Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Battle of Heligoland Bight (1914)" ¶ 20
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Tyrwhitt and Beatty
The U-boats were to surrender to Commodore Reginald Tyrwhitt at Harwich, under the supervision of the Harwich Force, then the surface fleet was to sail to the Firth of Forth and surrender personally to Beatty.
Publicly, Vice Admiral Beatty was regarded as a hero, although he had taken little part in the action or planning of the raid, which was led by Commodore Tyrwhitt and conceived by him and Keyes, who had persuaded the Admiralty to adopt it.
Some information was passed to Beatty ( commanding the battlecruisers ), Tyrwhitt ( Harwich destroyers ) and Keyes ( submarines ), but Jellicoe was unhappy with the arrangement.
A peculiarity of the street names in Jalan Besar is that many bear the names of World War I British generals and admirals and two French generals — Allenby, Kitchener, French, Maude, Jellicoe, Tyrwhitt, Foch, Sturdee, Beatty and Petain.

Tyrwhitt and requesting
Tyrwhitt had for some time been requesting replacement of his previous cruiser because she was too slow to keep up with his destroyers, but Arethusa did not arrive until 26 August.

Tyrwhitt and reinforcements
Jellicoe despatched a message advising Tyrwhitt that he should expect reinforcements, but this was delayed at Harwich and never received.

Tyrwhitt and Goodenough
Keyes and Tyrwhitt requested support for their operation, in particular bringing the Grand Fleet south and the support of the squadron of six light cruisers commanded by Commodore William Goodenough.
Tyrwhitt did not discover the additional forces until Goodenough ’ s ships appeared through the mist, leading to immediate concern whether they were friend or foe at a time when he was expecting to meet only enemy vessels.

Tyrwhitt and with
Several small chapels also existed during medieval times, with another hospital and chapel founded by William Tyrwhitt in 1441.
Bentley was credited with creating the English school of Hellenists, by which the 18th century was distinguished, including scholars such as R Dawes, J Markland, John Taylor, Jonathan Toup, T Tyrwhitt, Richard Porson, Peter Paul Dobree, Thomas Kidd and James Henry Monk.
Tyrwhitt's bibliophile friend Thomas Crofts is credited with introducing Tyrwhitt in 1776 to George Catcott, the owner of the ' manuscripts ' of the poems.
As Tyrwhitt turned away to the west, Cöln — with Admiral Maass — approached from the southeast, and was also chased away by torpedoes.
More social events include the games played against the President's XI, captained by Bill Tyrwhitt Drake, the Court House XI, with George and Clare Bartlett entertaining both teams to supper at the Court House after the match, and Captain Scott ’ s XI, a regular visiting side whose founder, Harry Thomson, died in 2005.

Tyrwhitt and four
Tyrwhitt ordered four destroyers to detach and attack G-149.
At 07: 26, Tyrwhitt turned east, attempting to follow the sound of gunfire and his four destroyers.

Tyrwhitt and cruisers
The British devised a plan to ambush some of these destroyers on their regular daily patrols, and a fleet of 31 destroyers and two cruisers under Commodore Reginald Tyrwhitt and submarines commanded by Commodore Roger Keyes was dispatched.

Tyrwhitt and assist
Tyrwhitt turned back to assist Keyes on receipt of the signal that he was being chased.

Tyrwhitt and .
In 1785, Sir Thomas Tyrwhitt, Secretary to the Prince of Wales, leased a large area of moorland from the Duchy of Cornwall estate, hoping to convert it into good farmland.
In 1780, a farm was reclaimed on the site of an ancient tenement near the Two Bridges, and in 1785, Sir Thomas Tyrwhitt set about improving the moor at a place which he named Tor Royal, about south-east of Princetown.
Thomas Tyrwhitt ( 27 March 1730 – 15 August 1786 ) was an English classical scholar and critic.
Initially Tyrwhitt was convinced that they were authentic, and pressed for publication in 1777.
He was the father of John Tyrwhitt Davy Kidd who served in India for many years and Richard Bentley Porson Kidd, who was rector of Potter Heigham church among other duties in Norwich, Norfolk.
Commodore Roger Keyes commanded a squadron of long-range submarines that regularly patrolled Heligoland Bight, while Commodore Reginald Tyrwhitt commanded a destroyer patrol, both operating from Harwich.
Tyrwhitt — aboard the brand new light cruiser — would command the 3rd Flotilla of 16 modern L-class destroyers, whilst his subordinate, Captain Wilfred Blunt — aboard the light cruiser — would command the 1st Flotilla of 16 older destroyers.
At 08: 12, Tyrwhitt returned to the original plan, which was to sweep across the area from east to west.
Eventually, Keyes recognised Southampton, and the ships attempted to rejoin Tyrwhitt.
The 18th-century scholar Thomas Tyrwhitt first proposed the theory that Mr. W. H.

