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18 - Professor Spenser Wilkinson, Admiral William Sims and the Teaching of Strategy and Sea Power at the University of Oxford and the United States Naval War College, 1909–1927

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2016

Benjamin Darnell
Affiliation:
DPhil Candidate in History, New College, University of Oxford
J. Ross Dancy
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Military History Sam Houston State University
Paul M. Ramsey
Affiliation:
University of Calgary
Evan Wilson
Affiliation:
Caird Senior Research Fellow, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich
Jaap R. Bruijn
Affiliation:
Emeritus professor of Maritime History, Leiden University
Roger Knight
Affiliation:
Visiting Professor of Naval History, University of Greenwich
N. A. M. Rodger,
Affiliation:
Senior Research Fellow, All Souls College, University of Oxford
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Summary

Introduction

In 1918, Admiral William S. Sims, the newly appointed President of the United States Naval War College, wrote to Professor H. Spenser Wilkinson, the first Chichele Professor of Military History at the University of Oxford:

I have been an interested reader of your reviews in the Press for the past year (and of course I am well acquainted with your books), but I am particularly interested in your article in THE TIMES of Sunday, December 22nd [1918], in regard to educational questions, particularly as it relates to general staff training … [I would like] to discuss with you the above questions, particularly as relates to Naval War College work in time of peace.

These men shared a correspondence over the next four years concerning ‘ideas on education for Officers for the Navy’ and ‘the principles of the art of warfare’. Their conclusions shaped the teaching of strategy and sea power at the Naval War College throughout the interwar period, creating an intellectual legacy still evident today in the courses and material taught.

Their short exchange of letters and meetings in London and Oxford created a mutual interest and an important exchange of ideas, particularly for the reforms Sims was about to make at the United States Naval War College. Towards the end of Sims's time as president, he told Wilkinson, ‘As you doubtless know, many of your books are in constant use at the Naval War College and are widely quoted in naval writings.’ Indeed, Sims requested an extra thirty copies of The Brain of the Navy(1895) from Wilkinson, because ‘[the College] consider[ed] this to be so suggestive and valuable to the beginners at the college that [it] wish[ed] to have these copies for their use’. As Sims wrote, ‘This little book will never be out of date as far as this college is concerned.’ Wilkinson secured one hundred copies for Sims. This transfer of ideas and influence poses a number of key questions about our understanding of the development of the Naval War College not only under Sims's presidency, but also throughout the years before the Second World War.

Type
Chapter
Information
Strategy and the Sea
Essays in Honour of John B. Hattendorf
, pp. 213 - 225
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2016

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