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Frank Messervy

General Sir Frank Walter Messervy, KCSI, KBE, CB, DSO & Bar (9 December 1893 – 2 February 1974) was a British Indian Army officer in the First and Second World Wars. Following its independence, he was the first commander-in-chief of the Pakistan Army from August 1947 to February 1948.[11] Previously, he had served as General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Northern Command, India in 1946 and 1947.

Frank Walter Messervy
Messervy as the GOC of the 7th Indian Infantry Division during the Second World War
Nickname(s)"The Bearded Man"[a]
Born(1893-12-09)9 December 1893
Trinidad
Died2 February 1974(1974-02-02) (aged 80)
Heyshott, West Sussex, England
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Indian Army
Years of service1913–1948
RankGeneral
Unit9th Hodson's Horse
Commands heldCommander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army (1947–48)
Northern Command, India (1946–47)
Malaya Command (1945–46)
IV Corps (1944–45)
7th Indian Infantry Division (1943–44)
43rd Indian Armoured Division (1942–43)
7th Armoured Division (1942)
1st Armoured Division (1942)
4th Indian Infantry Division (1941–42)
9th Indian Infantry Brigade (1941)
Gazelle Force (1941)
13th Duke of Connaught's Own Lancers (1938–39)
Battles/warsFirst World War
Second World War
AwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the Star of India[1]
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Companion of the Order of the Bath
Distinguished Service Order[2] & Bar[3]
Mentioned in Despatches (3)[4][5][6]
Order of the Nile (Egypt)[7]
Legion of Merit (United States)
Other workHonorary Colonel, 16th Light Cavalry (1945–48)[8][9]
Honorary Colonel, The Jat Regiment (1947–55)[10]
Deputy Chief Scout (1949–50)
Berkshire County Councillor (1953–56)

Early life edit

Messervy was born in Trinidad on 9 December 1893,[12] the oldest child of Walter John Messervy (born in Jersey in the English Channel), a bank manager in the colony (and later England) and his wife Myra Naida de Boissiere from Trinidad.[13]

Early career edit

Sent to England from Trinidad, Messervy was initially educated at Eton College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and was commissioned into the Indian Army in January 1913[14][15] and in 1914 joined 9th Hodson's Horse.[16][17] which later became part of the 4th Duke of Cambridge's Own Hodson's Horse. He would see action in the First World War in France, Palestine and Syria from 1914 to 1918. He later served in Kurdistan in 1919.[17]

After attending the Staff College, Camberley, from 1925 to 1926,[17][18] Messervy was appointed as an instructor at the Staff College, Quetta from 1932 to 1936, where Bernard Montgomery was among his fellow instructors.[19] He was made commanding officer of the 13th Duke of Connaught's's Own Lancers, then in British India, during 1938 and 1939.[15]

Second World War edit

East Africa edit

In September 1939, Messervy was promoted to colonel[15] and became a General Staff Officer Grade 1 (GSO1) of the 5th Indian Infantry Division, which was about to be formed at Secunderabad. In mid-1940, the division was sent to the Sudan to counter the threat from the Italian forces based in Italian East Africa. Messervy was appointed commander of Gazelle Force.[20] Created on 16 October 1940, it was a mobile reconnaissance and strike formation of expanded battalion size created from elements of 5th Indian Division. During the ensuing East African campaign, Messervy commanded Gazelle Force with notable success, latterly attached to the Indian 4th Infantry Division. By 13 February 1941, the campaign had become static and Messervy's formation was disbanded.[21]

In early March 1941, Messervy was promoted acting brigadier[15] to command the Indian 5th Infantry Division's 9th Indian Infantry Brigade and played a significant role in the third Battle of Keren during the second half of March 1941. His promotion was in part related to his actions during the advance from Kassala through Agordat to the early fighting at Keren during February.[21]

When Major-General Noel Beresford-Peirse, then commander of the 4th Indian Infantry Division,[22] was promoted to command XIII Corps in North Africa Messervy, a brigadier for only six weeks, was appointed to take his place.[21] He was promoted to the acting rank of major general as a result of his new appointment.[15]

Western Desert – North Africa edit

 
Messervy, unshaved, giving orders south-west of Gazala.

Messervy took his division to North Africa in April 1941, taking part in Operation Battleaxe in June. During Operation Crusader in November that year, 4th Indian Division, dug in on the Egypt–Libya border, played a key role in repelling Rommel's tanks after they had defeated the British armour at Sidi Rezegh. The division's battle groups took part in the Eighth Army's pursuit when Rommel withdrew from his defensive positions at Gazala in December, ending the year at Benghazi.[23]

In early January 1942 Messervy had received orders to depart for India where he would assume command of the 31st Indian Armoured Division.[24] He was instead appointed to replace Major General Herbert Lumsden, the wounded commander of the 1st Armoured Division which had recently arrived in the desert.[25][26] During Rommel's attack from El Agheila in late January 1942, the division was outmatched by the Axis armour and heavily defeated. Upon Lumsden's return in March, Messervy was moved to command the 7th Armoured Division ("The Desert Rats") which had just lost its newly appointed commander, Major General Jock Campbell, who had been killed in a motor accident, shortly after being awarded the Victoria Cross (VC).[27] This made Messervy the only Indian Army officer to command a British Army division during the Second World War.[25]

When division HQ was overrun by the Germans at the start of the Battle of Gazala, Messervy was captured on 27 May 1942; but, removing all insignia, managed to bluff the Germans into believing he was a batman and escaped with other members of his staff to rejoin division HQ the following day.[25]

