�Quartermaster
Sergeant William Francis Harvey (1901-1956)����
Born 10th
March 1901 at 15 Streets Buildings, Sumner Street, Southwark, London. The
son of Petty Officer Francis Harvey (RN Chatham 134208 1895-1923 service
pension) and Maria Susan Harvey (buried Hammersmith May 1921), younger
brother of Lila Ada Harvey 1899-1914 (buried Nunhead, undertakers at
Lambeth). Aged 16 went to the Recruiting Office to sign up and was sent home
for his birth certificate. Signed up in either 1918 or 1919, wanted to go in
the Tank Corps but he had flat feet so was put in a Foot Regiment. During
his Service career he was promoted to Quartermaster Sergeant. He passed the
examinations for officer training at Sandhurst but did not take this
up�(Officers had to pay mess and other bills that lower ranks didn't). Was
in India in 1923, Egypt before that. Left the Army in 1926 (reason not
known). Then lived at 60 Cardross Street, Hammersmith, London W6 when he
joined London Transport (Buses) in August 1927 initially as a Conductor,
then Inspector, later was promoted to Operating Manager/Depot Inspector.
Married 1928 (his widow now iro 104!). (Lived at Station Road, Hanwell I
think before moving to Lady Margaret Road, Southall). His only daughter born
1929 (my mother). 2 grand-daughters. He retired on medical grounds in
November 1955. Died 19th March 1956 at his home in Hanwell, London. Cremated
26th March 1956 at Golders Green.
Apprenticed
as a hairdresser in Wardour Street. We don't know if this was before he
joined up or after he left the Army.
A pity Will
destroyed so much "stuff" before his death. Some papers were destroyed and
several medals (his father's) were stolen by burglars in the 1960s too,
luckily the older records and family photos survived. I guess he didn't say
much about his time in the Army. Apparently he wasn't in Ireland and we
don't know if he had any medals. Not sure if his father lived in Hammersmith
or Fulham after Southwark, before re-marrying. Later lived with them
(presumably at Southall).
QMS Harvey would have served in the Royal Irish Rifles at the time of his
enlistment and then with the Royal Ulster Rifles, however the picture to the
left shows him wearing the cap badge of the Royal Irish Fusiliers this would
have
been common place in those days.
(information
and photographs provided by kind permission of his Grand-Daughter Moira
Doherty thank you)
Some of his
photographs sent home
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and because of this Christmas card that he sent home
to his mother in 1920 it inspired me to do a piece on this other fine
soldier
-----o0o-----
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Field-Marshal Sir Henry Hughes Wilson.� Bt GCB DSO����� 1864 -
1922
�
�
Colonel of the Regiment� ROYAL IRISH RIFLES�
1915 - 1921
Colonel of the Regiment� ROYAL ULSTER RIFLES�
1921 - 1922
British field marshal,
born in Edgeworthstown, Ireland. He served in Burma and the Boer War, was
commander of the Staff College (1910--14), entered World War 1 as director
of military operations (1914), and rose to be Chief of the Imperial General
Staff (1918--22). He was knighted in 1919. He left the army in 1922 and
became MP for North Down, later that year� was assassinated by two I R A
members on the doorstep of his house in London.
Early
Career
Born May
5th, 1864, second son of James and Constance Wilson, of Currygrane, County
Longford, Ireland. Attended Marlborough School. Failed twice for Woolwich
and three times for Sandhurst in the years 1880-2. A very tall man, Wilson
was gazetted a Lieutenant in the Longford Militia (the 6th Bn, the Rifle
Brigade) - a back-door route to a military career. After a short period of
training in Darmstadt, eventually transferred to the 1st RB. Received a
serious eye wound while on active service in Burma; other injuries forced
him to walk with a stick thereafter. Spent a period in the 'French' section
of the Intelligence Department of the War Office. He spoke French and German
quite fluently. By September 1st, 1897, Wilson had achieved the rank of
Brigade-Major to the 3rd Brigade at Aldershot.
During the
war in South Africa, 1899-1902, the 3rd Brigade - renumbered the 4th (Light)
Brigade for active service- took part in many actions in Natal, including
The Tugela Heights, the Relief of Ladysmith, and the action of Laing's Neck.
