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John Charles Ready Colomb, Vanity Fair, 1887-03-26

"The Rule of the Road at Sea". Caricature by Ape published in Vanity Fair in 1887.

Sir John Charles Ready Colomb, KCMG (1 May 1838 – 27 May 1909) was a British naval strategist.

Life[]

He was born in Onchan, Isle of Man, the son of General George Thomas Colomb (1787-1874), and was the younger brother of British Vice-Admiral Philip Howard Colomb. He was educated privately, and entered the Royal Naval College from which he passed in 1854 into the Royal Marine Artillery. After being variously employed with the Navy, Army, Militia, and Volunteers he retired in 1869 with the rank of Captain. He thenceforth devoted himself to the study of naval and military problems, on which he had already published some essays.

His books on Colonial Defence and Colonial Opinions (1873), The Defence of Great and Greater Britain (1879), Naval Intelligence and the Protection of Commerce (1881), The Use and the Application of Marine Forces (1883), Imperial Federation: Naval and Military (1887), followed later by other similar works, made him well known among the rising school of Imperialists, and he was returned to parliament (1886–1892) as Conservative member for Bow and Bromley, and afterwards (1895–1906) for Great Yarmouth.

In 1887 he was created CMG, and in 1888 KCMG. He became a large landowner, when he inherited the Dromquinna estate with 4,500 acres in the barony of Dunkerron South (Kerry, Ireland) from his father-in-law Robert Samuel Palmer. There in the townland of Templenoe outside Kenmare he commissioned the architect James Franklin Fuller around 1890 to build Dromquinna House. Colomb became a member of the Irish privy council in 1903 and in 1906 sat on the Royal Commission dealing with congested districts. He was also a Deputy Lieutenant and a Justice of Peace for the county; and in 1895 served as High Sheriff of Kerry.[1] John Colomb was a member of the Carlton Club (then Pall Mall, today St James's Street, London).[2] Being ill for some time, he died after an operation on 27 May 1909 at his London residence, 75 Belgrave Road.

Family[]

He married on 1 January 1866, to Emily Anna, daughter of Robert Samuel Palmer (1802-1891), and widow of Charles Augustus Francis Paget (1832–64), Lieutenant of the Royal Navy and grandson of the first Marquess of Anglesey. They had three children:[3][4]

  • Laura Olivia (1866–1944): Married in 1894 Ruthven Frederic Ruthen-Smith (1864-1955), Britain's ambassador to Switzerland at the beginning of the 20th century and an investor. He was the son of Frederick Chatfield Smith, head of the Smith's Bank in Nottingham;
  • Rupert Palmer Colomb (1868–1955): He was Member of Parliament (M.P.) of the "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland" and High Sheriff of Kerry in 1917. He was invested as a "Companion" of the "Order of the Bath" (C.B.). He married Mabel Louisa Mordaunt (1869-1958), daughter of John Murray Mordaunt (1837-1923), Justice of the Peace (J.P.);
  • Gwendaline Rose Emily (1876–1966): Married in 1900 the judge Sir Thomas Mordaunt Snagge (1868-1955), knighted 1931. Their son was the British newsreader and commentator on BBC Radio John Snagge (1904-1996).

References[]

  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. Encyclopædia Britannica Cambridge University Press 
  • Columb, J.C.R., The Defense of Great and Greater Britain: Sketches of Its Naval, Military and Political Aspects, E. Stanford, 1880, 264 pages.
  • d'Egville, Howard, Imperial Defence and Closer Union: A Short Record of the Life Work of Sir John Colomb and of the Movement Toward Imperial Organization, London, 1913.
  • Schurman, D. M., The Education of a Navy: The Development of British Naval Strategic Thought 1867-1914, London, 1965, pp. 16–35.
  • Kennedy, Greg, Neilson, Keith and Schurman, D.M., eds., Far-Flung Lines: Essays on Imperial Defence in Honour of Donald Mackenzie Schurman, London: Frank Cass, 1997, pp. 31–34.
  • Gat, Azar, A History of Military Thought Oxford University Press, 2002, pp. 474–477.
  • Hobson, Rolf, Imperialism at Sea, Brill. 2002. pp. 87–90.
  • Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs }[better source needed]
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External links[]

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
William Robson
Member of Parliament for Bow and Bromley
1886 – 1892
Succeeded by
John Macdonald
Preceded by
James Marshall Moorsom
Member of Parliament for Great Yarmouth
1895 – 1906
Succeeded by
Arthur Fell
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at John Colomb and the edit history here.
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