Messervy knew little about tanks and was not considered a great success commanding armoured divisions by his superiors. He was dismissed from command of 7th Armoured Division by Eighth Army commander Neil Ritchie in late June 1942 following the severe defeat the division had sustained at the Battle of Gazala. He transferred to Cairo as Deputy Chief of General Staff, GHQ Middle East Command 1942 and was sent to India a few months later to raise 43rd Indian Armoured Division as its commander. Originally intended for service in Persia, the division was disbanded in April 1943 when the threat to Persia was removed by the Soviet victory at Stalingrad.[28]

India and Burma edit

 
Lieutenant-General Frank Messervy, GOC IV Corps in Burma, talks to a sepoy from the 17th Indian Infantry Division, December 1944.[b]
 
Lieutenant-General Sir Frank Messervy receives the sword of General Seishirō Itagaki, commander of the Japanese Seventh Area Army, at a formal ceremony of surrender held in the grounds of HQ Malaya Command, Kuala Lumpur, 22 February 1946.

Much to his horror, Messervy was then made Director of Armoured Fighting Vehicles, General Headquarters, India, in 1943, where he argued successfully against the then prevailing view that anything other than light tanks could not be used in Burma. This was to have a significant impact in the next two years when medium tanks were used to telling effect against the Japanese.[28]

In July 1943, Messervy was appointed GOC of the 7th Indian Infantry Division, in succession to Major-General Thomas Corbett, which, although an improvement above his old position, was not initially greeted with much enthusiasm by the division's officers, who all admired Corbett.[29]

The division had been created some three years before Messervy's assumption of command and originally contained many professional soldiers in its ranks. However, many of these men had been, in the usage of the day, "milked" to help create other new units then being formed in the huge expansion of the Indian Army, with the situation being so severe that the division had at one point resembled a training formation rather than a combat division. This all changed in the summer of 1942 when serious training began to take place and which started to absorb the many lessons learned from fighting in the jungle and the Japanese. This would serve the division well when it did enter combat the following year.[28]

The division was sent to the Arakan in Burma to join XV Corps in September. In the Japanese offensive in February 1944, despite having his headquarters overrun and scattered and his supply lines compromised, Messervy's brigades conducted a successful defence whilst being supplied by air (Battle of the Admin Box). After going on the attack in late February, 7th Indian Division was relieved in mid-March.[30]

In March 1944, Messervy lost two brigades sent to reinforce the hard-pressed defences at Imphal and Kohima in India. By May, the whole division was back in the front line in the Kohima sector, fighting a key five-day battle at the Naga Village. It then advanced towards the Chindwin river, combining with Indian 20th Infantry Division to inflict a heavy defeat on the Japanese at Ukhrul.[30]

In December 1944, Messervy was appointed to command IV Corps, which he led in the 1945 offensive during which, he captured the key communications centre at Meiktila in Burma and advanced to Rangoon between February and April. When Messervy returned from home leave hostilities had ceased. He was made Commander-in-Chief Malaya Command in 1945 after the Japanese surrender.[31]

Pakistan and Kashmir edit

Close to the Partition of India, Messervy was made General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Northern Command, India from 1946 to 1947. Finally when Pakistan came into being on 15 August 1947, he was appointed as the Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army.[32]

 
Fighting in Kashmir at the time of Messervy's retirement

On 20 August, a letter signed by Messervy went out to all the brigade headquarters in northwest Pakistan, attaching plans for a certain Operation Gulmarg. According to the plan, 20 lashkars of Pashtun tribesmen were to be armed and trained in various brigade locations in northwest Pakistan for an armed invasion of Kashmir. The information leaked out, one of the letters having fallen into the hands of an Indian officer Major Onkar Singh Kalkat. Kalkat was put under house arrest, but he escaped and made his way to India.[33] By the D-day of 22 October, when the attack was launched, Messervy was away in London, leaving General Douglas Gracey, the Chief of General Staff, as the Acting Commander-in-Chief[34] On his return, he stopped in Delhi, where Lord Mountbatten made him swear that he had not been asked for, nor had he provided, any help to the tribesmen.[35] But within a week he was found providing arms and ammunition to the Pakistani invading forces.[35] He complained to Governor George Cunningham of the NWFP that Mountbatten had gone over to the side of the "Hindus".[36][c]

Pakistani officers narrate that both Messervy and Gracey were involved in running the day-to-day operations of Pakistan's Kashmir War. Officers were loaned out for commanding the rebel forces and shown on records as being absent.[38] Nevertheless, Messervy issued a statement on 12 November 1947, denying that any "serving Pakistan Army officers are directing operations in Kashmir", which was cited by Pakistan in the UN Security Council debates as proof of Pakistan's innocence.[39]

Messervy was relieved of his post on 15 February 1948,[40] leading to his retirement on 22 August that year.[41][31] He was granted the honorary rank of general.[32] Later, he wrote an influential article on Kashmir in the Asiatic Review, where he alleged that India had planned to militarily intervene in Kashmir several weeks before the event.[42][43] He opined that if the pro-India National Conference party was allowed to hold power in Kashmir, India would likely win a plebiscite, but if Pakistan was allowed to hold on to the areas that it had captured, a Pakistan win was 'even more certain'. He had 'few doubts' as to which dominion most people of Kashmir would choose.[44] Historian Gowher Rizvi states that influences of this kind persuaded the Secretary of State for Commonwealth Affairs Philip Noel-Baker to ensure that Pakistan's viewpoint was "not ignored" in the UN Security Council.[45]

Messervy died at home in the small village of Heyshott,[46] in the south of England, on 2 February 1974.[47]

Family edit

In 1927 Messervy married Patricia Waldegrave Courtney daughter of Lt Col Edward Arthur Waldegrave Courtney. They had a daughter and two sons.[46]

