- Gerard Bucknall
Lieutenant-General Gerard Corfield Bucknall, CB, MC (1894 – 1980) was a
British Army officer andcorps commander duringWorld War II .In 1914, during the First World War, Bucknall was commissioned in
The Middlesex Regiment with whom he served inFrance with some distinction. Between the wars he served with theEgyptian Army (Egypt was thende-facto part of theBritish Empire ) and attended theStaff College, Camberley . He was commander of 2ndBattalion by the outbreak of the Second World War, to be succeeded byBrian Horrocks (who would later take up another of Bucknall's posts), by the time theBritish Expeditionary Force left for France. He was appointed GOC 53rd (Welsh) Division in 1941 before eventually seeing action in 1943 with the 5th Division in Sicily and Italy.Bucknall impressed Montgomery and when he was appointed to command Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of
Normandy in June 1944, he appointed Bucknall to command XXX Corps. However, Alan Brooke, the CIGS, believed Bucknall to be unsuitable for command at that level. By August 1944 Bucknall was removed from his command, due to the relatively poor performance of XXX Corps, to be replaced by Horrocks. Montgomery conceded that it had been a mistake to appoint him and Bucknall was given a command inNorthern Ireland which he held until his retirement.References
*"Biographical Dictionary of British Generals of the Second World War", Nick Smart. ISBN 1-84415-049-6.
*"Caen 1944", Ken Ford. ISBN 1-84176-625-9
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.