Allegiance United Kingdom Service number 486538 | Years of service 1968–2011 | |
Born 9 December 1947 (age 69) ( 1947-12-09 ) Commands held Chief of Defence Materiel Books Kaye, Son and Co. Ltd, The Trades Increase: A Centenary History of Norex PLC, P & O: A Fleet History, Blue Star Awards Order of the Bath, Order of the British Empire Similar Tony Atkinson, David Murray, Andrew Gregory |
Kevin o donoghue diarmuid lynch killarney historic rally 2016 stage 2
General Sir Kevin O'Donoghue, KCB, CBE (born 9 December 1947) is a retired British Army officer and former Chief of Defence Materiel. He retired from the service in December 2010, being succeeded as Chief of Defence Materiel by Bernard Gray.
Contents
- Kevin o donoghue diarmuid lynch killarney historic rally 2016 stage 2
- Kevin o donoghue testing for rally of the lakes 2016
- Early life
- Military career
- Later life
- Personal life
- Honours and decorations
- References
Kevin o donoghue testing for rally of the lakes 2016
Early life
O'Donoghue was born on 9 December 1947, to Phillip James O'Donoghue and Winifred Mary O'Donoghue. He studied at University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology. He graduated in 1971 with a First-class Bachelor of Science (BSc).
Military career
O'Donoghue joined the Territorial Army in 1968. He was commissioned in the Royal Engineers as a Second Lieutenant (on probation) on 10 October 1968. He was attending university and had previously been an Officer Cadet. In 1971, after approximately two years as a troop commander in 75 Engineer Regiment, he converted to a Regular Commission and spent the next 5 years in the British Army of the Rhine.
In 1976, he moved to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst as an instructor. He then attended the Canadian Forces' Command and staff Course in Toronto before being posted to the Ministry of Defence as Military Assistant to the Chief of the General staff.
O'Donoghue returned to Germany as Officer Commanding 4 Field Squadron RE (21 Engineer Regiment) in support of 7th Armoured Brigade. During this time he was instrumental in the development and introduction of the mini minefield defence concept. On promotion he returned to the UK and became a member of the Directing staff for the Army staff Course. Command of 25 Engineer Regiment included a deployment to the Falkland Islands. He then attended the Higher Command and Staff Course in 1990 and was promoted to Brigadier and assumed the appointment of Commander Corps Royal Engineers 1 (British) Corps (which became Chief Engineer Allied Command Europe Rapid Reaction Corps) and Commander Hameln Garrison.
In 1993 he attended the NATO Defence College in Rome, before moving to Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe to become the Director of staff Operations. He was promoted to Major General in April 1996 on appointment as Chief of staff, Headquarters Quartermaster General, following which he moved to the Ministry of Defence to become the Assistant Chief of the General staff.
He was promoted to Lieutenant General and became the UK Military Representative to NATO, the EU and WEU. He then served as Deputy Chief of the Defence staff (Health), responsible for the Defence Medical Services, from 2002 to 2004.
He became Chief of Defence Logistics on 1 January 2005. When the Defence Logistics Organisation merged with the Defence Procurement Agency on 2 April 2007, he became the first Chief of Defence Materiel. He retired from this post in December 2010.
He officially retired from the British Army on 19 March 2011.
Later life
Since 2010, O'Donoghue has been Chairman of SSAFA.
Personal life
O'Donoghue has a wife named Jean and together they have three daughters. His hobbies include dog walking, reading military history and gardening.
Honours and decorations
In the 2005 New Year Honours, O'Donoghue was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB).
On 10 May 2004, he was appointed to the honorary role of Chief Royal Engineer. His tenure ended on 10 May 2009. On 1 February 2007, he was appointed Honorary Colonel Commandant of the Royal Logistic Corps. On 1 June 2009, he was appointed to the honorary role of Master General of Logistics. He was the first to hold this appointment. His tenured ended on 1 June 2012.