The
Little-Known Story of Percy Hobart

They
Called Him 'Hobo'
Trevor J. Constable
Winston Churchill threw down the Sunday
Pictorial on the morning of August 11, 1940, with an angry scowl on his face.
"We Have Wasted Brains!" blazed the headline to a slashingly critical
article by Britain's top military analyst, Captain B. H. Liddell Hart.
Dominating the page was a photograph of a hawk-faced officer in the black beret
of the Royal Tank Corps, former Major-General Percy Hobart. He was Liddell
Hart's classic example of Britain's "wasted brains."
Practical pioneer and developer of the
now-dreaded Blitzkrieg technique and former commander of the world's first
permanent tank brigade, Hobart's revolutionary innovations in armoured warfare
had won him international military fame -- and special attention in Germany.
Dire peril now threatened Britain, but General Hobart was not commanding British
tanks. He wasn't even in the Army. He had been found serving as a corporal in
the Home Guard [overage men and other civilians otherwise unfit for regular
military service, meagerly armed, whose "uniform" was an arm band] --
the highest responsibility Britain's military mandarins were willing to give to
the progenitor of the Blitzkrieg.
Aroused by Liddell Hart's exposure of
the situation, Churchill was determined to change Hobart's assignment. In the
process, the prime minister was to launch and bring to its climax a drama of
personal resurrection unsurpassed in military history. As Churchill pressed
buzzers and rumbled memoranda to his secretaries, the country stood on the
brink of ruin. The struggle with the Luftwaffe raged overhead. German armies
were massing on the French coast for the projected invasion. The British Army
had been routed in France with the modern tank methods first demonstrated to the
world by Hobart, now a Home Guard corporal. The Germans had learned and applied
only too forcefully the techniques pioneered by Hobart's tank brigade years
before.
The prime minister directed that Hobart
should be taken back into the Army. The chief of the Imperial General Staff
should give him at least one of the new armoured divisions to command. Delay was
to be avoided. A personal meeting was to be arranged promptly between Corporal
Hobart and the prime minister.
In a modest home near Oxford, lean,
bushy-browed Percy Hobart was preparing to leave for his Home Guard duties. The
one-time general who had commanded hundreds of armoured vehicles in manoeuvres
and raised and trained the 7th Armoured Division in North Africa took a wry look
outside his front door at what was now his "transport." A baby Austin
driven by a member of the Women's Volunteer Services stood waiting. The
telephone jangled, Corporal Hobart answered, and found himself talking to one of
Churchill's secretaries. The tank expert was asked to have lunch with the prime
minister at Chequers, the official country residence of the British leader.
Bigger things were in store for the aggressive 55-year-old ex-general, whose
stormy and controversial past held the key to his future.
From the early 1920s, when he had
transferred to the Royal Tank Corps as a military engineer, Hobart had turned
his thinking to the future. He was among the few pioneers in every major nation
to whom the tank appeared as the decisive land weapon of any future war. These
tank enthusiasts, British, German, American and French, took their tactical
inspiration from two outstanding British theorists, J. F. C. Fuller and Captain
B. H. Liddell Hart. Liddell Hart in particular was influential. He was even then
winning recognition as Britain's leading military brain -- in or out of uniform
-- and he wrote forcefully and persuasively in favour of the new doctrine of
strategic mobility. This concept is basic to today's military teachings, but it
was heresy in the 1920s. Liddell Hart held that tanks would restore to
20th-century warfare the ancient Mongolian idea of extreme mobility -- the
Mongols' main instrument of conquest. Bloody slugging matches in the 1914-18
fashion were doomed. Generalship would again flourish and replace the dull
butchery of mass frontal attacks by infantry.
Orthodox military minds of that time
could not grasp such concepts, which demanded creative imagination no less than
military understanding. Men with imagination, vision and ability to carry these
qualities over into practical soldiering were rare in the static-minded,
socially-centred British Army. Percy Hobart was one such man. His diversified
background and interests ensured that imaginative, mobile thinking would be
second nature to him. A student of history and its lessons, he had delved also
into such creative non-military fields as painting, literature and church
architecture. Vibrant facets of mind to which regular military life gave no
scope sparkled brilliantly in Percy Hobart.
