Tony Hibbert (British Army officer)
Tony Hibbert, MBE MC (6 December 1917 - 12 October 2014),[1] was a British Army officer who fought in the Second World War. During the span of a military career that began in 1935 and ended in 1947,[2] Hibbert saw action in the Battle of France, the North African Campaign, the Italian Campaign and Operation Market Garden. Following these battles, Hibbert led a T-Force unit in Operation Eclipse, a campaign carried out by the Allies shortly before V-E Day.
As a civilian, after his time in the army, Major Hibbert enlarged and diversified his family’s wine and spirits business. A restless first retirement, begun in the early 1970s, was followed by a 1981 retirement attempt that led his wife and him to ownership of Cornwall's Trebah Garden, which they went on to restore to its prewar splendor.[2] In 2009, after nearly sixty years of marriage, Major Hibbert was widowed.[2] Five years later, he died peacefully, at home.
Beginning of military career
James Anthony Hibbert was born in Chertsey, Surrey.[3] Son of a Royal Flying Corps pilot,[4][5][6] Hibbert decided to enter the British Army while he was in Germany, working as a vineyard apprentice for his family's wine business.[1][2][5] Having seen that Germany was preparing for war, he returned to England in 1935 and applied to the Royal Military Academy.[1][2] His father, who thought Germany would not go to war, after the defeat it had suffered in the First World War, was upset by his decision to abandon his apprenticeship.[6]
In January 1938, Hibbert was commissioned into the Royal Artillery.[1] On 9 September 1939,[2] less than ten days after the German invasion of Poland, he arrived in Cherbourg, France, with the British Expeditionary Force.[2] In the Battle of Dunkirk, he commanded a half-battery that defended the Allies' northern perimeter for four days. On 1 June 1940, his ammunition supply depleted, he was forced to destroy his guns.[1][5][7] Evacuated from Dunkirk on the tugboat "Sun X," Hibbert was mentioned in dispatches that described his meritorious actions in the face of the enemy and were sent to the high command.[1]
1st Parachute Brigade
In October 1940,[7] Hibbert joined the original No. 2 Commando, the initial unit of the paratrooper corps Winston Churchill had called for after the debacle in France.[8][9] Having been redesignated No. 11 Special Air Service Battalion in November 1940,[10] the unit became the 1st Parachute Battalion the following September.[10] As part of the newly-formed 1st Parachute Brigade,[10] it was soon part of the emergent 1st Airborne Division.
Hibbert served in the North African Campaign, during which he became a staff officer,[5] and in the Italian Campaign.[1] In July 1944, after he'd attended the Staff College at Camberley, he became Brigade Major of the 1st Parachute Brigade.[1]
On 17 September 1944, the first day of the ill-fated Operation Market Garden, Brigade HQ, led by Major Hibbert, and the 2nd Parachute Battalion, led by Lieutenant-Colonel John Frost, reached the Arnhem road bridge,[1][5][11] their intact objective in the operation. In the operation's plan, the bridge had had to be held for only two days; but the two units, along with other elements of the 1st Airborne Division, held its northern end, against fierce opposition, for three.[1][5] While leading a remnant group in withdrawal from the bridge, toward nearby Oosterbeek, where the rest of the Division was still fighting,[11] Hibbert was captured by the Germans.[1][2][5]
After escaping from a truck in which he and other prisoners were being transported to a prisoner-of-war camp in Germany, Hibbert was sheltered by the Dutch Resistance.[3][5][11] Most British and Polish troops who hadn't been killed, captured, or wounded in the attempt to take Arnhem were successfully withdrawn from the area, in Operation Berlin. Hibbert and other officers of the 1st Brigade regrouped and planned Operation Pegasus, by which well over one hundred sheltered men, including them, got out of the area a month thereafter.[1][11] Shortly after the men crossed the Rhine, under cover of darkness, and were met by the Allied force that had been sent to retrieve them, Hibbert's leg was broken, when a jeep on whose bonnet he was riding was in a collision.[1][5][11] The five months' hospitalisation this cost him was, in his words, a "thoroughly unsatisfying climax" to a "thoroughly unsatisfactory battle."[11]
Operation Eclipse
Having been all but destroyed in Operation Market Garden, the 1st Airborne Division saw no action in the war's remainder, but Major Hibbert’s own participation in the conflict continued. In April 1945, still on crutches, Hibbert was discharged from hospital.[2] On the morning of 5 May, in part of Operation Eclipse, he led a T-Force from Lubeck to the German port city of Kiel.[7][12] The force consisted of some hundreds of men from the 5th King's Regiment of the British Army and the 30th Assault Unit of the Royal Navy.[13]
Although the German forces in northwest Germany had surrendered at Lüneburg Heath the evening before, the officers of the German Navy in Kiel were convinced they had not surrendered.[12] The German troops north of the Kiel Canal were reluctant to hand in their arms.[12] Even so, Hibbert and his small force established their authority in a city with tens of thousands of German fighters.[12][13] No other Allied force arrived until 7 May, when troops of the 15th Division moved into the city.[12]