Career edit

Promotions edit

  • Second Lieutenant-22 January 1913[57]
  • Lieutenant – 22 April 1915[58]
  • Captain – 22 January 1917[59]
    • Acting Major – 23 November to 27 December 1918[60]
    • Brevet Major – 1 July 1929[61]
  • Major – 22 January 1931[62]
    • Local Lieutenant-Colonel – 1 September 1932[63]
    • Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel – 1 July 1933[64]
  • Lieutenant-Colonel – 10 April 1938[65]
  • Colonel – 19 April 1940[66]
    • Acting Major-General[67] (Temporary Brigadier) – 14 April 1941
    • Temporary Major-General – 14 April 1942[68]
  • Major-General – 17 April 1943[69]
    • Acting Lieutenant-General – 8 December 1944[70]
  • Lieutenant-General – 1 June 1945[71]
    • Acting General – 15 August 1947[55]
  • Honorary General – 1948[32]

Notes edit

  1. ^ So-called due to his tendency to forego shaving during periods of action.
  2. ^ This division was sometimes known as 'The Black Cat Division' due to its formation badge, which are clearly visible on the shoulders of the men on parade.
  3. ^ Cunningham had been aware, from his Governor's position, of the efforts to mobilise the Pasthun tribes. He had alerted Messervy, who apparently promised to warn Liaquat Ali Khan about the inadvisability of such an operation.[37]

