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Bryan Mahon

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Name
  
Bryan Mahon

Service/branch
  
British Army

Rank
  
General


Bryan Mahon todayinirishhistoryfileswordpresscom2012048t

Born
  
2 April 1862 Galway, Ireland (
1862-04-02
)

Commands held
  
10th (Irish) Division Western Frontier Force Commander-in-Chief, Ireland

Battles/wars
  
Second Boer War World War I

Awards
  
Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath KCMG Distinguished Service Order

Died
  
September 29, 1930, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

Battles and wars
  
Second Boer War, World War I

Similar People
  
Maurice Sarrail, Robert Baden‑Powell - 1st Baron, Janko Vukotic, Stepa Stepanovic, Piet Cronje

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General Sir Bryan Thomas Mahon (2 April 1862 – 29 September 1930) was an Irish born general of the British Army and Senator of the Irish Free State.

Contents

Bryan Mahon British General George Milne and General Sir Bryan Mahon watch a

General mahon arrives at salonika aka gen sir bryan mahon 1914 1918


Biography

Mahon was born at Belleville, County Galway on 2 April 1862. He became a lieutenant in the 8th (King's Royal Irish) Hussars in 1883. He served in Sudan in the Dongola Expedition in 1896 as Staff officer to Sir Herbert Kitchener, and was present at the Battle of Ferkeh and the operations at Hafir. In 1899 he took part in the final defeat of the Khailfa as Assistant Adjutant general in charge of Intelligence, and was mentioned in despatches (dated 25 November 1899) by Colonel Wingate with the following words:

I cannot speak in sufficiently strong terms of the excellence of the services performed by this officer. I invariably placed him in general command of all the mounted troops; his personal disregard for danger, intrepid scouting, and careful handling of men, all fit him for high command; his bold and successful seizure of the position in front of Fedil's camp, and his conduct of the fight before I came up, show him to possessed of exceptional qualities as a commander.

During the Second Boer War Colonel Mahon led a flying column 2,000 strong, and consisting mainly of South African volunteers from Kimberley, which came to the Relief of Mafeking. The town, which had been under siege for seven months by Boer forces, was facing starvation. Mahon was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) for his services during the operations, and was invested with the order by King Edward VII on 2 June 1902.

He was briefly Governor of Khartoum in 1903.

During the First World War he commanded the 2nd (Sialkot) Cavalry Brigade and the 10th (Irish) Division during the Gallipoli Campaign. The 10th Division landed at Suvla Bay on the night of 6–7 August 1915. In September he moved with the Division to be head of the British Salonika Army to support Serbia at the onset of the Macedonian campaign. In 1916 General Mahon took up command of the Western Frontier Force in the Egyptian Expeditionary Force.

He was then appointed as the Commander-in-Chief, Ireland in 1916 in the lead up to the Anglo-Irish war. He retired from the British Army at the end of August 1921.

After his retirement he was elected as a privy council member of the short-lived Senate of Southern Ireland. He was appointed to Seanad Éireann by the President of the Executive Council, William T. Cosgrave, in 1922 and 1925. He was elected to the Seanad in 1928, and served until his death in 1930.

Mahon was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (FRGS) in May 1902.

References

Bryan Mahon Wikipedia