Robert Brooke-Popham
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Sir Robert Brooke-Popham | |
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18 September 1878 – 20 October 1953 | |
Brooke-Popham with General Wavell |
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Nickname | Brookham[1] |
Place of birth | Mendlesham, Suffolk, England |
Place of death | RAF Halton, Buckinghamshire, England |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/branch | Royal Air Force |
Rank | Air Chief Marshal |
Commands held | Iraq Command Air Defence of Great Britain British Far East Command |
Battles/wars | South African War World War I World War II |
Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Moore "Henry" Brooke-Popham,[2] GCVO, KCB, Kt., CMG, DSO, AFC, (18 September 1878 – 20 October 1953) was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. Most notably, Brooke-Popham was Commander-in-Chief of the British Far East Command only months before Singapore fell to Japanese troops.
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[edit] Family life and education
Brooke-Popham was born in England in the Suffolk village of Mendlesham on 18 September 1878.[3] His parents were, Henry Brooke, a country gentleman of Wetheringsett Manor in Suffolk and his wife Dulcibella who was the daughter of the Reverend Robert Moore.[4]
Brooke-Popham's education was not atypical of a man entering the British officer class. After schooling at Haileybury and officer training at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, he was commissioned in 1898.[5] In January 1926, Brooke-Popham married Opal Mary, the daughter of Edgar Hugonin. They later had a son and a daughter.[4]
[edit] Early military career
After graduating from Sandhurst in May 1898, Brooke-Popham was gazetted to the Oxfordshire Light Infantry in the rank of second lieutenant.[5] As a subaltern Brooke-Popham saw action in the Second Boer War during 1899 and 1900 and on 26 April 1902 he was seconded for duty in South Africa. During his time in South Africa he served in the Orange Free State, Transvaal, Orange River Colony and Cape Colony. By 1910 Brooke-Popham had returned to Great Britain and attended the Army Staff College at Camberley in that year.[6]
[edit] Military aviation before World War I
Brooke-Popham was attached to the Air Battalion of the Royal Engineers during its manoeuvres of 1911, after which he decided to learn to fly. He attended the flying school at Brooklands and gained Royal Aero Club certificate number 108 in July 1911.
Upon completion of flying training, Brooke-Popham remained an infantry officer. However, in early 1912 he transferred to the Air Battalion, taking up duties as a pilot in March. The next month, Brooke-Popham was appointed Officer Commanding of the Battalion's Aeroplane Company.
With the creation of the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) from the Air Battalion on 13 May 1912, Brooke-Popham was transferred to the RFC. He was appointed Officer Commanding of No. 2 Squadron; however a week later he was appointed Officer Commanding of No. 3 Squadron which effectively put him back in charge of his old squadron as No. 3 Squadron was the successor unit to the Air Battalion's Aeroplane Company.
[edit] World War I
Following the outbreak of World War I, Brooke-Popham went to France as the Deputy Assistant Adjutant and Quartermaster-General in the headquarters of the Royal Flying Corps where he was responsible for the administrative and technical support of the squadrons deployed in the field. His understanding of the importance of air power and its support to land forces led him to criticize the lack of adequate air support to the British Expeditionary Force.
On 20 November 1914 Brooke-Popham was appointed Officer Commanding of No. 3 Wing of the RFC. At this time the wing consisted of No. 1 and No. 4 squadrons and on the same day as his appointment, Brooke-Popham received a temporary promotion to lieutenant colonel. During the Battle of Neuve Chapelle, Brooke-Popham directed his Wing's operation and was later awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his actions during the Battle.
By 1915 Brooke-Popham was too senior an officer to take part in much operational flying, and he had limited experience of air combat. Rather, his energies were directed in administrative and organizational activities as he served in several staff posts at the RFC's headquarters in France. In May 1915 Brooke-Popham was appointed RFC's Chief Staff Officer and in March 1916 he was the Corps' Deputy Adjutant and Quartermaster-General which saw Brooke-Popham granted the temporary rank of brigadier-general.
With the establishment of the Royal Air Force in April 1918, Brooke-Popham was transferred to the newly created Air Ministry in London. He served as the Controller of Aircraft Production for the remainder of the War and for some months afterwards.
[edit] RAF service during the inter-war years
[edit] Post War honours
Following the end of World War I, Brooke-Popham was decorated for his contribution to the war effort. In January 1919 he was awarded the Air Force Cross and made a companion of the Order of St Michael and St George. Later in the same year he was appointed a companion of the Order of the Bath and was given a permanent commission in the RAF as a colonel. He was rapidly promoted to air commodore when the RAF introduced its own rank system.[5]
[edit] Career progression
From 1919 to 1921, Brooke-Popham served as Director of Research at the Air Ministry and in November 1921 he was tasked with establishing the RAF Staff College at Andover and he became its first commandant on 1 April 1922.
