Henry Hughes Wilson

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Henry Wilson
Henry Wilson

Sir Henry Hughes Wilson, 1st Baronet, GCB, DSO, (May 5, 1864June 22, 1922) was a British Field Marshal and Conservative Party politician. Wilson was killed by the Irish Republican Army in 1922.

Wilson was born in Currygrane, Ballinalee, County Longford, Ireland and was the second son of James and Constance Wilson, of Currygrane. He was educated at Marlborough College, and made unsuccessful attempts to get into the British Army colleges Royal Military Academy and Sandhurst between 1880 and 1882. In 1882, he succeeded in being commissioned as a Lieutenant in the Longford Militia (which was a militia battalion of The Rifle Brigade) and then transferred to a regular battalion.[citation needed]

He served in Burma where he received several serious wounds, including an eye wound and one which forced him to use a walking-stick for the rest of his life. He later worked in Intelligence Department of the War Office where his fluent French and German was useful.

In 1897, he became Brigade Major of the 3rd Brigade at Aldershot, and from 1899 to 1901 he saw active service during the Second Boer War with the 4th (Light) Brigade before becoming assistant military secretary to Lord Roberts and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order.

He returned to England in 1901 and spent some time as commander of the 9th Provisional Battalion, and the rest as a staff officer. Promotion followed in 1907 when he became a Brigadier-General and commanded the Staff College at Camberley, Surrey until 1910, when he became Director of Military Operations at the British War Office.

Memorial To Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson At Liverpool Street Station London
Memorial To Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson At Liverpool Street Station London

In 1914, he surreptitiously supported British Army officers who refused to lead troops against Ulster Unionists opponents of Third Irish Home Rule Bill in the Curragh Mutiny. This damaged his career and he was not appointed Chief of Staff to Sir John French. At the start of the First World War, he was liaison officer to the French Army but, due to his poor relations with Philippe Pétain[citation needed], was replaced. From December 1915 until December 1916, he commanded IV Corps in France.

In September 1917, he took over the Eastern Command, which allowed him to live in London and worked closely with Prime Minister David Lloyd George. In February 1918, he was promoted to Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS), effectively the head of the British army, and was the principal military adviser to Lloyd George in the last year of the First World War.

After the war, on July 3, 1919, he was promoted to British Field Marshal, awarded £10,000 by the British Parliament and made a baronet. At the Paris Peace Conference, he acted as Britain's chief military adviser but found himself in increasing disagreement with Lloyd George. He resigned from the army and became a Member of Parliament for North Down. After 1921 he was Sir James Craig's parliament's military adviser. He always advised that Catholics should not be discriminated against.[citation needed]

On June 22, 1922, two English-born members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), Reginald Dunne and Joseph O'Sullivan, shot and killed Sir Henry Wilson as he returned to his Eaton Square home after unveiling a war memorial in Liverpool Street Station. Two policemen were also shot as the pair tried to make good their escape. They were then surrounded by a crowd and arrested by other policemen. They were hanged on August 10, 1922. The shooting of Wilson may have been ordered by Irish Free State General Michael Collins[1] in retaliation for the continuing troubles in Northern Ireland.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dwyer, T. Ryle (2005) The Squad, Dublin, pp.256-258
  • Field-Marshal Sir Henry Wilson: His Life and Diaries by Major-General Sir C E Callwell, Cassell, 1927.

[edit] External links

Military Offices
Preceded by
Sir William Robertson
Chief of the Imperial General Staff
1918–1922
Succeeded by
The Earl of Cavan
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Thomas Watters Brown
Member of Parliament for North Down
19221922
Succeeded by
John Morrow Simms