Liddell Hart's "Mongolian"
concept of strategic mobility became the focus of Hobart's considerable
intellectual resources. Development of these concepts and their adjustment to
the mechanical twentieth century dominated Hobart's life from the time they were
put forward. His creative imagination had been fired by the military revolution
he could visualize, but his creativity was combined with a rock-hard realism.
"Wars cannot be fought with dream stuff," he used to say, as he poured
his life's energies into the development of practical machines for armoured
warfare, and the effective methods of directing these new mobile weapons. His
goal was to break military science out of the straitjacket of trench warfare by
updating the Mongol methods.
Where the Mongols lived off the country
through which they ranged, Hobart planned to carry sustaining rations in the
tanks. Refuelling would be from lightly-protected dumps in the enemy rear, where
the far-ranging armoured columns would penetrate and strike. He worked with
relentless zeal to cut "the tail" of non-fighting service vehicles
which hobbled and almost immobilized conventional army units. Tank forces of the
future were to be self-contained for the maximum possible range.
Down-to-earth problems such as these
did not prevent Hobart from taking a prescient look up at the sky. He planned
for the time when the increasing power and versatility of aircraft would permit
mobile armoured columns to be completely supplied by airdrop. Standard practice
today, this concept was in those times often the subject of mockery. Hobart
planned to send his hard-hitting columns ripping into enemy supply lines and
nerve centres in the rear, paralysing command and demoralizing troops in the
front lines. Less than twenty years later, America's General George S. Patton
was to carry out these tactics on a vast scale and with historic success.
Resistance to these radical ideas began
to stiffen. The old order found its neurotic and professional security
threatened by the progress of strategic mobility. "Hobo," as he was
affectionately called by his intimates, viewed the old order and its resistance
to the new ways with direct and unconcealed contempt. "Why piddle about
making porridge with artillery," he said, "and then send men to drown
themselves in it for a hundred yards of No Man's Land? Tanks mean advances of
miles at a time, not yards!'
Views like these were shared only by a
small military minority. The powerful ruling faction of military conservatives
was convinced of the value of the tank only in scattered use to support infantry
formations. Horsed cavalry had been literally swept from the battlefield by the
machine gun, but cavalrymen and cavalry philosophy nevertheless still ruled the
high commands of the British Army. Men like these regarded Hobart's ideas as
anathema. Professionally, they were maintaining the kind of army that could
fight the First World War over again. Content with familiar ideas and concepts,
and fearful deep inside that Hobart and others might be right, these controlling
conservative elements closed the high commands of the British Army to tank
advocates.
During this same period in the USA,
despite the nation's massive mechanical heritage, a similar situation prevailed.
Development of an independent armoured force was stifled on that side of the
Atlantic, although General Douglas MacArthur held a vision of the military
future similar to that of Percy Hobart. Tank development was largely left to
devoted individual officers in both Britain and America.
What Hobart's faction lacked in
authority they made up for with energy and persistence. Aided by the strong
independent voice of Liddell Hart, the tank enthusiasts were finally able in
1927 to pressure the British military hierarchy into the formation of an
"experimental mechanized force." Manoeuvres demonstrated dramatically
that such a force outclassed old-style formations, leaving them bewildered and
embarrassed. The theories of Liddell Hart and Fuller and the practical genius of
Hobart's training and organization were vividly vindicated. The writing was on
the wall for the old order.
The die-hards reacted with a more
energetic campaign against tank advocates and theorists. At all costs tank men
were to be kept out of high command. Major-General J. F. C. Fuller, whose
writings had been widely acclaimed both in the US and Germany, was the first
victim. By a series of subtle manoeuvres he was quietly squeezed into retirement
and never allowed to hold an important post. Other tank officers were
sidetracked and discriminated against professionally.
Hobart was now a rising power in
British military circles, and conservative machinations were directed against
him. He miraculously survived these early efforts at strangulation of the new
ideas, and held a series of commands in the Royal Tank Corps. He worked out a
basic modern battle drill for tanks, and used all his considerable powers of
persuasion to get radio-telephones for his armoured fighting vehicles.
