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Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque

Philippe François Marie Leclerc de Hauteclocque[b][c] (22 November 1902 – 28 November 1947) was a Free-French general during the Second World War. He became Marshal of France posthumously in 1952, and is known in France simply as le maréchal Leclerc or just Leclerc.

Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque
Leclerc in August 1944 during the Liberation of Paris
Member of the Superior Council of Defence
In office
12 April 1947[1] – 28 November 1947
Personal details
Born(1902-11-22)22 November 1902
Belloy-Saint-Léonard, France
Died28 November 1947(1947-11-28) (aged 45)
Colomb-Béchar, French Algeria
Resting placeLes Invalides
SpouseThérèse de Gargan
Children
  • Bénédicte
  • Charles
  • Henri
  • Hubert
  • Jeanne
  • Michel
Parents
  • Adrien de Hauteclocque (father)
  • Marie-Thérèse van der Cruisse de Waziers (mother)
Alma mater
Nickname(s)Leclerc, le maréchal Leclerc
Military service
AllegianceThird Republic
Free France
Fourth Republic
Branch/serviceFrench Army
Years of service1924–1947
RankArmy general[a]
Unit
List
    • 24th Dragoons Regiment[3]
    • 5th Cuirassiers Regiment[4]
    • 8th Moroccan Spahis Regiment[5]
    • 1st Chasseurs d'Afrique Regiment[6]
    • 4th Infantry Division
Commands
Battles/wars
List

The son of an aristocratic family, Hauteclocque graduated from the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr, the French military academy, in 1924. After service with the French Occupation of the Ruhr and in Morocco, he returned to Saint-Cyr as an instructor. He was awarded the croix de guerre des théâtres d'opérations extérieures for leading goumiers in an attack on caves and ravines on Bou Amdoun on 11 August 1933.

During the Second World War he fought in the Battle of France. He was one of the first who defied his government's Armistice to make his way to Britain to fight with the Free French under General Charles de Gaulle, adopting the nom de guerre of Leclerc so that his wife and children would not be put at risk if his name appeared in the papers. He was sent to French Equatorial Africa, where he rallied local leaders to the rebel Free French cause, and led a force against Gabon, whose leaders supported the French Government. From Chad he led raids into Italian Libya. After his forces captured Kufra, he had his men swear an oath known today as the Serment de Koufra, in which they pledged to fight on until their flag flew over the Strasbourg Cathedral. The forces under his command, known as L Force, campaigned in Libya in 1943, covered the Eighth Army's inland flank during its advance into Tunisia, and participated in the attack on the Mareth Line. L Force was then transformed into the 2e Division Blindée, although it was often referred to as La Division Leclerc. It fought under Leclerc's command in the Battle of Normandy, and participated in the liberation of Paris and Strasbourg.

After the end of World War II in Europe in May 1945, he was given command of the French Far East Expeditionary Corps (Corps expéditionnaire français en Extrême-Orient, CEFEO). He represented France at the surrender of the Japanese Empire in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945. He quickly perceived the necessity for a political solution to the nascent conflict in Indochina, but once again was ahead of his countrymen, and was recalled to France in 1946. He was killed in an air crash in Algeria in 1947.

Early life edit

 
Coat of arms of House of Hauteclocque

Philippe François Marie de Hauteclocque was born on 22 November 1902 at Belloy-Saint-Léonard in the department of Somme, France. He was the fifth of six children of Adrien de Hauteclocque, comte de Hauteclocque (1864–1945), and Marie-Thérèse van der Cruisse de Waziers (1870–1956). Philippe was named in honour of an ancestor killed by Croatian soldiers in service of Habsburg monarchy during Thirty Years' War in 1635.[8]

Hauteclocque came from an old line of country nobility. His direct ancestors had served in the Fifth Crusade against Egypt, and again in the Eighth Crusade of Saint Louis against Tunisia in 1270. They had also fought at the Battle of Saint-Omer in 1340 and the Battle of Fontenoy in 1745. The family managed to survive the French Revolution. Three members of the family served in Napoleon's Grande Armée and a fourth, who suffered from weak health, served in the supply train.[8] The third son, Constantin, who had served in Napoleon's Russian Campaign, was created a chevalier by King Louis XVIII, and a Papal count by Pope Pius IX in 1857. Constantin had two sons. The older, Alfred François Marie (1822–1902), died childless. The younger, Gustave François Marie Joseph (1829–1914), became a noted Egyptologist.[8][9]

Gustave, in turn, had three sons. The first, Henry (1862–1914), and third, Wallerand (1866–1914), became officers in the French Army, serving during the colonial campaigns, including fighting Samory in the Sudan. Both were killed in the early fighting of the First World War. The second son was Adrien, who enlisted in August 1914 as a trooper in the 11e Régiment de Chasseurs à Cheval [fr], the regiment in which his son Guy was a cornet. Adrien was later commissioned, and was twice awarded the Croix de Guerre for gallantry. He survived the war, and inherited the family title and estate in Belloy-Saint-Léonard.[8][9]

Early military career edit

Philippe de Hauteclocque was homeschooled until he was 13, when he was sent to L'école de la Providence, a Jesuit school in Amiens.[9] In 1920, at the age of 17, he went to Lycée privé Sainte-Geneviève, known as Ginette, a preparatory school in Versailles.[10] He then entered the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr, the French military academy. Each class has a name; his was Metz et Strasbourg after towns in Alsace and Lorraine returned to France by the Treaty of Versailles. He graduated on 1 October 1924, and was commissioned as a sous lieutenant in the French Army.[11] Having chosen the cavalry branch, he then had to attend the Cavalry School in Saumur, from which he graduated first in his class on 8 August 1925.[12]

Hauteclocque's older brother Guy had married Madeleine de Gargan, the daughter of the Baron de Gargan. Philippe became a frequent visitor to the Gargan household, and became enchanted by Madeleine's youngest sister Thérèse. The two courted while he was at Saint-Cyr. In the tradition of old noble families, Count Adrien asked Baron de Gargan for permission for Philippe to marry Thérèse. The wedding ceremony took place in the Church of St Joan of Arc in Rouen on 10 August 1925. For a wedding present, Adrien gave them a chateau in Tailly. They had six children:[12][13] Henri (1926–1952), who was killed in the First Indochina War;[14] Hubert (1927–), who served as mayor of Tailly from 2001 to 2008; Charles (1929–); Jeanne (1931–); Michel (1933–2014); and Bénédicte (1936–).[15] Philippe and Thérèse hired an Austrian governess, and spoke German in front of their children to improve their command of the language.[16]

Having graduated from Saumur, Hauteclocque joined his regiment, the 5e Régiment de Cuirassiers [fr], which was then on occupation duty in Trier as part of the Franco-Belgian occupation of the Ruhr. Garrison duty was not to his liking, so he volunteered for service with the 8e Régiment de Spahis Marocains [fr], based at Taza in Morocco. He was promoted to lieutenant in October 1926. In 1927, he was posted as an instructor at the Military School of Dar El-Beida at Meknes, the military academy of French Morocco. Here, he met Paul de Langlade [fr], a First World War veteran eight years his senior, who would later volunteer to serve under his command. In 1929, he was attached to the 38e Goum Mixte Marocains, a Moroccan Goumier unit at M'Zizel in the Atlas Mountains.[17] He saw action in the fighting against the Ait Hammou guerrillas. In one action, two horses were shot out from under him.[18] Afterwards, he was posted to the 1er Régiment de Chasseurs d'Afrique [fr], the senior cavalry regiment of the Armée d'Afrique, based at Rabat.[19]

In February 1931, Hauteclocque went back to Saint-Cyr as an instructor, but wanted to return to active service. During the summer break in 1933, he flew south to Africa, where he reported to Général de brigade Henri Giraud on 11 July. Giraud sent him into the field as a liaison officer with a goum. He was awarded the croix de guerre des théâtres d'opérations extérieures for leading goumiers in an attack on caves and ravines on Bou Amdoun on 11 August.[20] The Commander in Chief in Morocco, Général de division Antoine Huré, felt that Hauteclocque should not have been there, and held the award up for three years. Others felt differently, and Hauteclocque was given early admission to the course for promotion to capitaine. He placed fourth in the class, and was promoted on 25 December 1934.[18][21] Promotion was slow in the inter-war French Army, especially in the cavalry, and he was only the second in his Saint-Cyr class to reach that rank. Most had to wait until 1936.[22] He was also made a Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur.[1]

Although they were devout Catholics, Hauteclocque and Thérèse subscribed to Action Française, the journal of a far-right political organisation of the same name, despite a papal interdict against it, and continued to do so even after Thérèse was refused absolution.[23] In contrast, his cousin Xavier de Hauteclocque [fr] was an award-winning journalist who covered the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany, visited the concentration camp at Dachau, and wrote about the Night of Long Knives. Xavier died in April 1935, convinced that he had been poisoned by the Nazis.[24] After the Second World War, Hauteclocque destroyed his copies of Action Française.[25]

Hauteclocque broke his leg in two places in a fall from his horse in 1936. He told his company that it was his own fault for riding on the shoulder of the road. Thereafter he frequently walked with a cane. After another mishap involving losing his way during a tactical exercise and getting stuck in a field cordoned off with barbed wire, he told them that when you have done something really stupid, it is best to admit it.[26][22]

In November 1938, Hauteclocque entered the École supérieure de guerre, the French Army's staff college, as part of its 60th class. On graduating in July 1939, he was ordered to report to the 4e Division d'Infanterie [fr] (4e DI) as its chief of staff.[27]

Fall of France edit

On 10 May 1940, Germany invaded Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Belgium. The 4e DI was ordered to hold the line of the Sambre river. Hauteclocque was placed in charge of three infantry battalions. To his dismay, orders came to pull back to the Canal de l'Escaut. From there the 4e DI retreated northward, becoming encircled in the Lille pocket on 28 May. Hauteclocque received permission to escape through German lines.[28] He attempted to make his way back to the French lines by pretending to be a civilian refugee, but was apprehended by a German patrol and taken prisoner when they discovered an old military pay receipt. He was taken back to a German command post, where he secretly destroyed the receipt. He convinced a German colonel that he had been wounded in Morocco, suffered from malaria, and had six children, all of which was true, and he was thus exempted from military service, which was false. The Germans let him go. He then made his way to the Crozat Canal, swam across, and encountered a French patrol.[29]

 
A Char B1 tank. French tanks were usually given names by their crews.

