Sneha Girap (Editor)

Charles Deedes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years of service
  
1899 - 1937

Rank
  
General

Service/branch
  
British Army


Died
  
March 9, 1969

Name
  
Charles Deedes

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Commands held
  
3rd Infantry Brigade 53rd (Welsh) Division

Battles/wars
  
Second Boer War World War I World War II

Awards
  
Order of the Bath, Order of St Michael and St George, Distinguished Service Order

Battles and wars
  
Second Boer War, World War I, World War II

General Sir Charles Parker Deedes, KCB, CMG, DSO (9 August 1879 – 9 March 1969) was a senior British Army officer who went on to be Military Secretary.

Contents

He was born at Nether Broughton, Leicestershire, the son of the Revd Philip Deedes and educated at Winchester College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst.

Military career

Deedes was commissioned into the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry as a Second Lieutenant in February 1899, and promoted to Lieutenant on 9 October 1899. He served in the Second Boer War.

He also served in World War I initially as a General Staff Officer at the General Headquarters of the British Expeditionary Force and then from 1916 with 14th Army Corps and from 1917 as a General Staff Officer with 2nd Division in France.

After the War he was appointed Deputy Director of Staff Duties at the War Office. In 1926 he became Commander of 3rd Infantry Brigade and in 1928 he was made General Officer Commanding 53rd (Welsh) Division. He became Director of Personal Services at the War Office in 1930 and Military Secretary in 1934.

He retired in 1937. He was promoted to general and held the colonelcy of the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry from 1927 to 1947.

During World War II he was an Area Commander for the Home Guard.

Family

He married Eve Mary Dean-Pitt and they went on to have a son (Major-General Charles Julius Deedes).

References

Charles Deedes Wikipedia