Swedish intelligence reports that the Red Army would violate the Yalta agreement and advance from Germany to Denmark were what had prompted Operation Eclipse.[13] Capture of Denmark would have given the Soviet Union a postwar port free of the ice that blocked its own port of Murmansk several months each year.[13] By establishing Allied control of Kiel and of the German scientific bases between that city and the Danish border, Hibbert's force forestalled such a Russian move.[13][1]
On V-E Day, 8 May, Major Hibbert was placed under arrest.[7] His advance to Kiel had required him to go north of Bad Segeberg, in apparent violation of the surrender terms that had been agreed at Lüneburg Heath. [12] The advance had been made on orders from the 21st Army Group,[12] whose Chemical Warfare branch controlled T-Force operations,[14] but there was a question whether the 21st Army Group had had the authority to issue such an order.[12]
Hibbert was absolved of blame and released, but the arrest meant that his "rather frustrating military career," as he himself later put it, had ended with "a certain artistic symmetry."[1][5][7] On 3 September 1939, the day the British declared war, he’d been arrested for crashing his Battery Commander’s command car—and had been exonerated.[7][1] He’d spent the first day and the last day of the war under arrest.[2]
Life after the military
Invalided out of the Army in 1947,[3][2] Major Hibbert returned to CG Hibbert, his family’s wine and spirits business, which was on the verge of collapse.[2] Finding "the cut and thrust of commercial life," as he put it, "as exciting as war with no prisoners taken,"[7] he turned the firm around and rose to be its managing director.[5] Among the diverse fields to which he extended it was soft-drink canning, in which he introduced the ring pull can to the United Kingdom.[2] He received the Queen's Award for Industry.[2]
In 1960, on land he owned at Lymington, Major Hibbert formed Salterns Sailing Club, which is run for and by youngsters ("with some adult help").[15][16] As a sailor himself, he competed worldwide in the International Moth Class of dinghy,[3][2] which he helped to invent.[5]
Major Hibbert tried twice to retire. His first retirement, in 1972,[7] was to Devon, where he entered upon a gentleman farmer’s life, which didn’t suit him.[2] For his second retirement, in 1981, his wife and he sought a house with "no work, no worries and no responsibilities." When they bought Trebah, in Cornwall, they dreamt of "the quiet pleasures of retirement, mornings spent drinking gin on the terrace and summer afternoons sailing and fishing from the beach."[17] Not until they’d received a visit from the Secretary of the Cornwall Garden Society, eight days after they’d moved in,[17] did they learn they’d purchased what had once been one of England’s most beautiful and important gardens.[18] What began as a three-year commitment on their part, to restore the garden, became a decades-long, open-ended undertaking that gave them what Hibbert called the happiest years of their lives.[18][19]
In 2006, Major Hibbert was presented an MBE for his contribution to tourism and sailing.[3][5][2]
In 2009, Major Hibbert’s wife, Eira, died.[5][2] The former Eira Bradshaw was of an old Northumbrian family that included John Bradshaw, president of the court that tried Charles I.[20] Major Hibbert and she were married in 1949.[5]
In 2009, in recognition of the heroism of the Dutch who sheltered and aided members of the 1st Airborne Division after the Battle of Arnhem, Major Hibbert donated his Military Cross—MC—to the Hartenstein Museum, in Oosterbeek.[6] He’d received the award in 1945, for his actions at the Arnhem bridge and during the escape after the battle there.[6]
In 2010, Kiel bestowed its Great Seal on Major Hibbert, for his keeping the city from being captured by the Russians at the end of the Second World War.[21][22][23] With respect to his thus being honored by what had been the enemy, Hibbert remarked that he couldn't imagine "many people have been honoured by both sides."[24]
On 12 October 2014, at age 96, Major Hibbert died, at his family home.[25][26] At the time of his death, Trebah Garden ranked as one of Cornwall's biggest horticultural attractions.[5][27] The garden was in the hands of the Trebah Garden Trust, which the Hibberts had created and to which they'd donated it.[5][2] The garden had opened to the public in 1987, after their first six years' work in its restoration.[5][2][28]
Major Hibbert’s funeral took place 3 November 2014, at the Parish Church of the village of Mawnan Smith, location of Trebah Garden. Lieutenant Colonel Giles Timms, Commanding Officer of 4th Battalion, Parachute Regiment, observed that Major Hibbert’s name lives on in the Hibbert Sword, presented annually to the most-promising officer of the airborne forces.[29]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 Roll Call: Major Tony Hibbert, MBE MC ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 Obituary—Major James Anthony Hibbert, MBE MC Trebah Garden website
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Obituary of Major Tony Hibbert The Independent, 17 October 2014.
