Gervase Thorpe
Major-General Gervase Thorpe, CB, CMG, DSO (10 August 1877 – 4 October 1962) was a senior officer in the British Army.
Early life
Gervase Thorpe was born on 10 August 1877, the fifth son of Colonel James Thorpe (1823–1902), JP, of Coddington Hall in Nottinghamshire and of Ardbrecknish in Argyllshire, by his second wife, Annie (died 1929), eldest daughter of John MacDougall, of Lunga in Argyllshire.[1][2][3] In 1917, he married Margaret, daughter of James Burt-Marshall, of Luncarty in Perthshire.[1][4] They had two sons: Ian (killed in action in 1944) and Ivor Lawrence (died 1958).[5][6]
Career
Following schooling at Eton College,[1] Thorpe was commissioned into the Army on 8 September 1897 as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. He was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant on 16 July 1899 and served in the Second Boer War; wounded, he received the Queen's and King's South Africa Medals with clasps for service at the battles of Modder River and Pandaardeberg, and in Transvaal and South Africa (1901 and 1902). On 15 October 1901, he was posted as a Station Staff Officer.[7]
Promoted to Captain in October 1904, Thorpe served in France during World War I, initially as a Deputy Assistant Quartermaster General (August and September 1914) and then as an Aide-de-Camp to a Divisional Commander until October 1914. He served as an adjutant between November 1914 and February 1915, after which he was a Brigade Major until September of that year. On the first day of September 1915, he was promoted to the rank of Major and on 9 September was posted as a General Staff Officer 2nd Division; he was moved to the 1st Division in June 1916. Promoted to Brevet Lieutenant Colonel on New Years Day 1917, Thorpe remained as a GSO until 7 June 1918, when he became Brigade Commander with the temporary rank of Brigadier. He relinquished that position on 1 September 1919, became a temporary Lieutenant Colonel in the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Highlanders (May to August 1919) and took a promotion as Brevet Colonel on 3 June 1919, which became substantive on 31 August the following year.[7]
A posting to the War Office as Assistant Adjutant General in January 1920 lasted until 25 April 1923. On that day, he was appointed a Brigade Commander in the Second Command, a post he held until 16 November 1925 when he was transferred of the Rhine Army as a staff officer.[7] He left that role at the end of October 1927 to become Brigade Commander of the 3rd Infantry Brigade in the Aldershot Command.[7][8] In May 1931, he moved again, this time to be Deputy Adjutant General in India and on 1 March 1931 became a Major-General. On 28 April 1935, he was promoted to be Commander of the Western Command[7] and between 1937 and 1945, he was Colonel of his regiment.[1] Having retired in 1939, Thorpe was brought back into employment in 1940 and served as commandant of the Cherbourg Base.[8]
Thorpe was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in 1931, a Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in 1918 and received the Distinguished Service Order with a bar during World War I, when he was also mentioned in despatches eight times. He died on 4 October 1962.[8]
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Thorpe, Major-General Gervase", Who Was Who (online edition), April 2014 (Oxford University Press). Retrieved 8 March 2016.
- ↑ Burke, Sir Bernard, A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland, 6th ed., vol. ii (1879; London: Harrison), p. 1591
- ↑ For obituaries of his parents, see "Obituary: Colonel Thorpe, J.P.", Nottingham Evening Post, 14 July 1902, p. 4, and "Highland funeral at Oban", Dundee Courier, 21 November 1929, p. 3. Both articles retrieved 8 March 2016.
- ↑ "Picturesque wedding", Sheffield Independent, 11 January 1917, p. 1. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
- ↑ "Deaths", Times (London), 2 October 1944, p. 1
- ↑ "Deaths", Times (London), 15 August 1958, p. 1
- 1 2 3 4 5 The Half-Yearly Army List: January 1939, 1939 (London: His Majesty's Stationery Office), p. 36
- 1 2 3 "Maj.-Gen. G. Thorpe", Times (London), 6 October 1962, p. 12