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Thomas Morland

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Name
  
Thomas Morland

Years of service
  
1884 – 1923

Battles and wars
  
World War I

Rank
  
General

Service/branch
  
British Army

Battles/wars
  
First World War


Thomas Morland

Commands held
  
2nd Infantry Brigade 5th Division X Corps XIII Corps Army of the Rhine

Died
  
May 21, 1925, Montreux, Switzerland

Education
  
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Charterhouse School

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

Similar People
  
Friedrich Sixt von Armin, Alexander Godley, Herbert Plumer - 1st Viscount, James Cannan, Raymond Leane

General Sir Thomas Lethbridge Napier Morland (9 August 1865 – 21 May 1925) was a British general during the First World War.

Contents

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Early life

Born in Montreal, Canada East, Morland was the son of Thomas Morland and Helen Servante. Educated at Charterhouse School and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Morland was commissioned into the King's Royal Rifle Corps in 1884.

Service in West Africa

He later served in Nigeria, reaching the rank of lieutenant colonel and being appointed commanding officer of the West African Field Force in 1900. The following year he was in command of an expedition to Yola, leading to the defeat and deposition of the Emir of Adamawa in September 1901, and to British occupation of the Adamawa Emirate, important for the later occupation of the Sokoto Caliphate as it reduced slave traffic through the Adamawa area. Morland was wounded by a poisoned arrow during the fighting, but stuck to his command. In a despatch describing the expedition, the acting High Commissioner of Northern Nigeria gives him "very great credit for the successful issue of this impotent expedition." The following year he was appointed a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) in recognition of his services (dated 25 April 1902). From 1905 to 1909, he was Inspector-General of the West African Field Force.

Great War

In 1910, he was promoted to brigadier general and given command of 2nd Infantry Brigade, a position he held until the outbreak of the First World War.

He then became General Officer Commanding 47th Division, then GOC of 14th Division and then GOC of 5th Division. He was promoted to lieutenant general in 1915, and commanded X Corps through to April 1918. During this time, he was one of Plumer's corps commanders at the Battle of Messines.

At the end of the war, he took command of XIII Corps, a position he held until 1920, when he was promoted and made commander-in-chief of the British Army of the Rhine. Two years later, he was appointed General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Aldershot Command and promoted to full general. He retired the following year, in 1923.

Morland died on 21 May 1925 and was buried in the English cemetery at Villeneuve, Montreux.

Family

In 1890, he married Mabel St. John, with whom he had two daughters.

Morland was portrayed by Eric Carte in the 2006 BBC docudrama The Somme - From Defeat to Victory.

References

Thomas Morland Wikipedia