Bell served as a
midshipman on and in the
Kamerun Campaign of 1914 to 1915. As damage control parties battled fires and flooding, Bell used a compass from one of the lifeboats, and commanded the ship by means of commands passed along a chain of men to the lower steering compartment where a team of men struggled with a wheel that was directly connected to the rudder. After all Exeter's guns had been put out of action but still seaworthy, Bell planned to collide with the enemy, saying "I'm going to ram the --------. It will be the end of us but it will sink him too". However the
Admiral Graf Spee turned to confront the other two cruisers and Bell was ordered to withdraw for repairs at the
Falkland Islands. The captain, eight officers and 79 members of the crew were given the Freedom of the
City of Exeter on 29 February 1940, and were welcomed by a crowd of 50,000 cheering residents. The crew marched through the streets with fixed bayonets, carrying HMS ''Exeter's
shell-torn White Ensign through the streets. Bell was replaced as captain of Exeter'' on 12 April 1940 and the following year became
Flag Captain to the
Flag Officer, Malaya, escaping the
Fall of Singapore the following year and becoming captain of in 1946 and aide-de-camp to the King in 1947. He retired from the Navy owing to ill health on 8 January 1948. ==In popular culture==