Career
Royle joined the Royal Navy with a commission as a midshipman in 1900. He served in World War I as Gunnery Officer on the battleship HMS Marlborough and was at the Battle of Jutland in 1916, then on the staff of Admiral Sir Charles Madden in the Grand Fleet. Royle was appointed Assistant to the Deputy Director of Naval Ordnance in 1923 and became Naval attaché in Tokyo in 1924.
He was given command of the cruiser HMS Canterbury in 1927, the shore establishment HMS Excellent in 1930 and the aircraft carrier HMS Glorious in 1933.
He went on to be Naval Secretary from 1934 and to 1937, when he was appointed Vice Admiral commanding the aircraft carriers, serving until 1939. Royle was knighted in 1941 and promoted admiral in 1942.
In retirement he was appointed briefly as Secretary to the Lord Great Chamberlain and finally as Yeoman Usher (deputy) of the Black Rod, a ceremonial position in the House of Lords, serving in that office from 1946 to 1953. He collapsed and died while putting out a heath fire near his home at Wimborne Minster in Dorset.