Difference between revisions of "Anthony Buzzard"

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|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Anthony_Buzzard,_2nd_Baronet
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Anthony_Buzzard,_2nd_Baronet
 
|nationality=UK
 
|nationality=UK
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|image=Anthony Buzzard.png
 
|description=[[Director of UK Naval Intelligence]] from 1951-1954. Attended the [[3rd Bilderberg|3rd]] and [[4th Bilderbergs]] after retiring
 
|description=[[Director of UK Naval Intelligence]] from 1951-1954. Attended the [[3rd Bilderberg|3rd]] and [[4th Bilderbergs]] after retiring
|birth_date=1902-04-28
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|alma_mater= Royal Naval College Osborne, Royal Naval College Dartmouth.
|birth_place=Derbyshire, East Midlands
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|birth_date=28 April 1902
|death_date=1972-03-10
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|birth_place=Derbyshire, East Midlands,UK
|death_place=West Clandon, Surrey
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|death_date=10 March 1972
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|death_place=West Clandon, Surrey,UK
 
|constitutes=mariner, spook
 
|constitutes=mariner, spook
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|children=Sir Anthony Farquhar Buzzard
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|parents=Edward Farquhar Buzzard.
 
|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Anthony_Buzzard
 
|powerbase=http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/Anthony_Buzzard
 
|employment={{job
 
|employment={{job
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}}
 
}}
 
'''Rear Admiral Sir Anthony Buzzard'''  was an officer in the [[Royal Navy]] who was [[Director of UK Naval Intelligence]] from 1951 to 1954. He attended the [[3rd Bilderberg|3rd]] and [[4th Bilderbergs]] after retiring.
 
