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Evelyn Barker

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Nickname(s)
  
Bubbles

Died
  
November 23, 1983

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Service/branch
  
British Army

Years of service
  
1913–1950

Rank
  
General

Name
  
Evelyn Barker


Evelyn Barker wwwdssgovausitesdefaultfilesimagesindigeno

Unit
  
King's Royal Rifle Corps

Commands held
  
2nd Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps 10th Infantry Brigade 54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division 49th (West Riding) Infantry Division VIII Corps British Forces in Palestine and Trans-Jordan Eastern Command

Battles/wars
  
World War I World War II Palestine Emergency

Awards
  
Distinguished Service Order

Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II, Jewish insurgency in Mandatory Palestine

Similar People
  
Alan Cunningham, Menachem Begin, David Ben‑Gurion, Avraham Tehomi, Dov Gruner

General Sir Evelyn Hugh Barker KCB KBE DSO MC (22 May 1894 – 23 November 1983) was a British Army officer who saw service in both World War I and World War II, where he commanded the 49th (West Riding) Infantry Division and later VIII Corps in the Western Europe Campaign. He was also commander of the British forces in Palestine from 1946 to 1947 and is remembered for his antisemitism and his controversial order, following the King David Hotel bombing In July 1946, that (We) will be punishing the Jews in a way the race dislikes as much as any, by striking at their pockets and showing our contempt of them.

Contents

Evelyn Barker httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons99

Early life and military career

The son of Major General Sir George Barker, a British Army officer, and Hon. Clemency Hubbard, daughter of John Hubbard, 1st Baron Addington, Evelyn Barker was born on 22 May 1894, the youngest of two children and the only son. He was educated at Summer Fields School and Wellington College, Berkshire and later entered the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, where, on 5 February 1913, he passed out and was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the King's Royal Rifle Corps (KRRC) of the British Army. He was posted to the 4th Battalion, KRRC, then serving in Gharial, British India.

In November 1914, three months after the outbreak of the Great War, Barker's battalion was sent to England where it became part of the 80th Brigade of the 27th Division and was sent to reinforce the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) on the Western Front in December. Barker, now temporary lieutenant, remained on the Western Front, being wounded in March 1915 during the Actions of St Eloi Craters. In November, the battalion was sent to the Salonica Front. Promoted to captain in February 1916, he became the battalion's adjutant, remaining in this post until August 1917, later becoming a brigade major and a General Staff Officer Grade 3 (GSO3). He ended the war having been wounded twice, awarded the Military Cross (MC) in 1917, the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) in 1918 and was twice mentioned in despatches. In 1919, with the war over and still with the KRRC, he took part in the British military expedition against the Bolsheviks in the south of the former Russian Empire.

Between the wars

Remaining in the army during the interwar period, Barker served as a GSO3 at the War Office and later at Southern Command. In 1923 he married Violet Eleanor and together they had one son, George Worsley Barker. Barker attended the Staff College, Camberley from 1927 to 1928. Among his many fellow students there were a large number of future general officers, Philip Christison, Angus Collier, Oliver Leese, Eric Nares, Oliver Edgcumbe, Stephen Irwin, Ronald Penney, Charles Norman, Wilfrid Lloyd, Stanley Kirby, William Bishop, Edmund Beard, Colin Jardine, Eric Dorman-Smith, George Surtees, Robert Bridgeman, Reginald Savory, John Hawkesworth, Alfred Curtis, Eric Hayes, Christopher Woolner, Clement West and John Whiteley.

From 1931–33 he was brigade major of the 8th Infantry Brigade, part of the 3rd Infantry Division, then serving as part of Southern Command. In June 1936 he became Commanding Officer (CO) of the 2nd Battalion, KRRC, then stationed in Palestine during the Palestinian Arab Revolt of 1936–39. In 1937 the battalion was converted into a motorised infantry role and, later in the year, was sent to England where it became part of the Mobile Division. In late July 1938 Barker returned to the United Kingdom to take command of the 10th Infantry Brigade, part of the 4th Infantry Division.

