Richard Ryan (Royal Navy officer)

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Lieutenant-Commander Richard John Hammersley Ryan, GC (23 July 1903 – 21 September 1940) was a Royal Navy officer who was posthumously awarded the George Cross along with Chief Petty Officer Reginald Vincent Ellingworth for the "great gallantry and undaunted devotion to duty" they displayed while attempting to defuse a mine which had fallen on Dagenham in Essex on 21 September 1940.

Early life and career

Ryan was from a naval family, the son of Admiral Frank Edward Cavendish Ryan. He joined the Royal Navy in the early 1920s, was promoted to lieutenant in 1925,[1] and lieutenant commander on 1 August 1933.[2]

Second World War

The pair had defused many such devices together, and had just successfully defused a device in Hornchurch which was threatening an aerodrome and explosives factory when they were called to Dagenham. The bomb there was hanging from its parachute on a warehouse.[3]

Notice of the award appeared in the London Gazette of 20 December 1940:[4][5]

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References

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  3. Casualty details – Ryan, Richard John Hammersley, Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 13 February 2008
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  5. The George Cross at Sea, 1939–45

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