James Hargest
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Brigadier-General James Hargest CBE, DSO & 2 bars, MC, ED, MP, (4 September 1891 - 12 August 1944) was a New Zealand military officer and politician.
Hargest was born in Gore, where his father was a farmer. He joined the Territorial Force in 1911, and when World War I broke out, he volunteered to serve in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, being commissioned as a second lieutenant. He fought and was wounded at the Battle of Gallipoli, and later fought in France. By the end of the war, he had risen to command a battalion, and had been awarded the Military Cross, the DSO, and the French Légion d'honneur.
Upon his return to New Zealand, Hargest returned to farming, buying land near Invercargill. He became active in local affairs, and in 1931, he was elected to Parliament as the MP for Invercargill. Hargest was a supporter of the coalition between the United Party and the Reform Party. When the coalition solidified to become the National Party, Hargest joined it formally.
With the outbreak of World War II, Hargest sought to return to military service. Initially, he was turned down on medical grounds, but this was overridden by the Prime Minister, Michael Joseph Savage. Hargest left New Zealand in 1940, holding the rank of Brigadier. He and his forces took part in the Battle of Crete, and subsequently the Western Desert Campaign. In late 1941, Hargest was captured, and was imprisoned in Castle Vincigliata, near Florence, along with a number of other Allied officers. A group of officers, including Hargest, managed to escape — Hargest and Brigadier Miles, another New Zealander were the only two to reach safety in neutral Switzerland. With the help of the French Resistance, Hargest travelled through France to Spain, from which he flew to England. Later, he was appointed New Zealand's observer in the D-Day landings in Normandy, being attached to a British division. On 12 August 1944, he was killed by shell fire.
James Hargest College in Invercargill is named after him.