Like most things for which he
struggled, radios are indispensable to the military of today. A tank in today's
armies would hardly be considered battle-worthy without radio. But Hobart spent
months requesting, cajoling, demanding it. When the precious radios were finally
obtained, Hobo was as happy as a child on Christmas morning. "Control is as
important as hitting power, armour or mobility," he said.
With the radios came a new dimension in
tank tactics. The basic equipment for a modern tank force was now to hand and
Hobart began building up the techniques of command and control that were to rock
the world. He made a sharp departure from the army concepts of leadership then
in vogue. He believed in men knowing what they were seeking to accomplish in a
military operation, right down to privates. "I do not want automata serving
under me," he told his subordinates.
He brought everyone serving with him
into intimate contact with the higher strategic and tactical principles he was
striving to establish in modern war. Although not an orator, Hobo was possessed
of a virile and inspiring eloquence that generated tremendous enthusiasm. His
gift was to focus this enthusiasm on practical military matters, charging the
mundane with a rare magic. Hobart carried this principle over into the civilian
circles where equipment was being manufactured for his tanks. When he finally
got his radios, he sought out the young woman scientist who ground the crystals
for these long-awaited sets. She was set up in the tank turret beside Hobart and
he showed her how hundreds of fighting vehicles depended on the accuracy of her
work.
After the young woman had gone away
visibly impressed by what she had been shown, Hobart turned to his brigade
major. "What a damned boring, awful job that girl has, grinding those
crystals -- but now she knows where we'd be without her."
Note1
The soaring enthusiasm generated by
Hobart's methods reached its zenith in the 1st Tank Brigade, formed in 1934 as
the world's first permanent tank unit on modern lines. By this time a brigadier
despite his radical views on warfare, Hobart was given command of this historic
unit. He quickly infused the brigade with a booming esprit de corps unrivalled
in the British Army.
Under his control at long last was the
kind of formation that could conclusively prove the case for strategic mobility.
Hobart lost no time. In a series of brilliantly executed war games, he proved
the feasibility of driving to the enemy's rear with fast-moving armoured units
and completely disrupting enemy organization. He carried the revolution even
further.
Hobart proved that armoured units could
both travel and fight by night. This innovation forced a complete revision of
strategic and tactical concepts, for it placed old-style military units more
than ever at the mercy of armoured fighting vehicles. He firmly established the
fundamentals of co-operation between tanks and air power, central to all that is
done on the modern battlefield. He drove the 1st Tank Brigade hard. He knew how
much could be proved and needed to be proved and that he might not be granted
the time by his superiors. Continuing antagonism toward tanks, tank advocates
and the new concepts of armoured warfare characterized the high command of the
army, and Hobart was never sure that his next war game would not be his last.
These unsparing efforts by Percy Hobart
gave birth to the basic technique of the Blitzkrieg, the new mode of mobile
warfare that was to bring nation after nation tumbling down and force Britain to
the brink of defeat. The British high command remained irrationally prejudiced
against the military technique that Hobart was unfolding. With a curious kind of
intellectual detachment, most British leaders did not believe that the
devastating effects of Hobart-style armoured units could be carried over into
actual warfare. Purblind views such as these aroused Hobart's fiercest
antagonism: "What in hell is the use of having war exercises," he
would fume, "when every lesson they teach us is ignored?"
Note2
Scepticism about armour was reinforced
by lingering love of the cavalry horse. The logical passage of this beloved
beast into military limbo was delayed and obstructed by its devotees. These men
became opposed to the tank on emotional, sentimental grounds, and found in
Hobart a hostile, aggressive opponent. Horsemen nevertheless carried far more
weight than tank men in British military life. Cavalry experts not only ruled
the army commands, but had long tentacles into the body politic. Their influence
was such that as late as 1936 the then secretary of war, Alfred Duff Cooper,
apologized to the cavalry in Parliament for mechanizing eight of its regiments.
Hobart's achievements were running a
poor second to the cavalry horse in Britain, but elsewhere they were undergoing
dynamic scrutiny. A strong-jawed German colonel named Heinz Guderian probed with
Teutonic thoroughness and an enthusiast's zeal into the lessons of every Hobart
trial and exercise. Every report, observation and paper pertaining to Hobart's
force was meticulously analyzed by Guderian, the Hobart of the new German Army.