World War II

A month after the start of World War II, in October 1939, Barker took his brigade to France as part of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), where they remained for the next few months. The 10th Brigade was one of three which formed part of the 4th Division, then commanded by Major General Dudley Johnson, a distinguished Great War veteran who had been awarded the Victoria Cross (VC). The other two brigades, the 11th under Brigadier Kenneth Anderson, and the 12th under Brigadier John Hawkesworth, the latter who Barker had attended the Staff College with in the late 1920s. The division itself was under the command of Lieutenant General Alan Brooke's II Corps.

After many months of relative inactivity (which led this period to be known as the "Phoney War") the German Army launched its assault on the Western Front on 10 May 1940, the brigade, together with the rest of the division advanced to Brussels but, soon afterwards, was ordered to retreat and, from 19 to 22 May, fought to hold the line of the Escaut. On 27 May Barker's brigade was briefly transferred to the 5th Division (with only two brigades), which was then holding the Ypres-Comines canal against an assault by three German divisions. The brigade was ordered to hold the gap between the 5th and 50th Divisions but was reinforced by Anderson's 11th Brigade as the task was too difficult. The 3rd Division, part of II Corps, was ordered to move round the left of the corps to allow the 5th and 50th Divisions to form a coherent line. The day after, Barker was ordered to retreat to the Dunkirk perimeter, which it did, with most of the brigade, which had sustained heavy losses, being evacuated to England on 31 May. Peter Young, then a platoon commander in the 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment (part of the 10th Brigade), was impressed by Barker during this period, writing that he was "the coolest man you could wish to see under fire. He seemed to like it; indeed I feel sure that he did. He liked to observe his officers and men in times of stress, because it helped to weigh them up. After so many years I am not ashamed to confess that I always felt braver when he was present".

After returning to England he remained in command of the brigade until October 1940 and, handing over to Brigadier Walter Clutterbuck, he spent the next two months as member of a Transportation Committee. In February 1941, Barker was, aged just forty-six, promoted to major general and assumed command of the 54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division, a first-line Territorial Army (TA) formation. Despite being a first-line formation, the division contained a large number of second-line units, due to the division splitting with its second-line duplicate, the 18th Infantry Division, on a geographical basis. Barker trained his troops well in anti-invasion duties until, in January 1942, the division was placed on the Lower Establishment, which meant the division, in addition to receiving low priority for equipment, lost much of its artillery and other supporting units. However, on 30 April 1943, Barker took over as General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 49th (West Riding) Infantry Division.

The 49th Division, another first-line TA formation, had previously fought in the Norwegian Campaign in April 1940, although it had left behind the divisional troops and only two of its three brigades, the 146th and 148th, both poorly-trained and equipped, and the divisional HQ, had fought. After evacuating from Norway, two of the division's brigades, the 146th and 147th, had been sent to garrison Iceland, not returning to the United Kingdom until 1942, whereby the division was reconstituted, now with the 70th Brigade replacing the 148th. As it had been stationed in Iceland, the division's insignia was that of a polar bear. Barker, however, believed the original design, featuring the polar bear with its head facing downwards, made the animal look too timid and had it changed into a more aggressive-looking animal. The new design featured the bear with its head thrown back and roaring. By the time Barker became GOC, the 49th "Polar Bears" Division had been selected to join the British Second Army, which was formed in July to take part in the Allied invasion of Normandy, then scheduled for May 1944. The division formed part of I Corps, then under Lieutenant General Gerard Bucknall, later replaced in August 1943 by Lieutenant General John Crocker. As a result, the division undertook training in amphibious landings, mainly in Scotland. Whilst he was there Barker, nicknamed "Bubbles", apparently gained a reputation as a stickler for physical fitness.In January 1944, the division moved to East Anglia in preparations for the invasion.

The 49th Division, now serving as part of Lieutenant General Bucknall's XXX Corps, landed in Normandy as part of Operation Overlord on 12 June 1944, six days after the initial Normandy landings (more commonly known as D-Day). The division's first contact with the enemy came around Tilly-sur-Seulles on 16 June, where the 6th Battalion, Duke of Wellington's Regiment (6th DWR), of 147th Brigade, sustained very heavy losses.The division's next engagement, intended to protect the right flank of the newly-arrived VIII Corps taking part in Operation Epsom, was during Operation Martlet on 25 June, with the objective of seizing the Rauray bridge. The first day went well, with the village of Fontenay, the initial objective, being captured, although Rauray itself was more difficult, eventually falling on 27 June and holding against repeated German counterattacks for four days. The division performed well, although the 6th DWR was disbanded due to its heavy casualties (and replaced by the 1st Leicesters), and the defence of Rauray against two SS panzer divisions had impressed Barker's superiors.

