Henry George Chauvel
- Upper Clarence Light Horse - Queensland
Mounted Infantry - Boer War - First World War - Australian Imperial
Force - 1st Light Horse Brigade - Gallipoli - Middle Eastern theatre
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Desert Mounted Corps - Battle of Romani - Battle of Magdhaba -
First Battle of Gaza -, Beersheba - Battle of Megiddo -

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Sir Harry Chauvel |
General Sir Harry Chauvel GCMG,
KCB (16 April 1865 – 4 March 1945) was a senior officer of the
Australian Imperial Force who fought at Gallipoli and in the
Middle Eastern theatre during the First World War. He was the
first Australian to attain the rank of lieutenant general and
later general, and the first to lead a corps. As commander of
the Desert Mounted Corps, he was responsible for one of the most
decisive victories and fastest pursuits in military history.
The son of a grazier, Chauvel was commissioned as a captain in
the Upper Clarence Light Horse, a unit organised by his father,
in 1886. After the family moved to Queensland he was
commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Queensland Mounted
Infantry in 1890, and saw service during the 1891 Australian
shearers' strike. He became a regular officer in 1896, and went
to the United Kingdom as part of the Queensland contingent for
the 1897 Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. In 1899 he commanded
one of two companies of Queensland Mounted Infantry that were
Queensland's initial contribution to the Boer War. After the
war, he was closely involved with the training of the Australian
Light Horse.
Promoted to colonel in 1913, Chauvel became the
Australian representative on the Imperial General Staff but the First World War
broke out while he was still en route to the United Kingdom. Convinced that the
accommodation for Australian troops on Salisbury Plain would not be ready before
winter, Chauvel arranged for the Australian Imperial Force to be diverted to
Egypt. There he joined his new command, the 1st Light Horse Brigade, in
December. In May 1915, the brigade was sent dismounted to Gallipoli, where
Chauvel assumed responsibility for some of the most dangerous parts of the line.
He took charge of the 1st Division that November. In March 1916, Chauvel became
commander of the Anzac Mounted Division, gaining victories in the Battle of
Romani in August and the Battle of Magdhaba in December, and nearly winning the
First Battle of Gaza in March 1917. The following month, he took over the Desert
Column, later known as the Desert Mounted Corps, thereby becoming the first
Australian to command a corps, and the first to reach the rank of lieutenant
general. At Beersheba in October 1917, his light horse captured the town and its
vital water supply in one of history's last great cavalry charges. By September
1918, Chauvel was able to effect a secret redeployment of three of his mounted
divisions and launch a surprise attack on the enemy that won the Battle of
Megiddo. He followed up this victory with one of the fastest pursuits in
military history.
In 1919, Chauvel was appointed Inspector
General, the Army's most senior post. He attempted to maintain an increasingly
hollow structure in place in the face of short-sighted politicians intent on
cutting expenditure. He was concurrently Chief of the General Staff from 1923
until his retirement in 1930. In November 1929, he became the first Australian
to be promoted to the rank of general. During the Second World War, he was
recalled to duty as Inspector in Chief of the Volunteer Defence Corps.
Early life
Henry George Chauvel was born in
Tabulam, New South Wales on 16 April 1865, the second child of a
grazier, Charles Henry Edward Chauvel, and his wife Fanny Ada
Mary, née James. By 1884, Charles Henry Chauvel's station at
Tabulam consisted of 96,000 acres (39,000 ha), on which he
raised 12,000 head of cattle and 320 horses. From an early
age Henry George Chauvel was known as "Harry". He was
educated at Mr Belcher's School near Goulburn, before going to
Sydney Grammar School from 1874 to 1880, and Toowoomba Grammar
School from 1880 to 1882. While at Sydney Grammar, Harry served
in the school cadet unit, rising to the rank of lance corporal.
In 1886, Charles Henry was given permission to raise two troops
of cavalry. On 14 March 1886, he was commissioned as a captain
in the Upper Clarence Light Horse, with his sons Arthur and
Harry becoming second lieutenants, while his two younger sons
became troopers. The unit escorted Lord Carington when he
formally opened the railway at Tenterfield, New South Wales in
1886.
