James Willcocks

{{Short description|British general (1857–1926)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}

{{EngvarB|date=January 2020}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| honorific_prefix = General

| name = Sir James Willcocks

| honorific_suffix = {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|GCB|GCMG|KCSI|DSO}}

| image = Sir James Willcocks.jpg

| image_size =

| alt =

| caption = Sir James Willcocks

| office = Governor of and General Officer Commanding Bermuda

| term_start = May 1917

| term_end = 1922

| office2 = General Officer Commanding, Indian Corps

| term_start2 = 1914

| term_end2 = September 1915

| office3 = General Officer Commanding, Northern Army, India

| term_start3 = October 1910

| term_end3 = 1914

| office4 = Commander, Nowshera Brigade

| term_start4 = 1906

| term_end4 = 1907

| office5 = Commander, Belgaum District

| term_start5 = February 1902

| term_end5 = 1906

| office6 = Colonel-Commandant, West African Frontier Force

| term_start6 = 1 January 1900

| term_end6 = January 1902

| nickname =

| birth_date = {{birth date|1857|04|01|df=yes}}

| birth_place = Baraut, India

| death_date = {{death date and age|1926|12|18|1857|4|1|df=y}}

| death_place = Bharatpur, India

| placeofburial =

| allegiance = United Kingdom

| branch = British Army

| serviceyears = 1878–1922

| rank = General

| unit =

| commands = Indian Corps
Northern Army, India
Belgaum district
West African Frontier Force

| battles = War of the Golden Stool
Second Afghan War
Second Boer War
Bazar Valley campaign
First World War

| awards = Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George
Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India
Distinguished Service Order

| relations =

| laterwork =

}}

General Sir James Willcocks, {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|sep=,|GCB|GCMG|KCSI|DSO}} (1 April 1857 – 18 December 1926) was a British Army officer who spent most of his career in India and Africa and held high command during the First World War.

Early life and education

Willcocks was born in Baraut, Meerut District, British India, the son of an officer in the East India Company's army. He was educated in England and passed out from the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, in January 1878 (having only got in on the third attempt), being commissioned into the 100th Foot in the Punjab.{{London Gazette |issue=24547 |date=29 January 1878 |page=461}}

File:HMS Malabar (1865).jpg

Military career as a company and field officer

In late 1879, shortly after being promoted lieutenant,{{London Gazette |issue=24798 |date=6 January 1880 |page=50}} Willcocks persuaded his superiors to send him to the Second Afghan War (although his regiment was not engaged there), where he served as a transport officer. In 1881 he again served as a transport officer in the Mahsud Waziri expedition, rejoining his regiment the following year. In 1884 he was seconded to the newly formed Army Transport Department and posted to Assam. He was promoted captain in what was by now the Prince of Wales's Leinster Regiment in August 1884.{{London Gazette |issue=25401 |date=3 October 1884 |page=4333}} He served in the Sudan in 1885–1886 and then returned to Assam before serving in Burma in 1886, for which he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO).{{London Gazette |issue=25761 |date=25 November 1887 |page=6374}} In December 1887 he was offered a permanent transfer to the Commissariat and Transport Department, but declined in favour of the adjutantcy of the 1st Battalion of his regiment.{{London Gazette |issue=25789 |date=21 February 1888 |page=1155}}

File:General Sir James Willcocks, KCMG, DSO, and staff, at the entrance to the fort at Kumasi.jpg

