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John Mogg (British Army officer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir

John Mogg
Birth nameHerbert John Mogg
Born(1913-02-13)13 February 1913
Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada[1]
Died28 October 2001(2001-10-28) (aged 88)
Watlington, Oxfordshire, England[1]
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Years of service1937−1976
RankGeneral
Service number73153
UnitOxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry
Royal Green Jackets
Commands held9th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry
10th Battalion, Parachute Regiment
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
I Corps
Strategic Command
Battles/warsSecond World War
Malayan Emergency
AwardsKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Commander of the Order of the British Empire
Distinguished Service Order & Bar
Spouse(s)
Cecilia Margaret Molesworth
(m. 1939)
[2]

General Sir Herbert John Mogg, GCB, CBE, DSO* (17 February 1913 – 28 October 2001) was a senior British Army officer who also held the NATO position of Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe (DSACEUR)[3] and was "in his time, probably the British army's most popular general".[3]

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Transcription

Well, good afternoon everybody. It's a real privilege to be allowed to give this talk at a museum in which I've spent many happy hours toiling away in the depths of the Templer Reading Room, like I suspect many of you in this audience. My earliest contact was when, having completed my application form, it was rightly scrutinised by the curator who telephoned me. He said, 'I see you've put down your interest in writing a book about the Prince Imperial. You will, of course, be aware of Ian Knight's seminal work on the Prince, which is upstairs in the sales department.' My heart fell. Even I knew that Ian Knight was one of the world's experts in the Zulu Wars. The first of my many false starts. But this is about a different book. What I want to talk about is: why the book; why these particular scapegoats; the research and sources; and, finally, editing. You will be relieved to hear that I'm not going to plough through chapter by chapter, but merely touch on each individual story. You will also be pleased that there are only two maps. As was outlined in Robert's introduction, the aim of the book is to appeal to the general reader, not the military history buff. It's a book about the stress falling on men under extraordinary circumstances - mostly at war, although not all of them - and what happens when the blame is laid on them, unfairly for the most part. I've tried to present an even balance and not reach my own conclusions - though I fear it's inevitable in some cases - but rather leave it to the reader to decide. Briefly, my scapegoat criterion was where an individual has taken the blame for something not entirely his fault, and that others stood to benefit from passing the blame onto him and avoiding it themselves. Magnus Linklater wrote: 'Scapegoats are usually sought when reputations are at stake and they tend to be found among the ranks of those who are closest to the action when disaster strikes. Not only are they the ones least capable of answering back, they are there on the front line, smoking gun in hand, while everyone else runs for cover. Time and again political or military leaders fail to connect with those whose responsibility it is to deliver the goods. Chains of command are weak or non-existent. Orders are imprecise or muddled. Even experienced statesmen and generals, insulated from the realities of the front, can make catastrophic mistakes. And when the worst happens, their instinct is almost always to blame those further down. This is history from the inside. Flawed, confused and frequently dysfunctional.' Why the book? Well, it all started with this man - the statue of the Prince Imperial of France, son of Napoleon III, great nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte. He stands outside what was my company office when I was a cadet at Sandhurst, about the middle of the last century. What was this statue doing? A Frenchman from the 1870s, not an officer, despite having attended the Military Academy at Woolwich, and not even actually in the British Army. With the idleness and arrogance of youth we took little notice, apart from daubing him with paint or placing inappropriate objects on his head on high days and holidays. The Zulu War in which he was involved? All we knew was from the movie with Michael Caine and Stanley Baker. Many years later I wondered about him a little more and thought there might be a story here - and I've told you of my disappointing start at the museum. Nevertheless, undaunted, I did write a book with David Rooney on Harry and Juana Smith, called 'In Love And War'. But that, as they say, is another story. I do actually have a