'''Rear Admiral Sir Anthony Buzzard'''  was an officer in the [[Royal Navy]] who was [[Director of UK Naval Intelligence]] from 1951 to 1954. He attended the [[3rd Bilderberg|3rd]] and [[4th Bilderbergs]] after retiring.
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==Early life==
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Anthony Wass Buzzard was born on 28 April 1902 at Lea Green in [[Derbyshire]], the home of his mother's father, son of prominent physician and [[Regius Professor of Medicine (Oxford)|Regius Professor of Medicine]] at the [[University of Oxford]] [[Farquhar Buzzard|Sir Edward Farquhar Buzzard]]. Anthony was raised in [[Surrey]] at his father's estate, Munstead Grange. His father was a doctor and Honorary Physician to [[George VI of the United Kingdom|King George VI]].  In 1929, his father was created a [[baronet]], of Munstead Grange in the Parish of Godalming in the County of Surrey. Anthony was the second eldest of five siblings: Margaret, Anthony, Sylvia, and Isabel. He attended a preparatory school from age eight to thirteen, and studied at the [[Royal Naval College, Osborne]], followed by the [[Britannia Royal Naval College|Royal Naval College, Dartmouth]]. In 1915, at the age of thirteen, he joined the Royal Navy as a [[midshipman]], and served during the [[First World War]].<ref name=lh>[http://www.kcl.ac.uk/lhcma/locreg/BUZZARD.shtml Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives]</ref>
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==Second World War==
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Buzzard commanded the destroyer ''HMS Gurkha'' during the early years of the war,<ref name=lh/> and his actions during her sinking led to the award of the [[Distinguished Service Order]].  ''Gurkha'' was part of a force of cruisers and destroyers sent by the British in the immediate aftermath of the [[Operation Weserübung|German invasion of Norway]] on 7 April 1940.  ''Gurkha'' was the first British destroyer sunk by an air attack.<ref name=net>[http://uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/4424.html U-boat.net]</ref> On 19 April the British ships were attacked by [[Junkers Ju 88]] and [[Heinkel He 111]] bombers.<ref name=net/> ''Gurkha'' was hit by one bomb on the aft end, which blew a forty-foot hole in the starboard side.<ref name=net/> The stern caught fire. She then sank; the crew were rescued by the [[light cruiser]] [[HMS Aurora (12)|HMS ''Aurora'']] at the last moment; ''Aurora'' managed to rescue 190 officers and men.<ref name=net/>
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Buzzard was then one of the captains assigned to visit the parents of those lost in the sinking of ''HMS Hood'' to offer his condolences. By 1941 Buzzard was serving as gunnery officer aboard the battleship ''HMS Rodney''<ref name=lh/> during the pursuit and [[Last battle of the battleship Bismarck|sinking]] of the German battleship [[German battleship Bismarck|''Bismarck'']],<ref name=lh/> with the ''Rodney'' being the first ship to open fire with her own guns. On 14 October 1941 Buzzard was appointed as an [[Order of the British Empire|Officer of the Order of the British Empire]] for his service.<ref>https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/35307/supplement/5945</ref> Buzzard then served as assistant director, in the Admiralty Plans Division, and as a member of Joint Planning Committee, with the [[Churchill War Ministry|War Cabinet]] between 1942 and 1943.<ref name=lh/>
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Buzzard became captain of the [[aircraft carrier]] ''HMS Glory''.<ref name=lh/> He spent three months overseeing the final fitting out before ''Glory'' was commissioned on 21 February 1945.  On 14 May the ship became operational and departed her harbour, bound for the Mediterranean.  From there she went on to [[Fremantle, Western Australia|Fremantle]], where she arrived in time for Victory over Japan Day.  Once V.J. Day was over, the ship went to [[Rabaul]] for the signing of the surrender of the Japanese forces there.
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He inherited the [[Buzzard baronets|Buzzard baronetcy]] upon his father's death in December 1945.<ref>[http://janus.lib.cam.ac.uk/db/node.xsp?id=EAD%2FGBR%2F0014%2FBZRD The Papers of Rear-Admiral Sir Anthony Wass Buzzard]</ref>
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==Naval Intelligence==
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Buzzard was assigned to the [[Royal Naval Air Service]] after the end of the war, and commanded the cruiser ''HMS Superb'' between 1946 and 1950.<ref name=lh/> In 1951, at the age of forty-nine, Buzzard became the youngest man to be appointed [[Director of UK Naval Intelligence|Director of Naval Intelligence]]. He was promoted rear admiral. As Director of Naval Intelligence, Buzzard helped develop the nuclear deterrent policy in the early 1950s and was fundamental to it. He was in the post until his retirement in 1954.<ref name=lh/>
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After his retirement from the military he joined the defence contractor [[Vickers-Armstrong]], during the [[Cold War]]. Buzzard was a founder member of both the [[Institute of Strategic Studies]], and the [[Council of Christian Approaches to Defence and Disarmament]].<ref name=lh/> He frequently corresponded with [[Henry Kissinger]], and developed the idea of "Graduated Deterrence".  Graduated Deterrence posited that one must issue a reasonable threat to one's enemy that is also realizable and not so massive that no one believes that it will ever happen. During the [[1960s]] he sat on the Minister of State for Disarmament, [[Alun Gwynne Jones, Baron Chalfont|Lord Chalfont's]] Disarmament Panel. In [[1967]] he became Chairman of the [[British Council of Churches]] Committee on the [[Middle East]].<ref name=lh/>
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{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
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{{PageCredit
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|site=Wikipedia
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|date=04.04.2024
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|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Anthony_Buzzard,_2nd_Baronet
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}}

Latest revision as of 09:14, 2 May 2024

Person.png Anthony Buzzard   PowerbaseRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(mariner, spook)
Anthony Buzzard.png
Born28 April 1902
Derbyshire, East Midlands, UK
Died10 March 1972 (Age 69)
West Clandon, Surrey, UK
NationalityUK
Alma materRoyal Naval College Osborne, Royal Naval College Dartmouth.
ParentsEdward Farquhar Buzzard.
ChildrenSir Anthony Farquhar Buzzard
Founder ofInternational Institute for Strategic Studies
Director of UK Naval Intelligence from 1951-1954. Attended the 3rd and 4th Bilderbergs after retiring

Employment.png Director of UK Naval Intelligence Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
1951 - 1954
Preceded byEric Longley-Cook
Succeeded byJohn Inglis
Attended the 3rd and 4th Bilderbergs after retiring

Rear Admiral Sir Anthony Buzzard was an officer in the Royal Navy who was Director of UK Naval Intelligence from 1951 to 1954. He attended the 3rd and 4th Bilderbergs after retiring.