In 1889 Willcocks served as an intelligence officer in the Chin-Lushai expedition and in 1891 in the Manipur expedition. In June 1897 he was appointed assistant adjutant-general of the Baluchistan field force, and in November 1897 second-in-command of the new West African Frontier Force as a temporary lieutenant-colonel,{{London Gazette |issue=26931 |date=21 January 1898 |page=378}} under the command of Frederick Lugard. He was appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the 1899 New Year Honours.{{London Gazette |issue=27038 |date=2 January 1899 |page=2 |supp=y}} In July 1899, while on half-pay, he was promoted substantive lieutenant-colonel{{London Gazette|issue=27096|page=4211|date=7 July 1899}} (having received his brevet in May 1898).{{London Gazette |issue=27094 |date=30 June 1899 |page=4074}} On the 23 September 1899 Willcocks is recorded as being aboard the British and African Steam Navigation Company Royal Mail ship SS Bornu, embarking from Liverpool with the destination being Forçados. He was accompanied aboard ship by a number of officers who took part in the War of the Golden Stool.{{Cite news|date=25 September 1899|title=The Liverpool Mercury, 25 September 1899|work=The Liverpool Mercury}}

Colonel Lugard became High Commissioner following the proclamation of the new Protectorate of Northern Nigeria on 1 January 1900, and Willcocks succeeded him as colonel-commandant of the Frontier Force, being granted the local rank of colonel on the same day.{{London Gazette |issue=27156 |date=23 January 1900 |page=431}} For his relief of Kumasi during the Ashanti War of 1900, Willcocks was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG) and promoted to brevet colonel.{{London Gazette |issue=27214 |date=27 July 1900 |page=4656}}

Military career as a general officer

File:Gen. Sir James Willcocks and his personal staff (Photo 24-186).jpg

File:2-4 Bn East Yorkshire Regiment and General Sir James Willcocks Hamilton Bermuda 1917.jpg and General Sir James Willcocks in Hamilton, Bermuda in 1917]]

In early January 1902, Willcocks received orders to go to South Africa, and issued a statement to say how welcome he found this order, as he had never before been unemployed.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=The War – Departure of Sir James Willcocks|date=24 January 1902 |page=9 |issue=36673}} He was graded as a colonel on the staff while employed on special service in South Africa.{{London Gazette|issue=27405|page=847|date=11 February 1902}}

After serving only a couple of weeks in the late stages of the Second Boer War, Willcocks was transferred to India in late February, to assume command of the Belgaum district.{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=Latest intelligence – The War – Sir James Willcocks|date=22 February 1902 |page=7 |issue=36698}} He was promoted to the substantive rank of colonel on 29 March 1902,{{London Gazette |issue=27486 |date=21 October 1902 |page=6652}} on the day he took up command with the temporary rank of brigadier-general while so employed.{{London Gazette |issue=27456 |date=22 July 1902 |page=4673 }} He was promoted major general and given a brigade in 1906,{{London Gazette |issue=27974 |date=7 December 1906 |page=8648}} was appointed Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1907 Birthday Honours,{{London Gazette|issue=28034|page=4430|date=25 June 1907|supp=y}} and commanded the Bazar Valley Field Force against the Zakka Khel clan of the Afridi in February and March 1908, was given command a division in March 1908{{London Gazette |issue=228121 |date=20 March 1908 |page=2169}} and promoted lieutenant-general for distinguished service in the field following his command of the Mohmand Field Force in July 1908.{{London Gazette |issue=28168 |date=14 August 1908 |page=6066 |supp=y}} In October 1910, he was appointed to the command of the Northern Army.{{London Gazette |issue=28437 |date=15 November 1910 |page=8181}} In the 1913 New Year Honours he was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India (KCSI).{{London Gazette |issue=28677 |date=31 December 1912 |page=2 |supp=y}} He was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in 1914.

In 1914 Willcocks was given command of the Indian Corps in France. He was appointed Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG) in the 1915 Birthday Honours,{{London Gazette |issue=29202 |date=22 June 1915 |page=6113 |supp=y}} and was promoted general in May 1915,{{London Gazette |issue=29459 |date=1 February 1916 |page=1326 |supp=y}} but resigned in September 1915 after friction with Sir Douglas Haig, who commanded the First Army.