few copies here with me today, just in case! However, after the Harry Smith book was published, I turned again to the Prince Imperial, more for my own interest than anything else. Once I got into it and realised how badly this man, Captain Jahleel Carey, how badly he'd been treated and clearly made the scapegoat for the Prince's killing by the Zulus, I then concluded that he could not possibly have been the only one in history to have been so victimised, and there must be others. But who? My thoughts were pretty haywire when I first started. I knew of some obvious possibilities, like for instance Byng or Dreyfus, but little of the real detail. Incidentally, out of interest, I questioned a lady under the age of 30 what she knew of either. She'd never heard of Byng, and wasn't Dreyfus that actor? So, I asked around and some of my clever friends assembled a list of possible scapegoats. Now, I don't expect you to read that slide - I've done it deliberately so you can't - but I just wanted to demonstrate the array of people that one might consider. Interestingly, when I mentioned to people what I was doing, many had their own pet scapegoats and would make helpful suggestions. But I needed some form of theme or connection, I couldn't just cherrypick what I fancied. The difficulty is that they tend to stand alone and bear little relevance to each other, so a connection in that sense was out. So, what I tried to do was select different ranks - remember, I was solely dealing with military men - nationality, various places where things happened, and across as wide a timeframe as I could. However, before I could even do that, I had to carry out some fairly basic research. For my stories I needed to be able to discover something about the man himself and his background, and to be able to set the scene in which the action took place without becoming purely a military history. For instance, a man who it seemed to me had very interesting potential was General Dmitri Pavlov. You wouldn't want to meet him on a dark night. Pavlov had been a Russian tank brigade commander on the Republican side on the Spanish Civil War and highly regarded, but was then blamed for failing in Operation BARBAROSSA, when the Germans invaded Russia in June 1941. He was promptly executed by Stalin and his background effectively wiped clean. So I had no access to his family, personal life, or any real detail about him. So he wasn't a starter. Others I would have loved to have done, like my hero Scipio Africanus who beat Hannibal in 202BC and Liddell Hart thought a better general than Napoleon, but they didn't quite fit the scapegoat criteria. Having, therefore, carried out initial research, I established the following framework. Ranks: I didn't really achieve much of a spread here as you can see. This is mainly because inevitably the blame gets attached to those in command who are most visible. I did though manage to squeeze in a lance corporal. Nationality: Again, I wasn't particularly successful as more than half of them were Englishmen, as you can see from that slide. Parts of the world: I did do a little bit better here, and you can see how the spread goes from America right through the Continent, Africa, India, Burma, the Philippines and Korea. So I did a bit better there. And then on the timeframe, I didn't do too badly there either, stretching from 1754 with Dupleix, through to 1994, Dallaire, so some 240 years. And so I got a good stretch there. So you can see, when someone like the eminent historian Professor Sir Michael Howard told me he was disappointed that I hadn't included General Gough, who was sacked in 1918, I was able to reply that I had Lance Corporal Short for that time and place. Anyway, I had quite enough generals. I suspect, having read the book, he would have only given me a B-, although he was overall very complimentary. What I'm going to do now is to run through the research I did. I'm going to resist telling you the actual story of each chapter because a) we'd be here to midnight, and b) you can read it for yourselves. The real nugget for any researcher is to discover something that no one else has found, what I call 'the trunk in the attic' with family papers. Look at Charles Moore's latest book on Margaret Thatcher, when he discovered exactly that in her sister Muriel's house. For our Harry Smith book, we discovered Harry's great, great nephew alive and living in Essex. He had all Harry's medals and busts of Harry and Juana and a number of pictures that had not seen the light of day. Of course, this doesn't happen that often, so the other key to go initially is for primary sources. For example, the original, or rather facsimile or photo of the original, of which there is no doubt about its legitimate provenance, like Emile Zola's letter 'J'accuse!' to the president of France, published in 'L'Aurore' in January 1898, naming the villains in the Dreyfus case. Secondary sources are books, articles and journals