- Umrao Singh
Captain Umrao Singh VC (21 November ,1920 –21 November ,2005 ) was anIndia n recipient of theVictoria Cross (VC), the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He was the onlynon-commissioned officer in theRoyal Artillery or theRoyal Indian Artillery to be awarded the Victoria Cross during theSecond World War , and the last survivor of only 40 Indian soldiers to be awarded the VC between 1912, when Indians first became eligible to be awarded the VC, toIndian independence in 1947.Early life
Singh, son of Mohar Singh Yadav, was born into a poor farming family in
Palra , a small village inJhajjar district inHaryana (then theRohtak district of undivided Punjab), 50 km north ofDelhi . He attended a local school and joined the Indian Army in November 1939. He was promoted toHavildar (Sergeant ) in theRoyal Indian Artillery ,Indian Army in 1942.Award
On the night of
15 December to16 December 1944 in theKaladan Valley ,Burma (nowMyanmar ), Umrao Singh was afield gun detachment commander in an advanced section of the 33 Mountain Battery, 30th Mountain Regiment, Indian Artillery, serving on detachment as part of the81st West African Division inViscount Slim 's British14th Army , supporting the advance of theXV Corps on theArakan . Singh's gun was in an advanced position, supporting the 8th Gold Coast Regiment. After a 90 minute sustained bombardment from 75 mm guns and mortars from the Lt-GenSakurai Seizo 'sJapan ese 28th Army, Singh's gun position was attacked by at least two companies of Japanese infantry. He used aBren light machine gun and directed the rifle fire of the gunners, holding off the assault. He was wounded by two grenades.A second wave of attackers killed all but Singh and two other gunners, but was also beaten off. The three soldiers had only a few bullets remaining, and these were rapidly exhausted in the initial stages of the assault by a third wave of attackers. Undaunted, Singh picked up a "gun bearer" (a heavy iron rod, similar to a crow bar) and used that as a weapon in hand to hand fighting. He was seen to strike down three infantrymen, fatally wounded, before succumbing to a rain of blows.
Six hours later, after a counter-attack, he was found alive but unconscious near to his artillery piece, almost unrecognisable from a head injury, still clutching his gun bearer. Ten Japanese soldiers lay dead nearby. His field gun was back in action later that day.
Later life
Singh was presented with his VC by King George VI at
Buckingham Palace on15 October 1945 . The citation reads "Havildar Umrao Singh set a supreme example of gallantry and devotion to duty."He was promoted to
Subedar Major after recovering from his wounds. He retired from the British Indian army in 1946, but rejoined the army in 1947 following independence, and served until 1965. After leaving the army a second time, he returned to farm his family's 2acre (8,000 m²)smallholding .He was made an honorary
captain in 1970. At the celebrations of the 50th anniversary ofVE Day in London in 1995, he was almost turned away from the VIP tent because his name was not on the correct list, butBrigadier Tom Longland, who had organised the event, recognised his medal and gave orders for him to be admitted. After the event, Singh complained to BritishPrime Minister John Major about the meagrepension of £168 per year paid to the then ten surviving Indian VC holders. The amount had remained fixed since 1960, but Major subsequently arranged for the pension to be raised to £1,300 per year. He attended the service of dedication of theVictoria Cross and George Cross Memorial inWestminster Abbey on14 May 2003 .After being diagnosed with
prostate cancer in July 2005, he died, aged 85, at theArmy Research and Referral hospital inNew Delhi November 21 2005 . He was cremated in his native village with fullmilitary honours , attended byBhupinder Singh Hooda (Chief Minister of Haryana), GeneralJoginder Jaswant Singh (Army Chief), and Lt GenCharanjit Singh (Director General of Artillery). His wife, Vimla pre-deceased him, but he was survived by two sons and a daughter.In spite of personal hardship and receiving substantial offers, Singh refused to sell his medal during his lifetime, saying that selling the medal would "stain the honour of those who fell in battle".
References
* [http://www.outlookindia.com/pti_news.asp?id=336780 VC winner bid farewell with full military honours] , Outlookindia.com,
21 November 2005
* [http://www.hindu.com/2005/11/22/stories/2005112217881200.htm Last Indian Victoria Cross winner dies] , "The Hindu ",22 November 2005
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-1882294,00.html Obituary] , "The Times ", page 60,November 22 ,2005 .
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/22/db2201.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/11/22/ixportal.html Obituary] , "The Telegraph",22 November 2005 .
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article328929.ece Obituary] , "The Independent ",24 November 2005 .
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1654460,00.html Obituary] , "The Guardian ",1 December 2005 .External links
* [http://haynese.winthrop.edu/india/medals/VC/2USingh.html Umrao Singh]
* [http://www.victoriacross.org.uk/bbumraos.htm VC citation]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.