- John Northcott
Infobox Officeholder
honorific-prefix = Lieutenant GeneralThe Honourable
name = Sir John Northcott
honorific-suffix = KCMG KCVO CB
imagesize =
small
caption =
order = 30th
office = Governor of New South Wales
term_start =1 August 1946
term_end =3 July 1957
predecessor = The Lord Wakehurst
successor = Sir Eric Woodward
birth_date = birth date|1890|3|24|df=y
birth_place =Creswick, Victoria
death_date = Death date and age|1966|8|4|1890|3|24|df=yes
death_place =Wahroonga, New South Wales
birthname =
nationality = Australian
spouse =
nickname =
allegiance =Australia
branch =Australian Army
serviceyears = 1908–1946
rank = Lieutenant General
commands = 1st Armoured Division
II Corps
battles =World War I
*Gallipoli Campaign World War II
*North African Campaign
awards =Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian OrderCompanion of the Order of the Bath Mentioned in Despatches Lieutenant General Sir John Northcott KCMG, KCVO, CB, (
24 March 1890 –4 August 1966 ) was anAustralian Army general who served as Chief of the General Staff duringWorld War II , commanded theBritish Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan, and wasGovernor of New South Wales .Early life
John Northcott was born on
24 March 1890 atCreswick, Victoria , the eldest son of John Northcott, a storekeeper, and his wife Elizabeth Jane, née Reynolds. He was educated at Dean State School, Grenville College,Ballarat and theUniversity of Melbourne . While at school, he served in theAustralian Army Cadets .cite web | last = Coates | first = Henry John | title = Northcott, Sir John (1890 - 1966) | work =Australian Dictionary of Biography , Volume 15 | publisher =Melbourne University Press | date = 2000 | url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A150573b.htm | pages = pp. 493-494] He was commissioned assecond lieutenant in the 9th Light Horse, a Militia unit, on14 August 1908 , and was promoted tolieutenant on31 October 1910 andcaptain on31 July 1911 . On16 November 1912 he was commissioned as alieutenant in the Administrative and Instructional Staff of the Permanent Military Forces, retaining the rank of captain as an honorary rank until he was promoted to that rank on1 June 1918 .AMF Gradation List of Officers, 1945]Great War
He was posted to the 6th Military District (
Tasmania ) where he was serving when theGreat War broke out. His first task was assisting with the raising of units in Tasmania. He joined theFirst Australian Imperial Force (AIF) as alieutenant on24 August 1914 and was appointed adjutant of the 12th Infantry Battalion which was forming atAnglesea Barracks, Hobart . He was promoted tocaptain in the AIF on18 October 1914 .Northcott sailed for Egypt with the 12th Battalion on
20 October 1914 . The 12th Battalion was one of the first battalions ashore at Gallipoli on the firstANZAC Day ,25 April 1915 . Northcott's part was brief; he was wounded in the chest by a rifle bullet and evacuated toAlexandria and later toEngland . There he married Winifred Mary Paton, who had travelled to England to join him, at the parish church inOxted on14 September 1915 .He returned to Australia on
30 December 1915 and took no further part in the fighting, it being "a rigid rule that no Regular officer once invalided to Australia could again go overseas". [cite book | last = Rowell | first = Sydney Fairbairn | title = Full Circle | publisher =Melbourne University Press | date = 1974 | location =Clayton, Victoria | pages = pp. 19-20 | isbn = 0 522 84058 2] His AIF appointment was terminated on30 September 1916 and he was posted to the 5th Military District (Western Australia ).Between the Wars
Northcott was given the honorary rank of
major on1 January 1919 and the brevet rank on1 January 1920 but was not made substantive until1 October 1923 .Northcott attended the
Staff College, Camberley from 1924 to 1926. On returning to Australia, he served as staff officer (later director), stores and transport, at Army Headquarters atVictoria Barracks, Melbourne . He was appointed a Member of theRoyal Victorian Order on8 July 1927 for his service during the visit of the Duke and Duchess of York that year to open theOld Parliament House, Canberra . He served on the staff of the 4th and 3rd Divisions. He went back to England as anexchange officer with theBritish Army ] , serving on the staff of the44th (Home Counties) Infantry Division . He attended the Imperial Defence College in 1935, and the Senior Officers' School,Sheerness in 1936, and finally completed an attachment to the Committee of Imperial Defence. He was a defenceattaché in theUnited States andCanada from September 1936 to June 1937.Northcott was given the
brevet rank oflieutenant colonel on1 July 1935 , which was made substantive on1 January 1936 . He was then promoted to thebrevet rank of fullcolonel on1 July 1937 and substantive rank on13 October 1939 . From1 September 1939 to12 October 1939 , he was Director of Military Operations and Intelligence.econd World War
Northcott was promoted to the local rank of