References edit

  1. ^ "No. 37977". The London Gazette (Supplement). 6 June 1947. p. 2574.
  2. ^ "No. 35396". The London Gazette (Supplement). 26 December 1941. p. 7333.
  3. ^ "No. 36477". The London Gazette (Supplement). 18 April 1944. p. 1815.
  4. ^ "No. 35396". The London Gazette (Supplement). 26 December 1941. pp. 7339–7353.
  5. ^ "No. 37015". The London Gazette (Supplement). 3 April 1945. p. 1819.
  6. ^ "No. 37184". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 July 1945. pp. 3746–3753.
  7. ^ "No. 31736". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 January 1920. pp. 698–700.
  8. ^ "No. 37238". The London Gazette. 24 August 1945. p. 4299.
  9. ^ "No. 38431". The London Gazette. 15 October 1948. p. 5447.
  10. ^ "No. 40738". The London Gazette. 23 March 1956. p. 1736.
  11. ^ A letter catalogued by MJF[who?], dated 23 March 1948, refers to Sir Douglas David Gracey as Commander-in-Chief, Pakistan Army at that date; but the International Who's Who states that Messervy was Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army until August the same year.
  12. ^ Frank Walter Meservy [sic], death registration March Quarter 1974, Registration District: Midhurst, 5h 2245.
  13. ^ "Messervy, Sir Frank Walter (1893–1974), army officer : Oxford Dictionary of National Biography – oi". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31440. Retrieved 16 July 2018. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  14. ^ "No. 28683". The London Gazette. 21 January 1913. p. 499.
  15. ^ a b c d e "Indian Army officer histories". Unit Histories.
  16. ^ MESSERVY, Gen Sir Frank Walter (1893–1974), Liddell Hart Military Archives, King's College, London
  17. ^ a b c Smart 2005, p. 215.
  18. ^ Maule 1961, p. 16.
  19. ^ Maule 1961, pp. 17–18.
  20. ^ Mead 2007, p. 295.
  21. ^ a b c Mead 2007, p. 296.
  22. ^ Mason, Philip (1982), ‘The Indian Divisions Memorial, 1939–1945’, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Wellingborough, Skelton's Press
  23. ^ Mead 2007, pp. 296–297.
  24. ^ Mead 2007, p. 297.
  25. ^ a b c Mead 2007, p. 298.
  26. ^ Maule 1961, p. 163.
  27. ^ Maule 1961, p. 170.
  28. ^ a b c Mead 2007, p. 299.
  29. ^ Maule 1961, pp. 216–219.
  30. ^ a b Mead 2007, p. 300.
  31. ^ a b Mead 2007, p. 301.
  32. ^ a b c "No. 38411". The London Gazette (Supplement). 21 September 1948. p. 5135.
  33. ^ Malhotra, Iqbal Chand; Raza, Maroof (2019), Kashmir's Untold Story: Declassified, Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 79–80, ISBN 978-93-88912-85-3
  34. ^ "Failures and Successes of Kashmir War: Muzaffarabad Seminar – 27 November 1990", Defence and Media 1991, Inter Services Public Relations, Pakistan, 1991, p. 114: Quoting General Wajahat Hussain, former ADC to Muhammad Ali Jinnah: "This was the time to take important decisions and it appears that either he wanted to evade making decisions or pretended to be innocent about the conspiracy hatched by high-ranking British officers. His leave enabled General Gracey to take over as the acting Chief and he had to take the blame."
  35. ^ a b Hajari, Nisid (2015), Midnight's Furies: The Deadly Legacy of India's Partition, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, pp. 214–215, ISBN 978-0-547-66924-3
  36. ^ Razvi, Mujtaba (1971), The Frontiers of Pakistan: A Study of Frontier Problems in Pakistan's Foreign Policy, National Publishing House: [From Cunningham's diary for 7 November 1947] "Messervy came up from Pindi for a talk; just back from England. He was in Delhi two days ago and was surprised to find Mountbatten directing the military operations in Kashmir. M. B. [Mountbatten] is daily becoming more and more an anathema to our Muslims, and it certainly seems as if he could see nothing except through Hindu eyes."
  37. ^ Hodson, H. V. (1969), The Great Divide: Britain, India, Pakistan, London: Hutchinson, p. 447, ISBN 9780090971503
  38. ^ "Failures and Successes of Kashmir War: Muzaffarabad Seminar – 27 November 1990", Defence and Media 1991, Inter Services Public Relations, 1991, p. 115: "A cell for planning on Kashmir was created in Military Operations Directorate under Brigadier Sher Khan.... Such officers were sent to assist the Mujahideen and were shown as retired or absent without leave. .. General Wajahat further said that "apart from planning military operations, General Messervy had a close liaison with the civil authorities. He used to come to the office at half past seven, Brigadier Sher Khan would present the report on the previous twenty four hours and get instructions for the next day. Then they would visit the operations room where consultations would continue till 10 a.m."
  39. ^ Thorner, Alice (January 1949), "The Kashmir Conflict, Parts I and II", Middle East Journal, 3 (1), Middle East Institute, JSTOR 4322039: 'On November 12, General Sir Frank Messervy, the Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army, issued a communique stating that "there is absolutely no truth in the allegations made by the Government of India that serving Pakistan Army officers are directing operations in Kashmir against State forces" (Quoted by Sir Zafrullah Khan to the Security Council on January 17, 1948, Document S/P.V. 220, 63–65).'
  40. ^ Millar, Thomas Bruce (1967), The Commonwealth and the United Nations, Sydney U.P., p. 28
  41. ^ "No. 38400". The London Gazette. 10 September 1948. p. 4907.
  42. ^ Webb, Matthew J. (2012). "Escaping history or merely rewriting it? The significance of Kashmir's accession to its political future". Contemporary South Asia. 20 (4): 471–485. doi:10.1080/09584935.2012.737311. S2CID 143608576.: "While India's intervention was militarily successful, it was also highly controversial. General Sir Frank Messervy, Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army, alleged that India had planned to militarily intervene in the state several weeks before the event."
  43. ^ * Korbel, Josef (1966) [first published 1954], Danger in Kashmir (second ed.), Princeton University Press, pp. 85–86, ISBN 9781400875238
  44. ^ Snedden, Christopher (2005), "Would a plebiscite have resolved the Kashmir dispute?", South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, 28 (1): 64–86, doi:10.1080/00856400500056145, S2CID 145020726
  45. ^ Rizvi, Gowher (1992), "India, Pakistan and the Kashmir Problem", in Raju G. C. Thomas (ed.), Perspectives on Kashmir: the roots of conflict in South Asia, Westview Press, p. 73, ISBN 978-0-8133-8343-9
  46. ^ a b ODNB 1871-1980: Messervy
  47. ^ England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858–1995.
  48. ^ "No. 28683". The London Gazette. 21 January 1913. p. 499.
  49. ^ "No. 28849". The London Gazette. 14 July 1914. p. 5455.
  50. ^ "No. 33829". The London Gazette. 27 May 1932. p. 3419.
  51. ^ "No. 33829". The London Gazette. 27 May 1932. p. 3418.
  52. ^ "No. 33884". The London Gazette. 18 November 1932. p. 7344.
  53. ^ "No. 34264". The London Gazette. 13 March 1936. p. 1660.
  54. ^ "No. 37801". The London Gazette. 29 November 1946. p. 5852.
  55. ^ a b "No. 38041". The London Gazette. 8 August 1947. p. 3739.
  56. ^ "No. 38400". The London Gazette. 10 September 1948. p. 4907.
  57. ^ "No. 28683". The London Gazette. 21 January 1913. p. 499.
  58. ^ "No. 29186". The London Gazette. 8 June 1915. p. 5526.
  59. ^ "No. 30236". The London Gazette. 17 August 1917. p. 8458.
  60. ^ "No. 33409". The London Gazette (Supplement). 3 July 1928. p. 5217.
  61. ^ "No. 33513". The London Gazette. 2 July 1929. p. 4362.
  62. ^ "No. 33693". The London Gazette. 27 February 1931. p. 1357.
  63. ^ "No. 33882". The London Gazette. 11 November 1932. p. 7180.
  64. ^ "No. 33955". The London Gazette. 30 June 1933. p. 4383.
  65. ^ "No. 34516". The London Gazette (Supplement). 3 June 1938. p. 3567.
  66. ^ "No. 34832". The London Gazette (Supplement). 16 April 1940. p. 2301.
  67. ^ "No. 35163". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 May 1941. p. 2783.
  68. ^ "No. 35533". The London Gazette (Supplement). 21 April 1942. p. 1799.
  69. ^ "No. 36003". The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 May 1943. p. 2043.
  70. ^ "No. 37466". The London Gazette (Supplement). 25 January 1946. p. 701.
  71. ^ "No. 37294". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 October 1945. p. 4890.

Bibliography edit

  • Brett-James, Antony (1951). . Gale & Polden. p. 481 pages. Archived from the original on 27 March 2020. Retrieved 31 August 2007.
  • Callahan, Raymond (2007). Churchill and His Generals. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-070061512-4.
  • Holland, James (2016). Burma '44. Bantam Press.
  • Mackenzie, Compton (1951). Eastern Epic. Chatto & Windus, London. p. 623 pages.
  • Maule, Henry (1961). Spearhead General: The Epic Story of General Sir Frank Messervy and His Men in Eritrea, North Africa and Burma. Odhams Press, 1961.
  • Mead, Richard (2007). Churchill's Lions: a biographical guide to the key British generals of World War II. Stroud: Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-431-0.
  • Smart, Nick (2005). Biographical Dictionary of British Generals of the Second World War. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 1844150496.