Following a series of severe droughts in northern New South
Wales, Charles Henry Chauvel sold his property at Tabulam in
1888 for £50,000. After paying his debts, he bought a much
smaller 12,000 acres (4,900 ha) property at Canning Downs on the
Darling Downs in Queensland. In 1889, Harry Chauvel embarked on
a solo tour of Europe, visiting Venice, Rome, Florence, Paris
and London. While in the United Kingdom, he watched military
manoeuvres Aldershot in the presence of Emperor Wilhelm II of
Germany. Harry resigned his commission in the New South Wales
Military Forces when he moved to Queensland but on 9 January
1890 he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the
Queensland Mounted Infantry. After completing his examinations
for the rank was confirmed as Lieutenant in June 1890.
Chauvel's unit was called up in March 1891 during the shearers'
strike that had begun earlier that year. Leading his troops and
a small party of Queensland Police, he was given the task of
escorting a party of strikebreakers to a station north of
Charleville. Near Oakwood, Chauvel's troops were confronted by a
crowd of around two hundred mounted sheep shearers who became
agitated when the inspector in charge of the police detachment
arrested four of the shearers who were wanted by the police.
Chauvel managed to disperse the crowd peacefully and bring his
charges safely to their destination. During the 1894 Australian
shearers' strike, the Queensland government enrolled special
constables rather than calling up the militia. Chauvel was
appointed a temporary sub-inspector in Clermont, and later the
district around Longreach.
On 9 September 1896, Chauvel transferred to the
Queensland Permanent Military Forces with the rank of captain in the Moreton
Regiment. He was sent to the United Kingdom with the Queensland contingent for
the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. Sporting the emu feathers worn by
Queensland units, he marched with the colonial troops through London behind Lord
Roberts on 21 June 1897. Chauvel qualified at the School of Musketry at Hythe,
Kent, and served on exchange with the 3rd Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps
and 2nd Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment at Aldershot. On returning to
Australia, he became a staff officer at Headquarters, Queensland Defence Force.
Boer War
|
Officers of the Queensland Mounted Infantry. Chauvel
is squatting in the front row, second from the
right, holding a rifle. |
In July 1899, the Premier
of Queensland, James Dickson, offered a contingent of troops for service in
South Africa in the event of war between the British Empire, and the Boer
Transvaal Republic and Orange Free State. For a time Chauvel served as an
enrolment officer, signing up volunteers from the Darling Downs. The Boer War
broke out in October 1899, and Chauvel was given command of one of two companies
of Queensland Mounted Infantry that departed Brisbane on 1 November 1899.
They disembarked at Cape Town on 14 December and joined the Imperial force under
Lord Methuen at the Orange River. The Queensland Mounted Infantry's first
fighting was in an action at Sunnyside on 1 January 1900 alongside the infantry
of the Royal Canadian Regiment. In February, the Queensland Mounted Infantry
became part of Major General John French's Cavalry Division. After a strenuous
march, the Cavalry Division relieved the Siege of Kimberley on 15 February.
In the reorganisation that followed, the Queensland Mounted Infantry became part
of Major General Edward Hutton's 1st Mounted Infantry Brigade, along with the
Canadian and New Zealand mounted units. Chauvel distinguished himself fighting
alonside a group of New Zealanders and capturing a Maxim gun. The Queensland
Mounted Infantry participated in the capture of Pretoria and the Battle of
Diamond Hill. Chauvel was given a mixed force of British, Australian, Canadian
and New Zealand mounted troops that became known as "Chauvel's Mounted
Infantry", with Victor Sellheim as his chief of staff. Chauvel was given the
mission of escorting 10,000 head of cattle to Belfast, Mpumalanga to supply the
troops in the eastern Transvaal but his force was diverted by local commanders
to burning Boer homesteads sheltering Boer commandos and attacking Boer units.
The Queensland Mounted Infantry embarked for Australia on 13 December 1900. They
reached Brisbane on 17 January 1901 and the regiment was disbanded there on 23
January. For his part in the fighting, Chauvel was Mentioned in
Despatches, and was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George.