These studies formed the basis of the new panzer divisions, armoured spearheads
of Germany's new army. Hobart's 1st Tank Brigade was Guderian's practical guide,
and answered many of the German leaders early problems. Guderian had his
difficulties with German military conservatives, but he accorded his country's
tank debunkers little attention. When they spoke of "tank
limitations," Guderian would not listen. "That's the old school,"
Guderian would say, "and already it is old history. I put my faith in
Hobart, the new man."
At the conclusion of some prewar
manoeuvres of Guderian's panzer division, the German general was reported to
have offered a farewell toast in champagne -- "To Hobart." The dynamic
British pioneer was considerably less popular in Britain than he was with the
modern military men of Germany. Unreasoning conservatism was taking an even
sharper stand against tank men than ever before. The irrational nature of the
conservative standpoint, combined with the menace to his country and the
disasters that he could already foresee had turned Hobart into an explosively
fierce advocate of what he knew to be true and proved by actual test.
The slender general's personal
forcefulness and vehement manner of expressing himself in pursuit of his goals
had earmarked him for professional extinction. "No man is any good who has
no enemies" was one of Hobart's credos.
Note3.
By the late 1930s he had more bitter foes in Britain's War Office than any other
officer in the British Army. He had become involved in heated arguments with all
Britain's military mandarins. Every leader from the Chief of the Imperial
General Staff downwards had felt the whiplash of his tongue and the weight of
his eloquent logic. Confrontations with senior officers could not long continue.
Hobart's passion for the armoured idea was actually leading him to risk his all.
Efforts to tone him down had little
success. A deeply concerned Liddell Hart, in company with General
"Tim" Pile -- another long-time tank advocate -- took Hobo out to
dinner one evening. Their purpose was to save not only Hobart himself, but the
armoured idea, which Hobo's confrontations with high personages was placing in
jeopardy. Relaxing in a pleasant atmosphere, Liddell Hart quietly stressed to
Hobo that he was alienating potential War Office converts by his infuriating
ways of argument. Like all strong personalities, Hobart could pass from one
extreme of behaviour to another. Force was balanced in his character by a
courtly and irresistible charm. "He apologized disarmingly," Liddell
Hart recalls, "and promised that it would not occur again. But only a week
later the Chief of the Imperial General Staff complained to me that Hobo had
again been intolerably rude to him. I tackled Hobo about it, but he was
completely unaware of having been rude to anyone."
In this climate of clash and
controversy, Britain tardily began the formation of its first modern armoured
division. The Germans already had four and were building more. Hobart's fears
and predictions were being realized. He was the logical man for the command, and
the new secretary of war, energetic, reform-conscious Leslie Hore-Belisha, was
determined that Hobart should get the vital assignment. War Office conservatives
dug their toes in and treated Hore-Belisha to a bewildering exhibition of
bureaucratic and professional resistance. The secretary was unable to put Hobart
into the post, and recalled in later years: "In all my experience as a
minister of the Crown, I never encountered such obstructionism as attended my
wish to give the new armoured division to Hobart."
A cavalryman whose most recent
assignment had been the training of riding instructors was proposed by the War
Office for command of the new armoured division. This proposal fairly
characterized the uncomprehending state of British military thought on the eve
of the world's greatest war. In a compromise arrangement with the War Office,
Hobart became director of military training. Hore-Belisha hoped by this
stratagem that Hobart's personal drive, enthusiasm and knowledge of armoured
warfare could permeate all army training.
The tank genius was now deep in
"enemy" territory. He was the last tank man of high rank left in an
influential post. Like a loathsome infection, he was gradually walled off by the
subtle processes of the War Office organism, while pressure mounted to expel him
entirely from that august body. Hore-Belisha was continually urged to dismiss
Hobart.
The Munich crisis provided the right
emotional climate and an excuse to get rid of him completely. He was bundled on
a Cairo-bound aircraft, assigned to raise and train Britain's second modern
armoured division. With Hobo's removal to the Nile delta, tank thinking was
exterminated in Whitehall [Britain's Foreign Office], and as Liddell Hart put
it, "The British Army was again made safe for military conservatism."
For these decisions on the part of its highest military professionals, Britain
was to pay dearly in life and prestige.
