|
John Yeldham Whitfield was born 11th October, 1899. and educated
at Monmouth School and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. He
was commissioned into The Queen’s Royal Regiment in December
1918 and thereafter served for many years, in West and East Africa.
In 1942 he returned to England to take command of a battalion of
his Regiment in The Queen’s Brigade of 56th (London) Division.
This battalion, the 2/5th Queen’s, he took to Iraq and to
the closing stages of the 8th Army’s campaign in North Africa;
to Europe and the assault landing at Salerno, thence across the
Volturno to Monte Camino. It was in the capture of the Monte Camino
monastery that he personally led the attack exchanging shots with
the Germans with his revolver while advancing from rock to rock.
In January 1944, having acted as Brigade Commander on and off since
Salerno, he was finally re-promoted Brigadier (he had been Brigadier
General Staff to General Sir George Giffard in West Africa until
his return to England in 1942). As a Brigade Commander in the 5th
Division he fought on the Garigliano and through three testing months
at Anzio. In July he had a few days away from battle when he took
15th Brigade to Egypt. Although a fine staff officer and administrator,
he could not be kept from command for long; in fact his next appointment
as BGS, 5 Corps, in Italy, to which he then returned, he held for
some fifteen days only.
General Templer, Commander, 56th (London) Division, had been recalled
to England. In a matter of minutes on the 26th July, 1944, he handed
over command to Major General John Whitfield at the Eden Hotel,
Rome, with a toast to his and the Division’s success drunk
by them both in Italian champagne.
From August 1944 he was more or less continuously in action during
the last stages of the Italian campaign: Gothic line, Senio battles,
crossing the Rubicon into the northern plains of Italy until he
entered Venice at the head of his Division in March 1945. The Grand
Hotel on the Grand Canal provided a worthy headquarters for him,
and there he remained until the Division was moved to Trieste on
the borders of Yugoslavia.
In 1946, after two years and two months as GOC 56th Division, he
returned to England to command 50th Northumberland Division and
Northumbrian District. He then became Chief of Staff, Northern Command,
until his retirement in 1951; but from 1951 to 1955 he was specially
re-employed as Inspector of Recruiting at the War Office.
One of the many honours he received was that of Commander, Legion
of Merit (USA). He was also awarded the Order of the Red Star after
a party of visiting Russian generals had stood in admiration on
the Camino battlefield in 1944. The honour he valued most was his
appointment as Colonel of his Regiment. It transpired that he was
to be the last Colonel of The Queen’s Royal Regiment, for
the line begun by the Earl of Peterborough in 1661 ended with him
when the Regiment was amalgamated on 14th October, 1959. He played
his part in the parade that day although he could not see the Duke
of Edinburgh present the new Regiment with its new Colours. By then
he was quite blind. He had been almost continuously in action from
April 1943 until April 1945. His courage was legendary. His faith
overcame all possibility of fear, and he remained untouched by shot
or shell.
Major General John Whitfield died on 23rd September 1971 and his
Regiment lost one of its best loved, highly respected and distinguished
officers. |