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Lieutenant Colonel H. G. Chauvel, 31 May 1902. |
Chauvel returned to find himself an officer in the newly
formed Australian Army. A force of 14,000 troops was assembled
for the opening of the first Federal Parliament on 9 May 1901
and Chauvel was selected as brigade major of the mounted
contingent, his first Federal posting. He became Staff Officer,
Northern Military District, based at Townsville, Queensland, in
July. In 1902, Chauvel was appointed to command of the 7th
Commonwealth Light Horse, a unit newly raised for service in
South Africa, with the local rank of lieutenant colonel.
Departing from Brisbane on 17 May 1902, the 7th Commonwealth
Light Horse arrived at Durban on 22 June, three weeks after the
war had ended. It therefore re-embarked for Brisbane, where it
was disbanded. Chauvel remained in South Africa for a few weeks
in order to tour the battlefields. On returning to Australia he
became Staff Officer, Northern Military District once more. He
was promoted to the brevet rank lieutenant colonel in December
1902.
In 1903, Hutton, now General Officer Commanding Australian
Military Forces, sent Chauvel to South Australia to organise the
light horse regiments there. On returning to Queensland in 1904,
he became acting Chief Staff Officer Queensland, based in
Brisbane. He was promoted to substantive lieutenant colonel in
December 1909 but his ambition to become the Australian
representative on the Imperial General Staff in London was
blocked by Hutton's successor Major General Charles Hoad. Based
on his experiences in South Africa, Chauvel developed views on
the nature of mounted infantry. He recommended that Australian
troops improve their discipline in the field, called for
stronger leadership from officers, and emphasised the need for
better organisation for supply and for timely and efficient
medical evacuation.
Chauvel knew Keith Jopp of Newmarket, Queensland even before the Boer War,
and while stationed in Brisbane Chauvel and Major Brudenell White would play
tennis at the Jopps' place with their daughters Dora and Sibyl. Chauvel became
engaged to Sibyl in January 1906 and they were married on 16 June 1906, at All
Saints Anglican Church, Brisbane. Their union ultimately produced two sons and
two daughters. That year Chauvel also sold the property at Canning Downs South.
In the shuffle of senior positions that followed Hoad's death in 1911, Chauvel
was appointed to the Military Board in Melbourne as Adjutant General. As such
Chauvel was involved in the implementation of the universal training scheme.
Chauvel was particularly involved with the training of the light horse. "When
the next war comes," White predicted, "it will only need an Ashby or a J.E.B.
Stuart to make their name immortal."
First World
War
War Office
Chauvel was promoted to colonel in
1913. On 3 July 1914, he sailed for England with his wife and
three children to replace Colonel James Gordon Legge as the
Australian representative on the Imperial General Staff. While
he was still travelling, the First World War broke out. On
reporting for duty at the War Office in mid-August 1914, Chauvel
was given a cable directing him to assume command of the 1st
Light Horse Brigade of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) when
it arrived in the United Kingdom. Chauvel became concerned with
slow progress on the AIF's proposed quarters on Salisbury Plain.
He made frequent visits to the site and had an Australia
engineer office, Major Cecil Henry Foott, appointed to the local
staff to safeguard Australian interests. Convinced that the huts
would not be ready on time and that Australian troops would
therefore have to spend a winter on Salisbury Plain under
canvas, Chauvel persuaded the High Commissioner for Australia in
London, former Prime Minister, Sir George Reid, to approach Lord
Kitchener with an alternate plan of diverting the AIF to Egypt,
which was done. Accompanied by Major Thomas Blamey, Chauvel
sailed for Egypt on the ocean liner SS Mooltan on 28 November
1914, arriving at Port Said on 10 December 1914.
Gallipoli
|
Brigadier General H. G. Chauvel outside his
Headquarters at Monash Valley. |
Chauvel began training his Brigade upon arrival in Egypt. He
was noted for insisting on high standards of dress and bearing
from his troops. The 1st Light Horse Brigade became part of
Major General Alexander Godley's New Zealand and Australian
Division, along with the 4th Infantry Brigade, the New Zealand
Infantry Brigade and New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade. When
the rest of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps departed
for the Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915, the mounted brigades
remained in Egypt, the Gallipoli Peninsula being unsuited to
mounted operations. Following heavy casualties in the early days
of the Gallipoli Campaign however, the light horse were called
upon to provide 1,000 reinforcements. The British commander in
Egypt, Lieutenant General Sir John Maxwell elected instead to
ship the mounted brigades to Anzac Cove intact.
