into Ogilvy s place retaining the confidence of the crew and bettering the gunnery record the following year His reputation for unorthodox treatment of his men continued to grow making it his business to reform recalcitrant sailors rather than simply punishing them He had the knack of threatening men with punishments he could not deliver such as dismissal from the service if they did not reform and succeeded Natal was called upon to assist a sailing ship the Celtic Race which had lost most of her sails in a storm and was in danger of sinking Despite the risk to his own ship he escorted Celtic Race into Milford Haven He was rewarded by the owners and underwriters being presented with a silver table centrepiece by the Lord Mayor of Liverpool on their behalf 8 From 1911 to 1913 he served as assistant to the Controller of the Royal Navy In 1913 he became captain of the battle cruiser Queen Mary When he took over he was asked to take part in an experiment by the Admiralty to dispense with ships police transferring their duties to petty officers He also introduced an innovation of his own to divide the ship s crew into three watches rather than the customary two Hall believed that in the war with Germany which he expected it would be impossible to run a ship continuously with just two watches The change attracted much ridicule but when war came it was adopted on all large ships A religious man he arranged that a chapel was provided on board the ship and this innovation too was adopted generally He felt it important that the authority of petty officers should be boosted and he did this by improving their quarters He arranged for washing machines on board for the convenience of the officers who no longer had to pay for laundry ashore and to the benefit of sailors who were tipped to carry out the washing He introduced a bookshop on board and the navy s first shipboard cinema Inadequacies in the water supply meant that it took an hour for all the stokers to finish washing after duty Hall insisted that his engineers find a solution to provide enough hot water that they could all wash in 15 minutes giving them more free time These changes too became standard Hall was criticised for being too soft with his crews but his requirements for discipline were not relaxed Rather he believed that reward was necessary as well as punishment Living conditions in society were improving generally and he believed the Navy must keep pace with standards ashore 9 Queen Mary took part in the battlecruiser squadron s visit to Cronstadt where the fleet officers and sailors were entertained by the Russian royal family and a lavish ball was held on board ship as the culmination of the visit It was the last such visit before World War I commenced and the battlecruisers transferred to their initial wartime base at Scapa Flow Ships spent long periods at sea before the strategic situation became clearer and the fear of immediate German raids diminished Queen Mary took part in the Battle of Heligoland Bight where the battlecruisers were called upon to support a raid by destroyers and cruisers against German patrol ships operating off Heligoland The raid was hailed as a British success although behind the scenes it was marred by poor communications between the British forces involved 10 Hall s health had deteriorated under the stress of continuous sea service and after three months matters had reached the point where he was obliged to request posting away from the ship Director of the Intelligence Divisions editHis seagoing career cut short by ill health Hall was appointed Director of the Intelligence Division DID by the Admiralty in October 1914 replacing Captain Henry Oliver According to Oliver Hall s wife wrote to him on behalf of her husband requesting that he replace Oliver in the Intelligence Division 11 Hall served as DID the title eventually reverted to the pre 1911 DNI until January 1919 when he retired from active duty It turned out to be a fortunate appointment for he was responsible for building up the naval intelligence organization during the war encouraged codebreaking and radio intercept efforts and provided the fleet with good intelligence making the division the pre eminent British intelligence agency during the war He also encouraged cooperation with other British intelligence organizations such as MI5 under Vernon Kell MI6 under Mansfield Smith Cumming and the Special Branch of Scotland Yard under Basil Thomson Ireland edit Easter Rising edit Thanks to intercepts from Room 40 Hall was instrumental in the interception of the steamer Aud on 21 April 1916 by HMS Bluebell which was carrying German arms to Ireland That morning the man who had organised the arms shipment Sir Roger Casement was arrested in Tralee Bay after disembarking from a German U Boat Hall was aware of the upcoming Easter Rising in Dublin but refused to reveal his sources so that when information of the rising did reach the government its authenticity was questioned Hall interrogated Casement and allegedly refused Casement the opportunity of making a public demand for the cancellation of the uprising 12 German Plot edit When the United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany intercepted traffic between the US German legation and Berlin dried up as a key source of British intelligence Less reliable information was used by intelligence chiefs including Admiral Hall such as spy obsessed loyalist residents in Ireland The mass arrests of known Sinn Fein activists following the discovery of a spurious German Plot in Ireland has been interpreted as a striking illustration of the apparent manipulation of intelligence in order to prod the Irish authorities into more forceful action when the British Government was unable to provide convincing evidence of a German Plot nationalist Ireland concluded that it had been invented as retribution for the defeat of conscription In that analysis Irish public opinion was wrong Based on the faulty intelligence information made available to them British ministers sincerely believed the threat was real 13 German counter