Horace Law


Sir Horace Rochfort Law was Commander-in-Chief Naval Home Command.

Naval career

Educated at Sherborne School and the Royal Naval College Dartmouth, Law joined the Royal Navy in 1929. He became a Gunnery specialist in 1937.

War service

Law served in World War II in the anti-aircraft cruiser HMS Cairo in 1939, the cruiser HMS Coventry in 1940 and the cruiser HMS Nigeria in 1942. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his role in the British landings in Greece and the subsequent evacuations from Greece and Crete.
He served in the Korean War arranging naval gunfire support for the Korean Army.

Post-war service

He was appointed Commanding Officer of the destroyer HMS Duchess in 1951 and the carrier HMS Centaur in 1958 and then made Commander of the Britannia Royal Naval College in 1960.
He went on to be Flag Officer Sea Training in 1961, Flag Officer Submarines in 1963 and Controller of the Navy in 1965. He was made Commander-in-Chief Naval Home Command and Flag Officer, Portsmouth Area in 1970. He was also First and Principal Naval Aide-de-camp to the Queen from 1970 to 1972. He retired in 1972.

Retirement

In retirement he became Chairman of Hawthorn Leslie and Company and was a member of Security Commission from 1973 to 1982.
In 1979 he was invited to deliver the MacMillan Memorial Lecture to the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland. He chose the subject "Belief and Discipline in a Free Society".

Personal life

In 1941 he married Heather Coryton: they went on to have two sons and two daughters. Law was a resident of South Harting, West Sussex, where he was a lay preacher at the parish church; a room at the church is named after him. He was president of the Officers' Christian Union and chairman of the Church Army Board during the 1970s and 1980s.