at which Wemyss commanded a squadron Wemyss served in the
First World War, initially as commander of the
12th Cruiser Squadron in the Channel Fleet and then, after being despatched to
Lemnos with a brief to prepare the harbour of
Moudros for operations against the
Dardanelles in February 1915, as Governor of Moudros. Wemyss became Commander of the
East Indies & Egyptian Squadron in January 1916 where he supported military operations on the
Palestine Front. Promoted to
vice-admiral on 6 December 1916, he was appointed a Commander of the French
Legion of Honour on 23 March 1917 and a Grand Officer of the
Order of the Crown of Italy on 11 August 1917. Returning to the Admiralty, Wemyss was appointed
Second Sea Lord in September 1917 and then
Deputy First Sea Lord in October 1917. Following
Sir Eric Geddes's decision to dismiss the
First Sea Lord,
Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, Wemyss was appointed Jellicoe's replacement in December 1917. and represented Britain at the
Armistice in November 1918. and the French
Croix de Guerre on 15 February 1919. He was also promoted to full
admiral on 21 February 1919, awarded the Grand Cross of the Romanian
Order of the Crown on 17 March 1919 and presented with the American
Distinguished Service Medal on 16 September 1919. (Supreme Allied Commander) standing, his chief of staff
Weygand sitting on the right. Wemyss was the senior British representative at the signing of the
armistice that ended active hostilities in the war. It was Wemyss who made the decision, much to the anger of British Prime Minister
David Lloyd George, to have the ceasefire to come into effect at 11.00 a.m. Lloyd George wanted it to take place at 2.30 p.m. so that he could make the announcement in the
House of Commons. Wemyss realised that 11 a.m on the 11th day of the 11th month had a strong, poetic quality about it; besides, by 2.30 p.m. more soldiers could be unnecessarily killed. After attending the
Paris Peace Conference as Britain's naval representative and arranging for the end of the food blockade and hence unblocking the negotiations, Wemyss resigned in November 1919 following persistent calls for
Sir David Beatty to be given his job. Wemyss was promoted to
Admiral of the Fleet on 1 November 1919. In retirement he wrote his memoirs under the title
The Navy in the Dardanelles Campaign and became a Non-Executive Director of
Cable & Wireless. He lived in
Cannes where he died in his garden on 24 May 1933. He was buried at
Wemyss Castle, his ancestral home. ==Family==