External links edit

  • Generals of World War II
  • Indian Army Officers 1939–1945
Military offices
Preceded by GOC 4th Indian Infantry Division
1941–1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC 1st Armoured Division
January–February 1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC 7th Armoured Division
March–June 1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC 7th Indian Infantry Division
1943–1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC IV Corps
1944–1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC Malaya Command
1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC-in-C Northern Command, India
1946–1947
Command disbanded
New title C-in-C of the Pakistan Army
1947–1948
Succeeded by

frank, messervy, general, frank, walter, messervy, kcsi, december, 1893, february, 1974, british, indian, army, officer, first, second, world, wars, following, independence, first, commander, chief, pakistan, army, from, august, 1947, february, 1948, previousl. General Sir Frank Walter Messervy KCSI KBE CB DSO amp Bar 9 December 1893 2 February 1974 was a British Indian Army officer in the First and Second World Wars Following its independence he was the first commander in chief of the Pakistan Army from August 1947 to February 1948 11 Previously he had served as General Officer Commanding in Chief Northern Command India in 1946 and 1947 Frank Walter MesservyMesservy as the GOC of the 7th Indian Infantry Division during the Second World WarNickname s The Bearded Man a Born 1893 12 09 9 December 1893TrinidadDied2 February 1974 1974 02 02 aged 80 Heyshott West Sussex EnglandAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchBritish Indian ArmyYears of service1913 1948RankGeneralUnit9th Hodson s HorseCommands heldCommander in Chief of the Pakistan Army 1947 48 Northern Command India 1946 47 Malaya Command 1945 46 IV Corps 1944 45 7th Indian Infantry Division 1943 44 43rd Indian Armoured Division 1942 43 7th Armoured Division 1942 1st Armoured Division 1942 4th Indian Infantry Division 1941 42 9th Indian Infantry Brigade 1941 Gazelle Force 1941 13th Duke of Connaught s Own Lancers 1938 39 Battles warsFirst World WarSecond World WarAwardsKnight Commander of the Order of the Star of India 1 Knight Commander of the Order of the British EmpireCompanion of the Order of the BathDistinguished Service Order 2 amp Bar 3 Mentioned in Despatches 3 4 5 6 Order of the Nile Egypt 7 Legion of Merit United States Other workHonorary Colonel 16th Light Cavalry 1945 48 8 9 Honorary Colonel The Jat Regiment 1947 55 10 Deputy Chief Scout 1949 50 Berkshire County Councillor 1953 56 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Second World War 3 1 East Africa 3 2 Western Desert North Africa 3 3 India and Burma 4 Pakistan and Kashmir 5 Family 6 Career 7 Promotions 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly life editMesservy was born in Trinidad on 9 December 1893 12 the oldest child of Walter John Messervy born in Jersey in the English Channel a bank manager in the colony and later England and his wife Myra Naida de Boissiere from Trinidad 13 Early career editSent to England from Trinidad Messervy was initially educated at Eton College and the Royal Military College Sandhurst and was commissioned into the Indian Army in January 1913 14 15 and in 1914 joined 9th Hodson s Horse 16 17 which later became part of the 4th Duke of Cambridge s Own Hodson s Horse He would see action in the First World War in France Palestine and Syria from 1914 to 1918 He later served in Kurdistan in 1919 17 After attending the Staff College Camberley from 1925 to 1926 17 18 Messervy was appointed as an instructor at the Staff College Quetta from 1932 to 1936 where Bernard Montgomery was among his fellow instructors 19 He was made commanding officer of the 13th Duke of Connaught s s Own Lancers then in British India during 1938 and 1939 15 Second World War editEast Africa edit In September 1939 Messervy was promoted to colonel 15 and became a General Staff Officer Grade 1 GSO1 of the 5th Indian Infantry Division which was about to be formed at Secunderabad In mid 1940 the division was sent to the Sudan to counter the threat from the Italian forces based in Italian East Africa Messervy was appointed commander of Gazelle Force 20 Created on 16 October 1940 it was a mobile reconnaissance and strike formation of expanded battalion size created from elements of 5th Indian Division During the ensuing East African campaign Messervy commanded Gazelle Force with notable success latterly attached to the Indian 4th Infantry Division By 13 February 1941 the campaign had become static and Messervy s formation was disbanded 21 In early March 1941 Messervy was promoted acting brigadier 15 to command the Indian 5th Infantry Division s 9th Indian Infantry Brigade and played a significant role in the third Battle of Keren during the second half of March 1941 His promotion was in part related to his actions during the advance from Kassala through Agordat to the early fighting at Keren during February 21 When Major General Noel Beresford Peirse then commander of the 4th Indian Infantry Division 22 was promoted to command XIII Corps in North Africa Messervy a brigadier for only six weeks was appointed to take his place 21 He was promoted to the acting rank of major general as a result of his new appointment 15 Western Desert North Africa edit nbsp Messervy unshaved giving orders south west of Gazala Messervy took his division to North Africa in April 1941 taking part in Operation Battleaxe in June During Operation Crusader in November that year 4th Indian Division dug in on the Egypt Libya border played a key role in repelling Rommel s tanks after they had defeated the British armour at Sidi Rezegh The division s battle groups took part in the Eighth Army s pursuit when Rommel withdrew from his defensive positions at Gazala in December ending the year at Benghazi 23 In early January 1942 Messervy had received orders to depart for India where he would assume command of the 31st Indian Armoured Division 24 He was instead appointed to replace Major General Herbert Lumsden the wounded commander of the 1st Armoured Division which had recently arrived in the