written by others. Merely copying out chunks of other people's work of course is plagiarism but there is nothing wrong in putting ones own slant on it, providing one gives proper accreditation to the author in one's sources. In my case, for instance, over the sinking of the USS 'Indianapolis', I used accounts written by others, but concentrated on the scapegoat aspects of the captain's story. Particular care must be taken over copying photos and images which are very often subject to copyright. Permission has to be sought and, sometimes rightly, a fee is charged. The painting on the book cover, for instance, showing Byng's execution belongs to the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich and cost us £175. So, to the stories. The Prince Imperial - you can almost see the arrogance dripping from his nose, can't you. There is much primary source material at the National Archives at Kew, and here at the [National Army] Museum, because the Zulu War is pretty well covered in the form of reports and dispatches. One of the joys about Kew is that you can photograph documents. This saves an enormous amount of handwritten note-taking or expensive photocopying. Here for instance, when I can find it, is a patrol report written by the Prince, the original of which is in Kew. But the jewels in Kew are the original papers of Carey's court martial in 1879. These were denied access to the public for 100 years. This is staggering when you think that nowadays even MI5 stuff is normally only blocked for 30 years. You can readily understand my suspicions that something had to be hidden by some very powerful people. Indeed, I was right. Admiral Byng. The Byng story is quite special, owing to the determination of the present-day family to see him exonerated. Two powerful ladies lead the campaign, very ably supported by a number of others, including the head of the family, Viscount Torrington, who made letters available to me. So you would not be surprised that I have a close association with them. They've encouraged and helped me with a view to my chapter, assisting them of course in their fight. Sadly, the government has other things to do at the moment and is not going to bother with us too much. Again, there is quite a lot at Kew and a considerable amount of contemporary stuff which is easily accessible with no copyright worries. This includes the log of the 'Monarch'. There we are. Now you can't read that, so I've blown up the bit that says, 'Admiral Byng was shot on the quarter deck,' and that's a piece out of the log. I also took photographs at Wrotham Park. This is still owned by the family but now only really used for conferences and weddings. Sadly, although Byng had it built, he never actually lived in it. Like Byng, Dreyfus was a name well known to many people, but not much of the detail beyond the fact that he was wrongly incarcerated in Devil's Island, which is associated of course with the novel 'Papillon'. Until I got into it, I had no idea of the depth of iniquity and criminal activity of the higher echelons of the French military political hierarchy in the 1890s. The real forger and traitor, Esterhazy - I don't think you'd buy a second-hand car from him - he was backed by some of the most senior and powerful men in France at the time and he's one of the nastier bits of work to come out of the story. His photograph here sadly wasn't good enough resolution for the book, and it portrays him very well. If you want to visit his grave, it's in Harpenden, but you will have to look very carefully because he's buried under the pseudonym Count de Voilemont. So many books have been written about the case that I wasn't able to find any primary sources that no one else had, although I was offered lunch in Paris with Dreyfus's great niece. Robert Harris later wrote a novel based on the story, to be made into a movie by Roman Polanski, so I sent him a copy of the book in case he needed some help. With Warren, I was lucky enough to have an enormous amount of material to work from, ranging from many books on the Boer War, and a number of them contemporary, to primary sources at Kew and the museum here. I was able, therefore, to ferret out the actual detail of how Warren had been treated by Buller, and hopefully not get too deflected by the rest of the goings on at the time. As an aside, there were many maps of the Boer War operations, as indeed there were for the rest of the book, of very varying quality, including sketches of my own. I thought it important, therefore, to have a continuity of style and presentation, so they were all drafted by Barbara Taylor, a professional map maker, with the exception of a contemporary Étaples one, which I thought important to have in its original state. Now, the one major story for you to puzzle over is the case of Brigadier George Taylor. Taylor was an outstanding battalion commander in the Second World War, with two DSOs [Distinguished Service Orders], and