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
Sir Henry Wilson.
Henry
Wilson was born in Edgeworthson, County Longford, Ireland,
in 1864. He served in Burma and the Boer War
(1899-1901) and then served as commander of the British Staff College.
In 1910 he was appointed director of military operations at the War
Ministry. In this position he worked closely with Ferdinand
Foch to ensure Anglo-French cooperation in the event of war with
Germany.
On the outbreak of the First World War Wilson
was the deputy chief of staff of the British Expeditionary
Force on the Western Front. Wilson
was Britain's chief liaison officer with the French Army until poor
relations with Henri-Philippe Petain caused
him to be withdrawn to Britain in May 1917.
In London Wilson worked closely with David
Lloyd George, the British Prime Minister. The two men were both
critical of the way the Commander-in-Chief, Sir
Douglas Haig, was running the war. In March 1918 Lloyd George appointed
Wilson as Imperial Chief of Staff. In this position he supported the
decision to make Ferdinand Foch Allied Supreme
Commander during the final stages of the war.
Wilson retired from the army in the 1922 General
Election became MP for North Down. Sir Henry Wilson, a staunch Irish
Protestant, was shot dead in London by Catholic Republicans in June
1922.
Sir
Henry Wilson: 1914-1918
Sir
Henry Wilson: Stephen Stratford
Sir
Henry Wilson: Wikipedia
Sir
Henry Wilson:
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Sir
Henry Wilson