Lieutenant General Sir Oliver William Hargreaves Leese, 3rd Baronet, (27 October 1894 – 22 January 1978) was a senior British Army officer who saw distinguished active service during both the . He commanded XXX Corps in North Africa and Sicily, serving under General Sir Bernard Montgomery, before going on to command the Eighth Army in the Italian Campaign throughout most of 1944.
Early in World War I, he joined the British Army and was gazetted in the Special Reserve of Officers as a second lieutenant into the Coldstream Guards on 15 September 1914,Ryder, p. 16 later gazetted in the Land Forces on 15 May 1915. Despite receiving only five weeks of training, Leese was sent to France in mid-October 1914 and was posted to the 3rd Battalion, Coldstream Guards, part of the 4th (Guards) Brigade of the 2nd Division, near Ypres, Belgium. However, on 20 October, a week before Leese's 20th birthday, he was wounded, the first of three woundings he was to receive during the war, after being hit in the back by shrapnel.Ryder, p. 18
He returned to England for treatment, and in 1915 returned to France, serving this time with the 2nd Battalion, Coldstream Guards, also part of the 4th Brigade, 2nd Division, where he experienced trench warfare throughout most of the year, in July suffered a second wounding, receiving multiple wounds to the face, but he remained on duty.Ryder, pp. 19–20 In September his battalion, now transferred to the 1st Guards Brigade of the newly created Guards Division, fought in the Battle of Loos and, on 3 October, Leese was promoted to lieutenant.Ryder, p. 21 The next few months were spent holding the trenches, with no major engagements taking place.
Leese was wounded for the third time during the Somme offensive in September 1916, an action in which he was mentioned in dispatches and awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO). The citation to his DSO, which was gazetted in November 1916, read:
On 18 January 1933 Leese married a granddaughter of Sir Baldwyn Leighton, 8th Baronet, Margaret Alice (died 1964), daughter of Cuthbert Leighton (recte Leicester-Warren), DL, JP, (1877–1954), of Tabley House, Knutsford, by Hilda Margaret Davenport; they had no children. Lady Leese's brother was the last of the line to own the Tabley estate which upon his death was eventually taken over by The University of Manchester.
From 1932 to 1938 Leese held a number of staff appointments and was promoted to lieutenant-colonel in December 1936, brevet-colonel in September 1938 and colonel in October 1938. In September 1938 he was posted to British Raj to be a GSO1 instructor at the Staff College, Quetta. He had succeeded to the Leese baronets on his father's death on 17 January 1937. Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage 1953.
Shortly after his arrival, he assumed command of the hastily raised 20th Independent Infantry Brigade (Guards), which was to participate in the ultimately doomed Norwegian campaign although this did not happen. Due to the German Army's invasion of Western Europe, which began on 10 May, Leese received a signal ordering him to France and to report to General Lord Gort, Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the British Expeditionary Force. He was assigned to act as Lieutenant General Henry Pownall's Deputy Chief of Staff. Leese arrived at the BEF's General Headquarters (GHQ), then at Arras, on the evening of the German assault. On 11 May, he was promoted to the acting rank of major general, after having been promoted to the acting rank of brigadier just nine days earlier. Four days after his arrival, he established an Advanced Headquarters at Ronse in order to be closer to the BEF, now stationed on the K-W Line. Over the following days, the BEF began retreating to a series of river lines and Gort's GHQ was moved to Wahagnies.
By 18 May, with the situation becoming worse by the day, Leese prepared an emergency plan for the BEF to retreat to Dunkirk, although it was politically impossible to go through with the plan at that time. Events moved rapidly and GHQ relocated several times, eventually arriving at De Panne, Belgium, within the Dunkirk perimeter, on 26 May. Over the next few days, the staff worked frantically to oversee the withdrawal and evacuation of the BEF back to the United Kingdom, following largely the same plan that Leese had designed. He himself was evacuated on 31 May. Throughout the campaign, Leese was "a model of cool, unruffled fortitude during the retreat to Dunkirk" and who "more than anyone, imposed some order on the BEF's withdrawal and evacuation" while booming with confidence.
