Henry Maitland Wilson: Difference between revisions
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===Supreme Allied Commander Mediterranean (1944)=== |
===Supreme Allied Commander Mediterranean (1944)=== |
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Wilson succeeded [[Dwight D. Eisenhower|Dwight D. "Ike" Eisenhower]] at [[Allied Forces Headquarters|Allied Forces Headquarters (AFHQ)]] as the Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean on 8 January 1944 based at Algiers.<ref name=heath310/> As such he exercised strategic control over the campaign in Italy. He strongly advocated the invasion of Germany via the [[Danube]] plain, but this did not take place when the armies in Italy were weakened to support other theatres of war.<ref>Fisher, p. 258</ref> |
Wilson succeeded [[Dwight D. Eisenhower|Dwight D. "Ike" Eisenhower]] at [[Allied Forces Headquarters|Allied Forces Headquarters (AFHQ)]] as the Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean on 8 January 1944 based at Algiers.<ref name=heath310/> As such he exercised strategic control over the campaign in Italy. He strongly advocated the invasion of Germany via the [[Danube]] plain, but this did not take place when the armies in Italy were weakened to support other theatres of war.<ref>Fisher, p. 258</ref> Jumbo Wilson was keen to follow through wit the deception plan Undercut, when unexpectedly the Germans decided to withdraw from Greece altogether. Although advised by Dudley Clarke that it might backfire and was unnecessary, Wilson was aware of the strategic complexities of the political situation. Every plan the General Staff had a shadow, integrated by 1944 with the American allies at all strategy levels; even to employ an actor imitating Monty arrive at Jumbo's HQ in Algiers.{{efn| the deception operation on 26 May 1944 began in London.}} |
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===Washington Mission (1945–1947)=== |
===Washington Mission (1945–1947)=== |
Revision as of 22:36, 27 December 2016
The Lord Wilson | |
---|---|
Nickname(s) | Jumbo |
Born | London, England | 5 September 1881
Died | 31 December 1964 Chilton, Buckinghamshire, England | (aged 83)
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service | British Army |
Years of service | 1900–1947 |
Rank | Field Marshal |
Unit | Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own) |
Commands | 6th Infantry Brigade 2nd Infantry Division British Troops in Egypt British Forces in Palestine and Trans-Jordan Ninth Army Persia and Iraq Command Middle East Command |
Battles / wars | Second Boer War First World War |
Awards | Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath[1] Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire[2] Distinguished Service Order[3] Mentioned in dispatches (5)[4] War Cross (Greece)[5] Virtuti Militari (Poland) [6] Distinguished Service Medal (United States)[7] Legion of Merit (United States)[8] |
Other work | Constable of the Tower of London[9] |
Field Marshal Henry Maitland Wilson, 1st Baron Wilson GCB, GBE, DSO (5 September 1881 – 31 December 1964), also known as Jumbo Wilson, was a senior British Army officer of the 20th century. He saw active service in the Second Boer War and then during the First World War on the Somme and at Passchendaele. During the Second World War he served as General Officer Commanding-in-Chief (GOC-in-C) British Troops in Egypt, in which role he launched Operation Compass, attacking Italian forces with considerable success, in December 1940. He went on to be Military Governor of Cyrenaica in February 1941, commanding a Commonwealth expeditionary force to Greece in April 1941 and General Officer Commanding (GOC) British Forces in Palestine and Trans-Jordan in May 1941.
Wilson became GOC Ninth Army in Syria and Palestine in October 1941, GOC Persia and Iraq Command in August 1942 and GOC Middle East Command in February 1943. In the closing stages of the war he was Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean, from January 1944, and then Chief of the British Joint Staff Mission in Washington D. C. from January 1945.
