Attention: You are using an outdated browser, device or you do not have the latest version of JavaScript downloaded and so this website may not work as expected. Please download the latest software or switch device to avoid further issues.

News > News > Book List ideas: Gunpowder and Glory

Book List ideas: Gunpowder and Glory

The Explosive Life of Frank Brock by his grandson Harry Smee (B 64-68)
30 Sep 2021
News

Old Bradfieldian Harry Smee (B 64-68) has co-authored the first biography of Wing-Commander Frank Brock RN OBE titled Gunpowder & Glory. Frank was Harry's grandfather and has been described as a ‘Boys Own hero’. The book about Frank's life has quite rightly attracted rave reviews:

Frank Brock was my kind of hero, and it is high time that his extraordinary story was told . . . prepare to be inspired. Lord Ashcroft (owner of the largest collection of VCs)

A must read.  A daredevil adventurer who was prepared to take risks and to push the boundaries. Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope GCB OBE DL, former First Sea Lord

Frank Brock was the epitome of an Edwardian Hero . . . A member of the Brock Firework family, he was involved in some of the most innovative technological advances of the Great War.   A fascinating and engaging biography. 'Despatches' – The magazine of the International Guild of Battlefield Guides

8th generation pyrotechnist, Frank Brock, was born in 1884 and attended Dulwich College. For over a decade after he joined the family business, Brocks Fireworks, he travelled the globe orchestrating breath-taking firework displays. A colossal show he staged at Spithead in 1905 with 58 warships and 6000 men for the Entente Cordiale marked him out in military circles as a genius, and as a sideline he began secretly developing improved smokescreens for the Navy.

Frank was a remarkable combination of James Bond and ‘Q’. A heavyweight boxer, a rugby player and a brilliant shot he was to become one of the most significant British officers in WW I, saving thousands of lives. Commissioned into the Army, the Navy and the RAF he was a spy behind enemy lines, an intelligence officer and a prolific inventor.

He enlisted as an officer in the Royal Artillery as soon as the war broke out. On his wedding day he dashed to France to prepare the ground for the world’s first strategic bombing raid on the main Zeppelin base at Friedsrichshafen in southern Germany. He and a fellow officer used false passports to sneak into Switzerland, from where they rowed across a lake into enemy territory to gather intelligence.

After the bombing raid - which was an enormous propaganda coup – Frank was transferred to the RNAS and ordered by Churchill to construct, commission and command a secret RNAS research station in East London, where much of his efforts were concentrated on inventing an explosive bullet to bring down the seemingly invincible Zeppelins.

The Brock Bullet was first put to the test in September 1916 when it was used against a Zeppelin in the skies above Hertfordshire. Tens of thousands cheered as the giant ‘baby killer’ crashed in flames. More Zeppelins were downed by Brock bullets soon afterwards, ending Germany’s dreams of supremacy in the air.

Working for the Board of Invention and Research in late 1917, Frank also invented the one million candela strength Dover Flare, a technology that was later used by the British RAF Pathfinder Force in WW II. His “light curtain” of Dover or Deck flares, which were burnt overnight on trawlers and drifters atop the cross-Channel anti-submarine barrage and lit an area of three square miles, were credited by Admiral Roger Keyes as being instrumental in the sinking of 13 U-boats.

Almost immediately after their debut, Frank was asked by Keyes to help him with a blocking operation at Zeebrugge, the Belgian port through which the U-boats reached the sea. It was a raid that only took place because of his inventive genius and his brilliant smoke screen, a technology that went on to be used by the Royal Navy in WW II. The Raid on Zeebrugge yielded more VCs than any other single engagement other than Rorke’s Drift (Zulu). Churchill described it as “the greatest feat of arms”.

The commander of his last mission, Captain Alfred Carpenter VC RN described Frank as a “whizz-bang man and warrior poet dedicated to the art of warfare as much as to the pursuit of intellectual study and reflection.”

To read more about all of Frank’s life and adventures, please follow the link to the publisher here: 

https://www.casematepublishing.co.uk/gunpowder-and-glory.html

Most read

Bradfield College Basketball Team 1994

Are you joining us for the 1994 Reunion? More...

Deadline for registration is Friday 10 May More...

Have your say

 
This website is powered by
ToucanTech