In 1925 the Air Defence of Great Britain had been created and it was charged with defending the United Kingdom from aerial attack. The following year, Brooke-Popham was posted as Air Officer Commanding (AOC) the Fighting Area within the Air Defence of Great Britain and he served in this capacity for the next two years. During his time as AOC Fighting Area, Brooke-Popham oversaw the establishment of a chain of huge concrete mirrors which were designed for acoustic early warning and he received a knighthood in 1927.
On 1 November 1928, Brooke-Popham was appointed AOC Iraq Command. This high profile position put him in charge of all British forces in Iraq and, when the post of high commissioner was vacant, he acted in that capacity as well. The start of 1931 saw Brooke-Popham promoted to air marshal and then posted as the first RAF officer to serve as commandant of the Imperial Defence College. Two years later in 1933, he returned to the Air Defence of Great Britain, this time in the senior post of Air Officer Commander-in-Chief. Later that year Brooke-Popham received the honorary appointment of Principal Aide-de-Camp to the King. In 1935 he left the Air Defence of Great Britain to become the Inspector General of the RAF. This was, however, a short-lived appointment and he was posted later that year.
[edit] Commander-in-Chief RAF Middle East
In late 1935, Brooke-Popham took up the post of Air Officer Commander-in-Chief RAF Middle East with his headquarters in Cairo. His appointment took place not long after the outbreak of the Second Italo-Abyssinian War in October 1935 and his principal aim was to deter the Regia Aeronautica from attacking British territory in north east Africa. In 1937, Brooke-Popham relinquished his command and returned to Great Britain, retiring from the RAF on 6 March.
[edit] Governor of Kenya
Following Italy's occupation of Ethiopia, the British Government wanted a military man to hold the post of Governor of Kenya. Brooke-Popham was appointed Governor and Commander-in-Chief of Kenya in 1937 and his military expertise was useful in helping the colony prepare for a possible war with Italy. Under his direction, a plan was devised which concentrated defensive resources on the strategically important port of Mombasa which was judged to be the most likely Italian target. Although this left Nairobi and the highlands with only limited defences, the barren regions of northern Kenya meant that the inland settlements were geographically protected from the Italian threat further to the north. Eventually, as the Italian occupation of Ethiopia was characterized by strife and unrest, the threat to Kenya dissipated.
Brooke-Popham's governorship was also marked by improved relations with the settlers. His predecessor had sought to dominante the political and economic life of the colony which had aroused repeated opposition from some of the settlers' leaders. However, in courting settler opinion, some historians have criticized Brooke-Popham for failing to deal with those settlers who wanted to limit African and Asian freedoms in Kenya.
In 1939 on the outbreak of World War II, Brooke-Popham ordered the internment of all Germans in Kenya, directed that all aircraft be commandeered and devised a plan to keep the colony's farms running. On 30 September 1939 he relinquished the governorship and returned to Great Britain.
[edit] World War II
[edit] Commonwealth Air Training Plan
Brooke-Popham rejoined the RAF shortly after his return to Great Britain and only weeks after the outbreak of World War II. He was first appointed as head of the RAF's training mission to Canada where he worked on the establishment of the Commonwealth Air Training Plan. In 1940 Brooke-Popham was made head of the training mission to South Africa where he continued work on the Plan.
[edit] Commander-in-Chief Far East Command
[edit] Command arrangements
On 18 November 1940, at the age of 62, Brooke-Popham was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the British Far East Command[7] making him responsible for defence matters in Singapore, Malaya, Burma and Hong Kong. This was a considerably more demanding undertaking than any of Brooke-Popham's many previous appointments. The Command had been newly created and Brooke-Popham was the first RAF officer to be appointed Commander-in-Chief of a joint command during a major world conflict. Additionally, there was a significant gap between the Commander-in-Chief's responsibility and his authority, as Brooke-Popham was nominally responsible for all defence matters in the British Far East colonies but the Royal Navy units in these waters did not come under his command; rather they reported to their own naval commander-in-chief in London. Furthermore, the civil servants in the Far East also did not report to the Commander-in-Chief, working instead for ministers in London.
[edit] Insufficient defences
With the Japanese threatening in south-east Asia, Brooke-Popham knew he had to build up the defences of the region. Those defences which already existed were primarily directed towards an attack from the sea and everywhere sufficient forces were lacking. The Command's aerial defences were particularly deficient and the priority attached to operations in the Middle East meant that British resources were directed elsewhere. During the following year, Brooke-Popham struggled without much success to build up defences, get the much-needed reinforcements and rectify the unsound command arrangements.
