Background
Hector Boyes was born in 1881 at Plymouth, the son of a naval officer, Sir George Boyes: he entered the service shortly before his fourteenth birthday.
Hector Boyes was born in 1881 at Plymouth, the son of a naval officer, Sir George Boyes: he entered the service shortly before his fourteenth birthday.
He saw action in the Boxer Rebellion as a midshipman, and by the outbreak of World War I, he was thirty-three years old, and the Flag Lieutenant to the Commander-in-Chief of the China Station. In 1915, Lieutenant-Commander Boyes was assigned to command the gunboat HMS Thistle in the East Africa Campaign. In 1919, Commander Boyes, now 38 years old, married Eleonora Bille de Falsen, a twenty-year-old half-Norwegian, half-Danish, the daughter of Henrik Anton Falsen, the Consul General of the Russian Portuguese of Archangel and Ida Bille.
They met in Archangel and had one child, Reginald George Hector Boyes b 1928.
From January 1920 to December 1921 he commanded HMS Hollyhock on the China station. Subsequently, he was promoted to captain, commanding the Australian naval academy at Flinders, the British squadron in the Persian Gulf, and the shore base at Simon"s Town in South Africa, before being appointed Chief of Staff to the Commander-in-Chief, The Nore.
Captain Boyes took retirement with the rank of rear admiral in 1934, but he was subsequently appointed as a naval attaché with the temporary rank of captain, serving in Oslo, where he was responsible for obtaining an important dossier of German military blueprints. Admiral Boyes continued in the diplomatic service during World World War II, serving as attaché in Tokyo until the outbreak of the Pacific War, and then at various embassies in Latin America.
He retired for a second time on 31 March 1947, and died in 1960.
Hector Boyes is the grandfather of the author Carolyn Boyes.