Horrocks Legacy Undiminished

Attending the commemoration service for Lieutenant General Sir Brian Horrocks KCB KBE DSO MC, and speaking to his three grandchildren and friends who knew him, it is abundantly clear that he remains an iconic military figure and exemplar for aspiring leaders today.

There is much available to read about his stirring later life from his autobiography, public sources and the excellent life story by Philip Warner. Few can match his deeds as Olympic sportsman, war-time general, ceremonial diplomat, author and business director, but perhaps the achievement that makes him unique is his role as a successful television presenter.

He never kept a diary and was known to have thrown away most of his official papers, but during my research, I discovered fascinating correspondence between him and the Royal Marine captain who commanded the Royal Navy’s boats on the River Kama at the time that Horrocks was training White Russians in Ekaterinburg. I also discovered that he would have perished in Russia if it wasn’t for his good friend, Eric Hayes, who nursed him through a life-threatening bout of Typhus in February 1920. Hayes, whose signature is above Horrocks’ in the Café Royal photograph, also became a General in World War II and is my subject tomorrow.

With Edward Fox at Sir Brian Horrocks’ Commemoration

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