Early life

Anthony Wass Buzzard was born on 28 April 1902 at Lea Green in Derbyshire, the home of his mother's father, son of prominent physician and Regius Professor of Medicine at the University of Oxford Sir Edward Farquhar Buzzard. Anthony was raised in Surrey at his father's estate, Munstead Grange. His father was a doctor and Honorary Physician to King George VI. In 1929, his father was created a baronet, of Munstead Grange in the Parish of Godalming in the County of Surrey. Anthony was the second eldest of five siblings: Margaret, Anthony, Sylvia, and Isabel. He attended a preparatory school from age eight to thirteen, and studied at the Royal Naval College, Osborne, followed by the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth. In 1915, at the age of thirteen, he joined the Royal Navy as a midshipman, and served during the First World War.[1]

Second World War

Buzzard commanded the destroyer HMS Gurkha during the early years of the war,[1] and his actions during her sinking led to the award of the Distinguished Service Order. Gurkha was part of a force of cruisers and destroyers sent by the British in the immediate aftermath of the German invasion of Norway on 7 April 1940. Gurkha was the first British destroyer sunk by an air attack.[2] On 19 April the British ships were attacked by Junkers Ju 88 and Heinkel He 111 bombers.[2] Gurkha was hit by one bomb on the aft end, which blew a forty-foot hole in the starboard side.[2] The stern caught fire. She then sank; the crew were rescued by the light cruiser HMS Aurora at the last moment; Aurora managed to rescue 190 officers and men.[2]

Buzzard was then one of the captains assigned to visit the parents of those lost in the sinking of HMS Hood to offer his condolences. By 1941 Buzzard was serving as gunnery officer aboard the battleship HMS Rodney[1] during the pursuit and sinking of the German battleship Bismarck,[1] with the Rodney being the first ship to open fire with her own guns. On 14 October 1941 Buzzard was appointed as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his service.[3] Buzzard then served as assistant director, in the Admiralty Plans Division, and as a member of Joint Planning Committee, with the War Cabinet between 1942 and 1943.[1]

Buzzard became captain of the aircraft carrier HMS Glory.[1] He spent three months overseeing the final fitting out before Glory was commissioned on 21 February 1945. On 14 May the ship became operational and departed her harbour, bound for the Mediterranean. From there she went on to Fremantle, where she arrived in time for Victory over Japan Day. Once V.J. Day was over, the ship went to Rabaul for the signing of the surrender of the Japanese forces there.

He inherited the Buzzard baronetcy upon his father's death in December 1945.[4]

Naval Intelligence

Buzzard was assigned to the Royal Naval Air Service after the end of the war, and commanded the cruiser HMS Superb between 1946 and 1950.[1] In 1951, at the age of forty-nine, Buzzard became the youngest man to be appointed Director of Naval Intelligence. He was promoted rear admiral. As Director of Naval Intelligence, Buzzard helped develop the nuclear deterrent policy in the early 1950s and was fundamental to it. He was in the post until his retirement in 1954.[1]

After his retirement from the military he joined the defence contractor Vickers-Armstrong, during the Cold War. Buzzard was a founder member of both the Institute of Strategic Studies, and the Council of Christian Approaches to Defence and Disarmament.[1] He frequently corresponded with Henry Kissinger, and developed the idea of "Graduated Deterrence". Graduated Deterrence posited that one must issue a reasonable threat to one's enemy that is also realizable and not so massive that no one believes that it will ever happen. During the 1960s he sat on the Minister of State for Disarmament, Lord Chalfont's Disarmament Panel. In 1967 he became Chairman of the British Council of Churches Committee on the Middle East.[1]


 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/1955 September23 September 195525 September 1955Germany
Bavaria
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
The third Bilderberg, in West Germany. The subject of a report by Der Spiegel which inspired a heavy blackout of subsequent meetings.
Bilderberg/195611 May 195613 May 1956Denmark
Fredensborg
The 4th Bilderberg meeting, with 147 guests, in contrast to the generally smaller meetings of the 1950s. Has two Bilderberg meetings in the years before and after
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References

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