Hauteclocque reported to the headquarters of Général d'armée Aubert Frère [fr], the commander of the Seventh Army, who gave him permission to visit his home at Tailly, which was still behind French lines. When he got there, however, he found that Thérèse had fled to Sainte-Foy-la-Grande in the southwest of France, where she had relatives. On returning to the Seventh Army, he was ordered to join the 2ème groupement cuirassé, a scratch force of armoured and mechanised units that included Brigadier General Stanisław Maczek's Polish 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade. The groupement launched a series of counter-attacks. Lacking a radio, Hauteclocque gave directions to the Char B1 tanks with his cane.[30] On 15 June, he was wounded in the head during a German air attack, and was taken to a hospital in a convent in Avallon. There he was again taken prisoner when the area was overrun by the Germans.[31]

This time, Hauteclocque escaped by jumping out a window.[32] After the armistice was signed on 22 June, French soldiers who had not been captured were simply allowed to go home, and the Germans were friendly towards Hauteclocque, especially when they discovered that he spoke fluent German. He made his way to rejoin his family by car and bicycle. So that he could cross from the zone occupée into the zone libre where Thérèse and the children were, his sister Yvonne obtained an identity card for him in the name of "Leclerc". It was his first use of this name. He also told Yvonne that he intended to join Général de brigade Charles de Gaulle in Britain. He was reunited with his family in Saint-Germain-les-Vergnes on 30 June but stayed with them for only four days before setting out for Spain.[33] He managed to obtain a visa on the second attempt, being refused the first time for carrying too much money with him. Once in Spain he took a train to Madrid, and then to Lisbon, where he went to the British embassy, which arranged his passage to Britain on a merchant ship, the SS Hillary.[34]

Africa edit

Leclerc arrived in London on 25 July 1940, and met with de Gaulle, who announced that he was promoting him to Chef d'escadrons (major). He also encountered his cousin Pierre de Hauteclocque, Xavier's brother, who was serving with the 13e Demi-Brigade de Légion Étrangère (13e DBLE, an infantry regiment of the French Foreign Legion). This was the largest unit that had joined the Free French Forces. After participating in the Battles of Narvik, it had found itself in Britain when France surrendered. Formed after the war began, it contained many men who had fought for the Republican cause in the Spanish Civil War, and many refugees from Nazi and Fascist countries. Leclerc then offered his own services to the unit, but its commander, Colonel Raoul Magrin-Vernerey, rejected his offer on the grounds that he was high-born, over-qualified and a cavalryman.[35]

Instead, in August 1940, de Gaulle ordered Leclerc to French Equatorial Africa, where the local leaders had declared themselves for Free France, as the governor of French Cameroon.[36] At this time he adopted Leclerc as his nom de guerre, so that Thérèse and their children would not be put at risk if his name appeared in the papers.[37] He quickly secured the Free French grip on Cameroon. He then led a force consisting of the 13e DBLE and Senegalese Tirailleurs against Gabon, whose local leader supported Vichy France. The Battle of Gabon lasted from 12 October to 12 November 1940, and ended with 20 dead and Gabon in Free French hands. Vichy prisoners were held as hostages in case Vichy France tried to retaliate against the families of Free Frenchmen. When Louis-Michel-François Tardy, the Bishop of Libreville, refused to conduct a mass to celebrate the victory, Leclerc had him arrested.[38] Capitaine de corvette Georges Thierry d'Argenlieu conducted the service in his capacity as a Carmelite priest.[39]

 
Serment de Koufra, plaque in Strasbourg

With Gabon in hand, de Gaulle sent Leclerc to Chad, the only Free French territory that shared a border with territory controlled by Axis Powers, along its Sahara Desert border with Italian-controlled Libya. Leclerc's attention was drawn to two Italian outposts in the desert, Murzuk in southwestern Libya and Kufra in the southeast. Both were over 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from his base at Fort Lamy in Chad. He started with a small raid on Murzuk by eleven men of the Régiment de Tirailleurs Sénégalais du Tchad (RTST) and two troops of the British Long Range Desert Group (LRDG) on 11 January 1941. In February, he led a much larger operation that captured Kufra.[40] After the battle, he had his men swear an oath known today as the Serment de Koufra ("Oath of Kufra"):

You shall not lay down arms, until the day when our colours, our beautiful colours, flutter over the Strasbourg Cathedral.[41]

Leclerc learnt a great deal about how to handle and supply a force advancing across the desert, and was rewarded with the British Distinguished Service Order.[42] He began planning a far more ambitious advance into Libya. This was delayed by a year due to Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel's defeat of the British Eighth Army in the Battle of Gazala, and the subsequent German and Italian advance into Egypt.[43] Leclerc was promoted to Général de brigade in August 1941, and pinned two metal stars captured from the Italians on his kepi.[44]

De Gaulle ordered the plan for an advance into Libya to be put in motion in the wake of the Eighth Army's victory in the Second Battle of El Alamein in November 1942. Leclerc set out from Fort Lamy on 16 December 1942 with 500 European and 2,700 African troops in 350 vehicles. He captured Sebha on 12 January 1943, and Mizdah on 22 January. He reached Tripoli on 26 January, where he was greeted by the Eighth Army's commander, General Bernard Montgomery. Leclerc's command, now reinforced by the Greek Sacred Squadron, and known as L Force, covered the Eighth Army's inland flank during its advance into Tunisia. L Force beat off a German counterattack on 10 March, and participated in the attack on the Mareth Line.[43]

Western Europe edit

 
Route of the 2e Division Blindée 1944-45

After the fighting in North Africa ended, Leclerc's L Force, now about 4,000 strong, became the 2e Division Française Libre (2e DFL). In June 1943, de Gaulle informed him the 2e DFL would be re-equipped by the Americans as an armoured division, the 2e Division Blindée (2e DB). It was often called La Division Leclerc. Although organised along American lines, its units had French titles. The non-white units were transferred elsewhere. The remainder of 2e DFL became the Regiment de Marche du Tchad (RMT), 2e DB's motorised infantry regiment. Free French armoured units serving with the Eighth Army became the 501e Régiment de chars de combat (501e RCC). The artillery and the other two armoured regiments of 2e DB, the 12e Régiment de Cuirassiers (12e RC) and the 12e Régiment de Chasseurs d'Afrique [fr] (12e RCA), were drawn from the Vichy Armée d'Afrique.[36] [45] Perhaps the most unusual unit in the division was the Régiment Blindé de Fusiliers-Marins (RBFM), sailors who served as a tank destroyer regiment.[46][47] Leclerc had to weld the various units, some of whom had recently been fighting against the Allies, into a team. This was no easy task. When two men from the 501e RCC upset a former Vichy officer by singing a disrespectful song about Général d'armée Henri Giraud, resulting in a fight, he told the officer concerned that respect had to be earned.[48]

 
General Leclerc talks to his men from the 501e RCC

In April 1944, 2e DB was shipped to Britain to participate in Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of northern France. Leclerc and his staff travelled by air in a converted B-24 Liberator bomber.[49] The division moved to training areas in Yorkshire, where Leclerc established his headquarters on the estate of Henry Frederick Hotham, 7th Baron Hotham, at Dalton Hall, Beverley.[50] Training was conducted in concert with Maczek's 1st Polish Armoured Division.[51]

On 1 August 1944, 2e DB landed at Utah Beach in Normandy as part of Major General Wade Haislip's United States XV Corps of Lieutenant General George S. Patton, Jr.'s United States Third Army.[52] Both of these American generals spoke French fluently.[53] Later that month, 2e DB participated in the Battle of the Falaise Pocket, which inflicted a major defeat on the German Army.[52] Like most new division commanders, Leclerc also made errors, in his case by allowing 2e DB to use roads that had been earmarked for American units, thereby causing traffic jams and holding up the American advance.[54]

The next assignment for 2e DB, and the one that it had been brought from Africa for, was the liberation of Paris. Allied troops initially avoided the historic city, moving around it to minimise the danger of destruction if the Germans sought to defend it. When Parisians rose against the Germans, de Gaulle and Leclerc persuaded General Dwight D. Eisenhower to help.[55] Leclerc's men had to fight their way into Paris, and when they got there they found German infantry and tanks still holding parts of the city.[56] The German commander, General der Infanterie Dietrich von Choltitz, was inclined to surrender, and did so to Leclerc and Henri Rol-Tanguy of the French Forces of the Interior at the Gare Montparnasse on 25 August 1944. Leclerc arranged for Ensign Philippe de Gaulle, who was serving in the RBFM, to be in attendance, but the elder de Gaulle was annoyed that Leclerc had allowed the communist Rol to co-sign the surrender.[57] The next day de Gaulle held a triumphal parade, accompanied by senior military figures including Leclerc, Alphonse Juin, Marie-Pierre Kœnig and Georges Thierry d'Argenlieu.[58]

 
Crowds of French patriots line the Champs Elysees to view Free French tanks and half tracks of Leclerc's 2e DB pass through the Arc du Triomphe on 26 August 1944, after Paris was liberated.