Scattered motorized and mechanized
troops with obsolescent equipment were all that Hobart found in Egypt as the
basis for a modern armoured division. A grim enough prospect in itself, the
equipment situation was overhung by a demoralizing and obstructive emotional
factor. Commanding in Egypt was one of the British Army's remaining conservative
hangovers from the First World War, a soldier for whom Hobart, himself a
decorated veteran of the first conflict, had never failed to express his
professional contempt. The commanding general was also a socially-minded
soldier. He especially detested Hobart at the personal level for his 1928
marriage, for which Hobart's wife had gone through the divorce court.
Modern minds would regard such a
procedure as little more than a fact of life. To the British Army of the period
between the wars, it was a transgression sufficient to bring many threats of
professional retribution on Hobart, one of them from the general who now
commanded in Egypt.
Hobart's arrival was followed by a
brief and brutally unceremonious interview in the quarters of the commanding
general. "I don't know why the hell you're here, Hobart," he barked,
"but I don't want you."
In this poisonous atmosphere, once
again virtually isolated, Hobart buckled down to build the kind of armoured
division of which he had always dreamed. There was virtually no communication
with main HQ, no sympathy with what he was doing, no co-operation and no
equipment. Hobart proved his superb qualities under these negative, antagonistic
conditions by bringing off the miracle of the 7th Armoured Division.
Troops accustomed to the sleepy
garrison routine of Egypt found themselves with a stern taskmaster. Rushed into
the desert to train by day and by night they soon found themselves permeated by
the unconquerable spirit of the tall, hawk-faced Hobart. He infused them with
the same magic morale he had given to the 1st Tank Brigade, and month by month
he welded the scattered units into a determined, smoothly functioning fighting
division.
Taking the jerboa (desert rat) as their
emblem they were soon known as the "Desert Rats." They proved
themselves Britain's finest armoured division in the whole North African
campaign. Lieutenant-General Sir Richard O'Connor, commander of the Western
Desert Force of 1940, called the 7th Armoured Division "the best trained
division I have ever seen."
Note 4
The grim and frustrating duels of the
War Office and the struggle for the armoured idea slipped into the background as
Hobart fulfilled himself in a man's job. When war broke out in September 1939, a
deadly, hard-hitting and superbly mobile force was under his command. Lean,
tanned and hard of body and mind, the 54-year-old Hobo was ready for whatever
the war could bring.
Three months later, Hobart was
dismissed from his command and sent into retirement.
This shocking blow came at the hands of
General Sir Archibald Wavell, who decided to act on an adverse report on Hobart
filed by the general who hated him and who had sworn professional retribution.
Normally a man impervious to the effects of opposition or professional
misfortune, Hobart was shaken to the roots of his being by his abrupt and
complete dismissal.
Lady Hobart recalls the 1940 dismissal
from the army as the one time in their life together that the general had shown
distress over any reverse. "He was a stricken man," she says today.
"To anyone lacking his intense fortitude, the wound would have been mortal.
No warning whatever was given that this blow was to fall."
General Sir Archibald Wavell, who was
himself a man with a keen mobile sense, was unable in later years to explain
adequately his action in dismissing Hobart. The loss of the tank genius from the
desert command was to have incalculable consequences for British arms and
fortunes. Liddell Hart tackled Wavell about Hobart's dismissal personally, and
made it clear to him how deplorable and damaging the whole affair had been.
"Wavell's explanation was rather lame," says Liddell Hart.
Wavell went on to win his own immortal
glories by crushing the Italians with the Hobart-trained 7th Armoured Division
-- the only unit available and able to nullify the overwhelming Italian
advantage in manpower and machines. By one of destiny's strangest twists,
Liddell Hart had compiled a list of the most promising officers in the British
Army for Hore-Belisha in 1937. Only two men were singled from the multitude of
British generals as likely to become great commanders -- Wavell and Hobart.
The fortunes of the British Army in
North Africa were left after Hobart's dismissal in the hands of high commanders
who were no more than amateurs in the handling of modern armoured forces. So
tight was the conservative grip on command that it was not until the latter part
of 1942 that authentic tank officers even reached divisional commands. This
continuing prejudice and incomprehension was reflected by the British Army's
record in the field. With an inferiority of force but with an intuitive gift for
handling mobile forces, Rommel proceeded to thrash humiliatingly a succession of
British generals sent against him. The troops in the field, as well as the
public all over the world, began to wonder if the British had ever heard of the
tank before Rommel. British troops in North Africa, repeatedly let down by their
armoured forces, began to look on their own tank units with considerable
suspicion.
