Charles John Melliss

Sir Charles John Melliss
Born 12 September 1862
Mhow, British India
Died 6 June 1936
Brockenhurst, Kent
Buried at St. Peter's Churchyard, Frimley, Surrey
Allegiance  United Kingdom
Service/branch British Indian Army
Rank Major General
Unit Indian Staff Corps
Battles/wars Tirah Campaign
War of the Golden Stool
World War I
Awards Victoria Cross
Order of the Bath
Order of St Michael and St George

Major General Sir Charles John Melliss VC, CB, CMG (12 September 1862 – 6 June 1936) was a British military officer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Melliss was a recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. A staff officer in the Mesopotamian Campaign of World War I, he was captured after the Siege of Kut.

Contents

Details of Victoria Cross

Mellis was 38 years old, and a captain in the Indian Staff Corps, Indian Army, attached to the West African Frontier Force during the Third Ashanti Expedition when, on 30 September 1900 at Obassa, Ashanti (now Ghana), Captain Melliss gathered together a party of men and charged into the bush at the head of them, into the thick of the enemy. Although wounded in a hand-to-hand encounter, his bold rush caused panic among the enemy who were at the same time charged by the Sikhs.

World War One

Major General Melliss was attached to the 6th (Poona) Division of the British Indian Army as it moved into what was then the Ottoman province of Basra in 1914. In April 1915, he was instrumental in the British victory at Shaiba.[1] Melliss also fought in the Battle of Ctesiphon,[2] the furthest up the Tigris that the 6th Division would advance.

After Ctesiphon, General Townshend, commander of the 6th Division, ordered a retreat back down the Tigris. Ottoman forces pursued the division to Kut-al-Amara, where, on 7 December 1915, Townshend ordered it to dig in and await relief. Melliss fell ill during the siege;[3] he was in hospital when Townsend surrendered on 29 April 1916.

Transported upriver to Baghdad by steamship, Melliss remained in hospital and unable to travel as the survivors of the 6th Division were marched north toward Anatolia. When Melliss was well enough to travel, he followed the same route north. As he was a general, Melliss was allowed a traveling party and better than average supplies. Along the way, they encountered dead and dying enlisted men who had fallen behind one of the columns of British and Indian prisoners.[4] Melliss took any survivors he found with him; at each stop he insisted that the men he had rescued from the desert be put into hospital.[5]

Melliss spent his captivity at Broussa in northwestern Anatolia. While there, he repeatedly wrote letters to Enver Pasha detailing the sad state of the enlisted prisoners and demanding better treatment. Most of the British other ranks (1,755 out of 2,592)[6] captured at Kut-al-Amara died in captivity.

Later life

His is buried at St. Peter's Churchyard, Frimley, Surrey, England. His VC is held by Wellington College.

References

  1. ^ Mousley, Edward Opotiki “The Secrets of a Kuttite” (1921) p. 15
  2. ^ Braddon, Russell "The Siege" (1969) p. 92-94
  3. ^ Mousley, Edward Opotiki “The Secrets of a Kuttite” (1921) p. 156
  4. ^ Mousley, Edward Opotiki “The Secrets of a Kuttite” (1921) p. 180-181
  5. ^ Braddon, Russell "The Siege" (1969) p. 285-286
  6. ^ Braddon, Russell "The Siege" (1969) p. 327