Montgomery's troops liberated Tailly, allowing Leclerc to return home to see Thérèse and the children again on 6 September 1944. His oldest sons, Henri and Hubert, now 18 and 17 years old respectively, lied about their ages to volunteer for service with 2e DB. Henri went on to serve with the RMT, while Hubert became a Sherman tank gunner with the 12e RCA. Other relatives also served with the division, including two nephews. The fighting in Paris cost 2e DB 97 killed and 238 wounded; nearly twice that number were lost in the fighting in surrounding areas. These were replaced by men and women who, like Leclerc's sons, offered themselves at a recruitment office the 2e DB established near the Bois de Boulogne.[59]

After Paris, 2e DB returned to XV Corps at Leclerc's request.[60] He won a notable victory on 12–16 September 1944 at the Battle of Dompaire against the Panzer IVs and Panther tanks of the German 112th Panzer Brigade by using manoeuvre and air power to compensate for the numerical and technical inferiority of his tanks. American historian Hugh M. Cole wrote that "this fight, characterised warmly by the XV Corps commander as a 'brilliant example' of perfect air-ground co-ordination, not only was an outstanding feat of arms but also dealt a crippling blow to Hitler's plans for an armoured thrust into the Third Army flank."[61]

 
General de Gaulle with Leclerc (centre) and other French officers at Montparnasse railway station in Paris, 25 August 1944

Patton personally pinned a Silver Star on Leclerc, and brought with him another six Silver Stars and 25 Bronze Star Medals for other members of the 2e DB. Patton then gave Leclerc his next objective: the town of Baccarat and the bridge there over the Meurthe River.[62] The bridge was captured before the Germans could destroy it.[63] Haislip's XV Corps was transferred to the Seventh United States Army on 29 September,[64] and Leclerc feared that 2e DB would be transferred to Général d'armée Jean de Lattre de Tassigny's French First Army. Leclerc regarded the First Army as being full of traitors who had supported Vichy France. Moreover, de Lattre had sacked Général de division Edgard de Larminat for Gaullist sentiments, and Leclerc had good reason to fear that he might meet a similar fate.[60]

On 22 November, Haislip gave Leclerc permission to advance on Strasbourg. Leclerc surprised the Germans by advancing over country roads and tracks to bypass their defences. Strasbourg was reached on 25 November,[65] and that afternoon the Tricolour flew over the Strasbourg Cathedral. The German offensive in the Ardennes in December and in Alsace in January led Eisenhower to consider abandoning Strasbourg, but strong opposition to the idea from the French caused him to back down. As a result, the 2e DB was transferred to de Lattre's command to assist in the reduction of the Colmar Pocket.[63]

Leclerc objected to the use of his troops in the attack on Royan in April 1945. As a result, only part of 2e DB was employed.[66] The division rejoined Seventh Army, crossing the Rhine on 25 April, and joining the pursuit into Bavaria. Leclerc visited Dachau concentration camp after its liberation by the Americans.[67] In an incident that took place on 8 May 1945 at Karlstein near Bad Reichenhall in Bavaria, he was presented with a defiant group of a dozen captured Frenchmen of the SS Charlemagne Division. He asked them why they wore a German uniform, to which one of them replied by asking why Leclerc wore an American one. Leclerc told his men to get rid of them. That was taken as a death sentence. The group of French Waffen-SS men was summarily executed by the RMT without any form of military tribunal procedure, and their bodies left where they fell until an American burial team collected them three days later.[68][69] On 2 June 1949 the bodies were exhumed and buried in the St. Zeno cemetery in Bad Reichenhall. For his services leading the 2e DB, Leclerc was awarded the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour.[70]

South East Asia edit

At the end of the Second World War in Europe in May 1945, Leclerc received command of the French Far East Expeditionary Corps (Corps expéditionnaire français en Extrême-Orient, CEFEO). He represented France at the surrender of the Japanese Empire in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945. On 28 November 1945, he legally changed his name to Jacques-Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque, incorporating his Free French pseudonym.[21]

Although he had never before served in the Far East, as CEFEO commander, Leclerc was charged with recovering French Indochina. This territory, comprising the present day states of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, had been conquered by the French during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Vichy regime had allowed the Japanese to use Indochina as a base from which to attack the Allies in Malaya, Burma and China. On 9 March 1945, the Japanese had deposed the French colonial government, taken direct control of Indochina, defeated the French army in several engagements, and imprisoned surviving French soldiers.[71]

 
Tokyo Bay, Japan. Surrender of the Japanese aboard USS Missouri (BB-63). Leclerc representing France signs the instrument of surrender. Other French representatives stand behind him while General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Allied Commander, stands at the microphone.

With the end of the war, Indochina was divided in two, with the area north of the 16th parallel occupied by 150,000 Nationalist Chinese troops, while the part to the south was occupied by 20,000 British and Indian troops of Major General Douglas Gracey's 20th Infantry Division. Meanwhile, the Vietnamese nationalist leader Ho Chi Minh had declared Vietnamese independence. Leclerc arrived in Saigon with a first contingent of French soldiers on 5 October 1945. He was dependent on the British for equipment and shipping.[72] He did not get along well with D'Argenlieu, whom de Gaulle had appointed French High Commissioner for Indochina.[73]

Leclerc heeded the advice he was given by United States General of the Army Douglas MacArthur to bring as many soldiers as possible.[74] He broke the Vietminh blockade around Saigon, then drove through the Mekong delta and up into the Central Highlands. This was possible because Ho feared Chinese domination far more than French colonialism, which he perceived to be in decline. Ho's first priority was getting rid of the Chinese, and for this he needed French help.[75] Leclerc quickly perceived the necessity for a political solution to the conflict.[76]

The French government negotiator Jean Sainteny flew to Saigon to consult Leclerc, who was acting as high commissioner in the absence of d'Argenlieu. Leclerc approved Sainteny's proposal to negotiate with Ho because he preferred a diplomatic solution to a larger conflict, but he still dispatched a flotilla with shiploads of French soldiers to northern Vietnam ready to attack if the talks failed. At that time, Ho felt that negotiations with the French constituted his best option because the Soviet Union had not yet endorsed the Vietminh or the Vietnamese nationalist party (VNQDD), and the French Communist Party chose to support French rule in Vietnam.[77]

On 6 March 1946, a tentative agreement was reached at the last minute (with Leclerc's fleet already in the Gulf of Tonkin) between Sainteny and Ho. The agreement stated that France would recognise Vietnam as a free state within the French Union, a new name for the French empire broadly similar to the British Commonwealth, and that Ho would allow France to base 25,000 soldiers in Vietnam for five years.[78] The Ho-Sainteny agreement was never confirmed because it disappointed people on both sides. Ho's immense prestige largely silenced Vietnamese dissent, but the agreement caused a serious split within the French side. French businessmen, planters, and officials in Saigon were "indignant at the prospect of losing their colonial privileges."[79]

D'Argenlieu bluntly denounced Leclerc. "I am amazed – yes, that is the word, amazed", he said, "that France's fine expeditionary corps in Indochina is commanded by officers who would rather negotiate than fight".[78] D'Argenlieu stated that a higher level meeting in Paris would be required. He then unilaterally declared a French-controlled Autonomous Republic of Cochinchina without asking either Paris or the Vietnamese.[77] In July 1946, Leclerc was replaced as commander of the French forces by Jean-Étienne Valluy.[80] At the time many French and American politicians were willing to believe that Ho was part of a Soviet plan to dominate the world, but Leclerc warned that "anti-communism will be a useless tool unless the problem of nationalism is resolved."[81] His advice was simple: "Negotiate at all costs!"[82]

Death edit

 
Fragment of a lamp from the crash of Leclerc's B-25 Mitchell.

Leclerc was appointed Inspector of Land Forces in North Africa. On 28 November 1947, his North American B-25 Mitchell, Tailly II, carrying Leclerc and his staff, crashed [fr] near Colomb-Béchar in French Algeria, killing everyone on board. His body was returned to France, where it was taken to Paris along the route that 2e DB had followed in August 1944. A funeral service was held at Notre Dame de Paris, and he was interred in a crypt at Les Invalides.[83][84][85][86]

Posthumous honours edit

Leclerc was posthumously created a Marshal of France on 23 August 1952, the anniversary of the day that 2e DB had entered Paris.[21] Today his marshal's baton is displayed in the Leclerc room of the Musée de l'Armée at Invalides,[87] as is his battered képi with the Italian stars that he wore at Kufra.[88]

The Leclerc tank built by GIAT Industries (Groupement Industriel des Armements Terrestres) of France is named after him.[89] There is a monument to Leclerc in the Petit-Montrouge quarter of the 14th arrondissement in Paris, between Avenue de la Porte d'Orléans and Rue de la Légion Étrangère, and near the Square du Serment-de-Koufra.[90][91] Two streets in Paris are named for him: Avenue du Général Leclerc in the 14th arrondissement[92] and Rue du Maréchal Leclerc in the 12th arrondissement, between the Bois de Vincennes and the Marne River.[93]

Military ranks edit

Second lieutenant Lieutenant Captain Squadrons chief Lieutenant colonel Colonel
         
1 October 1924[94] 1 October 1926[95] 25 December 1934[96] 31 July 1940[21] Never attributed 24 August 1940[97]
Brigade general Brigade general Division general Corps general Army general Marshal of France
           
10 August 1941[98]
Temporary
14 April 1942[21]
Substantive
25 May 1943[21] 25 May 1945[21] 14 July 1946[21] 23 August 1952[99]
Posthumous

Honours and decorations edit

Honours and decorations
National honours
Ribbon bar Name Date Source
  Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour
  Companion of the National Order of Liberation 6 March 1941 [100]
Military decorations
Ribbon bar Name Date Source
  Military medal 6 June 1946 [101]
  War Cross 1939–1945 with eight palms 6 June 1946 [101]
  War Cross for foreign operational theatres with two palms [1]
  Resistance Medal with rosette [1]
  Escapees' Medal [1]
  Colonial Medal with clasps "Maroc", "Fezzan", "Koufra", "Tripolitaine", "Tunisie", "Extrême-Orient" [1]
  Insignia for the Military Wounded [1]
  Commemorative medal for voluntary service in Free France [1]
  Commemorative war medal 1939–1945 [1]
Foreign honours
Ribbon bar Name Country Source
  Companion of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom [1]
  Distinguished Service Order United Kingdom [1]
  Silver Star United States [1]
  Bronze Star Medal United States [1]
  Commander of the Legion of Merit United States [1]
  Presidential Unit Citation United States [1]
  Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown with palm Belgium [1]
  Croix de guerre Belgium [1]
  Croix de guerre Luxembourg [1]
  Grand Cross of the Order of the Oak Crown Luxembourg [1]
  Commander's Cross of Virtuti Militari Poland [102]
  Czechoslovak War Cross 1939–1945 Czechoslovakia [1]
  Military Order of the White Lion Czechoslovakia [1]
  War Cross (1st Class) Greece [1]
  Grand Officer of the Order of Glory Tunisia [1]
  Grand Cross of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite Morocco [1]
  Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Cambodia Cambodia [1]
  Grand Cross of the Order of the Million Elephants and the White Parasol Laos [1]
  Order of the Paz in Morocco Spain [1]

Citations edit

For his promotion to Companion of the National Order of Liberation:

Leader of the highest value, admirable in zeal and energy. Wounded during the Battle of France, escaped from the hands of the enemy and joined the Free French Forces;
Took a decisive part in the rally of Cameroon, which he then knew, as governor, to organize for the war, and in the liberation of Gabon;
Commander of the troops of Chad, prepared and beautifully conducted the victorious operations of Murzuk and Kufra, which brought glory back under the folds of the flag.

