[The Crisis of the Naval War by John Rushworth Jellicoe]@TWC D-Link bookThe Crisis of the Naval War CHAPTER I 20/34
(_Vide_ Chapter X.) One of his first steps as First Lord which affected Admiralty organization was the appointment of a Deputy First Sea Lord.
This appointment was frankly made more as a matter of expediency than because any real need had been shown for the creation of such an office.
It is unnecessary here to enter into the circumstances which led to the appointment to which I saw objections, owing to the difficulty of fitting into the organization an officer bearing the title of Deputy First Sea Lord. Vice-Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss--who had come to England for the purpose of conferring with the Admiralty before taking up the post of British Commander-in-Chief in the Mediterranean--was selected by the First Lord as Deputy First Sea Lord. Shortly after assuming office as First Lord, Sir Eric Geddes expressed a wish for a further consideration of the question of Admiralty organization.
To this end he appointed a joint War Office and Admiralty Committee to compare the two organizations. Having received the report of the Committee, the First Lord and I both formulated ideas for further reorganization.
My proposals, so far as they concerned the Naval Staff, were conceived on the general lines of an extension of the organization already adopted since my arrival at the Admiralty, but I also stated that the time had arrived when the whole Admiralty organization should be divided more distinctly into two sides, viz., the Operational side and the _Materiel_ or Administrative side, and indicated that the arrangement existing in the time of the old Navy Board might be largely followed, in order that questions of Operations and _Materiel_ should be quite clearly separated.
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