- George Henry Fowke
Lieutenant-General Sir George Henry Fowke (1864-1936) was a
British Army general, who served on the staff of theBritish Expeditionary Force during theFirst World War .He joined the
Royal Engineers in 1884, and saw service in theSouth African War at theDefence of Ladysmith , where he wasmentioned in despatches . [ [http://www.angloboerwar.com/Other/army_mentions.htm Mentions in despatches - Army] ] After the end of the war, he was appointed as Director of Public Works in theTransvaal and was a member of theTransvaal Legislative Council from 1902 to 1904. During theRusso-Japanese War he was an observer attached to the Japanese Army in Manchuria, and then lectured on fortifications at theSchool of Military Engineering . He was appointed the Assistant Adjutant General for the Royal Engineers in 1910, and then the Inspector of the Royal Engineers in 1913.On the outbreak of the
First World War , he was appointed to the post of Brigadier-General Royal Engineers in the BEF, the senior engineering advisor. As the war settled into a stalemate it became apparent that the Royal Engineers would play a significant role intrench warfare , and the position was changed to Chief Engineer and then to Engineer-in-Chief in 1915. In February 1916 he was promoted to hold the post ofAdjutant-General of the Expeditionary Force, and succeeded as Engineer-in-Chief byS. R. Rice . He held this post until the end of the war, and retired from the Army in 1922.Notes
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* [http://www.kcl.ac.uk/lhcma/locreg/FOWKE.shtml FOWKE, Sir George (Henry) (1864-1936), Lieutenant General] - Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives.
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