Theodore Fraser

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Major-General Sir Theodore Fraser
June 15, 1865 (1865-06-15)May 22, 1953 (aged 87)
Place of birth Edinburgh Flag of England
Place of death Putney, London
Allegiance British Army
Unit Royal Engineers
Awards KCB,CSI,CMG

Major-General Sir Theodore Fraser KCB,CSI, CMG was a British soldier of the Royal Engineers, serving for most of his career with the Indian Army. He was born on 15 June 1865 in Inverness, Scotland to parents Rev. Donald Fraser D.D. and Theresa Eliza Isabella Gordon, the fourth daughter of Major-General Alexander Gordon of the Royal Engineers.

[edit] Education and career

From University College School he went to Clare College, obtaining his commission direct into the Royal Engineers in February 1886.

Indian service soon brought him experience of frontier warfare. He was in the Chin-Lushai expedition of 1889-90 and the Hazara expedition in 1891. He was promoted to Captain in August, 1896, and an adjutant of the 2nd Division during the Tirah campaign of 1897-98. In February to December, 1900 his experience was put to further use as a Special Service Officer stationed in Cape Colony, the Orange Free State, and the Frederickstad in Western Transvaal during the Second Boer War.

In 1901 he was sent into the Staff College, promoting Major in September, 1904 with the appointed role of Deputy Assistant Adjutant General (D.A.A.G.) of the Bombay Brigade in February, 1905. His role was changed to Deputy Assistant Quartermaster General (D.A.Q.M.G.) at British Army headquarters in Simla in November, 1907. He stay on the the headquarters for two years. In February, 1909 he assumed the role of a Professor and General Staff Officer Grade 2, instructing young officers at the Command and Staff College in Quetta for the next three years, promoting to Lieutenant-Colonel in December, 1912. Shortly after promotion he was sent to the Britannia Royal Naval College.

Though he was eager for active service during World War I, he was given an administrative role of Embarkation Commandant. It was not until March, 1915, that he was appointed Assistant Adjutant (A.A.) and Quartermaster General (Q.M.G.) of the Lahore Division and in France. In this capacity, and later as Assistant Quartermaster General (A.Q.M.G.) he was with the division at "Second Ypres" and the battles of Aubers Ridge and Festubert.

In May, 1916, Colonel Fraser was appointed the administrative role of General Staff Officer Grade 1(G.S.O.1) of the newly-formed 15th (Indian) Division, stationing on the Euphrates front until October of that same year where he was again transferred to the III Corps as Brigadier-General General Staff. He led the Corps through the [[Mesopotamian Campaign#The Siege of Kut|Battle of Kut], and the manumanoeuvre leading to the occupation of Baghdad, and then the operations on the Adhaim in April, 1917. He had received a brevet in March, and reached the substantive rank of Colonel in December, by which time the operations in the Jabal Hamrin area had been concluded. From February to April, 1918, he acted as Chief of the General Staff to General William Marshall, the Commander-in-Chief of the Mesopotamian campaign.

He assumed the command of the 15th Division in September 1918, the 18th Division in the following March, and promoting to Major-General in June 1919. He was engaged in the Kurdistan operations of 1919-20, and relinquished command in October, 1921, From March to November, 1922, he commanded the forces in Iraq, but was not again employed until May 1924, when he was appointed General Officer Commanding (GOC) Malaya. He performed his tour of duty in Singapore for the next three years until his retirement on 9 June 1927, with Major-General C.C. Van Straubenzee, KBE, CB, CMG (1867-1956) replacing him as the next GOC Malaya on 16 June, 1927.

Sir Fraser passed away in a nursing home on 22 May 1953 in Putney, London, at the age of 87. His funeral was carried at out the Putney Vale Crematorium at 2.30 p.m. on Tuesday, 26 May, 1953.


[edit] Trivia

  • Major-General Sir Theodore Fraser's last known home address was at The Rookery, Roehampton Lane, London in 1939.

[edit] References

  • Obituary in the Daily Telegraph, 23 May 1953.
  • The Times Newspaper, May 13, 1939.