commanded the 28th Commonwealth Brigade in Korea in 1951. The brigade comprised three British infantry battalions, a tank regiment, and Australians and New Zealanders. And here are their commanding officers. The division was commanded by General Jim Cassels. After the ferocious three-day battle of Maryang San, the brigade successfully achieved its objectives. It is barely mentioned in British military history, but for the Australian 3 RAR [3rd Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment], it's a major battle honour, and quite right too. The commanding officer, Frank Hassett, earned an immediate DSO and later became head of their army [the Australian Army]. But Taylor was sacked. I won't tell you too much about it for fear of influencing you with my thoughts. Suffice it to say, I had access to the papers of Taylor's appeal to the Army Council, which was upheld. He was subsequently given command of another brigade and Cassels later became CGS [Chief of the General Staff]. So why was he removed from command? Was he a scapegoat? Over to you. Colonel Charles Bevan was held to blame by Wellington for allowing the French to escape from Almeida in the Peninsular War in 1811. His battalion, the 4th of Foot, were too late to prevent much of the French crossing the bridge at Barba del Puerco. There is no doubt that he was given orders late by the useless General Erskine, but was he too slow in the uptake? Luckily for historians, he was an avid letter writer and many of his letters to his wife survived. Sadly, he committed suicide shortly afterwards and his memorial is in the little British military cemetery in Elvas in Portugal. Interestingly, his suicide was successfully covered up for some 32 years. Did he deserve the blame? Some of it, undoubtedly. But should Wellington have taken a bit more interest and allowed Bevan to defend himself? What would you have done? My earliest scapegoat is the Marquis Dupleix in India in 1754 - Clive's opposite number, but no soldier. He was an administrator and a wily entrepreneur, we would call him today. But did he play his own game to the detriment of the French East Indies Company? Or carve an empire for them to rival the British? In the end, the French scuttled out of India as best they could, dropping Dupleix in it. He died in penury and disgrace in France. I had two wonderful sources, one published in 1890, and the other in 1910, both totally opposed to each other in their judgement of Dupleix. Amazingly, both these books are in the biographical department of the Kensington and Chelsea library. The highly popular General 'Dado' Elazar was held to blame for the Israeli lack of preparedness for the Yom Kippur War in 1973. While some blame can be attached to him, he more than made up for it during the war when people like Moshe Dayan effectively folded. Golda Meir needed a scapegoat and the Agranat Commission after the war conveniently delivered Elazar. But the population wouldn't have it and Golda Meir and her government fell soon afterwards. I was helped enormously by Hanokh Bartov in Tel Aviv, a great friend of Elazar's, who kindly gave me an inscribed copy of his book on Dado as the only one here in the British Library is in Hebrew. Dado died of a heart attack, some say a broken heart, aged 52. I was also in touch with Elazar's son, Yair, who kindly reviewed my chapter. A man who was extraordinarily treated, whatever blame may have been attached to him, was Jackie Smyth. The disaster of the blowing of the Sittang Bridge in Burma in 1942 was, for many years, taught at the Staff College of how not to carry out a bridge demolition operation. Whatever the rights and wrongs, Smyth was sacked, not just from his command, but from the Army by Wavell. Smyth was a man with a VC [Victoria Cross] from the First World War, sent out to grass in the middle of a world war. Incredible. He described himself as a scapegoat for the loss of Burma. My nugget in this case were the papers of General Hutton, Smyth's immediate superior in Rangoon, which are in the Liddell Hart Centre in Kings College London. While understandably defensive, it's not difficult to see what a desperate job he had, particularly dealing with a taciturn Wavell from afar. Jackie Smyth himself was no mean writer, and one can detect from the papers at Kew how the official historian of that campaign must have smarted under Smyth's criticism. I was also able to discuss it with Brigadier John Randle, who'd been a young company commander at the bridge and seen much of his company decimated the other side, after it had been blown. Unsurprisingly, he had little time for Smyth. The chapter you must on no account read before you put your light out at night is the one on the Rwanda massacres, and Roméo Dallaire in 1994. You will all know the outlines of this disaster, but I suggest that many people, including me before I went down this road, had really little conception of how useless the UN [United