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Montagu Brocas Burrows

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Rank
  
Lieutenant-general

Service/branch
  

Education
  
Name
  
Montagu Burrows

Montagu Brocas Burrows Montagu Brocas Burrows by Walter Stoneman at Art on Demand Portraits

Commands held
  
9th Armoured Division11th Armoured DivisionWest Africa Command

Battles/wars
  
World War IWorld War II

Died
  
January 17, 1967, Marylebone, United Kingdom

Awards
  

Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II

Lieutenant General Montagu Brocas Burrows CB DSO MC (31 October 1894 – 17 January 1967) was a British Army officer who served in both world wars and became Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of West Africa Command from 1945–1946.

Military career

Educated at Eton College and Oxford University, Burrows was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the 5th Dragoon Guards, British Army. He served in the First World War and became a prisoner of war. He was deployed to the Murmansk coast with the North Russia Expeditionary Force in 1918. In the 1920s he played cricket for Surrey County Cricket Club.

He remained in the army and continued to serve during the interwar period; he became adjutant at Oxford University Officers' Training Corps (OTC) in 1920 and an Instructor at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst in 1922. After attending the Staff College, Camberley from 1925 to 1926, he became brigade major with the Nowshera Infantry Brigade in India in 1928 and then joined the 1st Cavalry Brigade at Aldershot in 1930. He was on the General Staff at the War Office from 1935 to 1938 when he became the military attaché in Rome.

He also served in the Second World War as General Officer Commanding (GOC) 9th Armoured Division in the United Kingdom from December 1940 to March 1942 and of the 11th Armoured Division from October 1942 to December 1943; he was appointed Head of the British Military Mission to the Soviet Union in 1944.

After the war he became General Officer Commanding-in-Chief (GOC-in-C) of West Africa Command; he retired in 1946.

References

Montagu Brocas Burrows Wikipedia


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