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Walter Lorrain Brodie

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Name
  
Walter Brodie

Service/branch
  
British Army

Battles/wars
  
World War I

Battles and wars
  
World War I


Rank
  
Lieutenant Colonel

Place of burial
  
France

Years of service
  
1904-1918

Role
  
Armed force officer

Awards
  
Victoria Cross


Buried at
  
Bienvillers Military Cemetery, France

Unit
  
The Highland Light Infantry

Died
  
August 23, 1918, Behagnies, France

Similar People
  
John Frederick MacKay, William Herbert Anderson, James Youll Turnbull, William Angus, George Wilson

Lieutenant Colonel Walter Lorrain Brodie VC MC (28 July 1885 – 23 August 1918) was a Scottish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.

Contents

Life

He was born on 28 July 1884 the son of John Wilson Brodie, an Edinburgh chartered accountant, and his wife, Grace Mary Lorrain. The family lived at 13 Belgrave Place in Edinburgh's fashionable West End. At the time of Walter's death they had moved to a nearby house at 23 Belgrave Crescent. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy then at Sandhurst Military College.

He was a Scottish Freemason having been Initiated in Lodge Canongate Kilwinning, No. 2, (Edinburgh) on 7 February, was Passed a Fellow of Craft on 28 February and Raised a Master Mason on 28 March 1906.

He appears to have been a career soldier and became a Lieutenant in the Highland Light Infantry in 1906. He was an expert in the use of machine-guns.

At the time of his deed which earned the Victoria Cross was 29 years old, and a lieutenant in the 2nd Battalion, The Highland Light Infantry, British Army during the First World War when the following deed took place on 11 November 1914 near Becelaere, Belgium for which he was awarded the VC:

For conspicuous gallantry near Becelaere on the llth November, in clearing the enemy out of a portion of our trenches which they had succeeded in occupying. Heading the charge, he bayonetted several of the enemy, and thereby relieved a dangerous situation.

As a result of Lieutenant Brodie's promptitude, 80 of the enemy were killed, and 51 taken prisoners.

Brodie personally killed nine men in the attack. In a letter to his parents the following day he described the event as "a bit of a scrape".

He received the Victoria Cross from King George V in person at Windsor Castle on 17 July 1915.

He later achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel.

Brodie was killed in action near Behagnies, France, on 23 August 1918. He is buried in Bienvillers Military Cemetery in grave XVIII F15.

Memorials

He is memorialised on his parent's grave in the modern north extension to Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. A memorial to Brodie also exists in the New Club on Princes Street of which he was a member.

References

Walter Lorrain Brodie Wikipedia