Nations] had been, and how supine was the Security Council, including I'm afraid the United Kingdom. The French come out of it worst, followed closely by the Belgians, who had the effrontery to court-martial Dallaire's right-hand man. Dallaire is not a scapegoat - he sent me this photo personally - but he says he felt like one, and had the UN managed it, he surely would have been. Now a senator in the Canadian parliament, he was gracious enough to carry out red ink corrections on my draft, something he would have been personally familiar with, having attended the British Higher Command and Staff Course. My most junior scapegoat is a lance corporal, and I'm very pleased to be able to include Robert Jessie Short. That's his gravestone. They say that history is written by the victors. Well, no one wants to expose their dirty laundry unnecessarily, and this goes for the war diary of the Étaples reinforcement depot in northern France in 1917. Here is a contemporary map of Étaples, which is a bit difficult to see, but I thought you'd like to see it. Close reading of the diary at Kew reveals really very little problem, when in fact the place was a badly run hotchpotch of receiving dead, dying and wounded from the front, and training reinforcements, and men returning from leave in England to go the other way. Not in regimental formed units, men were without their trusted leaders. The staff were not the best in the Army - they were at the front fighting. So you had all the ingredients of low moral - bad officers and non-commissioned officers, men being unnecessarily buggered about and confined to camp with not much to do. A classic for going wrong. And it did. Short was one of those soldiers who was probably a nightmare in barracks, with drink too readily available, but robust in the field. He must, for instance, have fought on the Somme and someone thought he was good enough to be promoted. He was charged with inciting mutiny on this bridge at Étaples, court-martialled and executed. Some commentators say that that was the standard of the time - death being the mandatory sentence for mutiny. I accept that it is a weakness of historians to judge actions in the past by the standards of today. However, you can still judge something by the law at the time with a balanced and fair view. This was the view of others more qualified than me, because Short was pardoned in 2006. Did he deserve what he got by the standards of the time? Lastly, let me turn to my two Americans. The Battle of Gettysburg is deeply embedded in the American psyche, for all the reasons that you will know well. I was a bit of a novice about the battle, but when I read accounts, it seemed to me that Longstreet, while not without criticism - look closely and you can see a button undone! nevertheless was certainly not to blame for the loss of the battle, the war and the Confederacy, which Jubal Early and his cronies so desperately wanted to prove, thus maintaining the myth of their god, Robert E Lee. I had no conception of how powerful the vitriol was, which came from the lost cause and their journal, the Southern Historical Society Papers. Did Longstreet sulk in his tent before day two of the battle because he couldn't get his way? Or did Lee fail to give him firm and crystal clear orders? In the 1930s, eminent historians such as Douglas Freeman, were highly critical of Longstreet. But as time went on and people realised how badly he'd been treated, albeit some of it his own making, views changed. And I wonder what yours will be. My final scapegoat today is Captain Charles McVay III, captain of the USS 'Indianapolis', which was torpedoed in the Philippines in 1945, having delivered parts of the atomic bomb for Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Court-martialled and convicted for failing to take anti-submarine precautions with his ship, he later shot himself. But there were other people in the frame, as you can see in the book. It also has one of the rare happy endings, but sadly too late for McVay. Let me finish by saying that there's an old adage that everyone has a book in them. Well, this may be true, but having written it, you have to get it on the shelves. Persuading a publisher in the days of e-books, Kindles and iPads of this world, and large discounts to the online booksellers such as Amazon, is not that easy. Having secured your contract, however, it's not good enough to deliver the manuscript and retire to your garret. There is still much work to be done. Editing, I was on three emails a day with my editor, proof reading, source identification and photograph map accreditation and copyright permission and indexing. Finally, you can write the best book in the world, but if it doesn't reach the public, what is the point? So good marketing is essential. Well, I'm glad to say I was blessed with a marvellous publishing team, and I hope you enjoy reading the book as much as I enjoyed writing it. Thank you all very much.

