
General Gott's grave at the El Alamein
war cemetery.
Lieutenant-General
William Henry Ewart "Strafer" Gott CB,
CBE,
DSO and
bar,
MC (
13 August 1897 -
7 August 1942) was a
British Army officer during both the
First and
Second World
Wars, reaching the rank of
lieutenant-general when serving in the
British Eighth Army.
An officer
in the King's Royal Rifle
Corps (KRRC), Gott served with distinction with the BEF in France
during
World War I. His nickname was a
pun on the phrase
Gott strafe
England.
Arriving
in Egypt
in 1939 as a
lieutenant-colonel
commanding the 1st Battalion KRRC, he enjoyed a remarkably rapid
promotion path - he was successively General Staff Officer, Grade I
(ranked lieutenant-colonel), commander of the Support Group , and commanding officer
of the famed 7th Armoured Division (the
Desert Rats). Gott was promoted to lieutenant-general,
given command of XIII
Corps in early 1942 and led that formation in the battles of
Gazala and First
Alamein
. A big man with an aggressive, outgoing
personality, he was popular with soldiers under his command, but as
a senior commander he was considered by some to be out of his
depth. The South African official historian, J. A. I.
Agar-Hamilton, wrote of Gott:
"It has not been unknown for a commander to pass from disaster to
disaster, but it is quite without precedent for any commander to
pass from promotion to promotion as a reward for a succession of
disasters."
In August 1942, Prime Minister
Winston
Churchill removed General Sir
Claude Auchinleck as Commander-in-Chief
Middle East and acting General Officer Commanding
Eighth Army. Gott's aggressive, somewhat
impetuous personality appealed to Churchill, and Gott was chosen to
take over Eighth Army.
This was despite the reservations of Auchinleck and
General Sir Alan
Brooke, the
Chief of the Imperial
General Staff, who perceived shortcomings as a large-scale
commander, highlighted by the confused see-saw of fighting before
and during First Alamein. Whatever his skills as an inspiring
battalion commander and divisional leader, he seemed unable to
translate these into the operational sphere where planning,
coordination, and cooperation between and among various fighting
elements is essential.
Before he
could take up his post, Gott was killed when an unarmed transport
plane - a Bristol Bombay - he had
hitched a lift in, was shot down by a German fighter ace, Emil Clade, of JG27, while returning to Cairo
from the
battle area.There is speculation that the Germans were aware
that he was on board the aircraft through signals interception but
this has never been proved. The Bombay aircraft of
216 Squadron RAF was flown that day by
the then 19-year-old
Flight Sergeant
Hugh "Jimmy" James. He was awarded the
DFM for the action - his
outstanding flying saved several lives - and survived the war. He
recently (2006) told the full story of the incident, and the
meeting, some 60 years later, of the pilot who had shot him down.
This story is told
here, and is based on a first-hand interview
with him.
Flight Sergeant James'
co-pilot on this flight was F/O James Lawless (RCAF), later of
406 Squadron.
Gott's replacement was Lieutenant-General
Bernard Law Montgomery.
Gott is buried in a
Commonwealth War Grave at
the El Alamein War Cemetery.
References
- Barr.N, Pendulum of War: The Three Battles of Alamein,
(2005), p.118
- War Diaries 1939-1945: EXCERPT
- "War Without Hate" by Colin Smith synopsis
- Follow the link and search the extract for "Gott"
- Commonwealth War Graves Commission entry