Willcocks was given the colonelcy of the Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) from April 1916 until his death.{{London Gazette|issue=29591|page=5072|date=23 May 1916}}{{cite web|url=http://www.regiments.org/regiments/uk/inf/047Loyal.htm |title=The Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) |publisher=regiments.org |access-date=4 December 2016 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071218193222/http://www.regiments.org/regiments/uk/inf/047Loyal.htm |archive-date=18 December 2007 }}

Governor of Bermuda and General Officer Commanding Bermuda, retirement and death

In May 1917, Willcocks was appointed Governor and General Officer Commanding the Imperial fortress of Bermuda (where a large Bermuda Garrison protected the Royal Naval Dockyard and other strategic assets),{{London Gazette |issue=30069 |date=15 May 1917 |page=4648}} being sworn in by the Chief Justice of Bermuda at the entrance to the Council Chambers in Hamilton on 2 June 1917.{{Cite news |title=HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR TAKES THE OATHS OF OFFICE |date=1917-06-05 |work=The Royal Gazette |location=Bermuda}}

Serving under Willcocks in Bermuda as General Staff Officer, 2nd Grade, was his son, Major James Lugard Willcocks, DSO, MC (1893–1963) of the Black Watch.{{Cite book |title=THE MONTHLY ARMY LIST FOR DECEMBER, 1919 |date=1919-11-27 |publisher=British Government |language=en |page=86}} His granddaughter (the daughter of James Lugard Willcocks and his wife, Muriel Kathleen Price, the daughter of the late Colonel Gordon Price, I.M.S.), Wendy Winifred Willcocks, was born at Bermuda on 15 November 1919.{{Cite web |url=https://gwulo.com/node/12654 |title=James Lugard WILLCOCKS (1893-1963) |website=Gwulo: Old Hong Kong |language=en}}

The depot ship at the Royal Naval Dockyard Bermuda at the time was the old troopship HMS Malabar, which had been assigned to that role in 1897 and was renamed HMS Terror (the name of her predecessor as depot ship) in 1901. She was placed on the sale list in 1914 and was sold in 1918. She was the first ship Willcocks saw at Bermuda when he arrived in 1917. Shortly after visiting her alongside the wharf at Front Street in the city of Hamilton, he wrote a letter for the Royal Gazette newspaper (dated 3 September 1918 and published on the front page on 7 September 1918) in which he fondly recalled his passage to India aboard her when he was a subaltern at the start of his career as a military officer.{{Cite news |title=Memories of the old Malabar: H.E. the Governor Visits the Famous Indian Troopship as she Lies off Front Street and Tells of his experiences Aboard her in the ByGone Days |date=1919-09-07 |work=The Royal Gazette |location=Bermuda}} Willcocks also memorably was carried aloft in the first flight over Bermuda (by a Burgess-built Curtiss N-9H Jenny floatplane (A2646) of the United States Navy from the former USS Elinor) on 22 May 1919 (strictly the second flight: US Navy Ensigns G. L. Richard and W. H. Cushing flew the seaplane from Murray's Anchorage to Hamilton Harbour, where they set down to collect Willcocks, who took Cushing's place in the two-seater). Willcocks dropped a message of goodwill to the people of Bermuda, which was Bermuda's first air mail.{{Cite book |last1=Partridge |first1=Ewan |last2=Singfield |first2=Tom |title=WINGS OVER BERMUDA: 100 Years of Aviation in the West Atlantic |date=2014 |publisher=National Museum of Bermuda Press |location=Royal Naval Dockyard, Ireland Island, Sandys, Bermuda |isbn=978-1-927750-32-2 |language=en}}{{Cite web |url=https://www.bermuda.com/first-plane-to-fly-over-bermuda |title=100th Anniversary – The First Plane To Fly Over Bermuda – May 22, 1919 |website=Bermuda.com |date=22 May 2019 |publisher=Bermuda.com Limited |language=en}} Willcocks was also a passenger in the first descent by a submarine in local waters. He was the life patron of the Bermuda War Veterans Society.{{Cite news |title=War Veterans and General Wilcocks |date=1926-12-22 |work=The Royal Gazette |page=1 |location=Bermuda}}

He served in these posts until 1922. He was appointed Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB) in the 1921 Birthday Honours.{{London Gazette |issue=32346 |date=4 June 1921 |page=4532 |supp=y}} He authored his memoirs The Romance of Soldiering and Sport, which was published in 1925.{{Cite book|last=Willcocks|first=Sir James|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZpC3AAAAMAAJ|title=The Romance of Soldiering and Sport|date=1925|publisher=Cassell|language=en}} He later returned to India and died at Bharatpur in 1926.