Army career

He was educated at St Michael's School, Victoria, B.C.,[4] Malvern College,[5] and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. After Malvern he took a Y-cadetship with 3rd Battalion, Coldstream Guards. After three years in the ranks he was selected for Sandhurst, where he gained the Sword of Honour in 1936, being commissioned into the 1st Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, (43rd & 52nd) in August 1937.

Second World War

In 1939, he was posted to 5th Battalion, Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, a newly formed Territorial training unit, and served initially as Adjutant and later Second in Command. By 1943, Major Mogg was in Command of a Divisional Battle School at Margate, 61st Infantry Division, XI Corps, Home Forces.[6] Mogg approached Major General Adrian Carton de Wiart, VC., and later Major General Brian Wainwright, Commanding Officers, 61st Infantry Division seeking an operational command. In the weeks before D-Day he was appointed Second in Command, 9th Battalion Durham Light Infantry, 151st Brigade.[7]

On D-Day, 6 June 1944, 9th DLI landed on Gold Beach at Le Hamel, Asnelles. In the breakout from the Normandy beachhead, 9DLI supported by 4th/7th Dragoon Guards were ordered to attack the village of Lingevres, 14 June 1944, defended by the Panzer Lehr Division. John Mogg gave an account of his experiences of the battle, during which the Commanding Officer, Lt Col. Humphrey Woods, DSO, MC* was killed and Mogg assumed command.

"As we crossed the start line all hell let loose from our own side and what with Typhoons and the artillery barrage and the tanks all shooting up the enemy positions in the wood, you could have seen the ground literally dance in front of you. And trees were coming down and I thought to myself "Good Lord, nobody can ever live in that thing, we must be able to walk straight on to our objective"." "And so we crossed right on time, 10.15, across the start line, with Humphrey Woods on the left and me on the right and we went through the corn, and the Geordies were never very tall guys and the corn that year was extremely high. We advanced about halfway across the corn with still this barrage going on when you suddenly saw the odd Geordie dropping in the corn and you couldn’t quite make this out where it was coming from. But, in fact, it was machine-gun fire coming from the forward edge of the wood and quite a lot of Geordies were dropping in the corn as casualties all the way along."

"However we advanced...and I spoke to Humphrey Woods on my radio, and this is the last time I heard him, and he said "We are running into terrible trouble here on the left, all the ‘A’ Company officers are casualties. I am trying to get on with ‘B’ Company and I will try and see how it happens. If not, if we don’t make any ground, you go on, whatever you do go on to your side of the village and I will try and collect as many of our soldiers and then come round behind you, because it’s obviously going to be easier your side". And, in fact, he was right, it was easier our side and apart from a fair amount of hand to hand fighting of ‘C’ Company on the right we got into the woods."

“...There was a scene of utter destruction with the church in ruins and many of the buildings had collapsed and there was very heavy shelling from the far side of the village. I suddenly had a message to say that Humphrey Woods had been killed and I suddenly realized that meant that I was the senior officer in the place and that made me the Commanding Officer, which filled me with utter despair to start with but I realized I must do something about it."

"I remember my Gunner officer was up by the Church in his tank at the main crossroads and we made a plan for some Artillery Fires which I could call for quickly." "We had an ‘O’ group with the two Company Commanders, the Anti Tank Platoon Commander, Carrier Platoon Commander, the Gunner and the 4th/7th Sqn Leader. I allocated positions for the Coys. blocking both roads and then I sited the Anti tank guns."[7]

Lingevres was taken and held against repeated German counter attacks until 9DLI and 4th/7th Dragoon Guards were relieved. The Battalion suffered casualties of 226 men and 22 Officers.[8] Mogg was awarded DSO for his actions at Lingevres, presented in the field by Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery,https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205416890 and became a distinguished commander of the 9th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry from the Invasion of Normandy to the defeat of Germany.

9DLI saw further action at the Falaise pocket, the crossing of the Albert Canal and at Gheel, Belgium.[9] On 23 September, 151st Brigade was ordered to move north and east of Eindhoven with 231st Brigade to guard the right flank of Operation Market Garden.[10] In November 1944 151st Brigade was disbanded and some units return to Britain. However 9DLI was reinforced and transferred to 7th Armoured Division, 131st Infantry Brigade, as a motorised battalion fighting at the Roer Triangle in January 1945 and the town of Ibbenbüren in March. 9DLI ended the war near Hamburg.

