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Alan Hartley

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Name
  
Alan Hartley

Rank
  
General

Years of service
  
1901 - 1944

Service/branch
  
British Army


Died
  
7 December 1954 (aged 72)

Commands held
  
5th King Edward's Own Probyn's Horse 4th (Secunderabad) Cavalry Brigade Waziristan District Rawalpindi District Northern Command, India Commander-in-Chief, India

Alan hartley vs goran olujic


General Sir Alan Fleming Hartley , psc (24 October 1882 – 7 December 1954) was a British Indian Army officer during World War II.

Contents

Military career

Born in 1882, the son of Dr. Reginald Hartley, M.D. Educated at Charterhouse School and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, Hartley was commissioned into the 1st Battalion, Durham Light Infantry as a second lieutenant on 8 January 1901. He was promoted to lieutenant on 10 May 1905 (seniority 5 June 1903), transferred to the Indian Army and appointed to 11th King Edward's Own Lancers (Probyn's Horse) that year.

He served in the Second Boer War (from May 1901 to May 1902) and in World War I in France, the Balkans and Mesopotamia, being mentioned in dispatches three times and awarded the DSO. He was promoted to captain on 8 January 1910, to major in June 1917 and to acting lieutenant-colonel in 1917, commanding 1st Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment at Salonika.

After attending the Staff College, Quetta from 1919 to 1920, from May 1921 to July 1924 he was a General Staff Officer grade 2 in India and from December 1924 to December 1926 he was an instructor at the Staff College, Quetta. From April 1927 to April 1931 he was the Commanding Officer of the 5th King Edward's Own Probyn's Horse, and he saw service during the operations on the North West Frontier 1930-31 as officiating Commander, 1st (Risalpur) Cavalry Brigade and was mentioned in despatches in the London Gazette 26 June 1931 He attended the Imperial Defence College in 1931. In January 1932 he became Commander of the 4th (Secunderabad) Cavalry Brigade after which, in September 1933, he was made Director of Military Operations and Intelligence at Army Headquarters in New Delhi. A brigadier by 1935, he was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1936 New Year Honours and promoted to major-general on 9 January 1936.

He was appointed officiating Commander of Waziristan District from May to December 1937, then formally appointed to command from December 1937 to July 1938, where he was again mentioned in despatches in the London Gazette 18 February 1938. He was appointed Commander of Rawalpindi District in July 1938.

By the start of World War II he was Commander of Rawalpindi District. On 6 June 1940, he was appointed General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Northern Command, India and promoted to lieutenant-general. He was promoted to full general in the Indian Army on 27 January 1941 and knighted in that year's Birthday Honours list as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India (KCSI). In January 1942 he succeeded General Sir Archibald Wavell for a short time as Commander-in-Chief, India. Wavell was reappointed in March 1942 and Hartley was appointed Deputy Commander in Chief. In Spring 1942 he was fighting the Japanese on the Eastern border of India. He was appointed Knight Grand Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire in the London Gazette 1 January 1944.

He retired 29 February 1944.

Family

In 1914 he married Phillippa, daughter of P. H. Osborne of Australia. She was decorated with the Kaiser-I-Hind medal in Gold in 1943.

References

Alan Hartley Wikipedia