Early life and military service
Born in London, England,[10] the son of Captain Arthur Maitland Wilson and his wife Harriet Wilson (née Kingscote), Wilson was educated at Eton College and Sandhurst.[11] He was commissioned into the Rifle Brigade as a 2nd lieutenant on 10 March 1900.[12] He served with the 2nd Battalion in South Africa in the Second Boer War, and having taken part in operations there in August 1900, was promoted to lieutenant on 18 March 1901.[11] He was posted with his battalion to Egypt and then in 1907 to India.[11] Promoted to captain on 2 April 1908 he served with the 3rd Battalion at Bordon in Hampshire and then in Tipperary in Ireland, and in 1911 became Adjutant of the Oxford OTC.[13]
Wilson served in the First World War, being appointed Brigade Major of the 48th Brigade on 15 October 1914; having been promoted to the rank of acting major in December 1914 and then to the substantive rank of major on 15 September 1915, he was sent to France to serve on the Western Front in December 1915.[11] His capabilities as a staff officer led to him being moved to become General Staff Officer (GSO) 2 of the 41st Division on the Somme and of the XIX Corps at Passchendaele.[11] In October 1917 he was appointed GSO 1 of the New Zealand Division with promotion to temporary lieutenant colonel on 28 October 1917.[11] For his war service he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in 1917 and was thrice mentioned in despatches.[11]
After being promoted to brevet lieutenant colonel on 1 January 1919 and being hand-picked for the first post-war staff course at Camberley, Wilson was given command of a company of cadets at Sandhurst.[14] He then became second-in-command of the 2nd Battalion, the Rifle Brigade at Aldershot in August 1923.[14] Next he took command of his regiment's 1st Battalion on the North-West Frontier in January 1927, receiving promotion to the substantive rank of lieutenant colonel on 15 June 1927.[15]
Returning to be an instructor at Camberley in June 1930, Wilson spent 9 months on half pay in 1933.[14] Promoted to temporary brigadier, he became Commander of 6th Infantry Brigade in 1934 and having been promoted to major-general on 30 April 1935, he became General Officer Commanding 2nd Division in August 1937.[16][14]
Second World War
Egypt (1939–1941)
On 15 June 1939, Wilson was appointed General Officer Commanding the British Troops in Egypt, with the rank of lieutenant general,[17] in which role he was also responsible for giving military advice for a range of countries from Abyssinia to the Persian Gulf. He made his HQ in Cairo and undertook successful negotiations with the Egyptian government at their summer quarters in Alexandria. The Treaty of 1936 called for the Egyptian army to fight under British command in the event of war and to supplement the limited force then at his disposal — an armoured division then being formed (later to be the 7th Armoured Division) and eight British battalions. He concentrated his defensive forces at Mersa Matruh some 100 miles from the border with Libya.[18]
Early in August, General Archibald Wavell was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Middle East Command, and he sent reinforcements which had been sought by Wilson, initially the Indian 4th Infantry Division and advanced elements of 6th Australian Division[19] and, as the buildup at Mersa Matruh continued, Richard O'Connor and his staff at 7th Infantry Division in Palestine were moved to Egypt to reinforce Wilson's command structure there. O'Connor's HQ, initially designated British 6th Infantry Division, was activated in November and became responsible for the troops at Mersa Matruh. It was redesignated Western Desert Force in June 1940.[20]
On 10 June 1940, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini declared war. Immediately Wilson's forces invaded Libya. However, their advance was reversed when on 17 June France sought an armistice and the Italians were able to move their forces from the Tunisian border in the West and reinforce with 4 divisions those that opposed Wilson in the East. The Italian forces invaded Egypt in September 1940, and advanced some 60 miles (97 km) to occupy Sidi Barrani. Wilson was facing very superior forces. He had 31,000 troops to the Italians' 80,000, 120 tanks against 275, and 120 artillery pieces against 250. He realised that the situation was one where the traditional text books would not provide a solution. As with other 1940s commanders he had been well-schooled in the strategy, and in thorough secrecy, he planned to disrupt the advance of the superior forces by attacking their extended lines at the right spots. After a conference with Eden and Wavell in October and rejecting Wavell's suggestion for a two-pronged attack, Wilson launched Operation Compass on 7 December 1940. The strategy was outstandingly successful and very quickly the Italian forces were cut in half.[21]
While Operation Compass continued successfully in 1941 and resulted in the complete defeat of the Italian Army in North Africa, Wilson, who was already highly regarded by his First World War regimental colleague and now Secretary of State for War, Anthony Eden, had also won the confidence of Churchill himself. In a broadcast Churchill said, "General Wilson, who actually commands the Army of the Nile, was reputed to be one of our finest tacticians, and few will now deny him that quality."[22]
Wilson was recalled to Cairo in February 1941 where he was offered and accepted the position of Military Governor of Cyrenaica.[14]
Greece (April 1941)