signalled and requesting
Following the Irgun's detonation of a large bomb in a market in Haifa on 6 July 1938 the High Commissioner signalled the Commander-in-Chief of the Mediterranean Fleet, Admiral Sir Dudley Pound, requesting the assistance of naval vessels capable of providing landing parties.
Following a brief naval bombardment the troops on Maaloy succeeded in securing the island ; however, the four Troops in Vaagso experienced considerable resistance from the German garrison and their attack up the main street briefly stalled before Durnford-Slater signalled Haydon requesting the floating reserve be released to him and No. 6 Troop under Peter Young were ferried across from Maaloy.

signalled and reinforcements
They first demanded to search Tel Hai, and while the Jews attempted to maintain neutrality, they signalled for reinforcements from the kibbutz Kfar Giladi.

signalled and with
The war also marked a watershed in the geo-political history of the region, as together with the Lombard migration the following year, it signalled the end of six centuries of Germanic dominance in the Pannonian Basin.
And Curbishley rewarded the chairman's loyalty with the Division One title in 2000 which signalled a return to the Premier League.
The exact derivation of the term is unknown, but it has been thought that in early Canadian football, the scoring of a single was signalled with a red flag.
Occasionally her eyes alone would dance, as at one moment she gently lowered her lids, and at another imperiously signalled with threatening glances.
Owen's review of the Origin in the April 1860 Edinburgh Review bitterly attacked Huxley, Hooker and Darwin, but also signalled acceptance of a kind of evolution as a teleological plan in a continuous " ordained becoming ", with new species appearing by natural birth.
Although he rejected Frith ’ s radicalism, by 1534 he clearly signalled that he had broken with Rome and that he had set a new theological course.
The " idle " condition of the circuit is a continuous marking state, with the start of a character signalled by a " start bit ", which is always a space.
Under the ideological guidance of Antoine Waechter, the party in 1986 signalled a break with the traditional divide in French politics, declaring that environmental politics could not be “ married ” to either the left or the right ( which gave rise to its famous slogan “ ni droite, ni gauche ”-" neither right, nor left ").
Unlike other Islamic messianic movements, the Bábí movement signalled a break with Islam and attempted to start a new religious system.
At 6: 30 a. m., Culloden signalled that she could see 5 enemy sail to the south east, and then with Blenheim and Prince George turned toward the Spanish ships.
While on board HMS Hampshire with Kitchener, Duquesne supposedly signalled the German submarine that sank the cruiser, got off by using a life raft before the ship sank, and was rescued by the submarine.
If one of the batsman turns to complete runs after the first without grounding his person or equipment behind the popping crease, then a short run is signalled by the umpire tapping his near shoulder with his fingers and the short runs are not scored.
This is signalled by making a " T " symbol with the arms.
Besides furthering Edward's quarrel with Godwin, the appointment signalled that there were limits to Edward's willingness to compromise on ecclesiastical reform.
Austria hoped that Prussia would join the war and, by massing its main army in Bohemia, it signalled its intent to join up with the Prussians.
In his 2009 Conservative Party Conference speech, Conservative Party leader David Cameron signalled that Duncan Smith might serve in his Cabinet, with responsibility for social justice, should he be called upon to form an administration after the next general election.
The term minstrel had previously been reserved for traveling white singing groups, but Emmett and company made it synonymous with blackface performance, and by using it, signalled that they were reaching out to a new, middle-class audience.
The control of the republic by Cárdenas and the PRI ( Partido Revolucionario Institucional ) predecessor Partido de la Revolución Mexicana without widespread bloodshed effectively signalled the end of rebellions that began with the 1910 Mexican Revolution.
The line was fully signalled with electric telegraph and staff and ticket working.
Even though Switzerland for instance is a member of the European Patent Organisation but not a member of the European Union, the EPO also signalled that it would have been likely to adjust its practice, if necessary, to conform with whatever text had finally emerged from the EU legislative procedure,
One of the first tracks by a British band to feature a drum machine ( a Roland TR-77 with preset patterns ), the song signalled a new direction for Ultravox.
Mathews signalled for Lestock to make more sail, reluctant to start the attack with his ships still disorganised, but the slowness of Lestock to respond caused the Franco-Spanish force to start to slip away to the south.
They used the same mechanical-photographic method for recording simultaneous discharges which, in this experiment, signalled the passage of a charged cosmic ray particle through both counters and through the thick wall of lead and iron with which they had surrounded the counters.

0.411 seconds.