major general on13 October 1939 when he was appointed Deputy Chief of the General Staff. He accompanied Mr Richard Casey to theDominion s' Conference in London in late 1939 as his military adviser. For his service as Deputy Chief of the General Staff, he was made a Companion of theOrder of the Bath on1 January 1941 . [ [http://www.itsanhonour.gov.au/honours/honour_roll/search.cfm?aus_award_id=1064403&search_type=quick&showInd=true Australian Honours Website] ]Northcott became acting Chief of the General Staff (CGS) on 26 January 1940 on the death of
Lieutenant General Ernest Ker Squires . In August 1940, his successor,General SirBrudenell White , died in an air crash andLieutenant General Vernon Sturdee succeeded him. The post of commander of the 8th Division thereby became available but Northcott was excluded from consideration because his knowledge was vital to the new CGS. When the commander of the 9th Division,Major General Henry Wynter fell ill in January 1941,Lieutenant General SirThomas Blamey asked for Northcott to replace him but he was involved in organizing the 1st Armoured Division and the appointment instead went to BrigadierLeslie Morshead .Northcott joined
Second Australian Imperial Force as amajor general on1 September 1941 and was given the serial number VX63396. He was attached to the British 7th Armoured Division in theMiddle East to study armoured warfare, returning to Australia in December 1941 to organize the new 1st Armoured Division. In March 1942, Northcott found out from The Herald that he was to be promoted to command II Corps. "This is what they do to me," was his comment, "just as my first tank is coming down the road". [cite book | last = Hopkins | first = MAJGEN R. N. L. | title = Australian Armour | publisher = Royal Australian Armoured Corps Tank Museum,Puckapunyal | date = 1978 | pages = pp. 94-95] The new post came with a promotion to the temporary rank oflieutenant general on6 April 1942 , which became substantive on12 December 1945 .However, on
10 September 1942 , Northcott was appointed Chief of the General Staff. As Blamey's principal non-operational subordinate, he was responsible for administering and training the army. His job also involved liaison withRoyal Australian Navy and theRoyal Australian Air Force , and he frequently had to represent Blamey in meetings with the Minister for the Army, MrFrank Forde .British Commonwealth Occupation Force
At the end of the war Sturdee was again invited to become CGS. He made it a condition of his acceptance that Northcott be given the appointment of
Commander in Chief of theBritish Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) in Japan.Northcott headed the BCOF from December 1945 until June 1946. As such, he negotiated the Northcott-MacArthur agreement with
General of the Army Douglas MacArthur , which governed the terms and conditions under which the BCOF would occupy part of Japan. The BCOF would serve under American command, with American policy being followed. This was probably fortunate for the Japanese people, as the Australian government would have treated them more severely. [cite book | coauthors = Dennis, Peter, Grey, Jeffrey, Morris, Ewan, Prior, Robin and Conner, John | title = The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History | publisher =Oxford University Press | date = 1995 | location =South Melbourne | pages = p. 367 | isbn = 0 19 553227 9 ]Northcott therefore was a highly regarded staff officer but his periods in command of the 1st Armoured Division, II Corps and BCOF were brief and "noted neither for innovation nor conspicuous success. In two of these three appointments he was followed by
Horace Robertson who "possessed the ebullience and flair that Northcott lacked".Governor of New South Wales
On 1 August 1946, Northcott became the first Australian-born, and one of the longest-serving,
Governors of New South Wales . As such, he gave patronage and support to many charitable organizations and to youth, church and citizens' groups. Northcott opened South Sydney Boys High School (nowSouth Sydney High School ) in 1950 and had one of the School Houses named after him. He retired in July 1957. General Blamey was unable to secure a knighthood for Northcott for his military service, it beingAustralian Labor Party policy not to award knighthoods at that time, however he was made a Knight Commander of theOrder of St Michael and St George in 1950 for his service as Governor and a Knight Commander of theRoyal Victorian Order in 1954 for his services with the Royal Tour of Queen Elizabeth II. In 1951 and 1956 he administered the Commonwealth of Australia as actingGovernor General . While occupying that office, he held the honorary rank ofgeneral . He was awardedhonorary degree s by theUniversity of Sydney (D.Litt., 1952), theNew South Wales University of Technology (D.Sc., 1956) and theUniversity of New England (D.Litt., 1956). During his term as governor he was honorary colonel of the 1st-15th Royal New South Wales Lancers. Survived by his two daughters, Sir John died on4 August 1966 in his home atWahroonga, New South Wales . He was accorded a state funeral with military honours and was cremated with Presbyterian forms.His papers are in the
State Library of New South Wales .References
External links
* [http://www.generals.dk/general/Northcott/Sir_John/Australia.html Bio at www.generals.dk]
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A150573b.htm John Northcott] at "Australian Dictionary of Biography "
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