Wilson eventually spent time as assistant military secretary to the
Commander-in-Chief, Lord Roberts; was awarded the DSO. He returned to
England early in 1901. After more time at the War Office, Wilson was
appointed to the temporary command of the 9th Provisional Battalion. On
return to staff duties, he played a considerable part in compiling the new
manual on Cavalry Training, and was deeply involved in the restructuring of
military training generally. He left the War Office without a single regret,
except that of an incomplete and unsatisfied endeavour to get a number of
useful and necessary reforms carried out'.
Early in 1907, Wilson was promoted to
Brigadier-General, and became Commandant of the Staff College. During his
time at Camberley, he took the opportunity to make study tours of the French
north-eastern frontier, and struck up good relationships with many of the
senior officers of the French Army, including Ferdinand Foch (who at the
time was his equivalent at the French Staff College). Wilson was a great
francophile, and encouraged a much increased unofficial dialogue with the
French Army. In August 1910, he was succeeded at Camberley by 'Wully'
Robertson, and took up the appointment as Director of Military Operations.
During his
time as DMO, Wilson carried out numerous reforms and made significant
progress countering what he perceived to be a lack of practical preparation
for war. He met with Bethmann-Hollweg and Von Tirpitz during an official
visit to Berlin - which was not long after followed by the Agadir crisis,
when it became starkly clear that Germany was considering war. Invited to a
special meeting of the Committee of Imperial Defence on August 23rd, 1911
(three years to the day before the BEF came to blows with the German Army at
Mons) Wilson presented his thoughts concerning a likely German attack in
Europe, and how the BEF should be deployed. It was the first time that the
planned six Divisions of the BEF were definitely placed on the left flank of
the French Army. Wilson made a favourable impression, particularly on
Churchill, Seely and Grey. Conversations with the French General Staff were
stepped up. But in the meantime, by mid-1914 another crisis was developing -
in Ireland.
�Wilson
and The Curragh Incident
�The
Government was considering using British troops in Ireland to suppress a
growing, organised revolt by the Protestant community in the North against
the Home Rule Bill. This was a most serious crisis, seemingly heading for a
civil war. In Parliament, in the Army and in the country generally was a
belief that the Government could not possibly deploy force to coerce the
Ulster population into separating from Britain. Bonar Law, MP told Wilson
that the House of Lords would bring in an amendment to the forthcoming Army
Annual Bill to the effect that the army would not be used in this way. Bu
shortly afterwards, it became clear that other senior politicians were
planning to 'scatter troops all over Ulster, as though it were a Pontypool
coal strike'. On July 20th, 1914, Wilson heard from General John Gough that
his brother Hubert Gough, commanding the Cavalry Brigade stationed at The
Curragh, had been ordered to either undertake operations against Ulster or
be dismissed the service. Given two hours to decide, Gough had accepted
dismissal. (Wilson and Gough were, of course, from Ireland themselves). By
evening, all of the 50 officers of the 16th Lancers had resigned. The crisis
rapidly escalated, with Wilson a leading voice in support of Gough. Seely
resigned from the War Office, replaced by Asquith; Ewart resigned as CIGS,
replaced by Sir Charles Douglas. Eventually the Government made sufficient
promises that the army would not be used to quell a civil disturbance on
British soil, and the crisis slowly abated. Wilson, Gough and many others
became 'marked men' as a result of this incident, which had an important
effect on relationships with the Government and the military hierarchy
throughout the succeeding years.
�The
Great War
�At
the outbreak of the war, Wilson was still in place as DMO at the War Office.
He attended the first War Council at 4pm on the 4th August 1914 : 'An
historic meeting of men, mostly entirely ignorant of the subject' according
to Wilson's diary. This Council endorsed the Wilson-inspired plans to send
the BEF to France immediately, with Wilson himself in the unusual role of
Sub-Chief of the General Staff. He disagreed at subsequent meetings with
Kitchener, who proposed to keep a Division in England as a counter-measure
to the feared invasion. This early tussle with the new War Minister -
together with his reputation from the Curragh - had a serious effect on
Wilson's career for the next two years. Wilson travelled with Sir John
French to French GHQ on 15th August, and on to the infamous first meeting
with Lanrezac. Wilson played a liaison role with the French HQs throughout
the Retreat and the so-called Race to the Sea. In late December, a proposal
to appoint Wilson to Chief of the General Staff to replace Murray was vetoed
by both Asquith and Kitchener; he was hurt by Sir John French's
acquiescence, the latter having promised him the post. Robertson was
appointed CGS; Wilson became Principal Liaison Officer with the French Army.
