Reginald Malpas Gore: Difference between revisions
Symorsebrown (talk | contribs) m Temp save |
Symorsebrown (talk | contribs) Amend biography |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==== '''A biography of Lt-Col Reginald Malpas Gore 1895-1969''' ==== | ==== '''A biography of Lt-Col Reginald Malpas Gore 1895-1969''' ==== | ||
{{Template:Origin|text=This biography and the associated photographs have been contributed by the son of the subject | {{Template:Origin|text=This biography and the associated photographs have been contributed by a FIBIS member who is the son of the subject. It describes the military career of a distinguished soldier in the Indian Army and his earlier service in the First World War.}} | ||
Reggie was the youngest of three surviving sons of a Kentish farming family<ref>The story of this family is described in "On Kentish Chalk -A Farming Family of the North Downs' by David Gore 2006</ref>. His grandfather had emigrated to the Australian goldfields in the 1850s where he made his fortune. This allowed Reggie’s father to go off and train as a doctor back in England where Reggie and his brothers were born and educated. Reggie, aged 19, was visiting his relations in Queensland in 1914 when ‘the Great War’ broke out and he enlisted there in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9th_Battalion,_Royal_Queensland_Regiment#World_War_I 9th Infantry, Australian Imperial Force]. A month later he heard that his eldest brother Sydney had been killed in France, and six months later he was himself fighting against the Turks at ANZAC Bay, Gallipoli. He was commissioned the following year and transferred to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25th/49th_Battalion,_Royal_Queensland_Regiment#49th_Battalion.2C_AIF 49th Infantry AIF] with whom he was in the trenches on the Western Front in France both in 1916 and 1917. | Reggie was the youngest of three surviving sons of a Kentish farming family<ref>The story of this family is described in "On Kentish Chalk -A Farming Family of the North Downs' by David Gore 2006</ref>. His grandfather had emigrated to the Australian goldfields in the 1850s where he made his fortune. This allowed Reggie’s father to go off and train as a doctor back in England where Reggie and his brothers were born and educated. Reggie, aged 19, was visiting his relations in Queensland in 1914 when ‘the Great War’ broke out and he enlisted there in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9th_Battalion,_Royal_Queensland_Regiment#World_War_I 9th Infantry, Australian Imperial Force]. A month later he heard that his eldest brother Sydney had been killed in France, and six months later he was himself fighting against the Turks at ANZAC Bay, Gallipoli. He was commissioned the following year and transferred to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/25th/49th_Battalion,_Royal_Queensland_Regiment#49th_Battalion.2C_AIF 49th Infantry AIF] with whom he was in the trenches on the Western Front in France both in 1916 and 1917. | ||
On the conclusion of the war, Reggie transferred to the Indian Army in which his other brother had been serving. He joined the 1st Battalion, [[88th Carnatic Infantry]] with which he went to Iraq during the British Mesopotamian mandate 1920-22 where his battalion were brought in to quell a combined Shia and Sunni inspired insurrection (shades of Iraq in 2003). There followed a period on operations in Waziristan with 2nd battalion, [[90th Punjab Regiment|90th Punjabis]], after which in 1922 he became adjutant when the 90th was renamed 2/8th Punjab Regiment and moved to [[Bannu]]. | On the conclusion of the war, Reggie transferred to the Indian Army in which his other brother had been serving. He joined the 1st Battalion, [[88th Carnatic Infantry]] with which he went to Iraq during the British Mesopotamian mandate 1920-22 where his battalion were brought in to quell a combined Shia and Sunni inspired insurrection (shades of Iraq in 2003). There followed a period on operations in Waziristan with 2nd battalion, [[90th Punjab Regiment|90th Punjabis]], after which in 1922 he became adjutant when the 90th was renamed 2/8th Punjab Regiment and moved to [[Bannu]]. | ||
In 1931 Reggie was seconded to the [http://www.britishempire.co.uk/forces/armyunits/burma/bmp.htm Burma Military Police] in [[Rangoon]] where he helped in the quelling of the rebellions at Tharrawaddy and [[Prome]]. He was then sent north to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shan_State Shan States] based at Loimwe where he had to deal with banditry, mostly from across the Chinese border. He was awarded the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen's_Police_Medal#King.27s_Police_Medal King’s Police Medal] for three operations which he led against armed bandits in 1934. | In 1931 Reggie was seconded to the [http://www.britishempire.co.uk/forces/armyunits/burma/bmp.htm Burma Military Police] in [[Rangoon]] where he helped in the quelling of the rebellions at Tharrawaddy and [[Prome]]. He was then sent north to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shan_State Shan States] based at Loimwe where he had to deal with banditry, mostly from across the Chinese border. He was awarded the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen's_Police_Medal#King.27s_Police_Medal King’s Police Medal] for three operations which he led against armed bandits in 1934. [http://books.google.com/books?id=hrpS_YQ9FoAC&lpg=PP1&dq=On%20Kentish%20Chalk&pg=PA91#v=onepage&q&f=true Read the citation]. | ||