Lt Col HJ Mogg DSO with ADC to General Wolz, Commander of Hamburg Garrison who was escorted to deliver the surrender of German Forces in North West Germany, 3rd May 1945.

Post War

In 1945 he attended the Staff College, Camberley as a student. After two years in Germany as GSO1, 7th Armoured Division, he returned to the Staff College as a member of the Directing Staff. From 1950-52 he was Commanding Officer (CO) of the 10th Battalion, Parachute Regiment.[6] In 1952 he became Chief Instructor at the School of Infantry at Warminster and from 1954 to 1956 was GSO1 at the Imperial Defence College. From 1958 he Commanded, 28th Commonwealth Infantry Brigade Group in the final stages of the Malayan Emergency, where he received the Meritorious Medal from the Sultan of Perak. On return he was appointed Director of Combat Development at the War Office and promoted to Major General.[11]

"His next appointment, as Commandant of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, (1963-66), was an inspired choice. He loved the job, and it suited him down to the ground. He fired up the cadets with his own enthusiasm for the army, for soldiering in all its aspects, and for sport of many kinds, from cricket to horses. His appointment to the key command of First (British) Corps in Germany in 1966.,[6] pointed to his future advancement to the top of the army's tree,"

He was appointed General Officer Commanding Southern Command in 1968, General Officer Commanding, Army Strategic Command later that year and, finally, Adjutant-General to the Forces in 1970.[6] He delivered the Kermit Roosevelt Lecture in April 1969 at Fort Leavenworth; an exchange programme with the US Army supported by the Kermit Roosevelt Fund. His lecture was suitably entitled; "Communication as a military art."[12] He travelled extensively as Adjutant General, visiting British units overseas and reassuring Britain’s allies in the Middle East and elsewhere at the time of Britain's withdrawal from ‘East of Suez’;[13] earning the sobriquet ‘Marco Polo” amongst his colleagues at the MOD.[14]

His final appointment was with NATO at SHAPE, Mons as Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe, DSACEUR between 1973 and 1976.[3] He was ADC General to the Queen from 1971 to 1974,[6] Colonel Commandant of the Royal Green Jackets from 1965 to 1973,[3] Commandant of the Army Air Corps from 1963 to 1974.[6] and Honorary Colonel of the 10th Battalion, Parachute Regiment,(1973–78)[15]

Mogg promoted many sports and adventure training within the army and was a president of a number army and veteran's associations.[16] He served various charities mostly connected with the armed services or adventure training.[3][17] He was respectively Chairman of Operation Drake Fellowship (now part of Fairbridge (charity), Operation Raleigh,[18] President of the Army Cricket Association, Army Free Fall Parachute Association, Army Saddle Club, the British Horse Society,[6] the Ex-Services Mental Welfare Society, The Normandy Veterans' Association and Chairman of The Army Benevolent Fund.[6]

His interest in education was shown in his Chairmanship of the governors of the Royal Soldiers' Daughters School and Icknield School, Watlington. He was also a long serving governor of Bradfield College and his old school Malvern.[6] In Detmold, Germany, a primary school for children whose parents are serving in the British Army was named after Sir John Mogg.[19][20]

He was made Vice Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire in 1979.[16]

Obituary

The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph obituaries summed up his personality and personal style:[3]

"John Mogg's large frame was combined with an exceptionally genial, warm and sympathetic character, which appealed not only to soldiers of all ranks, but to people in every walk of life, whatever their nationality. In his time, he was probably the British army's most popular general, and finished his career in one of Nato's most influential posts, as deputy supreme allied commander (1973–76) at headquarters at Mons, in Belgium. Here, his sound common-sense and even temperament were valuable in balancing the direct approach, and sometimes abrasive personality, of the supreme commander, the US General Alexander Haig."

