Frank Arthur Brock

Wing Commander Frank Arthur Brock OBE (29 June 1884 – 23 April 1918) was a British officer of the Royal Air Force who devised and executed the smoke screen used during the Zeebrugge Raid on 23 April 1918, in the British Royal Navy's attempt to neutralize the key Belgian port of Bruges-Zeebrugge during the First World War.

Frank Arthur Brock
Born(1884-06-29)29 June 1884
South Norwood, Surrey, England
Died23 April 1918(1918-04-23) (aged 33)
Zeebrugge Port, Belgium
AllegianceUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Service/branchRoyal Naval Air Service
Royal Air Force
Years of service1914–1918
RankWing Commander
Battles/warsWorld War I
  Zeebrugge Raid  
Awards Order of the British Empire
Mentioned in dispatches
Zeebrugge Memorial. Inscription reads:
TO THE GLORY OF GOD
AND IN MEMORY OF
THESE THREE OFFICERS
AND ONE MECHANIC OF THE ROYAL NAVY
WHO FELL ON THE MOLE AT ZEEBRUGGE
ON ST GEORGE'S DAY 1918 AND HAVE
NO KNOWN GRAVE
WING COMMANDER BROCK F. A. O.B.E.
LIEUTENANT COMMANDER HARRISON A. L. V.C.
LIEUTENANT HAWKINGS C.E.V.
MECHANIC SECOND CLASS F/50269[1] ROUSE J.

Background

Brock was born in South Norwood, Surrey, the son of Arthur Brock of Haredon, Sutton, Surrey, of the famous C.T. Brock & Co. fireworks manufacturers.[2][3] He was educated at Dulwich College[4] where he blew up a stove in his form room.[5] Brock joined the family business in 1901 (later becoming a director)[6] where he remained until the outbreak of the First World War.[7]

He originally joined the Royal Artillery, being commissioned as a temporary lieutenant on 10 October 1914,[8] but within a month was loaned to the Navy, to which he transferred, becoming a temporary sub-lieutenant in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve on 27 October 1914.[9] He was promoted to lieutenant on 31 December 1914,[10][11] becoming a flight lieutenant of the Royal Naval Air Service on 1 January 1915.[12] Brock was a member of the Admiralty Board of Invention and Research and founded, organized and commanded the Royal Navy Experimental Station at Stratford.[13]

Among his many developments were:[13]

  • The Dover Flare – used in anti-submarine warfare.
  • The Brock Colour Filter
  • The Brock Bullet (or Brock Incendiary Bullet or Brock Anti-Zeppelin Bullet) – the first German airship to be shot down was destroyed by this bullet.[14] Most British fighter aircraft machine guns used a mixture of Brock bullets, Pomeroy bullets, and Buckingham bullets when attacking zeppelins.[15]

By the time the Royal Naval Air Service merged with the Royal Flying Corps to form the Royal Air Force on 1 April 1918, Brock had risen to the rank of wing commander, and in January 1918 had been made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1918 New Year Honours.[16]

Zeebrugge Raid

On the night of 22–23 April 1918, the Zeebrugge Raid began when an armada of British sailors and marines led by the old cruiser, HMS Vindictive, attacked the Mole at Zeebrugge, Belgium, in order to negate the serious threat to Allied shipping, that was being posed by the port being used by the Imperial German Navy as a base for their U-boats and light shipping. Brock brought on board with him a box marked 'Highly Explosive, Do Not Open' which actually contained bottles of vintage port which were drunk by his men.[17] For the attack, Brock was in charge of the massive smoke screens that were to cover the approach of the raiding party:

Brock's new and improved smokescreen, or "artificial fog" as he preferred to call it, was ingenious. Essentially, a chemical mixture was injected directly under pressure into the hot exhausts of the motor torpedo boats and other small craft or the hot interior surface of the funnels of destroyers. The larger ships each had welded iron contraptions, in the region of ten feet in height, hastily assembled at Chatham. These were fed with solid cakes of phosphide of calcium. Dropped into a bucket-like container full of water, the resulting smoke and flames roared up a chimney and were dispersed by a windmill arrangement. It was more toxic than its predecessor. Taking in a lungful was an extremely unpleasant experience.[18]

At Zeebrugge, Brock, anxious to discover the secret of the German system of sound-ranging, begged permission to go ashore, not content to watch the action from an observation ship. He joined a storming party on the Mole and was killed in action.[19]

There is an account of German sailor Hermann Künne being involved in a fight with an English officer. Künne attacked a British officer armed with a revolver and a cutlass. Künne was similarly armed with a cutlass. He slashed his opponent across the neck and grabbed the revolver. The British officer, desperately wounded, stabbed Künne as he fell.[20] Given that the Victoria Cross citation for Lieutenant Commander Harrison makes no mention of a sword fight, there are those who believe that Brock was the British officer killed by Künne.[21]

Brock received a mention in despatches from Vice-Admiral Sir Roger Keyes, for his distinguished services on the night of the 22–23 April 1918,[22] He is commemorated on the Zeebrugge Memorial, which stands in Zeebrugge Churchyard. The Zeebrugge Memorial commemorates Brock, one mechanic from Brock's group, and two other officers of the Royal Navy who died on the mole at Zeebrugge and have no known grave.[23] His wife erected a memorial at Brookwood Cemetery, which commemorates him and her sisters two deceased husbands, all three of whom had served in the Royal Navy as officers.[24]