He rejoined his battalion (2/8th) as a company commander in time for their operations in Waziristan 1936-37 [photographs], and after an attachment to the 10/8th was promoted Lt Col on the outbreak of World War II. He took part with 14 Indian Division in the first counter offensive into Burma southward from Cox’s Bazaar along the Mayu peninsula in the Arakan. It was an ill-fated operation mounted in December 1942 against well-prepared Japanese positions on the most difficult terrain. The Arakan has steep jungle-covered hills rising to 1500 feet, two major rivers, an almost impassable mountain barrier on the eastern side, an unhealthy climate and monsoon rains which make manoeuvring impossible for six months of the year. It was in February after two months fighting, severe losses and failure to break through at Donbaik that Reggie himself was evacuated suffering from amoebic hepatitis. | He rejoined his battalion (2/8th) as a company commander in time for their operations in Waziristan 1936-37 [photographs], and after an attachment to the 10/8th was promoted Lt Col on the outbreak of World War II. He took part with 14 Indian Division in the first counter offensive into Burma southward from Cox’s Bazaar along the Mayu peninsula in the Arakan. It was an ill-fated operation mounted in December 1942 against well-prepared Japanese positions on the most difficult terrain. The Arakan has steep jungle-covered hills rising to 1500 feet, two major rivers, an almost impassable mountain barrier on the eastern side, an unhealthy climate and monsoon rains which make manoeuvring impossible for six months of the year. It was in February after two months fighting, severe losses and failure to break through at Donbaik that Reggie himself was evacuated suffering from amoebic hepatitis. |
Revision as of 11:08, 8 January 2011
A biography of Lt-Col Reginald Malpas Gore 1895-1969
This biography and the associated photographs have been contributed by a FIBIS member who is the son of the subject. It describes the military career of a distinguished soldier in the Indian Army and his earlier service in the First World War. |
Reggie was the youngest of three surviving sons of a Kentish farming family[1]. His grandfather had emigrated to the Australian goldfields in the 1850s where he made his fortune. This allowed Reggie’s father to go off and train as a doctor back in England where Reggie and his brothers were born and educated. Reggie, aged 19, was visiting his relations in Queensland in 1914 when ‘the Great War’ broke out and he enlisted there in the 9th Infantry, Australian Imperial Force. A month later he heard that his eldest brother Sydney had been killed in France, and six months later he was himself fighting against the Turks at ANZAC Bay, Gallipoli. He was commissioned the following year and transferred to 49th Infantry AIF with whom he was in the trenches on the Western Front in France both in 1916 and 1917.
On the conclusion of the war, Reggie transferred to the Indian Army in which his other brother had been serving. He joined the 1st Battalion, 88th Carnatic Infantry with which he went to Iraq during the British Mesopotamian mandate 1920-22 where his battalion were brought in to quell a combined Shia and Sunni inspired insurrection (shades of Iraq in 2003). There followed a period on operations in Waziristan with 2nd battalion, 90th Punjabis, after which in 1922 he became adjutant when the 90th was renamed 2/8th Punjab Regiment and moved to Bannu.
In 1931 Reggie was seconded to the Burma Military Police in Rangoon where he helped in the quelling of the rebellions at Tharrawaddy and Prome. He was then sent north to the Shan States based at Loimwe where he had to deal with banditry, mostly from across the Chinese border. He was awarded the King’s Police Medal for three operations which he led against armed bandits in 1934. Read the citation.
He rejoined his battalion (2/8th) as a company commander in time for their operations in Waziristan 1936-37 [photographs], and after an attachment to the 10/8th was promoted Lt Col on the outbreak of World War II. He took part with 14 Indian Division in the first counter offensive into Burma southward from Cox’s Bazaar along the Mayu peninsula in the Arakan. It was an ill-fated operation mounted in December 1942 against well-prepared Japanese positions on the most difficult terrain. The Arakan has steep jungle-covered hills rising to 1500 feet, two major rivers, an almost impassable mountain barrier on the eastern side, an unhealthy climate and monsoon rains which make manoeuvring impossible for six months of the year. It was in February after two months fighting, severe losses and failure to break through at Donbaik that Reggie himself was evacuated suffering from amoebic hepatitis.
He was passed fit again in August 1943 when he became CO of the 16th battalion taking part in the final phase of the Burma campaign. By June 1945 the battalion was back at Chhindwara in India and Reggie was posted to the 8th Punjab regimental centre to prepare for the Indian and Pakistani military partition of 1947, after which he retired. The 8th Punjab Regiment was transferred into the Pakistan army where it is now part of their 2nd Baluch regiment.
References
- ↑ The story of this family is described in "On Kentish Chalk -A Farming Family of the North Downs' by David Gore 2006