Chauvel arrived on 12 May 1915 and took over the critical sector
which included Pope's Hill and Quinn's, Courtney's and Steele's
Posts from Colonel John Monash. Open to Turkish observation on
two sides, these four advanced posts at the top of Monash Valley
were the linchpin of the defence. Chauvel reorganised the
defence, appointing permanent commanders for the posts. He also
formed special sniper groups who eventually managed to suppress
the Turkish snipers, making it safe even for mule trains to move
up Monash Valley. Chauvel's brigade soon found itself under
heavy pressure from the Turks. On 29 May 1915, the Turks fired a
mine under Quinn's Post and broke into it. The permanent
commander of the post, Lieutenant Colonel J. H. Cannan was
absent on leave and the acting commander, Lieutenant Colonel G.
J. Burnage was wounded in the fighting. Chauvel responded by
bringing up reserves and appointing a temporary post commander,
Lieutenant Colonel H. Pope, with orders to drive the Turks out
at all costs. Major S. C. E. Herring was miraculously able to
charge across the open practically unscathed, his attack having
coincided with a Turkish one on another part of the post so that
the Turkish machine gunners could not shoot without hitting
their own men. There were in fact only about seventeen Turks in
the post, who eventually surrendered. Chauvel's decision may
have been the wrong one, but it was decisive. He was also lucky.
For this action, he was Mentioned in Despatches.
On 9 July 1915, Chauvel was promoted to brigadier general,
back-dated to when he assumed command of the 1st Light Horse
Brigade on 10 December 1914. He spent six weeks in Egypt in June
and July in hospital with pleurisy but returned in time for the
August offensive, for which he was mentioned in despatches.
Chauvel was acting commander of the New Zealand and Australian
Division for short periods in September and October in Godley's
absence. Then on 6 November 1915, he became commander of the 1st
Division, and was promoted to Major General. He commanded this
division through the final phase of the Gallipoli Campaign, the
evacuation, and the reorganisation in Egypt in February and
March 1916. For his part in the evacuation, he was Mentioned in
Despatches. His role in the campaign as a whole was recognised
by his appointment as a Companion of the Order of the Bath.
Sinai
|
Mounted troops of the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade
with the Egyptian town of Magdhaba in the distance,
23 December 1916 |
Chauvel assumed command of the newly formed Anzac Mounted
Division on 16 March 1916, the day after it relieved the 1st
Division on the Suez Canal defences. Chauvel was again Mentioned
in Despatches for his part in the defence of the Canal. His
division was committed to No. 3 Section of the Suez Canal
Defences, the northern part of the Canal, under Major General H.
A. Lawrence. Arrangements were far from ideal. The Anzac Mounted
Division was incomplete, as the 3rd Light Horse Brigade had been
placed under No. 2 Section by General Sir Archibald Murray GHQ
Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF). Command was divided between
Chauvel and Lawrence. The British infantry commanders would not
take orders from Chauvel, and Lawrence was too far away to
control the battle, especially once the telephone lines were
cut. Murray, in Ismailia, was even further back. Their
dispositions were faulty, with the British infantry divisions
located unable to support the mounted troops, and the mounted
troops parcelled out so that only two brigades remained under
Chauvel's command.
Chauvel chose his ground carefully, reconnoitring it from the
ground and the air, and selecting both forward and fall back
positions. His luck held; the German commander selected the same
position as the forming up area for his attack in August 1916.
