Badge: Commander of the Order of the Sword
Awarded to Admiral Sir William Reginald Hall (1870-1943). Badge of the Order of the Sword (Sweden). Gold-rimmed, eight-pointed, white enamel cross. Gold crowns between each arm and crossed swords top and bottom. Upright swords at the side. The blue centre medallion shows three small crowns with an upright sword in the centre. On reverse of medallion a gold sword with a wreath on the point 'PRO PATRIA'. Suspended by a yellow moire ribbon with a blue stripe towards each edge. In fitted case of issue.
William Reginald Hall entered the Navy via HMS 'Britannia' at Dartmouth which he joined in 1884. He was commissioned as lieutenant in 1890 and served as a gunnery specialist. He was appointed captain of the new battle cruiser 'Queen Mary' in 1913 and saw action in the battle of Heligoland Bight in 1914. Later in the same year, Hall was appointed director of the intelligence division at the Admiralty, a position in which he excelled. His intimidating appearance and manner were an advantage in this role. During this war code-breaking and aerial photography began to be used as a source of intelligence and the data needed to be analysed and exploited. This is where Hall’s management skills were deployed to advantage. Hall’s activities were occasionally controversial and he sometimes clashed with his superiors. He retired at the end of the war, by then with the rank of rear-admiral, and was further advanced to admiral (retired) in 1926. Hall was elected as a conservative MP for seats in Liverpool and Eastbourne during the post-war period. During World War II, he was a member of the Home Guard.
William Reginald Hall entered the Navy via HMS 'Britannia' at Dartmouth which he joined in 1884. He was commissioned as lieutenant in 1890 and served as a gunnery specialist. He was appointed captain of the new battle cruiser 'Queen Mary' in 1913 and saw action in the battle of Heligoland Bight in 1914. Later in the same year, Hall was appointed director of the intelligence division at the Admiralty, a position in which he excelled. His intimidating appearance and manner were an advantage in this role. During this war code-breaking and aerial photography began to be used as a source of intelligence and the data needed to be analysed and exploited. This is where Hall’s management skills were deployed to advantage. Hall’s activities were occasionally controversial and he sometimes clashed with his superiors. He retired at the end of the war, by then with the rank of rear-admiral, and was further advanced to admiral (retired) in 1926. Hall was elected as a conservative MP for seats in Liverpool and Eastbourne during the post-war period. During World War II, he was a member of the Home Guard.
For more information about using images from our Collection, please contact RMG Images.
Object Details
ID: | MED1993 |
---|---|
Collection: | Coins and medals |
Type: | Order |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Carlman, Carl Friedrich |
People: | Hall, William Reginald |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Overall: 55 mm |
Parts: | Badge: Commander of the Order of the Sword |