Freepedia
is a series of free encyclopaedias. We currently specialize in history
but we intend to branch out into other areas. This section is about
Hubert Gough.
Hubert
Gough, a cavalry officer, led a division of the British
Expeditionary Force on the Western Front
during 1914 and 1915. He became a corps commander early in 1916 and
took part in the Battle of the Somme and
the offensives at Arras and Ypres.
Commander-in-Chief, Sir Douglas Haig, regarded
Gough as one of his best officers, but he was severely criticised by
others for his over-confident offensive enthusiasm and his belief in
cavalry attacks. Gough was blamed for the Fifth Army's collapse during
the German Offensive in March 1918.
Replaced by General Sir William Birdwood,
Gough did not hold command again until after the war. Gough was highly
critical of the Versailles Treaty and
was an active member of the Union of Democratic
Control. Sir Hubert Gough died in 1963.
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Sir
Hubert Gough
(1)
General
Hubert Gough, speech at a Union
of Democratic Control (11th November, 1920)
It
seems to me that the Peace Treaty can be viewed from two points of view,
the moral and the purely utilitarian. From either it appears thoroughly
bad, and it has failed and must continue to fail to reach any good result,
such as all who fought in the war supposed we were to gain. We hoped
to establish justice, fair-dealing between nations, and the honest keeping
of promises; we thought to establish a good and lasting peace which
would, of necessity, have been established on good will. The Peace Treaty
has done nothing of the kind.