Under great pressure, Chauvel was able to hang on until
Brigadier General Edward Chaytor's New Zealand Mounted Rifles
Brigade arrived after being released by Lawrence. The
counterattack that Chauvel had been calling for all day did not
materialise until dusk. At Katia and again at Bir el Abd,
Chauvel attempted to sweep around the Turkish flank but wound up
making frontal attacks on the Turkish rearguard and was beaten
off by determined counterattacks and by the timidity of
Brigadier General John Antill, who withdrew his 3rd Light Horse
Brigade under light shelling. Despite killing 1,250 Turks and
taking over 4,000 prisoners, Chauvel was criticised for his
failure to rout and destroy the Turks. However, for the Anzac
horsemen, who suffered over 900 of the 1,130 British casualties
in the Battle of Romani, it was a clear-cut victory, their first
decisive win and the turning point of the campaign. Later,
Chauvel realised that Romani was the first decisive British
victory of the war outside West Africa Campaign.
|
Chauvel was no hard-riding gambler against odds.
Like
Alva, he could on occasion ignore the ardent
enthusiasm of his officers and bide his time. Always
cool, and looking far enough ahead to see the
importance of any particular fight in its proper
relation to the war as a whole, he was brave enough
to break off an engagement if it promised victory
only at what he considered an excessive cost to his
men and horses. He fought to win, but not at any
price. He sought victory on his own terms. He always
retained, even in heated moments of battle, when
leaders are often careless of life, a very rare
concern for the lives of his men and his horses.
—Henry Gullett
|
In his report to the War Office on the battle, Murray passed
lightly over the part played by the Anzac Mounted Division. The
majority of awards for the Battle of Romani went to British
troops, including a generous number to officers of Murray's
staff. Lawrence was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the
Bath, but Chauvel, having already been made a Companion of the
Order of St Michael and St George for South Africa and Companion
of the Order of the Bath for Gallipoli, was recommended for a
lesser award, which he refused. In view of this, Murray decided
that Chauvel should receive no award at all, and he was merely
Mentioned in Despatches.
In October 1916, the command arrangements were altered. A new
command, Eastern Force, was formed under Major General Sir
Charles Macpherson Dobell, an officer with broad experience in
fighting colonial wars. Its advanced troops, including Chauvel's
Anzac Mounted Divison, became part of the Desert Column under
Major General Sir Philip Chetwode, a British cavalry baronet. In
the Battle of Magdhaba in December 1916, Chauvel therefore had a
free hand, answerable only to Chetwode, instead of the
cumbersome arrangements on the Canal. His intelligence on enemy
dispositions was considerably better thanks to the work of the
aviators of No. 5 Wing, which consisted of No. 14 Squadron,
Royal Flying Corps and No. 1 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps.
However he had only limited time to capture the position and its
water supply and when the issue was in doubt Chauvel ordered a
withdrawal. The order was ignored by Brigadier General Charles
Frederick Cox of the 1st Light Horse Brigade, whose troops
carried the position, and was cancelled by Chetwode. "Chauvel's
leadership," wrote Henry Gullett, "was distinguished by the
rapidity with which he summed up the very obscure Turkish
position in the early morning, and by his judgement and
characteristic patience in keeping so much of his force in
reserve until the fight developed sufficiently to ensure its
most profitable employment."
Chauvel
gained another important success in the Battle of Rafa in January 1917. In many
ways, the battle was similar to Magdhaba, but the Turkish position was stronger
and the threat of its reinforcement was greater. Once again, the availability of
water was a crucial feature of the battle. This time it was Chetwode who decided
to call off the battle, with Chauvel's concurrence, but once again the troops
carried the day. The victories at Magdhaba and Rafah changed Murray's mind about
awarding Chauvel a knighthood and in January 1917 Chauvel was appointed a Knight
Commander of St Michael and St George.
The
following month a second mounted division, the Imperial Mounted Division, was
formed from the 3rd and 4th Light Horse Brigades and the British 5th and 6th
Yeomanry Brigades. A British regular army officer new to the desert, Major
General Sir H. W. Hodgson, was appointed to command, with an all-British staff.
The deliberate mixing of Australian and Imperial troops was done with Chauvel's
approval but was contrary to the policy of the Australian Government, which soon
registered its displeasure, sending Brigadier General Sir Robert Anderson to
Cairo to discuss the matter frankly with Chauvel and his superiors. As a result,
the Imperial Mounted Division was renamed the Australian Mounted Division.
