Awards & Winners

Francis Harvey

Date of Birth 29-April-1873
Place of Birth Sydenham
(United Kingdom)
Nationality United Kingdom
Also know as Francis John William Harvey
Profession Sailor
Major Francis John William Harvey, VC was an officer of the British Royal Marine Light Infantry during the First World War. Harvey was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross, the highest military award for gallantry in the face of the enemy given to British and Commonwealth forces, for his actions at the height of the Battle of Jutland. A long serving Royal Marine officer descended of a military family, during his career Harvey became a specialist in naval artillery, serving on many large warships as gunnery training officer and gun commander. Specially requested for HMS Lion, the flagship of the British battlecruiser fleet, Harvey fought at the battles of Heligoland Bight, Dogger Bank and Jutland. At Jutland, Harvey, although mortally wounded by German shellfire, ordered the magazine of Q turret on the battlecruiser Lion to be flooded. This action prevented the tons of cordite stored there from catastrophically detonating in an explosion that would have destroyed the vessel and all aboard her. Although he succumbed to his injuries seconds later, his dying act may have saved over a thousand lives and prompted Winston Churchill to later comment: "In the long, rough, glorious history of the Royal Marines there is no name and no deed which in its character and consequences ranks above this".

Awards by Francis Harvey

Check all the awards nominated and won by Francis Harvey.

1916


Victoria Cross
(In recognition of most conspicuous bravery that took place on 31 May 1916 as Major of the Royal Marine Light Infantry, British Army during the First World War. Posthumously awarded.)