Richard O'Connor
General '''Sir Richard Nugent O'Connor''', (21 August 1889 – 17 June 1981) was a senior
British Army officer who fought in both the
First and
Second World Wars, and commanded the
Western Desert Force in the early years of the Second World War. He was the field commander for
Operation Compass, in which his forces destroyed a much larger
Italian army – a victory which nearly drove the
Axis from Africa, and in turn, led
Adolf Hitler to send the
Afrika Korps under
Erwin Rommel to try to reverse the situation. O'Connor was captured by a German reconnaissance patrol during the night of 7 April 1941 and spent over two years in an Italian
prisoner of war camp. He eventually escaped after the fall of Mussolini in the autumn of 1943. In 1944 he commanded
VIII Corps in the
Battle of Normandy and later during
Operation Market Garden. In 1945 he was General Officer in Command of the
Eastern Command in
India and then, in the closing days of British rule in the subcontinent, he headed
Northern Command. His final job in the army was
Adjutant-General to the Forces in London, in charge of the British Army's administration, personnel and organisation.
In honour of his war service, O'Connor was recognised with the highest level of
knighthood in two different
orders of chivalry. He was also awarded the
Distinguished Service Order (twice), the
Military Cross, the French
Croix de Guerre and the
Legion of Honour, and served as
aide-de-camp to
King George VI. He was also
mentioned in despatches nine times for actions in the First World War, once in
Palestine in 1939 and three times in the Second World War.
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