Palestine
|
Lieutenant General Sir Harry Chauvel (front and
centre) with his Desert Mounted Corps Headquarters. |
In the First Battle of Gaza in March 1917, Chauvel's
mission was similar to Rafa and Magdhaba, but on a
larger scale. He enveloped the Turkish position at Gaza
while the British 53rd (Welsh) Infantry Division and
54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division attempted to
capture it. When this failed, Chetwode ordered Chauvel
to attempt to capture Gaza from the rear. Chauvel
successfully improvised a late afternoon assault on Gaza
that captured the town despite the barriers of high
cactus hedges and fierce enemy opposition, entering it
after dark, only to have an out-of-touch Dobell order
the mounted troops to withdraw, despite Chauvel's
protests. This time his brigadiers at the front,
Generals Ryrie and Chaytor, although they that believed
that Gaza could be held, felt compelled to obey, as they
could not see the whole battle. All guns, including
captured ones were hauled away, as were all unwounded
prisoners, the wounded and even the dead. Chauvel
ensured that wounded Turkish prisoners that were unfit
to make the march to Deir al-Balah were each left with a
full water bottle.
Dobell launched the Second Battle of Gaza in April 1917
with a full scale frontal assault supported by naval
gunfire, tanks and poison gas. It ended even more
unsatisfactorily, and Dobell was relieved of command of
Eastern Force on 19 April. His place was taken by
Chetwode, while Chauvel took over the Desert Column,
thereby becoming the first Australian to reach the rank
of Lieutenant General. Command of the Anzac Mounted
Division passed to Chaytor. In June General Sir Edmund
Allenby took over the EEF from Murray. Allenby moved his
headquarters to Palestine and re-organised his command
along more regular lines. Eastern Force was abolished
and two corps headquarters were formed, XX Corps under
Chetwode and XXI Corps under Lieutenant General Edward
Bulfin. The Desert Column became the Desert Mounted
Corps, with the Anzac Mounted Division, the Australian
Mounted Division, the newly-formed Yeomanry Mounted
Division and the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade.
Although
some British thought that Allenby should replace Chauvel
with a British officer, Allenby retained him in command.
However he overrode Chauvel's own preference to appoint
a Royal Horse Guards officer, Brigadier General Richard
Howard-Vyse, known as "Wombat", as Chauvel's chief of
staff. Chauvel thus, on 2 August 1917, became the first
Australian to permanently command a corps. By
coincidence, all three of Allenby's new corps commanders
were regulars who had been commissioned from the
militia.
In the Third Battle of Gaza in
October 1917, it was again Chauvel and his Desert Mounted Corps
that had the critical role. Chetwode believed that the EEF did
not have the resources to defeat the Turks in their fixed
positions so he planned to drive the Turks from them by turning
the enemy flank at Beersheba, in a waterless area on the flank
of the enemy line. The Desert Mounted Corps would have a long
overnight approach over waterless desert and would have to
capture the town quickly with its wells intact or perish from
thirst. The Battle of Beersheba went right down to the line, but
the mission was accomplished, albeit not without a wild mounted
bayonet charge by the 4th Light Horse Brigade—the last of
history's great cavalry charges—to capture the town and its
vital water supply. Few battles have been won in such
spectacular fashion. For this decisive victory, and the
subsequent capture of Jerusalem, Chauvel was Mentioned in
Despatches twice more, and appointed a Knight Commander of the
Order of the Bath in the 1918 New Year's Honours List.
|
General Sir Harry and Lady Chauvel (third and fourth
from left) at
Dog River, Lebanon, near the stone tablet
recording the occupation of
Beirut and Tripoli.
|
Chauvel, however, was still disappointed with the failure to
destroy the Turkish army. The Turks had fought hard, forcing the
commitment of the Desert Mounted Corps in heavy action before
the moment for a sweeping pursuit came. When it did, the men and
horses were too tired and could not summon the required energy.