The division was withdrawn from the front line a few weeks later, transferring to Lieutenant General Crocker's I Corps, which was then part of the First Canadian Army, on 25 July and played a minor role in the advance towards Falaise. The division, now with the 56th Brigade replacing the 70th Brigade (disbanded due to the British Army's manpower shortage), advanced on the far left of the First Canadian Army towards the Seine, arriving there in late August. The division then, after crossing the river, turned towards the French port Le Havre, capturing it in conjunction with the 51st (Highland) Division while sustaining light casualties in a set-piece assault.

The 49th Division was then temporarily grounded, due to a shortage of supplies such as fuel and transport, with priority being given to XII and XXX Corps, now commanded by Lieutenant General Brian Horrocks, in their pursuit of the retreating German armies into Belgium and for Operation Market Garden. On 21 September the division concentrated in Belgium and liberated Turnhout after crossing the Antwerp-Turnhout Canal.It was during this period that Corporal John Harper of the Hallamshire Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment, of the 146th Brigade, was posthumously awarded the division's first and only VC of the war. The division then spent the next three weeks on the defensive, before capturing the Dutch town of Roosendaal on 30 October, after ten days of hard fighting. By the month's end the division was at Willemstad.

The division, in mid-November, transferred from Crocker's I Corps and the First Canadian Army to Lieutenant General Neil Ritchie's XII Corps of the British Second Army, where it was involved in the clearing the west bank of the River Maas on the Dutch-German frontier. On 28 November, however, Barker met Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery (one of Barker's instructors at the Staff College), commanding the 21st Army Group, and Lieutenant General Sir Miles Dempsey, commanding the British Second Army, both of whom were impressed with Barker's handling of the 49th Division, and was informed that he was taking over command of VIII Corps. Lieutenant General Richard O'Connor (another of Barker's Staff College instructors), GOC VIII Corps, was transferred to India to take command of the Eastern Army and Barker, by now a lieutenant general, was appointed the new GOC VIII Corps in his place. Barker, handing over the 49th Division to Major General Gordon MacMillan, became GOC in time to see the end of Operation Nutcracker.

VIII Corps, which did not see much action from the time of Barker's assumption of command, saw extensive action during the final push into Germany between March and May 1945. The corps, with the 15th Infantry, 11th Armoured and 6th Airborne Divisions under command (along with the 5th Infantry Division from 17 April), captured Osnabrück, Minden, Celle and Lüneburg and later crossed the Elbe. On 15 April, elements of Barker's corps liberated the remaining survivors of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. After the German capitulation and the end of World War II in Europe, Field Marshal Montgomery appointed Barker to head the Schleswig-Holstein Corps District of the British occupation zone. He was also knighted (KBE) immediately after the campaign.

Taking command in Palestine

In the spring of 1946, Barker was appointed GOC British Forces in Palestine and Trans-Jordan. The perception of the British government's timidity with regard to the Jews, predominant in military circles, was expressed in the memoirs of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery, now the Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS), the professional head of the British Army, in 1946–48:

"Indecision and hesitation were in evidence all down the line, beginning in Whitehall ... All this had led to a state of affairs in which British rule existed only in name; the true rulers seemed to me to be the Jews, whose unspoken slogan was – 'You dare not touch us.' "

Relationship with Katie Antonius

Soon after arriving in Palestine, Evelyn Barker became a frequenter of the Jerusalem haute societe gatherings in the mansion of Katie Antonius. The hostess was the widow of the famous Lebanese-Palestinian intellectual George Antonius, and was known for her intelligence and taste. The evening dances in the Karm al Mufti mansion, the Shepherd Hotel, where Antonius had written his Arab Awakening, were attended by diplomats, artists and British officers. Evelyn Barker, by now married with a son, dallied there with his Arab hostess.