desert 25 26 During Rommel s attack from El Agheila in late January 1942 the division was outmatched by the Axis armour and heavily defeated Upon Lumsden s return in March Messervy was moved to command the 7th Armoured Division The Desert Rats which had just lost its newly appointed commander Major General Jock Campbell who had been killed in a motor accident shortly after being awarded the Victoria Cross VC 27 This made Messervy the only Indian Army officer to command a British Army division during the Second World War 25 When division HQ was overrun by the Germans at the start of the Battle of Gazala Messervy was captured on 27 May 1942 but removing all insignia managed to bluff the Germans into believing he was a batman and escaped with other members of his staff to rejoin division HQ the following day 25 Messervy knew little about tanks and was not considered a great success commanding armoured divisions by his superiors He was dismissed from command of 7th Armoured Division by Eighth Army commander Neil Ritchie in late June 1942 following the severe defeat the division had sustained at the Battle of Gazala He transferred to Cairo as Deputy Chief of General Staff GHQ Middle East Command 1942 and was sent to India a few months later to raise 43rd Indian Armoured Division as its commander Originally intended for service in Persia the division was disbanded in April 1943 when the threat to Persia was removed by the Soviet victory at Stalingrad 28 India and Burma edit nbsp Lieutenant General Frank Messervy GOC IV Corps in Burma talks to a sepoy from the 17th Indian Infantry Division December 1944 b nbsp Lieutenant General Sir Frank Messervy receives the sword of General Seishirō Itagaki commander of the Japanese Seventh Area Army at a formal ceremony of surrender held in the grounds of HQ Malaya Command Kuala Lumpur 22 February 1946 Much to his horror Messervy was then made Director of Armoured Fighting Vehicles General Headquarters India in 1943 where he argued successfully against the then prevailing view that anything other than light tanks could not be used in Burma This was to have a significant impact in the next two years when medium tanks were used to telling effect against the Japanese 28 In July 1943 Messervy was appointed GOC of the 7th Indian Infantry Division in succession to Major General Thomas Corbett which although an improvement above his old position was not initially greeted with much enthusiasm by the division s officers who all admired Corbett 29 The division had been created some three years before Messervy s assumption of command and originally contained many professional soldiers in its ranks However many of these men had been in the usage of the day milked to help create other new units then being formed in the huge expansion of the Indian Army with the situation being so severe that the division had at one point resembled a training formation rather than a combat division This all changed in the summer of 1942 when serious training began to take place and which started to absorb the many lessons learned from fighting in the jungle and the Japanese This would serve the division well when it did enter combat the following year 28 The division was sent to the Arakan in Burma to join XV Corps in September In the Japanese offensive in February 1944 despite having his headquarters overrun and scattered and his supply lines compromised Messervy s brigades conducted a successful defence whilst being supplied by air Battle of the Admin Box After going on the attack in late February 7th Indian Division was relieved in mid March 30 In March 1944 Messervy lost two brigades sent to reinforce the hard pressed defences at Imphal and Kohima in India By May the whole division was back in the front line in the Kohima sector fighting a key five day battle at the Naga Village It then advanced towards the Chindwin river combining with Indian 20th Infantry Division to inflict a heavy defeat on the Japanese at Ukhrul 30 In December 1944 Messervy was appointed to command IV Corps which he led in the 1945 offensive during which he captured the key communications centre at Meiktila in Burma and advanced to Rangoon between February and April When Messervy returned from home leave hostilities had ceased He was made Commander in Chief Malaya Command in 1945 after the Japanese surrender 31 Pakistan and Kashmir editClose to the Partition of India Messervy was made General Officer Commanding in Chief Northern Command India from 1946 to 1947 Finally when Pakistan came into being on 15 August 1947 he was appointed as the Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army 32 nbsp Fighting in Kashmir at the time of Messervy s retirement On 20 August a letter signed by Messervy went out to all the brigade headquarters in northwest Pakistan attaching plans for a certain Operation Gulmarg According to the plan 20 lashkars of Pashtun tribesmen were to be armed and trained in various brigade locations in northwest Pakistan for an armed invasion of Kashmir The information leaked out one of the letters having fallen into the hands of an Indian officer Major Onkar Singh Kalkat Kalkat was put under house arrest but he escaped and made his way to India 33 By the D day of 22 October when the attack was launched Messervy was away in London leaving General Douglas Gracey the Chief of General Staff as the Acting Commander in Chief 34 On his return he stopped in Delhi where Lord Mountbatten made him swear that he had not been asked for nor had he provided any help to the tribesmen 35 But within a week he was found providing arms and ammunition to the Pakistani invading forces 35 He complained to Governor George Cunningham of the NWFP that Mountbatten had gone over to the side of the Hindus 36 c Pakistani officers narrate that both Messervy and Gracey were involved in running the day to day operations of Pakistan s Kashmir War Officers were loaned out for commanding the rebel forces and shown on records as being absent 38 Nevertheless Messervy issued a statement on 12 November 1947 denying that any serving Pakistan Army officers are directing operations in Kashmir which was cited by Pakistan in the UN Security Council debates as proof of Pakistan s