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Gilbert Roberts (Royal Navy officer)

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Gilbert Roberts
Born(1900-10-11)October 11, 1900
Kensington, England[1]
DiedJanuary 22, 1986(1986-01-22) (aged 85)
Torbay, England[1]
AllegianceUnited Kingdom British Empire
Service / branchUnited Kingdom Royal Navy
Years of service1913–1964
RankCaptain
UnitWestern Approaches Tactical Unit
AwardsCBE (1944)[2]
RD (1964)[1]
Spouse(s)
Alice Marjorie Brooks
(m. 1930, divorced)
[1]
                    
Jean Winifred Warren
(m. 1947)
[1]
Children2

Gilbert Howland Roberts CBE (11 Oct 1900 — 22 Jan 1986) was an officer in the British Royal Navy. From 1942 to 1945, Captain Roberts operated a naval wargaming unit based in Liverpool called the Western Approaches Tactical Unit (WATU). This unit developed anti-submarine tactics to defend trans-Atlantic merchant convoys from German submarines.

Early life

Gilbert Roberts was the second son of Sir Howland Roberts, 12th Baron Glassenbury of Kent and 5th Baronet of Britfieldstown in Cork.[3]

Military career

Roberts joined the Royal Navy as a cadet in September 1913, a month shy of his thirteenth birthday. His first posting was HMS Hibernia.

From 1935 to 1937, Roberts studied at the Portsmouth Tactical School. There, he discovered naval wargaming, and became an enthusiastic practitioner. Like many wargaming enthusiasts of his time, he developed his own rules, based mainly on the wargames of Fred T. Jane.

Roberts was given command of the destroyer HMS Fearless in autumn 1937. In December, the Fearless joined a flotilla to patrol the Spanish coast (during Spain's civil war). In late 1938 he developed tuberculosis.[a] He was deemed medically unfit and retired on 28 October 1938.[2][4]

Roberts convalesced at the King Edward VII Sanatorium in Midhurst until April 1939.[2]

On 1 January 1942 Roberts met with Admiral Cecil Usborne in London. Usborne ordered Roberts to report to the Western Approaches headquarters in Liverpool, where he was to establish a unit to develop tactics by which shipping convoys in the Atlantic could defend themselves from German submarine attacks. Through the use of wargames, he studied the reports of convoy escorts, devised defensive tactics, and trained escort commanders in their use.

In 1944, Roberts was tasked with planning the anti-submarine operations that supported Operation Overlord. These proved highly effective.

According to his colleagues and staffers, Roberts was a difficult man to work for. He was noted for being pushy, stubborn, and intolerant of disagreement. Nevertheless, he was liked and respected by his staff. It is suggested his abrasive personality was aggravated by his illness.[5]

In 1945, Robert visited the Germans' U-boat headquarters in Flensburg. On the wall, he found a portrait of himself, taken from a 1944 article from Illustrated magazine . Allegedly, it bore the caption: "This is your enemy, Captain Roberts, Director of Anti U-boat Tactics",[6] though Roberts didn't mention this caption in his memoirs. He did autograph the portrait for the pleasure of the Germans present.

Promotions

Promotions[2]
Rank Date
Cadet (entry) 15 September 1913
Midshipman 1 January 1917
Acting sub-lieutenant 15 November 1918
Sub-lieutenant 15 July 1919
Acting lieutenant 15 July 1921
Lieutenant 15 October 1920
Lieutenant-commander 15 October 1928
Commander 30 June 1935
Acting captain December 1942

Awards

Family

Footnotes

  1. ^ Diagnosed by the Surgeon General on HMS Resolution.
  1. ^ a b c d e "Royal Navy (RN) Officers 1939-1945 - R".
  2. ^ a b c d Service record of Gilbert Howland Roberts, (UK National Archives, ADM 196/124/8) (archived at Dropbox)
  3. ^ Williams (1979), Captain Gilbert Roberts, chpt. 1, p. 7
  4. ^ Williams (1979). Captain Gilbert Roberts, pp. 72-75
  5. ^ Parkin (2019). A Game of Birds and Wolves, chpt. 17
  6. ^ Williams (1979)

Bibliography

  • Mark Williams (1979). Captain Gilbert Roberts R. N. and the Anti-U-Boat School. Cassell. ISBN 0-304-30386-0.
  • Simon Parkin (2019). A Game of Birds and Wolves: The Secret Game that Won the War. Hodder & Staughton. ISBN 9781529353051.