In February 1918, the EEF began a series of operations across
the Jordan. Chauvel faced great difficulties with the terrain,
the weather and a tenacious enemy; the campaign was not a
success. The Desert Mounted Corps found itself fighting
outnumbered, with Turkish reinforcements closing in from all
sides. Chauvel was forced to withdraw to the West Bank of the
Jordan. He soon found his British troops diverted to France, to
be replaced by two Indian cavalry divisions, and the Australian
Mounted Division faced a similar fate for a time. Its 5th
Yeomanry Mounted Brigade was disbanded and Chauvel replaced it
with the 5th Light Horse Brigade, formed from the Australian and
New Zealand components of the now disbanded Imperial Camel Corps
Brigade, and a composite French cavalry regiment of Spahis and
Chasseurs d'Afrique.
In September 1918, Chauvel was able to effect a secret
redeployment of three of his mounted divisions. He launched a
surprise attack on the enemy and won the Battle of Megiddo. He
then followed up this victory with one of the fastest pursuits
in military history—167 km in only three days. This time he
succeeded in destroying the Turkish army. The Desert Mounted
Corps moved across the Golan Heights and captured Damascus on 1
October. Between 19 September and 2 October, the Australian
Mounted Division lost 21 killed and 71 wounded, and captured
31,335 Turkish prisoners. To restore calm in the city, Chauvel
ordered a show of force. Lieutenant Colonel T. E. Lawrence later
lampooned this as a "triumphal entry" but it was actually a
shrewd political stroke,] freeing Chauvel's forces to advance
another 300 km to Aleppo, which was captured on 25 October. Five
days later, Turkey surrendered. For this victory, Chauvel was
again Mentioned in Despatches.
Chauvel was obliged to remain in the Middle East due to the
situation in Syria and the Egyptian Rebellion, although he was
able to have Lady Chauvel join him there in January 1919. By
April, the situation had calmed and Chauvel was able to hand
over command of the AIF in the Middle East to Ryrie. Chauvel and
Lady Chauvel then headed for London on the RMS Malwa. They
arrived in time for him to lead Australian troops on a victory
march through the city on 3 May. Soon after, he was hospitalised
at the 3rd London General Hospital at Wandsworth with
appendicitis. The whole Chauvel family was able to sail for home
on the transport HMAT Demosthenes on 26 July 1919. For his
services as commander of the Desert Mounted Corps, Chauvel was
created a Knight Grand Cross of St Michael and St George in June
1919, was awarded the French Croix de Guerre avec Palme by the
President of France and the Order of the Nile (2nd Class) by the
Sultan of Egypt, and was Mentioned in Despatches for the
eleventh time.
Later life
Between the
wars
Chauvel's AIF appointment was terminated on 9 December 1919,
and the next day he was appointed Inspector General, the Army's
most senior post, which he held until 1930. In February 1920, he
was promoted to the substantive rank of lieutenant general,
back-dated to 31 December 1919. In January 1920, Chauvel chaired
a committee to examine the future structure of the army. The
committe's recommendations proved to be next to impossible to
implement in the face of defence cuts that were imposed in 1920
and 1922. On Lieutenant General Brudenell White's retirement as
Chief of the General Staff in 1923, that post was divided into
two, with Chauvel becoming 1st Chief of the General Staff as
well as Inspector General, while Brigadier General Thomas Blamey
became 2nd Chief of the General Staff. Chauvel also served as
Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, being the senior of
the three service chiefs. In November 1929, he became the first
Australian to be promoted to the rank of general. He attempted
to maintain the Army's structure in the face of short-sighted
politicians intent on cutting expenditure. As a result, the Army
became increasingly hollow, retaining the form of a large force
without the substance. When conscription was abolished by Prime
Minister James Scullin's government in 1929, it was left up to
Chauvel to attempt to make the new volunteer system work. He
finally retired in April 1930.
Chauvel's sons Ian and Edward resigned their commissions in the
Australian Army in 1930 and 1932 respectively, and accepted
commissions in cavalry regiments of the British Indian Army. His
daughter Elynne married Thomas Walter Mitchell, a grazier.
Chauvel became a frequent visitor to their property "Towong
Hill" near Corryong, Victoria. He was staying at Towong Hill
during the Black Friday Bushfires of 1939. When the property was
threatened by fire, he directed the firefighting effort, and at
one point climbed a tree close to the house to hack away burning
branches.