Advocating the death penalty

Barker saw capital punishment as an effective discouragement against resorting to arms, and argued for a wide application of the death penalty against Zionist guerillas. That it was never applied in the preceding years, he considered among the major causes of the failure to suppress the insurgency. Barker would later express his position in this way:

"I am in favour of the death penalty for murder, political or otherwise. The one strict law we had was against carrying arms. And it's no good having a law like that if you don't enforce it. So if anyone was caught carrying arms, he was up before a court martial, he could state his case, but if he was found guilty that was it. And, subject to Alan Cunningham's [the High Commissioner of Palestine] final say, I would confirm the death sentence."

In his position on the death penalty, Barker was not only strongly supported by his subordinates, but directly instructed by his superiors. The CIGS, Field Marshal Montgomery, conveyed to Barker that capital punishment of the Jewish militants must be carried out even when British soldiers were held hostage for the sentenced terrorists. When, on 18 June 1946, the Irgun abducted five British officers, to be held as hostages for the recently condemned to death members of the Irgun, Montgomery reacted with an urgent unplanned visit to Palestine for talks with Barker, of which he later recalled:

"I said that General Barker, as the confirming authority for death sentences on Jews convicted by military tribunals, must not be deterred from his duty by threats of the murder of five British officers who had been kidnapped since my visit a few days earlier. This did a good deal to strengthen his resolve. Barker was suffering from a lack of support by the Government authorities; I promised him my full support in his difficult task."

Operation Agatha

Spurred to deliver, in the middle of June 1946, Barker started planning a large-scale police operation throughout the Yishuv. Having the long-awaited order to arrest the leaders of the Jewish Agency, which was now strongly believed to be complicit in terrorism, Barker organised Operation Agatha in great secrecy and with high hopes of delivering a strong blow to the guerillas. The operation began in early morning of Saturday, 29 June (it became known as "Black Sabbath" among the Yishuv), with tens of thousands of soldiers and policemen employed in a cordon-and-search action in almost every Jewish settlement. By the end of the day, over 2,700 Jews were detained, including some leaders of the Jewish Agency. Dozens of weapon caches were found, including one in the Great Synagogue of Tel Aviv.

The order prohibiting social interaction with the Jews

Barker was in his office at the King David Hotel in Jerusalem when at 12.37 pm, Monday, 22 July 1946, the southern wing of the building collapsed following a large explosion, which killed more than 100 Britons, Arabs and Jews. It looked immediately apparent (and was very soon confirmed) that the hotel, which housed the headquarters of the Mandate administration, had been targeted by Zionist militants. Shortly after the explosion, Barker was in his office writing the order to his troops:

"The Jewish community of Palestine cannot be absolved from responsibility for the long series of outrages culminating in the blowing up of a large part of the Government offices in the King David Hotel causing grievous loss of life. Without the support, active or passive, of the general Jewish public the terrorist gangs who actually carried out these criminal acts would soon be unearthed, and in this measure the Jews in this country are accomplices and bear a share of the guilt.

I am determined that they shall suffer punishment and be made aware of the contempt and loathing with which we regard their conduct. We must not allow ourselves to be deceived by the hypocritical sympathy shown by their leaders and representative bodies, or by their protests that they are in no way responsible for these acts ... I have decided that with effect on receipt of this letter you will put out of bounds to all ranks all Jewish establishments, restaurants, shop, and private dwellings. No British soldier is to have social intercourse with any Jew ... I appreciate that these measures will inflict some hardship on the troops, yet I am certain that if my reasons are fully explained to them they will understand their propriety and will be punishing the Jews in a way the race dislikes as much as any, by striking at their pockets and showing our contempt of them."

Barker later regretted issuing this order:

"My office was in the middle of the building, overlooking the Old City. When I heard the explosion, I walked across the landing and I couldn't see anything, only dust. I was so angry when I found out what had happened that I went straight to my office and wrote an order to the troops, putting all Jewish establishments out of bounds. It was a rotten letter, written on the spur of the moment. I ought to have restrained myself for an hour or two before putting pen to paper."