For his attribution of the Military Medal:

During a glorious epic, which belongs to history, showed that the French flag always knew how to spread as a victor wherever the sacred cause of the homeland called it.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa National Order of Liberation. "Philippe LECLERC de HAUTECLOCQUE". ordredelaliberation.fr. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  2. ^ Government of the French Republic (18 November 1939). "Décret du 8 Novembre 1939 des officiers ayant obtenu le brevet d'état-major". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
  3. ^ Government of the French Republic (9 September 1924). "Décret du 9 Septembre 1924 portant mutation dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  4. ^ Government of the French Republic (17 September 1926). "Décret du 17 Septembre 1926 portant mutation dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  5. ^ Government of the French Republic (8 October 1926). "Décret du 8 Octobre 1926 portant mutation dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  6. ^ Government of the French Republic (21 July 1930). "Décret du 21 Juillet 1930 portant mutation dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  7. ^ Government of the French Republic (17 November 1945). "Decree on a change of name". gallica.bnf.fr (in French). Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d Clayton 1992, p. 34.
  9. ^ a b c Moore 2011, p. 16.
  10. ^ Moore 2011, p. 20.
  11. ^ Moore 2011, p. 24.
  12. ^ a b Moore 2011, pp. 25–26.
  13. ^ (in French). Dictionnaire des noms de rues. Archived from the original on 15 May 2014. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  14. ^ (in French). Fondation Leclerc de Hauteclocque. Archived from the original on 17 March 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  15. ^ "Famille de Hauteclocque" (PDF) (in French). Geneanet. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  16. ^ Moore 2011, p. 48.
  17. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 27–30.
  18. ^ a b Clayton 1992, p. 36.
  19. ^ Moore 2011, p. 34.
  20. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 36–38.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h "Leclerc De Hautecloque, Philippe François Marie" (in French). Mémorial-GenWeb. Archived from the original on 18 May 2014. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  22. ^ a b Moore 2011, pp. 45–46.
  23. ^ Moore 2011, p. 27.
  24. ^ Moore 2011, p. 42.
  25. ^ Vézinet 1974, p. 34.
  26. ^ Clayton 1992, p. 37.
  27. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 47–49.
  28. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 51–54.
  29. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 56–58.
  30. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 58–59.
  31. ^ Clayton 1992, p. 41.
  32. ^ Moore 2011, p. 64.
  33. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 66–68.
  34. ^ Clayton 1992, p. 42.
  35. ^ Moore 2011, p. 73.
  36. ^ a b Keegan 1982, pp. 299–300.
  37. ^ Moore 2011, p. 74.
  38. ^ Clayton 1992, pp. 45–46.
  39. ^ Moore 2011, p. 91.
  40. ^ Clayton 1992, pp. 46–48.
  41. ^ Jurez de ne déposer les armes que le jour où nos couleurs, nos belles couleurs flotteront sur la cathédrale de Strasbourg. "Le serment de Koufra" (in French). Ministère de la Défense. Retrieved 21 May 2014.
  42. ^ Moore 2011, p. 126.
  43. ^ a b Clayton 1992, pp. 48–61.
  44. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 147, 152.
  45. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 199–203.
  46. ^ Keegan 1982, p. 303.
  47. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 223–226.
  48. ^ Moore 2011, p. 216.
  49. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 228–230.
  50. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 234–235.
  51. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 241.
  52. ^ a b Clayton 1992, pp. 55–56.
  53. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 232, 257.
  54. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 267–268.
  55. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 288–291.
  56. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 302–308.
  57. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 310–311.
  58. ^ Moore 2011, p. 316.
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  60. ^ a b Moore 2011, p. 324.
  61. ^ Cole 1950, p. 201.
  62. ^ Moore 2011, p. 334.
  63. ^ a b Clayton 1992, pp. 58–61.
  64. ^ Clarke & Smith 1993, p. 254.
  65. ^ Clarke & Smith 1993, pp. 380–381.
  66. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 382–383.
  67. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 389–391.
  68. ^ Trigg 2006, p. 161.
  69. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 399–400.
  70. ^ Moore 2011, p. 402.
  71. ^ Logevall 2012, pp. 67–71.
  72. ^ Logevall 2012, pp. 118–119.
  73. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 414–417.
  74. ^ Moore 2011, p. 412.
  75. ^ Moore 2011, pp. 424–426.
  76. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 695.
  77. ^ a b Karnow 1983, pp. 152–153.
  78. ^ a b Karnow 1983, p. 153.
  79. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 154.
  80. ^ Karnow 1983, pp. 155, 696.
  81. ^ Karnow 1983, p. 175.
  82. ^ Moore 2011, p. 449.
  83. ^ Clayton 1992, pp. 137–138.
  84. ^ Fonton, Mickaël (5 August 2010). "Les morts mystérieuses : 4. Leclerc, l'énigme du 13e passager". Valeurs actuelles (in French). Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  85. ^ "Tombes Sépultures dans les cimetières et autres lieux". Cathédrale Saint-Louis des Invalides et le Caveau des Gouverneurs. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  86. ^ Government of the French Republic (6 December 1947). "Loi n°47-2292 du 6 décembre 1947 portant que le général d'armée Leclerc de Hauteclocque a bien mérité de la patrie et sera inhumé à l'Hôtel national des Invalides". legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  87. ^ "Les bâtons de maréchaux de la seconde guerre mondiale" (PDF) (in French). Musée de l'Armée. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  88. ^ "Képi dit de Koufra du Général Leclerc" (in French). Musée de l'Armée. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  89. ^ "Leclerc Main Battle Tank". Military-Today.com. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  90. ^ "Square du Serment-de-Koufra". Mairie de Paris. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  91. ^ . Extrait de la nomenclature officielle des voies de Paris. Archived from the original on 24 November 2006. Retrieved 2 July 2006.
  92. ^ . Extrait de la nomenclature officielle des voies de Paris. Archived from the original on 22 February 2007. Retrieved 2 July 2006.
  93. ^ . Extrait de la nomenclature officielle des voies de Paris. Archived from the original on 23 March 2007. Retrieved 2 July 2006.
  94. ^ Government of the French Republic (9 September 1924). "Décret portant promotion dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  95. ^ Government of the French Republic (17 September 1926). "Décret portant promotion dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  96. ^ Government of the French Republic (25 December 1934). "Décret portant promotion dans l'armée active". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 1 August 2019.
  97. ^ Ferry, Vital (2005). Croix de Lorraine et Croix du sud, 1940-1942: aviateurs belges et de la France libre en Afrique (in French). Le gerfaut. p. 95. ISBN 978-2-914622-92-9.
  98. ^ Government of Free France (11 August 1941). "Décret portant nomination dans les cadres supérieurs des Forces Françaises Libres". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  99. ^ Government of the French Republic (23 August 1952). "Décret conférant à titre posthume la dignité de maréchal de France au général Leclerc de Hauteclocque". legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  100. ^ a b Government of Free France (6 March 1941). "Décret du 6 Mars 1941 portant attribution de la Croix de la Libération". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  101. ^ a b c Government of the French Republic (6 June 1946). "Décret portant concession de la médaille militaire". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  102. ^ Puchalski 2000, p. 246.

General references edit

  • Clarke, Jeffrey J.; Smith, Robert Ross (1993). (PDF). The United States Army in World War II: The European Theater of Operations. Washington, DC: Center of Military History. OCLC 23464248. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  • Clayton, Anthony (1992). Three Marshals of France. London: Brassey's. ISBN 0-08-040707-2. OCLC 25026611.
  • Cole, Hugh M. (1950). (PDF). The United States Army in World War II: The European Theater of Operations. Washington, DC: Center of Military History. OCLC 1253758. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
  • Karnow, Stanley (1983). Vietnam: A History. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-74604-5. OCLC 9646422.
  • Keegan, John (1982). Six Armies in Normandy: from D-Day to the Liberation of Paris, June 6th–August 25th, 1944. New York: Viking Press. ISBN 0-670-64736-5. OCLC 8176673.
  • Logevall, Frederic (2012). Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-0-37550-442-6.
  • Moore, William Mortimer (2011). Free France's Lion: The Life of Philippe Leclerc, De Gaulle's Greatest General. Newbury, Nerkshire: Casemate Publishers. ISBN 978-1-61200-068-8. OCLC 721889914.
  • Puchalski, Zbigniew (2000). Dzieje polskich znaków zaszczytnych [History of Polish Decorations] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Sejmowe. ISBN 978-83-7059-388-9. OCLC 45821071.
  • Trigg, Jonathan (2006). Hitler's Gauls: The History of the 33rd Waffen Division Charlemagne. Stroud: Spellmont. ISBN 978-1-86227-293-4. OCLC 63186910.
  • Vézinet, Adolphe (1974). Le Général Leclerc de Hauteclocque, Maréchal de France (in French). Presses de la Cité. OCLC 1274173.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Marshal of France is a dignity and not a rank.
  2. ^ French pronunciation: [filip ləklɛʁ otklɔk]
  3. ^ Born Philippe François Marie de Hauteclocque, he was authorized to add his war pseudonym Leclerc to his name after the war.[7]

