[Home] About Janus Participating Institutions Browse and Search What's New Feedback Useful Links Research Tools
Churchill/DRYR contains:
<-- See earlier
7/4 Papers relating to the 1927 Geneva Naval Conference
8/1 Papers relating to the Invergordon mutiny, September 1931
8/2 Papers relating to the Invergordon mutiny, September 1931
9/1 Letters received by Dreyer on his appointment as Commander-in-Chief, China, 1932
9/2 Papers relating to Dreyer's service as Commander-in-Chief, China, 1933-34
9/3 "A brief historical summary of affairs connected with the China station" by Dreyer
10/1 Correspondence about access to the papers of Jellicoe
10/2 Papers dealing with the transfer of the papers of Admiral of the Fleet Lord Jellicoe to the British Museum (Dreyer was a Trustee with Admiral Forbes and Captain Harper)
11/1 Papers relating to Dreyer's honours and promotions, with letters of appreciation
11/2 Papers relating to Dreyer's retirement and World War Two
11/3 Printed lists of "Ships of Royal Navy lost during Second World War" (HMSO, 1947) and "British merchant vessels lost or damaged" (HMSO, 1947)
Search Janus
Advanced search
Browse catalogues or indexes

More information

Please feel free to contact the repository.

The Papers of Admiral Sir Frederic Charles Dreyer

Title Papers dealing with the transfer of the papers of Admiral of the Fleet Lord Jellicoe to the British Museum (Dreyer was a Trustee with Admiral Forbes and Captain Harper)
Reference DRYR 10/2
Covering Dates 1929–1949
Extent and Medium 1 file
Content and context

Includes list of papers; Deed of Trust; letter from Harper to Freyer accepting Trusteeship, September 1929; letter from Admiral Halsey to Dreyer relating to censorship of the Churchill and Beatty letters, January 1949; and restriction by the Admiralty on access to reports on Dominion navies, January 1949

No further on-line information.

This site uses Google Analytics Cookies. By using our website you agree that we can place these cookies on your device.

The webmaster.

Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!