Wilson was appointed to lead a Commonwealth expeditionary force of two infantry divisions and an armoured brigade to help Greece resist Italy and the subsequent German invasion in April 1941. Although the Allied forces were hopelessly inadequate Churchill's War Cabinet had thought it important to provide support for the only country outside the Commonwealth which was resisting the Axis advance. Wilson completed the evacuation of British troops from Greece on 29 April 1941.[14] He was appointed a GBE on 4 March 1941[2] and promoted to full general on 31 May 1941.[23]
Syria, Iraq and Palestine (1941–1943)
In May 1941, on his return from Greece, Wilson was appointed GOC British Forces in Palestine and Trans-Jordan and oversaw the successful Syria-Lebanon campaign, in which predominantly Australian, British, Indian, and Free French forces overcame Vichy French forces in fierce fighting.[24] In July 1941 Churchill recommended Wilson to take command of the Western Desert Force to lead it in its upcoming offensive operation against the Afrika Korps, what would become Operation Crusader of November 1941, but General Sir Claude Auchinleck preferred instead Lieutenant General Sir Alan Cunningham.[25] In October 1941 Wilson took command of the Ninth Army in Syria and Palestine and was appointed to the honorary title of Aide-de-Camp General to the King.[26]
Described as "sound but not spectacular",[27] Wilson enjoyed the confidence of Winston Churchill.[28] Wilson was Winston Churchill's choice to succeed Auchinleck as commander of the Eighth Army in August 1942. However, at the urging of the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Sir Alan Brooke, General Sir Bernard Montgomery was appointed to the post. Instead, Wilson was appointed to command the newly created independent Persia and Iraq Command on 21 August 1942.[29] This command, which had been part of Middle East Command, was created when it appeared that Germany, following successes in southern Russia, might invade Persia (Iran).[note 1]
C-in-C Middle East (1943)
In February 1943, after Montgomery's success at Alamein and the expulsion of Axis forces from North Africa, Wilson was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Middle East.[24] The Middle East was by this time comparatively removed from the main centres of fighting. However, on orders from London to create a diversion during the fighting in Italy, in September 1943 he organised an unsuccessful attempt to occupy the small Greek islands of Kos, Leros and Samos. The British forces suffered large losses to German air attacks and subsequent landings.[24]
Supreme Allied Commander Mediterranean (1944)
Wilson succeeded Dwight D. "Ike" Eisenhower at Allied Forces Headquarters (AFHQ) as the Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean on 8 January 1944 based at Algiers.[24] As such he exercised strategic control over the campaign in Italy. He strongly advocated the invasion of Germany via the Danube plain, but this did not take place when the armies in Italy were weakened to support other theatres of war.[31] Jumbo Wilson was keen to follow through wit the deception plan Undercut, when unexpectedly the Germans decided to withdraw from Greece altogether. Although advised by Dudley Clarke that it might backfire and was unnecessary, Wilson was aware of the strategic complexities of the political situation. Every plan the General Staff had a shadow, integrated by 1944 with the American allies at all strategy levels; even to employ an actor imitating Monty arrive at Jumbo's HQ in Algiers.[a]
Washington Mission (1945–1947)
In December 1944, following the death of Field Marshal Sir John Dill, Wilson was relieved as Supreme Commander, promoted to field marshal on 29 December 1944,[32] and sent to Washington to be Chief of the British Joint Staff Mission, a post he took up in January 1945.[24] One of Wilson's most secret duties was as the British military representative on the Combined Policy Committee which dealt with the development, production and testing of the atom bomb.[24] Wilson continued to serve as head of the British Joint Staff Mission until 1947, to the satisfaction of Britain and the United States. President Truman awarded him the Distinguished Service Medal in November 1945.[7]
Post-war
In January 1946 he was appointed aide-de-camp to George VI of the United Kingdom and was then created Baron Wilson, of Libya and of Stowlangtoft in the County of Suffolk.[33] From 1955 to 1960 he was Constable of the Tower of London. Wilson had married Hester Wykeham in 1914 and had one son and a daughter.[34] The son, Lieutenant-Colonel Patrick Maitland Wilson, accompanied his father in the Middle East during the Second World War as an intelligence officer. The son's memoirs, Where the Nazis Came, provide anecdotes and descriptions of important events in his father's war service. Never a rich man, when Field Marshal Lord Wilson died on 31 December 1964 in Chilton, Buckinghamshire,[10] his estate was proved at only £2,952 (roughly ₤100,000 in 2013[35]). His only son Patrick succeeded him in the barony.[36]
References
- Notes
- ^ The Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Alan Brooke, had been reluctant to make this appointment because he thought Wilson was too old and tired for the job. However, he later wrote "...I was totally wrong as I soon discovered, and he was still capable of giving the most valuable service. An exceptionally clear brain, a strong personality and an imperturbable character."[30]
- Citations
- ^ "No. 36544". The London Gazette (Supplement). 6 August 1944.
