Postal Curios and Autographs 1905
Home

Curios and Autographs
Autograph Postcard Types
Where he lived
Some photographs
Scrapbook
Cigarette Cards
Cartoon by Michael Leigh





1897-1899


1900-1902


1903-1904


1905-1906


1907-1909


1910-1919


1920-1924


1925-1929


1930-1931


1932


1933


1934


1935


1936


1937


1938-1939
Autograph request

Postcard sent by Bray to The Commander, HMS Russell, c/o GPO, London on 19th September 1905 asking for his autograph.

Signed by Captain T. Martyn Jerram.

Admiral Sir (Thomas Henry) Martyn Jerram, GCMG, KCB (6 September 1858 - 19 March 1933) was a Royal Navy officer who went on to be Commander-in-Chief, China Station.

Admiral Herbert Arthur Stevenson Fyler, C.B., D.S.O., Royal Navy, Retired (7 January, 1864 - 19 July, 1934) was an officer of the Royal Navy. His surname is sometimes misspelled as the more familiar "Tyler". A service record indicates, in the form of a correction, that his name should be Arthur Herbert Stevenson Fyler.

HMS Russell was a Duncan-class pre-dreadnought battleship of the Royal Navy commissioned in 1903. Built to counter a group of fast Russian battleships, Russell and her sister ships were capable of steaming at 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph), making them the fastest battleships in the world. The Duncan-class battleships were armed with a main battery of four 12-inch (305 mm) guns and they were broadly similar to the London-class battleships, though of a slightly reduced displacement and thinner armour layout. As such, they reflected a development of the lighter second-class ships of the Canopus-class battleship. Russell was built between her keel laying in March 1899 and her completion in February 1903.

Russell served with the Mediterranean Fleet until 1904, at which time she was transferred to the Home Fleet; in 1905 the Home Fleet became the Channel Fleet. She moved to the Atlantic Fleet in early 1907 before returning to the Mediterranean Fleet in 1909. In another fleet reorganisation in 1912, the Mediterranean Fleet became part of the Home Fleet and it was later transferred to British waters. Russell served as the flagship of the 6th Battle Squadron from late 1913 until the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914.

After the start of the war, Russell was assigned to the Grand Fleet and worked with the fleet's cruisers on the Northern Patrol, and in November, she bombarded German-occupied Zeebrugge. In November 1915 she was sent to the Mediterranean to support the Dardanelles Campaign, though she did not see extensive use there. On 27 April 1916 she was sailing off Malta when she struck two mines laid by a German U-boat. Most of her crew survived the sinking, though 125 men were killed.




Proudly built with SiteSpinner free website maker
Proudly built with SiteSpinner free website maker