External links edit

  • "Leclerc Memorial and Museum of the Liberation of Paris" (in French). Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  • (in French). Archived from the original on 26 April 2014. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  • "Raids in the Fezzan (includes description of Leclerc's expedition)". Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  • Newspaper clippings about Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

philippe, leclerc, hauteclocque, philippe, leclerc, redirects, here, french, footballer, philippe, leclerc, footballer, philippe, françois, marie, leclerc, hauteclocque, november, 1902, november, 1947, free, french, general, during, second, world, became, mars. Philippe Leclerc redirects here For the French footballer see Philippe Leclerc footballer Philippe Francois Marie Leclerc de Hauteclocque b c 22 November 1902 28 November 1947 was a Free French general during the Second World War He became Marshal of France posthumously in 1952 and is known in France simply as le marechal Leclerc or just Leclerc MarshalPhilippe Leclerc de HauteclocqueLeclerc in August 1944 during the Liberation of ParisMember of the Superior Council of DefenceIn office 12 April 1947 1 28 November 1947Personal detailsBorn 1902 11 22 22 November 1902Belloy Saint Leonard FranceDied28 November 1947 1947 11 28 aged 45 Colomb Bechar French AlgeriaResting placeLes InvalidesSpouseTherese de GarganChildrenBenedicteCharlesHenriHubertJeanneMichelParentsAdrien de Hauteclocque father Marie Therese van der Cruisse de Waziers mother Alma materLycee Sainte Genevieve Ecole Speciale Militaire Cavalry School Ecole Superieure de Guerre 2 Nickname s Leclerc le marechal LeclercMilitary serviceAllegianceThird RepublicFree FranceFourth RepublicBranch serviceFrench Army CavalryYears of service1924 1947RankArmy general a UnitList 24th Dragoons Regiment 3 5th Cuirassiers Regiment 4 8th Moroccan Spahis Regiment 5 1st Chasseurs d Afrique Regiment 6 4th Infantry DivisionCommandsList Colonne Leclerc L force 2nd Armoured Division French Far East Expeditionary CorpsBattles warsList Occupation of the Ruhr Second World War Battle of France Battle of Gabon Battle of Kufra Battle of the Mareth Liberation of Paris Liberation of Strasbourg First Indochina WarThe son of an aristocratic family Hauteclocque graduated from the Ecole speciale militaire de Saint Cyr the French military academy in 1924 After service with the French Occupation of the Ruhr and in Morocco he returned to Saint Cyr as an instructor He was awarded the croix de guerre des theatres d operations exterieures for leading goumiers in an attack on caves and ravines on Bou Amdoun on 11 August 1933 During the Second World War he fought in the Battle of France He was one of the first who defied his government s Armistice to make his way to Britain to fight with the Free French under General Charles de Gaulle adopting the nom de guerre of Leclerc so that his wife and children would not be put at risk if his name appeared in the papers He was sent to French Equatorial Africa where he rallied local leaders to the rebel Free French cause and led a force against Gabon whose leaders supported the French Government From Chad he led raids into Italian Libya After his forces captured Kufra he had his men swear an oath known today as the Serment de Koufra in which they pledged to fight on until their flag flew over the Strasbourg Cathedral The forces under his command known as L Force campaigned in Libya in 1943 covered the Eighth Army s inland flank during its advance into Tunisia and participated in the attack on the Mareth Line L Force was then transformed into the 2e Division Blindee although it was often referred to as La Division Leclerc It fought under Leclerc s command in the Battle of Normandy and participated in the liberation of Paris and Strasbourg After the end of World War II in Europe in May 1945 he was given command of the French Far East Expeditionary Corps Corps expeditionnaire francais en Extreme Orient CEFEO He represented France at the surrender of the Japanese Empire in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945 He quickly perceived the necessity for a political solution to the nascent conflict in Indochina but once again was ahead of his countrymen and was recalled to France in 1946 He was killed in an air crash in Algeria in 1947 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early military career 3 Fall of France 4 Africa 5 Western Europe 6 South East Asia 7 Death 8 Posthumous honours 9 Military ranks 10 Honours and decorations 10 1 Citations 11 References 11 1 General references 11 2 Notes 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Coat of arms of House of HauteclocquePhilippe Francois Marie de Hauteclocque was born on 22 November 1902 at Belloy Saint Leonard in the department of Somme France He was the fifth of six children of Adrien de Hauteclocque comte de Hauteclocque 1864 1945 and Marie Therese van der Cruisse de Waziers 1870 1956 Philippe was named in honour of an ancestor killed by Croatian soldiers in service of Habsburg monarchy during Thirty Years War in 1635 8 Hauteclocque came from an old line of country nobility His direct ancestors had served in the Fifth Crusade against Egypt and again in the Eighth Crusade of Saint Louis against Tunisia in 1270 They had also fought at the Battle of Saint Omer in 1340 and the Battle of Fontenoy in 1745 The family managed to survive the French Revolution Three members of the family served in Napoleon s Grande Armee and a fourth who suffered from weak health served in the supply train 8 The third son Constantin who had served in Napoleon s Russian Campaign was created a chevalier by King Louis XVIII and a Papal count by Pope Pius IX in 1857 Constantin had two sons The older Alfred Francois Marie 1822 1902 died childless The younger Gustave Francois Marie Joseph 1829 1914 became a noted Egyptologist 8 9 Gustave in turn had three sons The first Henry 1862 1914 and third Wallerand 1866 1914 became officers in the French Army serving during the colonial campaigns including fighting Samory in the Sudan Both were killed in the early fighting of the First World War The second son was Adrien who enlisted in August 1914 as a trooper in the 11e Regiment de Chasseurs a Cheval fr the regiment in which his son Guy was a cornet Adrien was later commissioned and was twice awarded the Croix de Guerre for gallantry He survived the war and inherited the family title and estate in Belloy Saint Leonard 8 9 Early military career editPhilippe de Hauteclocque was homeschooled until he was 13 when he was sent to L ecole de la Providence a Jesuit school in Amiens 9 In 1920 at the age of 17 he went to Lycee prive Sainte Genevieve known as Ginette a preparatory school in Versailles 10 He then entered the Ecole speciale militaire de Saint Cyr the French military academy Each class has a name his was Metz et Strasbourg after towns in Alsace and Lorraine returned to France by the Treaty of Versailles He graduated on 1 October 1924 and was commissioned as a sous lieutenant in the French Army 11 Having chosen the cavalry branch he then had to attend the Cavalry School in Saumur from which he graduated first in his class on 8 August 1925 12 Hauteclocque s older brother Guy had married Madeleine de Gargan the daughter of the Baron de Gargan Philippe became a frequent visitor to the Gargan household and became enchanted by Madeleine s youngest sister Therese The two courted while he was at Saint Cyr In the tradition of old noble families Count Adrien asked Baron de Gargan for permission for Philippe to marry Therese The wedding ceremony took place in the Church of St Joan of Arc in Rouen on 10 August 1925 For a wedding present Adrien gave them a chateau in Tailly They had six children 12 13 Henri 1926 1952 who was killed in the First Indochina War 14 Hubert 1927 who served as mayor of Tailly from 2001 to 2008 Charles 1929 Jeanne 1931 Michel 1933 2014 and Benedicte 1936 15 Philippe and Therese hired an Austrian governess and spoke German in front of their children to improve their command of the language 16 Having graduated from Saumur Hauteclocque joined his regiment the 5e Regiment de Cuirassiers fr which was then on occupation duty in Trier as part of the Franco Belgian occupation of the Ruhr Garrison duty was not to his liking so he volunteered for service with the 8e Regiment de Spahis Marocains fr based at Taza in Morocco He was promoted to lieutenant in October 1926 In 1927 he was posted as an instructor at the Military School of Dar El Beida at Meknes the military academy of French Morocco Here he met Paul de Langlade fr a First World War veteran eight years his senior who would later volunteer to serve under his command In 1929 he was attached to the 38e Goum Mixte Marocains a Moroccan Goumier unit at M Zizel in the Atlas Mountains 17 He saw action in the fighting against the Ait Hammou guerrillas In one action two horses were shot out from under him 18 Afterwards he was posted to the 1er Regiment de Chasseurs d Afrique fr the senior cavalry regiment of the Armee d Afrique based at Rabat 19 In February 1931 Hauteclocque went back to Saint Cyr as an instructor but wanted to return to active service During the summer break in 1933 he flew south to Africa where he reported to General de brigade Henri Giraud on 11 July Giraud sent him into the field as a liaison officer with a goum He was awarded the croix de guerre des theatres d operations exterieures for leading goumiers in an attack on caves and ravines on Bou Amdoun on 11 August 20 The Commander in Chief in Morocco General de division Antoine Hure felt that Hauteclocque should not have been there and held the award up for three years Others felt differently and Hauteclocque was given early admission to the course for promotion to capitaine He placed fourth in the class and was promoted on 25 December 1934 18 21 Promotion was slow in the inter war French Army especially in the cavalry and he was only the second in his Saint Cyr class to reach that rank Most had to wait until 1936 22 He was also made a Chevalier de la Legion d Honneur 1 Although they were devout Catholics Hauteclocque and Therese subscribed to Action Francaise the journal of a far right political organisation of the same name despite a papal interdict against it and continued to do so even after Therese was refused absolution 23 In contrast his cousin Xavier de Hauteclocque fr was an award winning journalist who covered the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany visited the concentration camp at Dachau and wrote about the Night of Long Knives Xavier died in April 1935 convinced that he had been poisoned by the Nazis 24 After the Second World War Hauteclocque destroyed his copies of Action Francaise 25 Hauteclocque broke his leg in two places in a fall from his horse in 1936 He told his company that it was his own fault for riding on the shoulder