intelligence edit Room 40 s decryptions also led to the capture of Captain Franz von Rintelen a veteran field agent in the intelligence wing of the German Imperial Navy who had operated covertly in the still neutral United States and among many other things had financed and encouraged strikes by anti war labor unions attempted a hostile takeover of the Du Pont corporation and firebombed munitions ships and armaments factories In 1917 Hall was awarded the Japanese Order of the Rising Sun Gold and Silver Star which represents the second highest of eight classes associated with the award 14 In that same year he was promoted to rear admiral He was knighted in 1918 and was promoted to vice admiral in 1922 and to full admiral in 1926 both on the retired list Political career editUpon retirement Hall served as a Conservative Member of Parliament MP for Liverpool West Derby from 1919 to 1923 then for Eastbourne 1925 1929 As an MP in 1919 he and a group of industrialists founded a group to counter subversive actions against free enterprise known as National Propaganda which was later renamed the Economic League Even in the House of Commons he was still said to be involved in the Zinoviev letter affair in 1924 which led to the victory of the Conservatives in the general election of that year In the 1920s and 1930s he travelled extensively in the United States to give lectures on intelligence gathering matters Too old to return to active service on the outbreak of World War II Hall nevertheless served in the British Home Guard until his death Despite his retirement from military and political life Hall by the late 1930s had been identified as an important target person by the National Socialist police apparatus in early 1940 the Reichssicherheitshauptamt in Berlin the headquarters of the intelligence service of the SS added his name to the Sonderfahndungsliste G B a list of people residing in the UK whom the Nazi leadership and or its intelligence service regarded as particularly important or from their point of view dangerous and who for that reason were slated to be tracked down and apprehended with heightened priority by special task forces of the SS that were to follow on the heels of the occupying forces in case of a successful invasion of the British islands by the Wehrmacht 15 Hall was described by the U S Ambassador to the Court of St James s Walter Page as a clear case of genius while American attache Edward Bell described him as a perfectly marvelous person but the coldest hearted proposition that ever was he d eat a man s heart and hand it back to him He was known as Blinker on account of a chronic facial twitch which caused one of his eyes to flash like a Navy signal lamp His daughter attributed this to childhood malnutrition He had attended a military boarding school in which the boys had to fill their bellies by stealing turnips from neighbouring farms Today such a twitch is also thought to be symptomatic of a mild form of Dyspraxia Honours and awards editKnight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George Companion of the Order of the Bath Order of the Rising Sun Gold and Silver Star Japan Commander of the Order of St Maurice and St Lazarus Italy 16 Commander of the Legion of Honour France 16 Navy Distinguished Service Medal 16 Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy 16 Notes edit James p 2 5 James William Milbourne 1956 The code breakers of Room 40 the story of Admiral Sir William Hall genius of British counter intelligence Reprint ed St Martin s Press p 5 Retrieved 30 January 2013 No 27263 The London Gazette 4 January 1901 p 82 James p 5 James p 5 6 James p 7 8 James p 8 James p 10 14 James p 14 18 James p 20 Beesly Room 40 p 36 Andrew 2004 Her Majesty s Secret Service Scientific American 291 5 247 Bibcode 2004SciAm 291e 28M doi 10 1038 scientificamerican1104 28b McMahon Paul 2008 British spies and Irish rebels British intelligence and Ireland 1916 1945 Vol 1 History of British intelligence Boydell Press pp 23 24 ISBN 978 1 84383 376 5 Order of the Rising Sun conferred 1917 No 30363 The London Gazette Supplement 30 October 1917 p 11322 Entry on William Reginald Hall on the Sonderfahndungsliste G B reproduced on the website of the Imperial War Museums in London a b c d Smith Gordon 29 December 2010 FOREIGN DECORATIONS AWARDED TO ROYAL NAVY London Gazette editions January 1918 December 1920 Naval History Net Retrieved 1 July 2011 References editAndrew Christopher 1986 Her Majesty s Secret Service The Making of the British Intelligence Community New York Viking ISBN 0 670 80941 1 Beesly Patrick 1982 Room 40 British Naval Intelligence 1914 1918 London Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 281468 0 James Admiral Sir William 1955 The Eyes of the Navy A Biographical Study of Admiral Sir Reginald Hall London Methuen amp Co Ramsay David 2008 Blinker Hall Spymaster The Man who Brought America into World War I Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 1 86227 465 5 A Clear Case of Genius Admiral Sir Reginald Blinker Hall s Autobiography Stroud The History Press 2017 External links editThe Papers of William Reginald Hall are held at Churchill Archives Centre in Cambridge and are accessible to the public The Dreadnought Project Reginald Hall First World War com Who s Who entry Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Sir William Hall Leigh Rayment s Historical List of MPs Military offices Preceded byHenry Oliver Director of Naval Intelligence1914 1919 Succeeded byHugh Sinclair Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded bySir F E Smith Member of Parliament for Liverpool West Derby1919 1923 Succeeded bySydney Jones Preceded bySir George Lloyd Member of Parliament for Eastbourne1925 1929 Succeeded byEdward Marjoribanks Party political offices Preceded bySir Malcolm Fraser Principal Agent of the Conservative Party1923 1924 Succeeded byHerbert Blain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reginald Hall amp oldid 1198720317, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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