A few weeks after his return to the United Kingdom, and after relinquishing his acting rank of major general, Leese was ordered to form and train a large brigade group, the 29th Infantry Brigade. The brigade was composed of four, instead of the usual three, battalions that had just returned from India, along with various supporting units such as artillery and engineers. On 30 December 1940, he was again promoted to the acting rank of major general and given command of the West Sussex County Division that also included the 29th Brigade. A month later he was moved to become General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 15th (Scottish) Infantry Division. He retained command of the division until mid-June.
At that same time, he was delighted to be selected to become GOC of the newly created Guards Armoured Division during its formation and training. The division initially comprised the 5th and 6th Guards Armoured Brigades, both of which had three armoured regiments and a battalion of motorised infantry, along with the Guards Support Group that commanded two regiments of field artillery, an anti-tank regiment, a light anti-aircraft (LAA) regiment and one battalion of lorried infantry. The armoured regiments of the 5th and 6th Brigades were all formerly infantry battalions of the Brigade of Guards and had to be retrained, although this was hampered by poor equipment, while at the same time having to adopt new battle training techniques. "A forceful personality, Leese proved extremely energetic in getting what he wanted from the War Office and then drove his men hard to create a thoroughly well organised division within a relatively short time." His rank was upgraded to temporary major general in November, and was made substantive in December.
Leese commanded XXX Corps during the Second Battle of El Alamein and for the rest of the North African campaign, which ended in Tunis in May 1943, and was mentioned in dispatches for his services.
After a short rest, XXX Corps then took part in the Allied invasion of Sicily in July–August 1943 before returning to the UK, to prepare for Allied invasion of Northwest Europe. A year after being promoted to the acting rank of lieutenant general, his rank was made temporary lieutenant general in September.
In May 1944, after witnessing Clark's Fifth Army engage in numerous attempts to break through the Winter Line, he directed his army during the fourth and final battle of Monte Cassino. He then directed his army during Operation Olive, an assault on the Gothic Line later in the year. Despite being a victory it nevertheless fell short of expectations and did not bring an early end to the fighting in Italy. Leese disliked working alongside Mark W. Clark, who commanded the American army. His rank of lieutenant general was made permanent in July 1944.
Leese believed that Slim was very tired, considering his years of service fighting in Burma and having asked for leave once Rangoon had been taken, and proposed that he should be replaced by Lieutenant General Philip Christison. The latter was selected as the potential replacement to Slim, due to his experience in amphibious warfare that would be well suited for the next ALFSEA offensive that included a seaborne landing to recapture British Malaya. As a result, Leese chose Slim to command the new Twelfth Army, to deal with the less demanding task of mopping up remnant Japanese forces in Burma. Leese misread the situation and believed Slim was in agreement with these decisions. In fact, Slim reacted by telling his staff he had been sacked and wrote to Leese and General Sir Claude Auchinleck, the Commander-in-Chief India, to say he would refuse the new post and resign from the army in protest. Once the news circulated, there was mass-opposition within the Fourteenth Army. Without support from his superiors, Leese was obliged to reinstate Slim. The political backlash resulted in Leese being removed from command and replaced by Slim.
Leese became a noted horticulture, writing books on cacti and keeping a well noted garden at his house, Lower Hall in Worfield, Shropshire. Although a keen cricketer, he had only modest success as a batsman in the 1914 Eton XI and was relegated to 12th man for that year's Eton v Harrow match, but was President of the Marylebone Cricket Club in 1965.Obituary in Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 1979, p. 1080. He served as High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1958.
On 10 April 1960, Leese appeared a contestant on the American game show What's My Line?. Following the amputation of his right leg in 1973, Leese, a widower for the final years of his life after his wife Margaret died in 1965, moved to Wales into a house called Dolwen at Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant, near Oswestry.Ryder, pp. 282–283 He died there after a heart attack on 22 January 1978, at the age of 83, and was buried at Worfield parish church.Ryder, pp. 284–285
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