of the road Thereafter he frequently walked with a cane After another mishap involving losing his way during a tactical exercise and getting stuck in a field cordoned off with barbed wire he told them that when you have done something really stupid it is best to admit it 26 22 In November 1938 Hauteclocque entered the Ecole superieure de guerre the French Army s staff college as part of its 60th class On graduating in July 1939 he was ordered to report to the 4e Division d Infanterie fr 4e DI as its chief of staff 27 Fall of France editMain article Fall of France On 10 May 1940 Germany invaded Luxembourg the Netherlands and Belgium The 4e DI was ordered to hold the line of the Sambre river Hauteclocque was placed in charge of three infantry battalions To his dismay orders came to pull back to the Canal de l Escaut From there the 4e DI retreated northward becoming encircled in the Lille pocket on 28 May Hauteclocque received permission to escape through German lines 28 He attempted to make his way back to the French lines by pretending to be a civilian refugee but was apprehended by a German patrol and taken prisoner when they discovered an old military pay receipt He was taken back to a German command post where he secretly destroyed the receipt He convinced a German colonel that he had been wounded in Morocco suffered from malaria and had six children all of which was true and he was thus exempted from military service which was false The Germans let him go He then made his way to the Crozat Canal swam across and encountered a French patrol 29 nbsp A Char B1 tank French tanks were usually given names by their crews Hauteclocque reported to the headquarters of General d armee Aubert Frere fr the commander of the Seventh Army who gave him permission to visit his home at Tailly which was still behind French lines When he got there however he found that Therese had fled to Sainte Foy la Grande in the southwest of France where she had relatives On returning to the Seventh Army he was ordered to join the 2eme groupement cuirasse a scratch force of armoured and mechanised units that included Brigadier General Stanislaw Maczek s Polish 10th Armoured Cavalry Brigade The groupement launched a series of counter attacks Lacking a radio Hauteclocque gave directions to the Char B1 tanks with his cane 30 On 15 June he was wounded in the head during a German air attack and was taken to a hospital in a convent in Avallon There he was again taken prisoner when the area was overrun by the Germans 31 This time Hauteclocque escaped by jumping out a window 32 After the armistice was signed on 22 June French soldiers who had not been captured were simply allowed to go home and the Germans were friendly towards Hauteclocque especially when they discovered that he spoke fluent German He made his way to rejoin his family by car and bicycle So that he could cross from the zone occupee into the zone libre where Therese and the children were his sister Yvonne obtained an identity card for him in the name of Leclerc It was his first use of this name He also told Yvonne that he intended to join General de brigade Charles de Gaulle in Britain He was reunited with his family in Saint Germain les Vergnes on 30 June but stayed with them for only four days before setting out for Spain 33 He managed to obtain a visa on the second attempt being refused the first time for carrying too much money with him Once in Spain he took a train to Madrid and then to Lisbon where he went to the British embassy which arranged his passage to Britain on a merchant ship the SS Hillary 34 Africa editLeclerc arrived in London on 25 July 1940 and met with de Gaulle who announced that he was promoting him to Chef d escadrons major He also encountered his cousin Pierre de Hauteclocque Xavier s brother who was serving with the 13e Demi Brigade de Legion Etrangere 13e DBLE an infantry regiment of the French Foreign Legion This was the largest unit that had joined the Free French Forces After participating in the Battles of Narvik it had found itself in Britain when France surrendered Formed after the war began it contained many men who had fought for the Republican cause in the Spanish Civil War and many refugees from Nazi and Fascist countries Leclerc then offered his own services to the unit but its commander Colonel Raoul Magrin Vernerey rejected his offer on the grounds that he was high born over qualified and a cavalryman 35 Instead in August 1940 de Gaulle ordered Leclerc to French Equatorial Africa where the local leaders had declared themselves for Free France as the governor of French Cameroon 36 At this time he adopted Leclerc as his nom de guerre so that Therese and their children would not be put at risk if his name appeared in the papers 37 He quickly secured the Free French grip on Cameroon He then led a force consisting of the 13e DBLE and Senegalese Tirailleurs against Gabon whose local leader supported Vichy France The Battle of Gabon lasted from 12 October to 12 November 1940 and ended with 20 dead and Gabon in Free French hands Vichy prisoners were held as hostages in case Vichy France tried to retaliate against the families of Free Frenchmen When Louis Michel Francois Tardy the Bishop of Libreville refused to conduct a mass to celebrate the victory Leclerc had him arrested 38 Capitaine de corvette Georges Thierry d Argenlieu conducted the service in his capacity as a Carmelite priest 39 nbsp Serment de Koufra plaque in StrasbourgWith Gabon in hand de Gaulle sent Leclerc to Chad the only Free French territory that shared a border with territory controlled by Axis Powers along its Sahara Desert border with Italian controlled Libya Leclerc s attention was drawn to two Italian outposts in the desert Murzuk in southwestern Libya and Kufra in the southeast Both were over 1 000 miles 1 600 km from his base at Fort Lamy in Chad He started with a small raid on Murzuk by eleven men of the Regiment de Tirailleurs Senegalais du Tchad RTST and two troops of the British Long Range Desert Group LRDG on 11 January 1941 In February he led a much larger operation that captured Kufra 40 After the battle he had his men swear an oath known today as the Serment de Koufra Oath of Kufra You shall not lay down arms until the day when our colours our beautiful colours flutter over the Strasbourg Cathedral 41 Leclerc learnt a great deal about how to handle and supply a force advancing across the desert and was rewarded with the British Distinguished Service Order 42 He began planning a far more ambitious advance into Libya This was delayed by a year due to Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel s defeat of the British Eighth Army in the Battle of Gazala and the subsequent German and Italian advance into Egypt 43 Leclerc was promoted to General de brigade in August 1941 and pinned two metal stars captured from the Italians on his kepi 44 De Gaulle ordered the plan for an advance into Libya to be put in motion in the wake of the Eighth Army s victory in the Second Battle of El Alamein in November 1942 Leclerc set out from Fort Lamy on 16 December 1942 with 500 European and 2 700 African troops in 350 vehicles He captured Sebha on 12 January 1943 and Mizdah on 22 January He reached Tripoli on 26 January where he was greeted by the Eighth Army s commander General Bernard Montgomery Leclerc s command now reinforced by the Greek Sacred Squadron and known as L Force covered the Eighth Army s inland flank during its advance into Tunisia L Force beat off a German counterattack on 10 March and participated in the attack on the Mareth Line 43 Western Europe edit nbsp Route of the 2e Division Blindee 1944 45After the fighting in North Africa ended Leclerc s L Force now about 4 000 strong became the 2e Division Francaise Libre 2e DFL In June 1943 de Gaulle informed him the 2e DFL would be re equipped by the Americans as an armoured division the 2e Division Blindee 2e DB It was often called La Division Leclerc Although organised along American lines its units had French titles The non white units were transferred elsewhere The remainder of 2e DFL became the Regiment de Marche du Tchad RMT 2e DB s motorised infantry regiment Free French armoured units serving with the Eighth Army became the 501e Regiment de chars de combat 501e RCC The artillery and the other two armoured regiments of 2e DB the 12e Regiment de Cuirassiers 12e RC and the 12e Regiment de Chasseurs d Afrique fr 12e RCA were drawn from the Vichy Armee d Afrique 36 45 Perhaps the most unusual unit in the division was the Regiment Blinde de Fusiliers Marins RBFM sailors who served as a tank destroyer regiment 46 47 Leclerc had to weld the various units some of whom had recently been fighting against the Allies into a team This was no easy task When two men from the 501e RCC upset a former Vichy officer by singing a disrespectful song about General d armee Henri Giraud resulting in a fight he told the officer concerned that respect had to be earned 48 nbsp General Leclerc talks to his men from the 501e RCCIn April 1944 2e DB was shipped to Britain to participate in Operation Overlord the Allied invasion of northern France Leclerc and his staff travelled by air in a converted B 24 Liberator bomber 49 The division moved to training areas in Yorkshire where Leclerc established his headquarters on the estate of Henry Frederick Hotham 7th Baron Hotham at Dalton Hall Beverley 50 Training was conducted in concert with Maczek s 1st Polish Armoured Division 51 On 1 August 1944 2e DB landed at Utah Beach in Normandy as part of Major General Wade Haislip s United States XV Corps of Lieutenant General George S Patton Jr s United States Third Army 52 Both of these American generals spoke French fluently 53 Later that month 2e DB participated in the Battle of the Falaise Pocket which inflicted a major defeat on the German Army 52 Like most new division commanders Leclerc also made errors in his case by allowing 2e DB to use roads that had been earmarked for American units thereby causing traffic jams and holding up the American advance 54 The next assignment for 2e DB and the one that it had been brought from Africa for was the liberation of Paris Allied troops initially avoided the historic city moving around it to minimise the danger of destruction if the Germans sought to defend it When Parisians rose against the Germans de Gaulle and Leclerc persuaded General Dwight D Eisenhower to help 55 Leclerc s men had to fight their way into Paris and when they got there they found German infantry and tanks still holding parts of the city 56 The German commander General der Infanterie Dietrich von Choltitz was inclined to surrender and did so to Leclerc and Henri Rol Tanguy of the French Forces of the Interior at the Gare Montparnasse on 25 August 1944 Leclerc arranged for Ensign Philippe de Gaulle who was serving in the RBFM to be in attendance but the elder de Gaulle was annoyed that Leclerc had allowed the communist Rol