"John Mogg was a large man in every sense. Tall and heavily built, he always paid close attention to what someone was saying, ready with help and often a joke. His special gift was to appear to have the leisure to deal with any problem or request, although few people can have led such a busy life."[6]

Family

John Mogg was born near Comox, Vancouver Island, BC., the son of Captain Herbert Barrow Mogg, MC., (d.1978, late Wiltshire Regiment & 4th Battalion Canadian Engineers), and Alice Mary Mogg, daughter of Lt Col John Fane Ballard, late DCLI, and Mary née Clerke Brown of Kingston Blount, Oxon. In 1939, he married Cecilia Margaret Molesworth (1914-2018),[2] daughter of Rev. John Hilton (d 1921) & Mrs E. Molesworth (d 1927). Sir John and Lady Mogg had three sons.[21][22][23]

References

  1. ^ a b "General Sir John Mogg GCB CBE DSO & Bar". 17 February 1913.
  2. ^ a b Rhodes, M (21 September 2018). "Lady Mogg 1914-2018". The Peerage. Archived from the original on 28 November 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2019. Lady Mogg was a kinswoman of HRH The Countess of Wessex.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Carver, Michael (3 November 2001). "General Sir John Mogg—Ebullient military commander involved in Britain's conflicts from Malaya to Northern Ireland". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 10 September 2008.
  4. ^ "Through the Years..."
  5. ^ Debrett's People of Today 1994
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "General Sir John Mogg". The Daily Telegraph. London. 22 November 2001. Retrieved 3 November 2008.
  7. ^ a b "Mogg, John (Oral history)". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  8. ^ "BBC - WW2 People's War - Lingevres - 14 June 1944". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  9. ^ Moses, Harry (2001). The Gateshead Gurkhas. A History of the 9th Battalion The Durham Light Infantry, 1859-1967. Durham County Record Office.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ routetovictory.info
  11. ^ Daily Telegraph (2001). "Obituary".
  12. ^ Professional Journal of the United States Army. Command and General Staff School. 1969.
  13. ^ "Arabian Gulf Digital Archive". AGDA.
  14. ^ Wilson, Lt. Gen. Sir James (19 March 2003). Unusual Undertakings. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781783379460.
  15. ^ Telegraph, Daily (2001). "Obituary". The Daily Telegraph.
  16. ^ a b The Telegraph obituaries : General Sir John Mogg
  17. ^ "Two Humorous Anecdotes from Colonel John Blashford-Snell on his experience of leadership, motivation,communication, inspiration, team-building and problem solving. | The Vintage Magazine – Save the Best for Last". www.thevintagemagazine.com. Retrieved 14 October 2020.
  18. ^ "General Sir John Mogg". The Daily Telegraph. London. 31 October 2001.
  19. ^ "Adult / Children's Education / Youth Activities" (PDF). British Army website. Ministry of Defence. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2008.
  20. ^ About Sir John Mogg School[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage - 2011. Debrett's Peerage Limited, 2011. 2011. ISBN 9781870520737. Retrieved 25 August 2017. ....Cecilia Margaret (Lady Mogg) Church Close Cottage, Watlington, Oxon,.... b 1914; m 1939, Gen Sir Herbert John Mogg, .... Grandchildren of the late Rev. Rennell Francis Wynn Molesworth, son of the .....John (Molesworth).... Lawrence Teesdale... Margaret Patricia Newell... Sophie Helen....
  22. ^ Mogg, Lady Margaret (7 February 2017). "Watlington was always home".
  23. ^ "Sophie's Brush With Greatness". Manchester Evening - News 22 January 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2018. Rochdale solicitor's firm Molesworth, Bright and Clegg. The firm was set up in 1840 by John Molesworth, one of the vicar's sons and Sophie's great-great grandfather.
Military offices
Preceded by Commandant of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
1963–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC 1st (British) Corps
1966–1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC-in-C Southern Command
1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by
New post
General Officer Commanding, Army Strategic Command
1968–1970
Succeeded by
Preceded by Adjutant General
1970–1973
Succeeded by
Preceded by Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe
1973–1976
Succeeded by
This page was last edited on 13 December 2023, at 04:52
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