An uneasy relationship between the two was inevitable. Wilson was granted a
Temporary Lieutenant-Generalship in the 1915 New Years Honours, but his name
was struck from the list of proposed KCBs. He was, however, knighted on July
1st, 1919 at Buckingham Palace.
In December
1915, in the wake of the removal of Sir John French as Commander-in-Chief,
to be replaced by Sir Douglas Haig, Wilson resigned his GHQ role. He had
been given to understand that he was to be offered a Corps command. He duly
took command of IV Corps on December 22nd, 1915, taking over from Rawlinson
who was himself taking First Army over from Haig. Whilst under his command,
the Corps had the misfortune of a suffering a surprise attack in front of
Vimy Ridge, losing a significant position in terms of the mine saps which
were at the time causing the Germans considerable difficulties. Wilson's
fledgling reputation as a battle commander took a severe knock. His Corps
remained on the relatively quiet Vimy front while the great Battle of the
Somme unfolded during the Summer of 1916. He left command of the Corps on
December 1st, 1916. For a man of his ambition, he must have been
disappointed to have seen his peers and some juniors rising in rank and
importance during 1916, while he still held only a Corps.
Wilson's
next ventures included a mission to Russia, and - after the fall of Asquith
and the creation of a coalition under David Lloyd George - a conference in
Italy on the subject of Salonika, together with the new Prime Minister. At
this time, Wilson began to win Lloyd George's admiration as a military man
who would back his Eastern schemes. Lloyd George conspired to bring Nivelle
to the highest command on the Western Front, subjugating Haig and the
'Westerners'. He appointed Wilson as Liaison Officer between the two men.
Wilson remained in this position throughout the appalling period when the
British were pushed into the costly Battle of Arras in support of Nivelle's
disastrous attack on the Chemin des Dames, which almost broke the back of
the French Army and at a stroke transferred the weight of responsibility for
carrying on the war on the Western Front onto the BEF. He resigned the post
on 26th June 1917, shortly after Plumer's resounding success at Messines.
After two idle months, Wilson was appointed to Eastern
Command, in England. According to his biographer, Callwell, 'it suited him
well...enabled him to keep in touch with his friends in the Cabinet, in the
War Office, and his friends in Parliament.' While Haig was fighting Third
Ypres, Wilson was intriguing in London. He was invited to accompany his
'friend' Lloyd George to the Rapallo Conference, where the decision was
taken to commence a Supreme War Council. This Council would have a British
Military Representative, who would of course not be Robertson, the CIGS who
Lloyd George despised, but Wilson. Again Callwell: ' the Supreme War
Council...was to a far greater extent his handiwork than it was ...of any
other individual on the side of the Allies'.
�It almost
lost the war for the Allies.
After
serious disagreements about the conduct of the war between Wilson and the
BEF, and political manoeuvring which made it impossible for Robertson to
stay on in the role, Wilson took over as Chief of the Imperial General Staff
in February 1918. To borrow a phrase from a later era, he was now to 'reap
the whirlwind'. The reduction in manpower on the Western Front, together
with two recent extensions of the line occupied by the BEF, had placed Haig
in a most dangerous situation. When the German Army struck on 21st March
1918 - an attack second in importance only to the initial attack in 1914,
and much heavier in terms of weight of artillery - the British suffered huge
losses, lost many miles of ground, and faced crisis. Hit hard again in
Flanders in April, Haig had to call for all backs to the wall to defeat the
onslaught. The crisis led to the creation of the Supreme Command of the
Allied forces on the Western Front, under Foch. This was at Haig's urging,
not Wilson's. The latter disagreed even with Foch's view of how to conduct
war on the Western Front. Foch and Haig, together with a refreshed French
Army pushed hard by Mangin and others, and a numerous if naive assistance
from the new American Army, defeated the German Army on the Western Front
between August and November 1918. Wilson, having achieved the pinnacle of
the British Army, was left to the politics, while the two commanders got on
with winning the war.
�After
the War
In February
1922, Wilson resigned as CIGS, and became a Member of Parliament for the
constituency of North Down, in Ulster. On June 22nd of that year, he was
assassinated by two I R A members on the doorstep of his house in
London. |