- ↑ Major James Anthony Hibbert, The Pegasus Archive—The Battle of Arnhem Archive
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 Major Tony Hibbert - obituary The Telegraph, 19 October 2014.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Extended Biography of Tony Hibbert Compiled by Tony Hibbert and Harvey Grenville. ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 Trebah My Story, Page 18: Hibbert and Bradshaw Families—Major Hibberts Log As captured by Internet Archive Wayback Machine 20 Aug 2011
- ↑ Formation of Airborne Forces, 1940-41 ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)
- ↑ Text of Churchill's call for a parachute corps ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 Formation and Early Airborne Forces ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 Personal account of Major Tony Hibbert's experiences of the Battle of Arnhem ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.7 A diary of ‘T’ Force operations in KIEL ARCRE—Archive research & document copying
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 "Operation Eclipse"—History Learning Site
- ↑ History of ‘T’ Force Activities in 21 Army Group ARCRE—Archive research & document copying
- ↑ Salterns Sailing Club—Welcome
- ↑ Salterns Sailing Club—Who Runs the Club
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 Trebah My Story, Page 12: The Hibberts 1981 to 2002—Major Hibberts Log As captured by Internet Archive Wayback Machine 20 Aug 2011
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 Trebah My Story, Page 13: The Hibberts 1981 to 2002—Major Hibberts Log As captured by Internet Archive Wayback Machine 20 Aug 2011
- ↑ "The Invisible Hand of Man" The Green File—with Mark Cullen, CJAD 800 AM, Montreal
- ↑ Trebah My Story, Page 16: Hibbert and Bradshaw Families, The Bradshaws—Major Hibberts Log As captured by Internet Archive Wayback Machine 20 Aug 2011
- ↑ "Honour for major who led capture of German port in WWII" BBC News Cornwall, 19 June 2010.
- ↑ "British war veteran receives ceremonial seal" City of Kiel Notices, 3 May 2010. Text in German.
- ↑ British hero who seized key German port during the Second World War is honoured ... by Germany" Mail Online, 21 June 2010.
- ↑ "British war hero is honoured again – by the Germans" The Telegraph, 20 June 2010.
- ↑ Decorated war veteran, Major Tony Hibbert of Trebah Gardens has died The West Briton, 14 October 2014
- ↑ "Kiel mourns Major Tony Hibbert" City of Kiel Notices, 22 October 2014. Text in German.
- ↑ "Tributes as war hero and Trebah Gardens founder Major Tony Hibbert dies" the Packet, 14 October 2014.
- ↑ "Tributes to war hero and Trebah garden founder" Western Morning News, 16 October 2014.
- ↑ "Bridge Too Far war hero who saved thousands of lives then rescued Trebah Garden laid to rest at moving service" Western Morning News, 3 November 2014.
External links
- Major Hibberts Log—Homepage As captured by Internet Archive Wayback Machine 20 May 2013
- Market Garden 1944—Major Tony Hibbert’s call to honour Polish General Sosabowski Ten-minute video interview, June 2012. Major Hibbert speaks of Stanislaw Sosabowski, who led the Polish 1st Independent Parachute Brigade at the Battle of Arnhem. After the battle, as Hibbert recounts, Sosabowski was "dismissed, and he lost also his rank in the army and his pension." Major Hibbert calls for the dismissal to be rescinded. YouTube.com
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