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Geoffrey Langlands

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Years of service
  
1939–1953

Name
  
Geoffrey Langlands

Rank
  
Major


Geoffrey Langlands itelegraphcoukmultimediaarchive02246Geoffre

Nickname(s)
  
Major Langlands of Pakistan

Born
  
21 October 1917 (age 106) Hull, England, United Kingdom (
1917-10-21
)

Service/branch
  
British Army  British Indian Army  Pakistan Army

Battles/wars
  
World War II Indo-Pakistani War of 1947

Awards
  
Sitara-e-Pakistan Hilal-i-Imtiaz Order of St Michael and St George Order of the British Empire

Other work
  
Headmaster Aitchison College Principal Cadet College Razmak Principal Langlands School and College

Battles and wars
  
World War II, Indo-Pakistani War of 1947

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom, British Raj, Pakistan

Imran Khan's Message on 100th Birthday of His Teacher (Major Geoffrey Langlands)


Geoffrey Douglas Langlands CMG, MBE, HI, SPk (born 21 October 1917) is a retired British Major, and a retired teacher and educator living in Pakistan since the partition of the British Indian Empire in 1947. He also served the British Indian Army and Pakistani Army as part of his service tenure.

Contents

Geoffrey Langlands Briton There at Pakistan39s Birth Lingers at 94 a Living

Early life

Langlands was born 21 October 1917, in Hull, England, to a father employed in an Anglo-American company and a mother who was a classical folkdance instructor. His father died 27 October 1918, due to the 1918 flu pandemic that killed millions worldwide. After the death of her husband, Mrs. Langlands moved with the children to her parents' home in Bristol.

Geoffrey Langlands Briton There at Pakistan39s Birth Lingers at 94 a Living

In 1930, Langlands' mother died due to cancer after which Langlands and his siblings lived under the care of their grandfather. The following year on 24 December, Langlands grandfather died leaving children with no other relatives. His older brother received a scholarship to an orphan school in Bristol, and a family friend helped secure positions for the other children.

Military career

Geoffrey Langlands Goodbye to Major Geoffrey Langlands of the Hindu Kush

In July 1935, Langlands completed his A Level education and began his teaching career in London, the following year at age 18. In September 1936, he had been a mathematics and science teacher to second grade students in a school in Croydon. When World War II began in 1939, Langlands joined the British Army as an enlisted soldier. In 1942, Langlands became a commando and took part in the Dieppe Raid

Geoffrey Langlands He has been kidnapped and taken tea with princesses a

In January 1944, Langlands arrived in British India as an army volunteer on a troop carrier and worked three years as part of the selection board for officers training in Bangalore. Rising to the acting rank of troop sergeant major, he received an emergency commission in the British Indian Army as a second lieutenant on 3 September 1944. During partition of the sub-continent in 1947 when India and Pakistan became independent nations, Langlands decided to move to Pakistan and was transferred to Rawalpindi where he joined Pakistan Army.

Teaching career

Geoffrey Langlands Hero of the Hindukush 77 Long Drives

For approximately six years, Langlands worked as an instructor for the Pakistani Army which was young at that time. Upon the completion of the contract with Pakistan Army, British Army troops began to leave the country. Ayub Khan, then President of Pakistan, asked Langlands to stay and work in Pakistan. Langlands was offered a teaching job in Aitchison College in Lahore which he accepted and as an English and mathematics teacher. During his 25-year teaching career at Aitchison College, Langlands first became house master of Kelly House in senior school and was later promoted to head master of the prep school. In 1979, then Chief Minister of Northwest Frontier Province (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) offered the post of principal to Langlands in Cadet College Razmak in North Waziristan, Federally Administered Tribal Areas. Langlands joined the Cadet college and served from April 1979 to September 1989.

In late 1989, Langlands took charge of the first private school in Chitral, Sayurj Public School, which was later renamed Langlands School and College in his honour. The school, founded in September 1988 by local Deputy Commissioner Javed Majeed, grew steadily under his leadership. Langlands served the school for twenty five years and after suffering a stroke in 2008, took retirement from the school at the age of 94 in September 2012. In June 2015, Langlands regain control of the school after having retired succeeding London-based Carey Schofield who took care of the school for two years as principal. Apparently, Langlands was not happy at the way the school was being run under Schofield thus he swiftly retook control of the school when Schofield was visiting London. To make sure of the takeover, the Pakistani residence visa of Schofield was allegedly cancelled by Pakistani authorities, preventing her from returning.

Recognition

  • Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE; 1982)
  • Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George (CMG; 2010)
  • Hilal-e-Imtiaz (HI; 2011) (Sitara-i-Imtiaz: 1987)
  • Sitara-i-Pakistan (SPk, 2004)
  • References

    Geoffrey Langlands Wikipedia