Cyril Bencraft Joly
Lt Colonel Cyril Bencraft Joly MC (9 September 1918 – 2000) was a British Army officer who served with 7th Armoured Division (Desert Rats) throughout the campaign in North Africa during World War II.
He described his experiences as a tank commander in the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment (2 RTR) in Take These Men (1955), a (lightly fictionalised) personal narrative of the Western Desert campaign that is regarded as a classic of its kind.
Life
Later in life he invented and patented an apparatus for providing a desired atmosphere in a sleeping space. It consisted of a frame for a bed with electrical fans to control the temperature.[1]
He was born in Mengtes, Yunnan, China and died at Winchester in Hampshire.[2]
In his later days he lived at Tregatillian near St Columb Major in Cornwall[3]
Family
Henry Bencraft Joly (1857-1898; his grandfather) was British Vice-Consul in Macao and translator of Ts'ao Chan's Hung Lou Meng: The Dream of the Red Chamber, a Chinese Novel in Two Books.[4] He had three brothers. His only daughter, Vivien, married Hugh David Beddington, son of Keith Lionel Beddington CBE.[5]
Works
- 1955 Take These Men (London, Constable and Company Ltd; reprinted Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1956; London, Buchan & Enright, 1985) ISBN 0-907675-40-9
- 1980 Silent Night: the defeat of NATO . London: Cassell ISBN 0-586-06847-3
- Operation Stille Nacht ISBN 3-7057-2018-X
References
- ↑ wikipatents Improvements in or relating to and apparatus for providing a desired atmosphere in a sleeping space
- ↑ Cyril Bencraft Joly - I129 - Individual Information - PhpGedView
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=ZsHfAAAAMAAJ&q=Cyril+Joly+tregatillian&dq=Cyril+Joly+tregatillian&cd=2
- ↑ https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/9603 The Dream of the Red Chamber 1892-93
- ↑ The Times, Wednesday, 24 Jun 1964; pg. 14; Issue 56046; col C