innocence 39 Messervy was relieved of his post on 15 February 1948 40 leading to his retirement on 22 August that year 41 31 He was granted the honorary rank of general 32 Later he wrote an influential article on Kashmir in the Asiatic Review where he alleged that India had planned to militarily intervene in Kashmir several weeks before the event 42 43 He opined that if the pro India National Conference party was allowed to hold power in Kashmir India would likely win a plebiscite but if Pakistan was allowed to hold on to the areas that it had captured a Pakistan win was even more certain He had few doubts as to which dominion most people of Kashmir would choose 44 Historian Gowher Rizvi states that influences of this kind persuaded the Secretary of State for Commonwealth Affairs Philip Noel Baker to ensure that Pakistan s viewpoint was not ignored in the UN Security Council 45 Messervy died at home in the small village of Heyshott 46 in the south of England on 2 February 1974 47 Family editIn 1927 Messervy married Patricia Waldegrave Courtney daughter of Lt Col Edward Arthur Waldegrave Courtney They had a daughter and two sons 46 Career editCommissioned into the British Indian Army 1913 48 Commissioned into the 9th Hodson s Horse 1914 49 Brigade Major 1928 1932 50 51 Instructor GSO2 at Command and Staff College Quetta 1932 1936 52 53 Commanding Officer 13th Duke of Connaught s Own Lancers 1938 1939 General Staff Officer 1 Indian Infantry Division East Africa 1939 1941 Commanding Officer Gazelle Force Sudan and Eritrea 1940 1941 Commanding Officer 9th Indian Brigade Ethiopia 1941 General Officer Commanding Indian Infantry Division North Africa 1941 1942 General Officer Commanding 1st Armoured Division North Africa 1942 General Officer Commanding 7th Armoured Division North Africa 1942 Deputy Chief of the General Staff HQ Middle East Command 1942 General Officer Commanding Indian 43rd Armoured Division 1942 1943 Director Armoured Fighting Vehicles India 1943 General Officer Commanding 7th Indian Infantry Division India 1943 1944 General Officer Commanding IV Corps Burma 1944 1945 General Officer Commander In Chief Malaya Command 1945 1946 General Officer Commander In Chief Northern Command India 1946 1947 54 Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army 1947 1948 55 Retired 1948 56 Promotions editSecond Lieutenant 22 January 1913 57 Lieutenant 22 April 1915 58 Captain 22 January 1917 59 Acting Major 23 November to 27 December 1918 60 Brevet Major 1 July 1929 61 Major 22 January 1931 62 Local Lieutenant Colonel 1 September 1932 63 Brevet Lieutenant Colonel 1 July 1933 64 Lieutenant Colonel 10 April 1938 65 Colonel 19 April 1940 66 Acting Major General 67 Temporary Brigadier 14 April 1941 Temporary Major General 14 April 1942 68 Major General 17 April 1943 69 Acting Lieutenant General 8 December 1944 70 Lieutenant General 1 June 1945 71 Acting General 15 August 1947 55 Honorary General 1948 32 Notes edit So called due to his tendency to forego shaving during periods of action This division was sometimes known as The Black Cat Division due to its formation badge which are clearly visible on the shoulders of the men on parade Cunningham had been aware from his Governor s position of the efforts to mobilise the Pasthun tribes He had alerted Messervy who apparently promised to warn Liaquat Ali Khan about the inadvisability of such an operation 37 References edit No 37977 The London Gazette Supplement 6 June 1947 p 2574 No 35396 The London Gazette Supplement 26 December 1941 p 7333 No 36477 The London Gazette Supplement 18 April 1944 p 1815 No 35396 The London Gazette Supplement 26 December 1941 pp 7339 7353 No 37015 The London Gazette Supplement 3 April 1945 p 1819 No 37184 The London Gazette Supplement 17 July 1945 pp 3746 3753 No 31736 The London Gazette Supplement 13 January 1920 pp 698 700 No 37238 The London Gazette 24 August 1945 p 4299 No 38431 The London Gazette 15 October 1948 p 5447 No 40738 The London Gazette 23 March 1956 p 1736 A letter catalogued by MJF who dated 23 March 1948 refers to Sir Douglas David Gracey as Commander in Chief Pakistan Army at that date but the International Who s Who states that Messervy was Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army until August the same year Frank Walter Meservy sic death registration March Quarter 1974 Registration District Midhurst 5h 2245 Messervy Sir Frank Walter 1893 1974 army officer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography oi Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31440 Retrieved 16 July 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required No 28683 The London Gazette 21 January 1913 p 499 a b c d e Indian Army officer histories Unit Histories MESSERVY Gen Sir Frank Walter 1893 1974 Liddell Hart Military Archives King s College London a b c Smart 2005 p 215 Maule 1961 p 16 Maule 1961 pp 17 18 Mead 2007 p 295 a b c Mead 2007 p 296 Mason Philip 1982 The Indian Divisions Memorial 1939 1945 Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Wellingborough Skelton s Press Mead 2007 pp 296 297 Mead 2007 p 297 a b c Mead 2007 p 298 Maule 1961 p 163 Maule 1961 p 170 a b c Mead 2007 p 299 Maule 1961 pp 216 219 a b Mead 2007 p 300 a b Mead 2007 p 301 a b c No 38411 The London Gazette Supplement 21 September 1948 p 5135 Malhotra Iqbal Chand Raza Maroof 2019 Kashmir s Untold Story Declassified Bloomsbury Publishing pp 79 80 ISBN 978 93 88912 85 3 Failures and Successes of Kashmir War Muzaffarabad Seminar 27 November 1990 Defence and Media 1991 Inter Services Public Relations Pakistan 1991 p 114 Quoting General Wajahat Hussain former ADC to Muhammad Ali Jinnah This was the time to take important decisions and it appears that either he wanted to evade making decisions or pretended to be innocent about the conspiracy hatched by high ranking British officers His leave enabled General Gracey to take over as the acting Chief and he had to take the blame a b Hajari Nisid 2015 Midnight s Furies The Deadly Legacy of India s Partition Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 214 215 ISBN 978 0 547 66924 3 Razvi Mujtaba 1971 The Frontiers of Pakistan A Study of Frontier Problems in Pakistan s Foreign Policy National Publishing