to co sign the surrender 57 The next day de Gaulle held a triumphal parade accompanied by senior military figures including Leclerc Alphonse Juin Marie Pierre Kœnig and Georges Thierry d Argenlieu 58 nbsp Crowds of French patriots line the Champs Elysees to view Free French tanks and half tracks of Leclerc s 2e DB pass through the Arc du Triomphe on 26 August 1944 after Paris was liberated Montgomery s troops liberated Tailly allowing Leclerc to return home to see Therese and the children again on 6 September 1944 His oldest sons Henri and Hubert now 18 and 17 years old respectively lied about their ages to volunteer for service with 2e DB Henri went on to serve with the RMT while Hubert became a Sherman tank gunner with the 12e RCA Other relatives also served with the division including two nephews The fighting in Paris cost 2e DB 97 killed and 238 wounded nearly twice that number were lost in the fighting in surrounding areas These were replaced by men and women who like Leclerc s sons offered themselves at a recruitment office the 2e DB established near the Bois de Boulogne 59 After Paris 2e DB returned to XV Corps at Leclerc s request 60 He won a notable victory on 12 16 September 1944 at the Battle of Dompaire against the Panzer IVs and Panther tanks of the German 112th Panzer Brigade by using manoeuvre and air power to compensate for the numerical and technical inferiority of his tanks American historian Hugh M Cole wrote that this fight characterised warmly by the XV Corps commander as a brilliant example of perfect air ground co ordination not only was an outstanding feat of arms but also dealt a crippling blow to Hitler s plans for an armoured thrust into the Third Army flank 61 nbsp General de Gaulle with Leclerc centre and other French officers at Montparnasse railway station in Paris 25 August 1944Patton personally pinned a Silver Star on Leclerc and brought with him another six Silver Stars and 25 Bronze Star Medals for other members of the 2e DB Patton then gave Leclerc his next objective the town of Baccarat and the bridge there over the Meurthe River 62 The bridge was captured before the Germans could destroy it 63 Haislip s XV Corps was transferred to the Seventh United States Army on 29 September 64 and Leclerc feared that 2e DB would be transferred to General d armee Jean de Lattre de Tassigny s French First Army Leclerc regarded the First Army as being full of traitors who had supported Vichy France Moreover de Lattre had sacked General de division Edgard de Larminat for Gaullist sentiments and Leclerc had good reason to fear that he might meet a similar fate 60 On 22 November Haislip gave Leclerc permission to advance on Strasbourg Leclerc surprised the Germans by advancing over country roads and tracks to bypass their defences Strasbourg was reached on 25 November 65 and that afternoon the Tricolour flew over the Strasbourg Cathedral The German offensive in the Ardennes in December and in Alsace in January led Eisenhower to consider abandoning Strasbourg but strong opposition to the idea from the French caused him to back down As a result the 2e DB was transferred to de Lattre s command to assist in the reduction of the Colmar Pocket 63 Leclerc objected to the use of his troops in the attack on Royan in April 1945 As a result only part of 2e DB was employed 66 The division rejoined Seventh Army crossing the Rhine on 25 April and joining the pursuit into Bavaria Leclerc visited Dachau concentration camp after its liberation by the Americans 67 In an incident that took place on 8 May 1945 at Karlstein near Bad Reichenhall in Bavaria he was presented with a defiant group of a dozen captured Frenchmen of the SS Charlemagne Division He asked them why they wore a German uniform to which one of them replied by asking why Leclerc wore an American one Leclerc told his men to get rid of them That was taken as a death sentence The group of French Waffen SS men was summarily executed by the RMT without any form of military tribunal procedure and their bodies left where they fell until an American burial team collected them three days later 68 69 On 2 June 1949 the bodies were exhumed and buried in the St Zeno cemetery in Bad Reichenhall For his services leading the 2e DB Leclerc was awarded the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 70 South East Asia editSee also French Indochina in World War II and First Indochina War At the end of the Second World War in Europe in May 1945 Leclerc received command of the French Far East Expeditionary Corps Corps expeditionnaire francais en Extreme Orient CEFEO He represented France at the surrender of the Japanese Empire in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945 On 28 November 1945 he legally changed his name to Jacques Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque incorporating his Free French pseudonym 21 Although he had never before served in the Far East as CEFEO commander Leclerc was charged with recovering French Indochina This territory comprising the present day states of Vietnam Cambodia and Laos had been conquered by the French during the late 19th and early 20th centuries The Vichy regime had allowed the Japanese to use Indochina as a base from which to attack the Allies in Malaya Burma and China On 9 March 1945 the Japanese had deposed the French colonial government taken direct control of Indochina defeated the French army in several engagements and imprisoned surviving French soldiers 71 nbsp Tokyo Bay Japan Surrender of the Japanese aboard USS Missouri BB 63 Leclerc representing France signs the instrument of surrender Other French representatives stand behind him while General Douglas MacArthur Supreme Allied Commander stands at the microphone With the end of the war Indochina was divided in two with the area north of the 16th parallel occupied by 150 000 Nationalist Chinese troops while the part to the south was occupied by 20 000 British and Indian troops of Major General Douglas Gracey s 20th Infantry Division Meanwhile the Vietnamese nationalist leader Ho Chi Minh had declared Vietnamese independence Leclerc arrived in Saigon with a first contingent of French soldiers on 5 October 1945 He was dependent on the British for equipment and shipping 72 He did not get along well with D Argenlieu whom de Gaulle had appointed French High Commissioner for Indochina 73 Leclerc heeded the advice he was given by United States General of the Army Douglas MacArthur to bring as many soldiers as possible 74 He broke the Vietminh blockade around Saigon then drove through the Mekong delta and up into the Central Highlands This was possible because Ho feared Chinese domination far more than French colonialism which he perceived to be in decline Ho s first priority was getting rid of the Chinese and for this he needed French help 75 Leclerc quickly perceived the necessity for a political solution to the conflict 76 The French government negotiator Jean Sainteny flew to Saigon to consult Leclerc who was acting as high commissioner in the absence of d Argenlieu Leclerc approved Sainteny s proposal to negotiate with Ho because he preferred a diplomatic solution to a larger conflict but he still dispatched a flotilla with shiploads of French soldiers to northern Vietnam ready to attack if the talks failed At that time Ho felt that negotiations with the French constituted his best option because the Soviet Union had not yet endorsed the Vietminh or the Vietnamese nationalist party VNQDD and the French Communist Party chose to support French rule in Vietnam 77 On 6 March 1946 a tentative agreement was reached at the last minute with Leclerc s fleet already in the Gulf of Tonkin between Sainteny and Ho The agreement stated that France would recognise Vietnam as a free state within the French Union a new name for the French empire broadly similar to the British Commonwealth and that Ho would allow France to base 25 000 soldiers in Vietnam for five years 78 The Ho Sainteny agreement was never confirmed because it disappointed people on both sides Ho s immense prestige largely silenced Vietnamese dissent but the agreement caused a serious split within the French side French businessmen planters and officials in Saigon were indignant at the prospect of losing their colonial privileges 79 D Argenlieu bluntly denounced Leclerc I am amazed yes that is the word amazed he said that France s fine expeditionary corps in Indochina is commanded by officers who would rather negotiate than fight 78 D Argenlieu stated that a higher level meeting in Paris would be required He then unilaterally declared a French controlled Autonomous Republic of Cochinchina without asking either Paris or the Vietnamese 77 In July 1946 Leclerc was replaced as commander of the French forces by Jean Etienne Valluy 80 At the time many French and American politicians were willing to believe that Ho was part of a Soviet plan to dominate the world but Leclerc warned that anti communism will be a useless tool unless the problem of nationalism is resolved 81 His advice was simple Negotiate at all costs 82 Death edit nbsp Fragment of a lamp from the crash of Leclerc s B 25 Mitchell Leclerc was appointed Inspector of Land Forces in North Africa On 28 November 1947 his North American B 25 Mitchell Tailly II carrying Leclerc and his staff crashed fr near Colomb Bechar in French Algeria killing everyone on board His body was returned to France where it was taken to Paris along the route that 2e DB had followed in August 1944 A funeral service was held at Notre Dame de Paris and he was interred in a crypt at Les Invalides 83 84 85 86 Posthumous honours editLeclerc was posthumously created a Marshal of France on 23 August 1952 the anniversary of the day that 2e DB had entered Paris 21 Today his marshal s baton is displayed in the Leclerc room of the Musee de l Armee at Invalides 87 as is his battered kepi with the Italian stars that he wore at Kufra 88 The Leclerc tank built by GIAT Industries Groupement Industriel des Armements Terrestres of France is named after him 89 There is a monument to Leclerc in the Petit Montrouge quarter of the 14th arrondissement in Paris between Avenue de la Porte d Orleans and Rue de la Legion Etrangere and near the Square du Serment de Koufra 90 91 Two streets in Paris are named for him Avenue du General Leclerc in the 14th arrondissement 92 and Rue du Marechal Leclerc in the 12th arrondissement between the Bois de Vincennes and the Marne River 93 Memorials to Leclerc nbsp Monument in Aulnay sous Bois nbsp Monument in Poissy nbsp Memorial plaque in Les Invalides in Paris nbsp Memorial plaque in Wasselonne nbsp Memorial plaque in Gruge l Hopital nbsp Leclerc monument in Domalain nbsp Statue of Leclerc in Douala nbsp Memorial tablet in Amiens CathedralMilitary ranks editSecond lieutenant Lieutenant Captain Squadrons chief Lieutenant colonel Colonel nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1 October 1924 94 1 October 1926 95 25 