Advancing to relieve Kimberley at the beginning of the war, Methuen attempted a night attack at Belmont on 22/23 November 1899. He sent Colville off with his brigade to assault Gun Hill: although 'They were guided by my Brigade Major, Captain Ruggles-Brise, who led them to the exact spot', Colville admitted that he had miscalculated the distance, and that the commanding officer (CO) of the 3rd Grenadier Guards attacked the wrong hill. Neither error was Ruggles-Brise's fault and he received his first mention in dispatches for his work that night.[26][27][28][29] He distinguished himself again at the Battle of Modder River[30] and was present at the Battle of Magersfontein.
When Colville was promoted to command the 9th Division, Ruggles-Brise went with him as his deputy assistant adjutant general (DAAG).[31][32] However, in May 1900, while Lord Roberts was closing in on Johannesburg, a yeomanry battalion under Colville's command was cut off and forced to surrender, Colville was made a scapegoat and sent home.[33] Ruggles-Brise remained in South Africa until the end of the year, when he was re-appointed as brigade major[34] in Home District (London).[10]
After completing this term he was then briefly placed on half-pay. Having been promoted to colonel on 30 August 1911,[10][43] he was next appointed commandant of the School of Musketry at Hythe in Kent,[4][10] in succession to Colonel Walter Congreve, a Victoria Cross (VC) recipient who had been a contemporary at Sandhurst many years before.[44][45] In 1909 the School of Musketry had advocated that each British infantry battalion should be equipped with six instead of two machine-guns. This had been turned down on grounds of cost, so the decision had been made to train the infantry in rapid-fire musketry to make up for the lack of automatic weapons. During Ruggles-Brises's command the school played a crucial role in training the instructors who in turn taught the British Regular Army to shoot so effectively that in the early part of the First World War German reports repeatedly credited them with possessing large numbers of machine guns.[4][46] Conversely, Ruggles-Brise has been criticised for delaying the development of anti-aircraft machine-guns in 1912.[47]
First World War
Brigade commander
Soon after the outbreak of the First World War, Ruggles-Brise was promoted to temporary brigadier general (15 September)[10][48][49] to command a brigade composed of the last three infantry battalions of the Regular Army left in Britain after the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) went to France. They constituted the 20th Infantry Brigade which, together with the 21st and 22nd infantry brigades and supporting units, formed part of the 7th Division, commanded by Major General Thompson Capper,[50] and assembled at Lyndhurst, Hampshire. Although not officially designated a Guards brigade, it did contain two Guards battalions (1st Grenadiers and 2nd Scots Guards), together with the 2nd Border Regiment; it was joined by the 2nd Gordon Highlanders, which returned from Cairo just before the brigade sailed from Southampton).[51][52][53][54][55][56]
The 7th Division landed at Zeebrugge on 7 October 1914, intended to assist the Belgian Army in the defence of Antwerp. In the event all it could do was help to cover the Belgian retreat and then take up defensive positions at Ypres where they were joined by the rest of the BEF after the race to the Sea. Thereafter the 20th Brigade was engaged in heavy fighting at Langemarck and Gheluvelt during the First Battle of Ypres[52][57][58] Like several other senior officers who got out among their units to exercise personal command during this confused fighting, Ruggles-Brise was wounded, having "sustained dreadful wounds to both arms and his shoulder blade and was stretchered back half dead, leaving Major Cator in command [of the 20th Brigade]. In hindsight maybe he was lucky for his Irish Guards contemporary, Brigadier-General Charles FitzClarence VC, was killed outright nine days later when leading the 1st Guards Brigade in a counterattack at Veldhock".[59] He was carried back 'half dead of a dreadful wound on a stretcher' on 2 November.[51][60]
During his convalescence in England he reverted to the half-pay list,[61] but after returning to active duty in July 1915 he was appointed brigadier general, general staff (BGGS), at the Aldershot Training Centre.[10][62]
The Bantams
On 25 September 1915, Ruggles-Brise was promoted to the temporary rank of major general[63] and appointed to command the 40th Division.[10][64][65] This was a new formation, one of the last of Kitchener's 'New Army' divisions, and by the time it was organised the flow of volunteers had slackened and the army had to reduce its height requirement for infantry in an effort to attract recruits. This led to the creation of so-called 'Bantam' battalions of smaller men. The 40th Division's 119th Brigade was the Welsh Bantam Brigade composed of 'well-knit, hardy Welshmen', but 'the men of the other two brigades (120th and 121st) contained a large proportion of under-developed and unfit men, and a drastic weeding-out became necessary'. 'It was estimated that only two serviceable battalions could be formed from the existing four in each brigade, consequently the 120th and 121st Brigades would each require two new battalions to complete it to war establishment. Early in 1916 Ruggles-Brise recommended that four new battalions should be sent, to prevent the departure of the division overseas being indefinitely postponed. The four battalions of 118th Brigade (39th Division) were transferred to complete his brigades. The reorganisation was completed in February 1916 and the division was fully mobilised by the end of May.[64]