House From Cunningham s diary for 7 November 1947 Messervy came up from Pindi for a talk just back from England He was in Delhi two days ago and was surprised to find Mountbatten directing the military operations in Kashmir M B Mountbatten is daily becoming more and more an anathema to our Muslims and it certainly seems as if he could see nothing except through Hindu eyes Hodson H V 1969 The Great Divide Britain India Pakistan London Hutchinson p 447 ISBN 9780090971503 Failures and Successes of Kashmir War Muzaffarabad Seminar 27 November 1990 Defence and Media 1991 Inter Services Public Relations 1991 p 115 A cell for planning on Kashmir was created in Military Operations Directorate under Brigadier Sher Khan Such officers were sent to assist the Mujahideen and were shown as retired or absent without leave General Wajahat further said that apart from planning military operations General Messervy had a close liaison with the civil authorities He used to come to the office at half past seven Brigadier Sher Khan would present the report on the previous twenty four hours and get instructions for the next day Then they would visit the operations room where consultations would continue till 10 a m Thorner Alice January 1949 The Kashmir Conflict Parts I and II Middle East Journal 3 1 Middle East Institute JSTOR 4322039 On November 12 General Sir Frank Messervy the Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army issued a communique stating that there is absolutely no truth in the allegations made by the Government of India that serving Pakistan Army officers are directing operations in Kashmir against State forces Quoted by Sir Zafrullah Khan to the Security Council on January 17 1948 Document S P V 220 63 65 Millar Thomas Bruce 1967 The Commonwealth and the United Nations Sydney U P p 28 No 38400 The London Gazette 10 September 1948 p 4907 Webb Matthew J 2012 Escaping history or merely rewriting it The significance of Kashmir s accession to its political future Contemporary South Asia 20 4 471 485 doi 10 1080 09584935 2012 737311 S2CID 143608576 While India s intervention was militarily successful it was also highly controversial General Sir Frank Messervy Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army alleged that India had planned to militarily intervene in the state several weeks before the event Korbel Josef 1966 first published 1954 Danger in Kashmir second ed Princeton University Press pp 85 86 ISBN 9781400875238 Snedden Christopher 2005 Would a plebiscite have resolved the Kashmir dispute South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 28 1 64 86 doi 10 1080 00856400500056145 S2CID 145020726 Rizvi Gowher 1992 India Pakistan and the Kashmir Problem in Raju G C Thomas ed Perspectives on Kashmir the roots of conflict in South Asia Westview Press p 73 ISBN 978 0 8133 8343 9 a b ODNB 1871 1980 Messervy England amp Wales National Probate Calendar Index of Wills and Administrations 1858 1995 No 28683 The London Gazette 21 January 1913 p 499 No 28849 The London Gazette 14 July 1914 p 5455 No 33829 The London Gazette 27 May 1932 p 3419 No 33829 The London Gazette 27 May 1932 p 3418 No 33884 The London Gazette 18 November 1932 p 7344 No 34264 The London Gazette 13 March 1936 p 1660 No 37801 The London Gazette 29 November 1946 p 5852 a b No 38041 The London Gazette 8 August 1947 p 3739 No 38400 The London Gazette 10 September 1948 p 4907 No 28683 The London Gazette 21 January 1913 p 499 No 29186 The London Gazette 8 June 1915 p 5526 No 30236 The London Gazette 17 August 1917 p 8458 No 33409 The London Gazette Supplement 3 July 1928 p 5217 No 33513 The London Gazette 2 July 1929 p 4362 No 33693 The London Gazette 27 February 1931 p 1357 No 33882 The London Gazette 11 November 1932 p 7180 No 33955 The London Gazette 30 June 1933 p 4383 No 34516 The London Gazette Supplement 3 June 1938 p 3567 No 34832 The London Gazette Supplement 16 April 1940 p 2301 No 35163 The London Gazette Supplement 13 May 1941 p 2783 No 35533 The London Gazette Supplement 21 April 1942 p 1799 No 36003 The London Gazette Supplement 4 May 1943 p 2043 No 37466 The London Gazette Supplement 25 January 1946 p 701 No 37294 The London Gazette Supplement 2 October 1945 p 4890 Bibliography editBrett James Antony 1951 Ball of fire The Fifth Indian Division in the Second World War Gale amp Polden p 481 pages Archived from the original on 27 March 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2007 Callahan Raymond 2007 Churchill and His Generals University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 070061512 4 Holland James 2016 Burma 44 Bantam Press Mackenzie Compton 1951 Eastern Epic Chatto amp Windus London p 623 pages Maule Henry 1961 Spearhead General The Epic Story of General Sir Frank Messervy and His Men in Eritrea North Africa and Burma Odhams Press 1961 Mead Richard 2007 Churchill s Lions a biographical guide to the key British generals of World War II Stroud Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 431 0 Smart Nick 2005 Biographical Dictionary of British Generals of the Second World War Barnsley Pen and Sword Books ISBN 1844150496 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frank Walter Messervy British Military History Biographies M Generals of World War II Indian Army Officers 1939 1945 Military offices Preceded byNoel Beresford Peirse GOC 4th Indian Infantry Division1941 1942 Succeeded byFrancis Tuker Preceded byHerbert Lumsden GOC 1st Armoured DivisionJanuary February 1942 Succeeded byHerbert Lumsden Preceded byJohn Campbell GOC 7th Armoured DivisionMarch June 1942 Succeeded byJames Renton Preceded byThomas Corbett GOC 7th Indian Infantry Division1943 1945 Succeeded byGeoffrey Evans Preceded bySir Geoffry Scoones GOC IV Corps1944 1945 Succeeded bySir Francis Tuker Preceded bySir Miles Dempsey GOC Malaya Command1945 Succeeded bySir Alexander Galloway Preceded bySir Richard O Connor GOC in C Northern Command India1946 1947 Command disbanded New title C in C of the Pakistan Army1947 1948 Succeeded byDouglas Gracey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank Messervy amp oldid 1217877924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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