Robert Selby Armitage

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Robert Selby Armitage
28 March 190526 May 1982
Place of birth Birling, Kent, England
Place of death Nettlebed, Oxfordshire, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
Rank Lieutenant Commander
Unit HMS Vernon
Battles/wars World War II bomb disposal
Awards George Cross
George Medal
Other work Stockbroker

Lieutenant-Commander Robert Selby Armitage GC, GM, RNVR (28 March 190526 May 1982) won both the George Cross and George Medal for his bomb disposal work during the Second World War.[1] He is one of only eight people to have been awarded both the George Cross and George Medal.[2]

The son of the Rev. Philip Armitage (1870-1960) and his wife Elizabeth Christina Armitage, née Marshall (c1875-1934), he was born in Birling in Kent on 28 March 1905[3] and educated at Rugby School and Trinity College, Cambridge.[4] On 28 September 1938 he married Frances Bland Tucker.

He defused unexploded bombs during the blitz in 1940, notably a mine that fell on Orpington in Kent. The mine had come to rest in a tree and he climbed a ladder to defuse it, offering no chance of escape if the fuse had been triggered. His George Cross was gazetted in the London Gazette on 27 December 1940, and he was invested on 24 May 1941 at the medal's first investiture ceremony. He was one of four recipients: one civilian and one each from the Navy, Army and Air Force.[5]

Also in 1940, he commanded a small coaster at the evacuation of the British Army from Dunkirk.[6]

His George Medal, gazetted on 15 February 1944, was for mine disposal work at Corton Sands, Suffolk on 15 June 1942 while serving in HMS Vernon.

On 26 May 1982, at his home in Nettlebed, Oxfordshire, he shot his wife, wounding her slightly, and then killed himself.[7]

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