- ^ a b "No. 35094". The London Gazette. 4 March 1941.
- ^ "No. 29886". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 1917.
- ^ "No. 36065". The London Gazette (Supplement). 22 June 1943.
- ^ "No. 35519". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 April 1942.
- ^ "No. 36828". The London Gazette (Supplement). 5 December 1944.
- ^ a b "No. 37442". The London Gazette (Supplement). 24 January 1946.
- ^ "No. 37521". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 April 1946.
- ^ "No. 40557". The London Gazette. 9 August 1955.
- ^ a b "Encyclopaedia Britannica". Retrieved 1 August 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f g Heathcote, p.308
- ^ "No. 27172". The London Gazette. 9 March 1900.
- ^ "No. 28544". The London Gazette. 24 October 1911.
- ^ a b c d e f Heathcote, p. 309
- ^ "No. 33284". The London Gazette. 14 June 1927.
- ^ "No. 34155". The London Gazette. 30 April 1935.
- ^ "No. 34639". The London Gazette. 23 June 1939.
- ^ "No. 37628". The London Gazette (invalid
|supp=
(help)). 25 June 1946. - ^ Mead (2007), p. 489
- ^ "Chapter 3 – Western Desert Force". University of Wellington. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
- ^ "No. 37628". The London Gazette (invalid
|supp=
(help)). 25 June 1946. - ^ "Churchill Broadcast Takes Stock of War". Jewish Virtual Library. 9 February 1941. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
- ^ "No. 35175". The London Gazette (invalid
|supp=
(help)). 27 May 1941. - ^ a b c d e f Heathcote, p. 310
- ^ Churchill vol 3 pp. 405–406
- ^ "No. 36544". The London Gazette (Supplement). 5 December 1941.
- ^ Mead (2007), p. 496
- ^ Mead (2007), pp. 495–496
- ^ Alanbrooke Diaries, 21 August 1942
- ^ Alanbrooke diaries, postscript to entry of 21 August 1942
- ^ Fisher, p. 258
- ^ "No. 36861". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 December 1944.
- ^ "No. 37498". The London Gazette. 12 March 1946.
- ^ "Henry Maitland Wilson, 1st Baron Wilson". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
- ^ "Measuring worth". Retrieved 28 April 2013.
- ^ Heathcote, p. 311
Sources
- Alanbrooke, Field Marshal Lord (edited by Alex Danchev and Daniel Todman) (2001). War Diaries 1939–1945. Phoenix Press. ISBN 1-84212-526-5.
{{cite book}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - Churchill, Winston (1948). The Second World War 6 volumes. Cassell. ASIN B000H6E98Q.
- Fisher, Ernest F. Jr. (1993). United States Army in World War 2, Mediterranean Theater of Operations, Cassino to the Alps: With a Portfolio of Maps. Government Printing Office.
- Heathcote, Tony (1999). The British Field Marshals 1736–1997. Barnsley (UK): Pen & Sword. ISBN 0-85052-696-5.
- Mead, Richard (2007). Churchill's Lions: A biographical guide to the key British generals of World War II. Stroud (UK): Spellmount. pp. 544 pages. ISBN 978-1-86227-431-0.
Further reading
- Dewar, Michael (1991). "Wilson" in Keegan, John (ed.): Churchill's Generals. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-8021-1309-5.
- Gun, W.T.J. (16 April 1941). A Fighting Ancestry – Letter in The Times. p. 5.
- Hackett, J.W (1985). "Wilson, Henry Maitland in Dictionary of National Biography". Retrieved 17 July 2016.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|subscription=
ignored (|url-access=
suggested) (help) - Houterman, Hans; Koppes, Jeroen. "World War II unit histories and officers". Retrieved 18 February 2009.
- Wilson, Henry Maitland (1948). Eight Years Overseas, 1939 – 1947. Hutchinson. ASIN B001P8LJWO.
- Wilson, Henry Maitland (1946). Despatch on the Persia and Iraq Command covering the period 21st August 1942 to 17th February 1943. published in "No. 37703". The London Gazette (Supplement). 27 August 1946.
- Wilson, Patrick Maitland (2002). Where the Nazis Came. Scotforth Books. ISBN 1-904244-23-8.
- Obituary in The Times. 1 January 1965.
- "One Of Our Finest Tacticians" in The Times. 12 April 1941. p. 3.
- "Persia-Iraq command" in The Times. 25 August 1942.
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