Personal life

Willcocks married Winifred Way, the second daughter of Colonel George Augustus Way, CB, BSC, on 29 July 1889, at Calcutta. James Lugard Willcocks, born 5 January 1893, in Delhi, was their only child.

Death

Willcocks died at Moti Hahal Palace, Bharatpur, Rajputana, India, on 18 December 1926. News of his death was received at Bermuda on 21 December. A ball scheduled to take place that evening at Government House was postponed until 23 December.{{Cite news |title=Government House |date=1926-12-21 |work=The Royal Gazette |page=1 |location=Bermuda}}{{Cite news |title=Government house |date=1926-12-22 |work=The Royal Gazette |page=1 |location=Bermuda}} The Legislative council was sitting, but limited business to one matter other than sending a letter to the Governor asking that the council's sympathies be expressed to Lady Willcocks.{{Cite news |title=Legislative Council |date=1926-12-22 |work=The Royal Gazette |page=1 |location=Bermuda}} The House of Assembly of Bermuda also sent a message to the Governor, on the motion of Major Thomas Melville Dill, MCP, asking that the profound regret of the Legislature and people of Bermuda and an expression of sympathy be sent to Lady Willcocks by the Secretary of State for the Colonies.{{Cite news |title=IN THE HOUSE |date=1926-12-21 |work=The Royal Gazette |page=1 |location=Bermuda}} General Willcocks' final message to Bermuda was printed in the Royal Gazette on 29 December 1926.{{Cite news |title=A Message to Bermuda from the Late General Willcocks |date=1926-12-29 |work=The Royal Gazette |page=1 |location=Bermuda}}

{{blockquote|Camp, foot of Himalayas,

India,

21st November, 1926.


The Editor,

"Royal Gazette."


Very Happy Xmas and New Year to all in Bermuda-It was with genuine grief I read of the fearful hurricane, which lately passed over your beautiful islands and the great loss of life in His Majesty's Navy.


I wired to the War Veterans for their gathering on 11th November and I mean one day to again visit Bermuda and meet such old friends as may still remember me.


God bless you all,

JAMES WILLCOCKS,

General.}}

Footnotes

{{reflist}}

References

{{Commons category|James Willcocks}}

  • Biography, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  • {{cite book|last=Willcocks|first=James|title=With the Indians in France|year=1920|url=https://archive.org/details/withindiansinfra00will|publisher=Constable}}
  • Willcocks, General Sir James. The Romance of Soldiering & Sport. London: Cassell and Company, Ltd. 1925.
  • Willcocks, Brigadier General Sir James. From Kabul To Kumassi. Twenty Four Years of Soldiering and Sport. London: John Murray. 1904.

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Willcocks, James}}

Category:1857 births

Category:1926 deaths

Category:People from Meerut district

Category:Graduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst

Category:British military personnel of the Second Anglo-Afghan War

Category:British Army personnel of the Mahdist War

Category:British military personnel of the Third Anglo-Burmese War

Category:British military personnel of the Second Boer War

Category:British Army generals of World War I

Category:Prince of Wales's Leinster Regiment officers

Category:Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath

Category:Knights Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George

Category:Knights Commander of the Order of the Star of India

Category:Companions of the Distinguished Service Order

Category:Royal West African Frontier Force officers

Category:Royal Army Service Corps officers

Category:Governors of Bermuda

Category:British military personnel of the War of the Golden Stool