Bruce Loxton


Bruce Hamilton Loxton was an Australian naval officer, naval historian, and Director-General of Naval Manpower in the Royal Australian Navy from 1975 until his retirement.

Early life

Loxton was born in Sydney and educated at Newington College and The Scots College.

Military education

At the age of 13, Loxton entered the Royal Australian Naval College as one of only 16 candidates selected from 480 applicants. He graduated from RANC in 1941, and was made a Lieutenant in 1944. He later graduated from the Naval War College at Newport, Rhode Island, and the Royal Naval Staff College, Greenwich,.

HMAS Canberra

Loxton was 18 and a midshipman on the ship's bridge of when it was sunk at the Battle of Savo Island. During the attack, a shell struck him and he was badly wounded. In all, 84 Australian personnel died on Canberra. On their return to Sydney, Rear Admiral Gerard Muirhead-Gould, the officer in charge of the Sydney naval area, told the crew of Canberra that they should feel ashamed that their ship had been sunk by gunfire without firing a shot in return. This annoyed Loxton for many years after the war, and he later set out to establish what had in fact happened. In 1994 he co-authored the book, Shame of Savo, analysing the strategy, operations, communications, tactics and command of the attack. He claimed that the American destroyer inadvertently torpedoed Canberra, crippling her through friendly fire before she could fire a shot.

Military service

Honours