Henry Major Tomlinson wrote of Wing Commander Brock: A first-rate pilot and excellent shot, Commander Brock was a typical English sportsman; and his subsequent death during the operations, for whose success he had been so largely responsible, was a loss of the gravest description to both the Navy and the empire.[25]


Frank Brock in Literature

Gunpowder & Glory is the first biography of Frank Brock.  Co-authored by his grandson Harry Smee and the established writer Henry Macrory, the book was published in 2020 by Casemate UK Ltd and explains the centuries of the Brock family, which began its firework enterprise in the 17th century and from which Frank Brock emerged in 1884.

Other books in which Brock appears include:

1.  Memories by Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher

Hodder & Stoughton – London. 1919

2.  Pyrotechnics - The History and Art of Firework Making by Alan St. Hill Brock A.R.I.B.A Daniel O’Connor – London. 1922

3.  The Blocking of Zeebrugge by Captain Alfred F.B. Carpenter V.C., RN

Herbert Jenkins Limited – London. 1922

4.  The Naval Memoirs of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Keyes – Scapa Flow to the Dover Straits 1916 – 1918

Thornton Butterworth Ltd – London. 1935

5.  A History of Fireworks by Alan St. H. Brock A.R.I.B.A.

George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd – London. 1949

6.  Zeebrugge – Eleven VCs before breakfast by Barrie Pitt

Cassell Military Paperbacks – London. 1958

7.  The Zeebrugge Raid by Philip Warner

William Kimber and Co. Limited – London. 1978

8.  Battleground Series - Zeebrugge & Ostend Raids 1918 by Stephen McGreal

Pen & Sword Books Ltd. – Barnsley. 2007

9.  The Zeebrugge and Ostend Raids 1918 by Deborah Lake

Pen & Sword Books Ltd. – Barnsley. 2002

10.  The Zeebrugge Raid 1918 – ‘The Finest Feat of Arms’ by Paul Kendal

Spellmount – The History Press – Gloucestershire. 2008

11.  The Flatpack Bombers – The Royal Navy and the Zeppelin Menace by Ian Gardiner

Pen & Sword Books Ltd. – Barnsley. 2009

12.  No Pyrrhic Victories – The 1918 Raids on Zeebrugge and Ostend – A Radical Reappraisal by E.C. Coleman

Spellmount – The History Press, Gloucestershire. 2014

13.  Zeebrugge . 1918 – The Greatest Raid of All by Christopher Sandford

Casemate Publishers – Oxford & Philadelphia. 2018


References

  1. John Rouse on Lives of the First World War
  2. Brock, Alan St. Hill (1922). Pyrotechnics: The History and Art of Firework Making. Great Russell Street, London: D. O'Connor.
  3. Warner, Philip (1978). The Zeebrugge Raid. London: William Kimber. p. 29.
  4. Hodges, S (1981). God's Gift: A Living History of Dulwich College. London: Heinemann. p. 101.
  5. Bourne, John M. (2001). Who's Who in World War One. London: Routledge. p. 28.
  6. Frank Arthur Brock on Lives of the First World War
  7. Brock, Alan St. Hill (1922), p.166.
  8. "No. 28932". The London Gazette. 9 October 1914. p. 8040.
  9. "No. 28953". The London Gazette. 27 October 1914. p. 8635.
  10. "No. 29024". The London Gazette. 29 December 1914. p. 7.
  11. O'Connor, M (2005). Airfields & Airmen of the Channel Coast. Pen & Sword Military. p. 52. ISBN 1-84415-258-8.
  12. "No. 29197". The London Gazette. 18 June 1915. p. 5874.
  13. Bourne, John M. (2001), p.38.
  14. "Fighting the Zeppelin". bbc.co.uk. 20 January 2003. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  15. "The Brock Bullet Claim" (PDF). flightglobal.com. Flight Aircraft Engineer Magazine. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  16. "No. 30460". The London Gazette. 4 January 1918. p. 375.
  17. Bourne, John M. (2001), p.39.
  18. Lake, Deborah (2002). The Zeebrugge and Ostend Raids 1918. Barnsley: Leo Cooper.
  19. Aspinall-Oglander, Cecil Faber (1951). Roger Keyes: Being the Biography of Admiral of the Fleet Lord Keyes of Zeebrugge and Dover. Hogarth Press. p. 246.
  20. McGreal, Stephen (2008). Zeebrugge and Ostend Raids (Battleground Europe). Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-78346-095-3.
  21. Ryheul, Johan (2014). The German Marine Corps in Flanders 1914-18. Oxford: Fonthill Media. ISBN 978-1-78155-224-7.
  22. "No. 13294". The Edinburgh Gazette. 25 July 1918. p. 2583.
  23. Reading Room Manchester (23 April 1918). "Brock, Frank Arthur". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  24. "Memorial at Brookwood to Brock, Catto and Nesling". findagrave.com. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  25. Tomlinson, Henry Major (1930). Great Sea Stories of All Nations. London: G.G. Harrap & Co. Ltd. p. 369.

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