Aug 312014
 

Field Marshal Sir Francis Wogan Festing, GCB, KBE, DSO, DL

Field Marshal Sir Francis Wogan Festing, GCB, KBE, DSO, DL (28th August 1902 – 3rd August 1976), called 菲士挺 in Chinese, was a field marshal in the British Army. His most important posts were as Commander of British Forces in Hong Kong (1945–1946 and 1949), General Officer Commanding British Troops in Egypt (1952), General Officer Commanding Eastern Command (1954), Commander-in-Chief Far East Land Forces (1956), and Chief of the Imperial General Staff (1958–1961). He also saw active service in the Second World War, taking a prominent role in Operation Ironclad (the Battle of Madagascar) and the Arakan offensive of the Burma Campaign, and later advised the British Government on ending conscription and reducing the size of the Army by fifteen battalions.

Army career

Born the son of Brigadier-General Francis Leycester Festing and Charlotte Katherine Grindall Festing (née Festing)and educated at Winchester College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, Festing was commissioned into 3rd Battalion the Rifle Brigade on 23rd December 1921.He was promoted to lieutenant on 23rd December 1923 and became Aide-de-Camp to General Sir John Burnett-Stuart in 1926.He went on to be Air Liaison Officer for Eastern Command on 1 February 1936 and, having been promoted to captain on 1 September 1936,joined the staff at the War Office on 15th February 1938 before being promoted to major on 23rd December 1938.

In the Second World War Festing was air liaison officer for the expedition to Norway of 1940, then, having been promoted to acting lieutenant colonel in April 1940, as a staff officer in the Operations Directorate at the War Office from May 1940.In September 1940 he became Commanding Officer of 2nd Battalion East Lancashire Regiment and then in April 1942 he became Commander of 29th Independent Infantry Brigade Group which was the landing force of Force 121 for Operation Ironclad, the seizure of Vichy French ports and airfields in the Indian Ocean, notably Diego Suárez,Majunga and Tamatave in Madagascar.He was awarded the DSO for his services in this campaign.

In the November of 1942 he took command of 36th Indian Division and at the beginning of 1944 led it in the final stages of the Arakan offensive of the Burma Campaign. In mid-1944 the division moved to Northern Burma as part of the US led Northern Combat Area Command before rejoining 14th Army. Festing had a reputation as a front line soldier as illustrated by one quote of an event on 29th October 1944:

“Myitkyina – To the growing Festing legend was added another dramatic chapter this week-end when Major-General Francis Wogan Festing personally led the advance platoon of the 36th British Division into Mawlu. The leader of the platoon was killed, leaving the unit in charge of a sergeant. Festing, who is generally at the front, took over, and, probably the highest ranking officer ever to command a platoon, led it into Mawlu.”

He was mentioned in despatches on 5th April 1945,appointed CBE on 5th July 1945 and appointed CB on 6th June 1946 all in recognition of his services in Burma and awarded the Legion of Merit in the Degree of Commander by the President of the United States for his conduct throughout the War on 8th November 1945.

He was appointed Commander of British Forces in Hong Kong from August 1945 and, then having been promoted to major-general on 17th August 1946,he returned to the UK to be Director of Weapons and Development at the War Office in February 1947 where he remained until 26th June 1949 and then returned to Hong Kong.After recovering from a blood clot on the brain,he was appointed President of the Regular Commissions Board on 1st October 1950 and became Assistant Chief of Staff (Organisation and Training) at Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers in Europe on 1st April 1951.He took part in the funeral procession on 11th February 1952 following the death of King George VI and was appointed KBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours 1952.

Promoted to lieutenant general on 6th February 1952,he became General Officer Commanding British Troops in Egypt in April 1952 and then General Officer Commanding Eastern Command on 1st July 1954 and, having been advanced to KCB in the New Year Honours 1956, he became Commander-in-Chief Far East Land Forces in August 1956.Promoted to full general on 29th November 1956, advanced to GCB in the Queen’s Birthday Honours 1957 and having been appointed ADC to the Queen on 26th June 1958,he became Chief of the Imperial General Staff on 29th September 1958.In this capacity he advised the British Government on ending conscription and reducing the size of the Army by fifteen battalions. Having been promoted to field marshal on 1st September 1960,he retired on 1st November 1961.

He was also Honorary Colonel of the 50th (Northumberland) Machine Gun Battalion of the Royal Northumberland Fusiliers from 1st February 1948, Colonel Commandant of the Royal Northumberland Fusiliers from 12th March 1953, Colonel Commandant of the 3rd Green Jackets, The Rifle Brigade from 7th November 1958 and Colonel Commandant of the 3rd Battalion The Royal Green Jackets from 15th June 1968.

In retirement he became a Deputy Lieutenant of Northumberland. His interests included early firearms and Japanese Swords; he was also a practising Roman Catholic.He died at his home at Tarset near Hexham in Northumberland on the 3rd of August 1976.

Family
In 1937 Francis Festing married Mary Cecilia, née Riddell (elder daughter of Cuthbert David Giffard Riddell, of Swinburne Castle, Northumberland),from an old recusant family.The couple had four sons: Fra’ Matthew Festing (Grand Master of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta),John Festing (former High Sheriff of Northumberland),Major Michael Festing and Andrew Festing (former President of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters).

Sourced from Wilipedia