December 1934 96 31 July 1940 21 Never attributed 24 August 1940 97 Brigade general Brigade general Division general Corps general Army general Marshal of France nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 10 August 1941 98 Temporary 14 April 1942 21 Substantive 25 May 1943 21 25 May 1945 21 14 July 1946 21 23 August 1952 99 PosthumousHonours and decorations editHonours and decorationsNational honoursRibbon bar Name Date Source nbsp Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour nbsp Companion of the National Order of Liberation 6 March 1941 100 Military decorationsRibbon bar Name Date Source nbsp Military medal 6 June 1946 101 nbsp War Cross 1939 1945 with eight palms 6 June 1946 101 nbsp War Cross for foreign operational theatres with two palms 1 nbsp Resistance Medal with rosette 1 nbsp Escapees Medal 1 nbsp Colonial Medal with clasps Maroc Fezzan Koufra Tripolitaine Tunisie Extreme Orient 1 nbsp Insignia for the Military Wounded 1 nbsp Commemorative medal for voluntary service in Free France 1 nbsp Commemorative war medal 1939 1945 1 Foreign honoursRibbon bar Name Country Source nbsp Companion of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom 1 nbsp Distinguished Service Order United Kingdom 1 nbsp Silver Star United States 1 nbsp Bronze Star Medal United States 1 nbsp Commander of the Legion of Merit United States 1 nbsp Presidential Unit Citation United States 1 nbsp Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown with palm Belgium 1 nbsp Croix de guerre Belgium 1 nbsp Croix de guerre Luxembourg 1 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of the Oak Crown Luxembourg 1 nbsp Commander s Cross of Virtuti Militari Poland 102 nbsp Czechoslovak War Cross 1939 1945 Czechoslovakia 1 nbsp Military Order of the White Lion Czechoslovakia 1 nbsp War Cross 1st Class Greece 1 nbsp Grand Officer of the Order of Glory Tunisia 1 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Ouissam Alaouite Morocco 1 nbsp Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Cambodia Cambodia 1 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of the Million Elephants and the White Parasol Laos 1 nbsp Order of the Paz in Morocco Spain 1 Citations edit For his promotion to Companion of the National Order of Liberation Leader of the highest value admirable in zeal and energy Wounded during the Battle of France escaped from the hands of the enemy and joined the Free French Forces Took a decisive part in the rally of Cameroon which he then knew as governor to organize for the war and in the liberation of Gabon Commander of the troops of Chad prepared and beautifully conducted the victorious operations of Murzuk and Kufra which brought glory back under the folds of the flag Journal Officiel de la France Libre 6 March 1941 100 For his attribution of the Military Medal During a glorious epic which belongs to history showed that the French flag always knew how to spread as a victor wherever the sacred cause of the homeland called it Journal Officiel de la Republique Francaise 6 June 1946 101 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa National Order of Liberation Philippe LECLERC de HAUTECLOCQUE ordredelaliberation fr Retrieved 19 July 2019 Government of the French Republic 18 November 1939 Decret du 8 Novembre 1939 des officiers ayant obtenu le brevet d etat major gallica bnf fr Retrieved 8 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 9 September 1924 Decret du 9 Septembre 1924 portant mutation dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 17 September 1926 Decret du 17 Septembre 1926 portant mutation dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 8 October 1926 Decret du 8 Octobre 1926 portant mutation dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 21 July 1930 Decret du 21 Juillet 1930 portant mutation dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 17 November 1945 Decree on a change of name gallica bnf fr in French Retrieved 23 September 2020 a b c d Clayton 1992 p 34 a b c Moore 2011 p 16 Moore 2011 p 20 Moore 2011 p 24 a b Moore 2011 pp 25 26 Leclerc avenue du marechal in French Dictionnaire des noms de rues Archived from the original on 15 May 2014 Retrieved 14 May 2014 Indochine octobre 1945 juillet 1946 in French Fondation Leclerc de Hauteclocque Archived from the original on 17 March 2014 Retrieved 16 May 2014 Famille de Hauteclocque PDF in French Geneanet Retrieved 14 May 2014 Moore 2011 p 48 Moore 2011 pp 27 30 a b Clayton 1992 p 36 Moore 2011 p 34 Moore 2011 pp 36 38 a b c d e f g h Leclerc De Hautecloque Philippe Francois Marie in French Memorial GenWeb Archived from the original on 18 May 2014 Retrieved 14 May 2014 a b Moore 2011 pp 45 46 Moore 2011 p 27 Moore 2011 p 42 Vezinet 1974 p 34 Clayton 1992 p 37 Moore 2011 pp 47 49 Moore 2011 pp 51 54 Moore 2011 pp 56 58 Moore 2011 pp 58 59 Clayton 1992 p 41 Moore 2011 p 64 Moore 2011 pp 66 68 Clayton 1992 p 42 Moore 2011 p 73 a b Keegan 1982 pp 299 300 Moore 2011 p 74 Clayton 1992 pp 45 46 Moore 2011 p 91 Clayton 1992 pp 46 48 Jurez de ne deposer les armes que le jour ou nos couleurs nos belles couleurs flotteront sur la cathedrale de Strasbourg Le serment de Koufra in French Ministere de la Defense Retrieved 21 May 2014 Moore 2011 p 126 a b Clayton 1992 pp 48 61 Moore 2011 pp 147 152 Moore 2011 pp 199 203 Keegan 1982 p 303 Moore 2011 pp 223 226 Moore 2011 p 216 Moore 2011 pp 228 230 Moore 2011 pp 234 235 Moore 2011 pp 241 a b Clayton 1992 pp 55 56 Moore 2011 pp 232 257 Moore 2011 pp 267 268 Moore 2011 pp 288 291 Moore 2011 pp 302 308 Moore 2011 pp 310 311 Moore 2011 p 316 Moore 2011 pp 320 322 a b Moore 2011 p 324 Cole 1950 p 201 Moore 2011 p 334 a b Clayton 1992 pp 58 61 Clarke amp Smith 1993 p 254 Clarke amp Smith 1993 pp 380 381 Moore 2011 pp 382 383 Moore 2011 pp 389 391 Trigg 2006 p 161 Moore 2011 pp 399 400 Moore 2011 p 402 Logevall 2012 pp 67 71 Logevall 2012 pp 118 119 Moore 2011 pp 414 417 Moore 2011 p 412 Moore 2011 pp 424 426 Karnow 1983 p 695 a b Karnow 1983 pp 152 153 a b Karnow 1983 p 153 Karnow 1983 p 154 Karnow 1983 pp 155 696 Karnow 1983 p 175 Moore 2011 p 449 Clayton 1992 pp 137 138 Fonton Mickael 5 August 2010 Les morts mysterieuses 4 Leclerc l enigme du 13e passager Valeurs actuelles in French Retrieved 1 July 2017 Tombes Sepultures dans les cimetieres et autres lieux Cathedrale Saint Louis des Invalides et le Caveau des Gouverneurs Retrieved 25 May 2014 Government of the French Republic 6 December 1947 Loi n 47 2292 du 6 decembre 1947 portant que le general d armee Leclerc de Hauteclocque a bien merite de la patrie et sera inhume a l Hotel national des Invalides legifrance gouv fr Retrieved 19 July 2019 Les batons de marechaux de la seconde guerre mondiale PDF in French Musee de l Armee Retrieved 25 May 2014 Kepi dit de Koufra du General Leclerc in French Musee de l Armee Retrieved 25 May 2014 Leclerc Main Battle Tank Military Today com Retrieved 25 May 2014 Square du Serment de Koufra Mairie de Paris Retrieved 25 May 2014 Avenue de la Porte d Orleans Extrait de la nomenclature officielle des voies de Paris Archived from the original on 24 November 2006 Retrieved 2 July 2006 Avenue du General Leclerc Extrait de la nomenclature officielle des voies de Paris Archived from the original on 22 February 2007 Retrieved 2 July 2006 Rue du Marechal Leclerc Extrait de la nomenclature officielle des voies de Paris Archived from the original on 23 March 2007 Retrieved 2 July 2006 Government of the French Republic 9 September 1924 Decret portant promotion dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 17 September 1926 Decret portant promotion dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 25 December 1934 Decret portant promotion dans l armee active gallica bnf fr Retrieved 1 August 2019 Ferry Vital 2005 Croix de Lorraine et Croix du sud 1940 1942 aviateurs belges et de la France libre en Afrique in French Le gerfaut p 95 ISBN 978 2 914622 92 9 Government of Free France 11 August 1941 Decret portant nomination dans les cadres superieurs des Forces Francaises Libres gallica bnf fr Retrieved 7 August 2019 Government of the French Republic 23 August 1952 Decret conferant a titre posthume la dignite de marechal de France au general Leclerc de Hauteclocque legifrance gouv fr Retrieved 19 July 2019 a b Government of Free France 6 March 1941 Decret du 6 Mars 1941 portant attribution de la Croix de la Liberation gallica bnf fr Retrieved 7 August 2019 a b c Government of the French Republic 6 June 1946 Decret portant concession de la medaille militaire gallica bnf fr Retrieved 29 October 2019 Puchalski 2000 p 246 General references edit Clarke Jeffrey J Smith Robert Ross 1993 Riviera to the Rhine PDF The United States Army in World War II The European Theater of Operations Washington DC Center of Military History OCLC 23464248 Archived from the original PDF on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 25 May 2014 Clayton Anthony 1992 Three Marshals of France London Brassey s ISBN 0 08 040707 2 OCLC 25026611 Cole Hugh M 1950 The Lorraine Campaign PDF The United States Army in World War II The European Theater of Operations Washington DC Center of Military History OCLC 1253758 Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 25 May 2014 Karnow Stanley 1983 Vietnam A History New York Viking Press ISBN 0 670 74604 5 OCLC 9646422 Keegan John 1982 Six Armies in Normandy from D Day to the Liberation of Paris June 6th August 25th 1944 New York Viking Press ISBN 0 670 64736 5 OCLC 8176673 Logevall Frederic 2012 Embers of War The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America s Vietnam New York Random House ISBN 978 0 37550 442 6 Moore William Mortimer 2011 Free France s Lion The Life of Philippe Leclerc De Gaulle s Greatest General Newbury Nerkshire Casemate Publishers ISBN 978 1 61200 068 8 OCLC 721889914 Puchalski Zbigniew 2000 Dzieje polskich znakow zaszczytnych History of Polish Decorations in Polish Warsaw Wydawnictwo Sejmowe ISBN 978 83 7059 388 9 OCLC 45821071 Trigg Jonathan 2006 Hitler s Gauls The History of the 33rd Waffen Division Charlemagne Stroud Spellmont ISBN 978 1 86227 293 4 OCLC 63186910 Vezinet Adolphe 1974 Le General Leclerc de Hauteclocque Marechal de France in French Presses de la Cite OCLC 1274173 Notes edit Marshal of France is a dignity and not a rank French pronunciation filip leklɛʁ de otklɔk Born Philippe Francois Marie de Hauteclocque he was authorized to add his war pseudonym Leclerc to his name after the war 7 External links edit Leclerc Memorial and Museum of the Liberation of Paris in French Retrieved 1 July 2017 Ordre de la Liberation in French Archived from the original on 26 April 2014 Retrieved 1 July 2017 Raids in the Fezzan includes description of Leclerc s expedition Retrieved 1 July 2017 Newspaper clippings about Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque amp oldid 1207801616, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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