Speaking specifically of the Palestinian situation, the Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) Middle East Land Forces, Lieutenant General Sir Miles Dempsey (formerly Barker's superior as GOC of the British Second Army), later reported to the War Minister Frederick Bellenger:

"We know that terrorism is tacitly accepted by all and sundry. Were this not so these murderers would soon be apprehended. The people must therefore take the consequences."

Operation Shark

With information that the Irgun ring responsible for the King David Hotel bombing was hiding in Tel Aviv, Barker organised a massive police operation in the city. His instructions to his subordinate Major-General James Cassels were short: "Jim, I want you to search Tel Aviv, every single room and attic and cellar in Tel Aviv. Is that quite clear ?"

The police action in Tel Aviv, codenamed Operation Shark, began on 30 July and achieved several successes, including the discovery of a large weapons cache in the city's main synagogue, and the arrest of the LEHI's leader Yitzhak Shamir. But the most important figure of the Zionist underground, Menachem Begin of the Irgun, slipped through British hands. He hid in a secret compartment in his house while British soldiers stayed in his home for two days. General Barker later recalled: "We should have caught him, but the men did not search his house properly. This is one of the problems of search operations. You have to rely on very junior people, and, if they make a mistake, the whole operation can be damaged."

On 24 January 1947, Barker confirmed the death sentence of the Irgun fighter, Dov Gruner. Barker later said in an interview to a researcher:

"This was a cut-and-dried case. Gruner had been caught redhanded, armed and shooting up British troops. His political views were nothing to do with the matter. It's nonsense to say that he was a prisoner of war. There was no war. Even if there had been, the Irgun were not obeying the rules of war. He was a criminal, a murderer. So I took it up to Alan Cunningham and I said, "This is an absolutely definite case of carrying arms and I propose to sign the death warrant. Do you agree? He said he did. It wasn't political. It wasn't referred to London. It was a decision taken by me on the spot."

Assassination plots

Barker was a target of the Irgun and the LEHI. In Palestine, explosive devices were placed around his home and at its very door, the GOC sometimes survived due to the vigilance of his officers, other times by luck. Assassination plots followed him to Britain after his return from the Mandate in February 1947. Among the would-be assassins was the future President of Israel, and the nephew of Chaim Weizmann, Ezer Weizman. A former Royal Air Force (RAF) pilot, and now a student of aviation in London, the 23-year-old Ezer Weizman worked with an Irgun colleague tracking Barker to his house and producing a plan to use a bomb against him. Before the duo was able to plant the device into the road, however, Weizman was visited by the police. Having attracted suspicion, the future President quickly left Britain. The story of this plot remained unknown until Weizman himself revealed it in his memoir "On Eagle's Wings" 30 years later. The retired Barker commented on this news in 1977:

"I expect he's glad that he failed in his mission. What good would it have done to kill me? It wouldn't have helped the Jewish cause or the Irgun or anyone else. At least General Weizman has been able to go through the last thirty years without a murder on his conscience."

Last years of military service, and retirement

After leaving Palestine in February 1947, Barker returned to England where he assumed his position of GOC Eastern Command. On 15 November 1948 he was promoted to the four-star rank of general.

Barker then held several honorary appointments, including Colonel Commandant of the 2nd Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps from 11 February to 9 February 1956. From 1949–1950 he was aide-de-camp general to the King. On 18 March 1950, General Sir Evelyn Barker retired from military service, at the age of 55, after a thirty-seven year military career. He was Deputy Lieutenant for the county of Bedfordshire from 1952–1967.

Despite controversy surrounding his command in Palestine "Bubbles" Barker was, although, according to Richard Mead, "largely unknown to the public, he was nevertheless a popular leader who was always very visible to his own troops, his nickname expressing perfectly his energy, enthusiasm and sense of humour".

Barker's antisemitism

General Barker's letters to his former lover, Katie Antonius, contain overtly antisemitic passages. He wrote about the Jews in April 1947: "Yes I loathe the lot – whether they be Zionists or not. Why should we be afraid of saying we hate them. Its time this damned race knew what we think of them – loathsome people".

References

Evelyn Barker Wikipedia