Beta Help us improve: share your feedback on our new website.

Cyril Percy Ryan

Navy Captain who invented the hydrophone for use in submarine detection.

Plaque Inscription

Captain Cyril Percy Ryan
1874–1940
Inventor of the hydrophone and captain of HMS Tarlair, naval research and experimental station, Hawkcraig, Aberdour, lived here

Black and white photo of man wearing an officer's naval uniform stands with his hands on his hits.
© National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London.

Location

Hawkcraig Cottage, Aberdour

Category

Engineering, Military

Year

2018

Captain Cyril Ryan was the inventor of the hydrophone and captain of HMS Tarlair, naval research and experimental station.

During World War One, Aberdour on the Firth of Forth became home to a research station of great military and scientific significance. On a spit of land near to the village were several huts and temporary buildings that together made up Hawkcraig Experimental Station, usually known as HMS Tarlair after the fishing boat originally assigned to the base.

It was here that the British navy developed a range of tools and technologies to aid in the war effort, the best known of which was the hydrophone – an instrument used for the detection of enemy U-boats. Tarlair’s commanding officer during the war was Captain Cyril Percy Ryan, who had come out of retirement in order to develop the hydrophone technology and train sailors in how to use it.

Born in County Kilkenny, Ireland in 1874, Ryan joined the navy in 1889 and as an, ‘excellent all round officer’, worked his way up to the position of Commander. He was placed on the retired list in 1911 but during World War One, Ryan was called upon to work with the Hydrophone Service.

The first models that he developed were shore-based instruments for controlling minefields. In 1915, he developed a hydrophone for use from the shore, noting in his official report that a submerged submarine was easier to hear at a given horsepower than a surfaced one, that iron ships were more easily heard than wooden ones and that paddleboats were the easiest vessel to rule out.

In 1917 he was appointed to HMS Tarlair to lead the Hawkcraig Experimental Station. In total, several thousand permanent and temporary personnel were assigned to Tarlair over the course of the war before operations came to a conclusion in 1919. Ryan remained in Tarlair until 1920 when he was transferred to the Torpedo Training School, HMS Vernon, in Portsmouth where he remained until 1921.

Explore more plaques

View all

Madge Easton Anderson

Trail blazing lawyer and Scotland’s first female solicitor.

Groups of women at some kind of reception sit at tables decorated with flowers. There is a row of five women of varying ages in the rear of photo, along a straight table.

Alexander Bain

Inventor of the fax machine and electric clock.

Black and white portrait photograph of a person. They are wearing a suit with a bow tie, and they have a long, full beard.

Andrew Blain Baird

Blacksmith who attempted the first heavier-than-air powered flight in Scotland.

Old, sepia-toned portrait photograph of Andrew Baird. He is well dressed with dark hair and a large moustache.

John Logie Baird

Inventive engineer who was the first person to demonstrate a working television live.

Black and white photograph of a person seated behind a microphone and a bank of light bulbs. They are holding a ventriloquist's doll in each hand as if they are having a conversation.

Charles Glover Barkla

1917 Nobel Prize winner for Physics.

Black and white photograph of a person wearing a suit and tie seated at a table. They are looking into the camera and holding a large book in their hands, as if reading.

Sir Arnold Bax

Leading composer of 20th century symphonies.

Black and white photo of three people seated at a table inside a public house. All are drinking and smiling, as if sharing a joke, and the person in the centre is looking at the camera and holding a pipe.