After promotion to rear-admiral on 9 June 1882,[7] Richards was appointed Junior Naval Lord in July 1882 and then Commander-in-Chief of the East Indies Station, hoisting his flag in the corvette HMS Bacchante, in May 1885.[3] In that role he organized and equipped a naval brigade to support the British advance up the Irrawaddy River in November 1885 during the Third Anglo-Burmese War.[3] On his return to England in June 1888, together with two other admirals, he was asked to investigate the disposition of the ships of the Royal Navy many of which were unarmoured and together incapable of meeting the combined threat from any two of the other naval powers ("the Two-power Standard") and to prepare the report which ultimately led to the Naval Defence Act 1889.[3] He was also a member of a Royal Commission formed to look into Naval and Military administration.[8]
First Naval Lord
Promoted to vice admiral on 25 October 1888,[9] Richards became Commander-in-Chief, China Station in November 1890 and Second Naval Lord in June 1892.[3] He was promoted to full admiral on 1 September 1893[10] and became First Naval Lord in November 1893.[3] In that role Richards led a huge shipbuilding and naval works programme undertaken in accordance with the provisions of the Naval Defence Act 1889.[3] The programme was opposed by Prime Minister William Gladstone who was concerned about its vast cost and who resigned after a Cabinet defeat over it in March 1894.[3] The programme continued under the Government of Lord Rosebery and then under the Government of Lord Salisbury and Richards remained in office driving the programme throughout the political turmoil.[3] He was advanced to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath in June 1895.[11]
Richards also had to respond as First Naval Lord to the Far Eastern Crisis of 1897/98 when the Russian Pacific Fleet was threatening to attack the Korean port of Chemulpo to back up Russia’s demands for a peacetime coaling station at Deer Island.[12] He was promoted to Admiral of the Fleet on 29 November 1898[13] and served as First Naval Lord until August 1899 when he retired.[14] He died at his home, Horton Court at Chipping Sodbury in Gloucestershire, on 28 September 1912.[14]
Family
In 1866 Richards married Lucy Fayle, daughter of Fitzherbert Brooke, of Horton Court, Gloucestershire; they had no children.[1]