The dedication of the Shrine of Remembrance in 1934 saw a series of reunions.
Ian and Edward arrived from India on leave, Alexander Godley came from Britain,
and Howard-Vyse as chief of staff to Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester. In
1937, Chauvel travelled to the United Kingdom as head of the Australian
contingent for the coronation of King George VI, where he was welcomed by
Chetwode and Howard-Vyse. Chauvel had the contingent dressed as light horsemen,
wearing emu plumes, bandoliers and spurs. When the Dominion troops assembled at
Buckingham Palace to receive their King George VI Coronation Medals, Chauvel led
the parade, with Howard-Vyse as his chief of staff. On the way back, the
contingent visited France, where ceremonies were held at the Villers–Bretonneux
Australian National Memorial and the Arc de Triomphe. Chauvel frequently led
Anzac Day parades through Melbourne but resigned from the leadership of the
march in 1938 in protest against at decision by the Returned and Services League
of Australia to change the form of service at the Shrine from a Christian to a
secular one.
Second World War and legacy
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General Sir Harry Chauvel (centre) with a group of
officers for practice with
Owen guns. |
During the Second World War, Chauvel was recalled to duty as
Inspector in Chief of the Volunteer Defence Corps (VDC), the
Australian version of the British Home Guard. Following
Brudenell White's death in the Canberra air disaster, Prime
Minister Robert Menzies turned to Chauvel for advice on a
successor as Chief of the General Staff. On Chauvel's
recommendation, Menzies appointed Lieutenant General Vernon
Sturdee to the post. During the war, Chauvel's son Ian served as
staff officer in the Italian campaign, while Edward was posted
to New Guinea to learn about jungle warfare from the Australian
Army. Chauvel's daughter Eve joined the Women's Royal Australian
Naval Service and spent a day in a lifeboat in the North
Atlantic after her ship was torpedoed by a U-Boat. Tom Mitchell
was captured by the Japanese in the Battle of Singapore. Chauvel
remained with the VDC, based at Victoria Barracks, Melbourne but
constantly travelling on inspections until his death on 4 March
1945.
Chauvel was given a state funeral service at St Paul's
Cathedral, Melbourne officiated by the Anglican Archbishop of
Melbourne, Joseph John Booth, after which he was cremated at
Springvale Crematorium with full military honours. Eight
generals acted as pallbearers: Lieutenant General John Northcott,
Chief of the General Staff; Lieutenant General John Whitham,
Corps Commander, VDC; Major General James Cannan, Quartermaster
General; Major General Charles Brand; Major General Cyril Clowes,
GOC, Victoria Line of Communications Area; Major General John
Austin Chapman, Deputy Chief of General Staff; Major General
Charles Lloyd, Adjutant General; and Major General Clive Steele,
Engineer in Chief.
Portraits of Chauvel are held by the Australian War Memorial in
Canberra, the Naval and Military Club in Melbourne, and the
Imperial War Museum in London. A portrait by George Washington
Lambert is in the possession of the family. Chauvel is
commemorated in a bronze plaque in St Paul's Cathedral,
Melbourne. His sword is in Christ Church, South Yarra and his
uniform in the Australian War Memorial. There is also a memorial
window in the chapel of the Royal Military College, Duntroon.
Chauvel's daughter Elyne Mitchell wrote a number of non-fiction
works about her father and his corps. In his book Seven Pillars
of Wisdom, T. E. Lawrence provided a wildly inaccurate version
of Chauvel. Chauvel's nephew Charles Chauvel became a well-known
film director, whose films included Forty Thousand Horsemen
(1940), about the Battle of Beersheba. Chauvel was portrayed by
Bill Kerr inThe Lighthorsemen (1987), which covered the exploits
of an Australian cavalry regiment during the A Dangerous Man:
Lawrence After Arabia (1990), which took place around the 1919
Paris peace conference; and by Colin Baker in the 1992 Young
Indiana Jones TV movie Daredevils of the Desert, another
retelling of the Third Battle of Gaza from the director of The
Lighthorsemen.
Reference
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