The 40th Division under Ruggles-Brise embarked for France in early June and took its place on the Western Front to join in the continuous trench warfare. One of his brigades assisted another division in the Battle of the Ancre (the last phase of the Battle of the Somme) in November 1916,[64][66] and the division followed up the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line in March 1917, but the whole division's first offensive actions came in April and May 1917. On 21, 24 and 25 April, the 40th Division captured 'Fifteen Ravine' (a valley originally bordered by 15 distinctive trees), Villers-Plouich and Beaucamp.[64] Today, Fifteen Ravine British Cemetery stands in Farm Ravine, which was captured by the 12th (Service) Battalion, South Wales Borderers, while Villers-Plouich was captured by the 13th (Service) Battalion East Surrey Regiment.[67][68]
Home defence
Ruggles-Brise was promoted to substantive major-general for "distinguished service in the field" on 3 June 1917.[10][69] He relinquished command of the 40th Division to fellow guardsman Major-General John Ponsonby on 24 August 1917[64][70] and returned to England to take over command of the 73rd Division, a home defence formation stationed in Essex. Originally composed of men of the Territorial Force (TF) who had not volunteered for (or were unfit for) overseas service, this distinction had been swept away by the Military Service Act 1916, and the division's role had changed to fitness training to prepare these former home service men for drafting to fighting divisions.[71] Towards the end of 1917 the War Office decided to disband the home service divisions, and the 73rd Division was progressively broken up between January and March 1918. Ruggles-Brise relinquished his command on 4 March.[10][71]
Haig's right-hand man
His next posting was as Military Secretary at General Headquarters (GHQ) of the British Expeditionary Force under the BEF's commander-in-chief (C-in-C), Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig.[10][72] After harsh criticism of GHQ's performance during the 1917 fighting, several of Haig's senior staff had been replaced by new men like Ruggles-Brise brought in.[73][74][75] The military secretary was one of the C-in-C's closest assistants with particular responsibility for promotions and appointments. Ruggles-Brise arrived in the middle of the German spring offensive of March 1918, and one of his first jobs was to inform the commander of the BEF's Fifth Army, General Sir Hubert Gough – in the midst of organising a counter-attack – that he was being replaced.[76] Gough later recalled that Ruggles-Brise 'told me as nicely as he could'.[77]
Retirement
Ruggles-Brise continued as Haig's Military Secretary throughout the German offensives and then the Allies' victorious Hundred Days Offensive of 1918, which ultimately led to the armistice of 11 November 1918 and an end to the war. He finally relinquished the position on 13 April 1919. He then worked in the Military Secretary's Department in England until 3 September 1919,[10][78] and retired from the army, after thirty-five years of service, on 10 March 1920.[10][79][65]
In retirement he devoted himself to soldiers' welfare, and was secretary of the Officers' Association.[4]
Ruggles-Brise was an all-round sportsman, considered an excellent shot and a good tennis player.[4] He was best known for his cricketing prowess as a right-hand batsman and medium-pace bowler. He was in the Winchester XI 1880–82 and played for Oxford University Cricket Club in 1883, winning his Blue. The following year he played for the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC). His first-class career for Oxford and MCC consisted of eight matches, in which he scored 278 runs at an average of 18.53 with a highest score of 73. He took one wicket. He also played twice for Essex in non-first-class matches. As a serving officer he played regularly for the Household Brigade team.[86]
Family
In 1895 Ruggles-Brise married music expert Lady Dorothea Stewart Murray (1866–1937), elder daughter of the 7th Duke of Atholl. They had no children.[2][3][4] Ruggles-Brise died at the age of 63 on 24 June 1927 of pneumonia contracted after playing tennis a few days before.[4][87]
Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 1: The Regular British Divisions, London: HM Stationery Office, 1934/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN1-847347-38-X.
Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2b: The 2nd-Line Territorial Force Divisions (57th–69th), with the Home-Service Divisions (71st–73rd) and 74th and 75th Divisions, London: HM Stationery Office, 1937/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN1-847347-39-8.
Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 3a: New Army Divisions (30–41) and 63rd (R.N.) Division, London: HM Stationery Office, 1939/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN1-847347-41-X.
Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 4: The Army Council, GHQs, Armies, and Corps 1914–1918, London: HM Stationery Office, 1944/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN1-847347-43-6.
Burke's Landed Gentry, 15th Edn, London, 1937.
Louis Creswicke, South Africa and the Transvaal War, Vol II: From the Commencement of the War to the Battle of Colenso, 15 Dec 1899, Edinburgh, 1900 [1]
Brig-Gen J.E. Edmonds, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium, 1914, Vol II, London: Macmillan, 1925/Imperial War Museum & Battery Press, 1995, ISBN1-870423-55-0.
A.H. Farrar-Hockley, Ypres 1914: Death of an Army, London: Arthur Barker 1967/Pan 1970.
Anthony Farrar-Hockley, Goughie: The Life of General Sir Hubert Gough, London: Hart-Davis, MacGibbon, 1975, ISBN0-246-64059-6.
Hart's Army List, various dates.
Rayne Kruger, Goodbye Dolly Gray: The Story of the Boer War, London: Cassell, 1959/Pan 1974, ISBN0-330-23861-2.
Peter Liddle (ed.), Passchendaele in Perspective: The Third Battle of Ypres, London: Leo Cooper, 1997, ISBN0-85052-552-7.
Barker-McCardle, James; Sogden, Alan (2024). The Caring General: The Military Life and Letters of Major General Sir Harold Goodeve Ruggles-Brise Kcmg, Cb, Mvo 1864-1927. Helion and Company. ISBN978-1804514894.
Travers, Tim (1990). The Killing Ground: The British Army, the Western Front, and the Emergence of Modern Warfare 1900–1918. London: Routledge. ISBN0-415-10448-3..
Who Was Who, 1916–1928.
Leon Wolff, In Flanders Fields: The 1917 Campaign, London: Longmans, 1958/Corgi 1966.
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