[edit] Operation Matador
In August 1941 Brooke-Popham submitted a plan for the defence of Malaya to London for approval. This plan, code-named Matador, worked on the basis that the Japanese would land on the east coast of Thailand and then advance south. The essence of Operation Matador was that Allied forces would advance into Thailand and fight the Japanese there. However, the plan relied upon force levels not available to Brooke-Popham and involved violating neutral Thailand with whom a non-aggression pact had been signed the previous year.
Concern regarding the situation prompted the government in London to send Duff Cooper as a special cabinet envoy. Copper's arrival in September 1941, did not help to maintain Brooke-Popham's authority in a difficult situation.
On 22 November, with the Japanese establishing sea and air bases in southern Indo-China, Brooke-Popham urged London that Operation Matador should be put into effect, granting him permission to advance into southern Thailand. Brooke-Popham did eventually receive permission on 5 December although many conditions were attached. The plan was reworked to take account of the limited forces available and on 8 December the war with Japan began.
Although it had been agreed in London that Brooke-Popham should be replaced as commander-in-chief on 1 November 1941, the change was not made because of the critical situation. However, with the war with Japan now unfolding, many believed that Brooke-Popham was near to a nervous collapse. The cabinet envoy Duff Cooper urged his replacement and London agreed. On 27 December, at the height of the battle for Malaya, Brooke-Popham handed over command to Sir Henry Pownall.
Brooke-Popham's return to Great Britain was closely followed by the fall of Singapore on 15 February 1942. Inevitably, Brooke-Popham was associated with the collapse and he was publicly attacked by some in Britain as the man chiefly responsible for the defeat.
[edit] Later War years
In May 1942, Brooke-Popham retired from active service in the RAF for the second time. His reputation severely damaged by the events in the Far East, he nevertheless continued to serve where he could. At some stage in 1942, Brooke-Popham became Inspector-General of the Air Training Corps, a position he continued in until 1945. From 1944 to 1946, he served as President of the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes Council.[5]
[edit] Later years
After Brooke-Popham relinquished his role as President of the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes Council, he lived in retirement. Brooke-Popham died in the hospital at RAF Halton in Buckinghamshire on 20 October 1953.
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[edit] Footnotes and references
- ^ Bourne, J M. Generals' Nicknames - No48: Robert Brooke-Popham ('Brookham') (HTML). Centre for First World War Studies Web Site. Retrieved on 2007-09-10.
- ^ Brooke-Popham's surname at birth was Brooke. On 6 May 1904 he assumed the additional surname of Popham by Royal Warrant which was the name of a much admired ancestor.
- ^ Schemmel, B. Index Br-By (HTML). Rulers.org. Retrieved on 2007-09-06.
- ^ a b Wykeham, Peter; Thomas Paul Ofcansky. Popham, Sir (Henry) Robert Moore Brooke (HTML). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
- ^ a b c d Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Brooke-Popham (HTML). Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation. Retrieved on 2007-09-10.
- ^ Summary Guide - ACM Sir (Henry) Robert (Moore) (1878-1953) (HTML). Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives. King's College London. Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
- ^ Timeline - Follow the sequence of events in the Japanese campaign leading to the fall of Singapore (HTML). No Prisoners. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (2002). Retrieved on 2007-09-10.
[edit] Further reading
- Air of Authority - A History of RAF Organisation - Air Chf Mshl Brooke-Popham
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - Sir (Henry) Robert Moore Brooke-Popham (requires login)
Military offices | ||
---|---|---|
New title College established
|
Commandant RAF Staff College, Andover 1922 – 1926 |
Succeeded by E R Ludlow-Hewitt |
Preceded by E L Ellington |
Air Officer Commanding Iraq Command 1928–1930 |
Succeeded by E R Ludlow-Hewitt |
Preceded by W H Bartholomew |
Commandant Imperial Defence College 1931 – 1933 |
Succeeded by Sir Lionel Preston |
Preceded by Sir Geoffrey Salmond |
Commander-in-Chief Air Defence of Great Britain 1933–1935 |
Succeeded by Sir John Steel |
Vacant
Title last held by
Sir Godfrey Paine |
Inspector-General of the RAF 1935 |
Succeeded by Sir Edward Ellington |
New title Command established
|
Commander-in-Chief Far East Command 1940 – 1941 |
Succeeded by Sir Henry Pownall |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by Sir Joseph Aloysius Byrne |
Governor of Kenya 1937–1939 |
Succeeded by Sir Henry Moore |