When Hobart went back to England, an
appeal against his dismissal was made to the king. The appeal was never put
forward by the War Office. In Britain's time of mortal danger, Hobart's foes had
eliminated him completely from military affairs, and had no intention of
bringing his case to the attention of the monarch. For his general's uniform and
badges of rank Percy Hobart substituted the white brassard of the Home Guard on
the sleeve of his lounge suit.
He joined the Home Guard without
communicating anything of his intense disappointment to his wife and family. A
deliberate effort had been made to break Hobart's spirit as well as to end his
military career. Self-pity might easily have overwhelmed a lesser man but Hobo
was made of sterner stuff. "I cannot do what is ideal, so I must do what I
can," he told his wife. He entered seriously into his Home Guard duties as
a corporal. As the months passed, he seemed to develop an inner conviction that
his chance would come, and that the wheels of the gods would eventually grind.
For Hobo, the wheels of the gods ground along on German tank tracks.
Six months after Hobart's removal from
the army, Guderian's panzers had run the British Army out of France in one of
history's most humiliating routs. The able and farsighted German leader had used
to perfection in war the techniques first tried and proved by Hobart. Never was
there a more appropriate time for review of their military affairs and doctrines
by the British, for only the miracle of Dunkirk had saved their beaten army from
capture or annihilation.
Incredible as it must now seem, the
stinging defeat of France and Dunkirk, with its devastating effects on morale
and national pride, made little impression on Britain's military conservatives.
Their intellectual detachment from the dynamism of events continued. The
smashing of their First World War type formations in France was deemed due to
some sort of lucky German punch, even though Hobart's Tank Brigade exercises in
the middle 1930s had portended the armoured revolution with undeniable clarity.
Winston Churchill was not satisfied
either with these military notions, or the defeats they had brought upon
Britain. He was no friend of military die-hardism. One of the early pioneers of
the tank in the First World War, Churchill had helped batter down opposition to
its introduction into the earlier conflict. Between the wars, the future prime
minister had watched tank developments closely. Hobart's disastrous
misemployment incensed Churchill, As prime minister and minister of defence he
was the most powerful official in Britain, but getting Britain's leading tank
tactician and general back into the army was to take every ounce of his
authority, as well as some of his eloquence.
As late as October 1940, Hobart was
still unemployed, his appointment obstructed high in the War Office. Churchill
was given a dossier listing the reasons why the progenitor of the Blitzkrieg
should not be given an armoured division. Churchill replied to the resisting
spirits in the War Office with a historic minute:
Note5
October 19, 1940
Prime Minister to Chief of Imperial
General Staff:
I was very pleased last week when you
told me you proposed to give an armoured division to General Hobart. I think
very highly of this officer, and I am not at all impressed by the prejudices
against him in certain quarters. Such prejudices attach frequently to persons
of strong personality and original view. In this case, General Hobart's views
have been only too tragically borne out. The neglect by the General Staff even
to devise proper patterns of tanks before the war has robbed us of all the
fruits of this invention. These fruits have been reaped by the enemy, with
terrible consequences. We should, therefore, remember that this was an officer
who had the root of the matter in him, and also vision. I have carefully read
your note to me, and the summary of the case for and against General Hobart.
We are now at war, fighting for our lives, and we cannot afford to confine
Army appointments to officers who have excited no hostile comment in their
career. The catalogue of General Hobart's qualities and defects might almost
exactly be attributed to any of the great commanders of British history.
... This is a time to try men of
force and vision, and not be confined exclusively to those who are judged
thoroughly safe by conventional standards.
With this push from Churchill, Hobart's
star went into the ascendant. He raised and trained the 11th Armoured Division,
earmarked to fight in North Africa. While he set his indelible personal stamp on
the 11th, Hobart chafed at the disasters inflicted on the British in North
Africa by Rommel. He felt certain that he could defeat the Desert Fox if given
the chance, but on the eve of the 11th Armoured's departure for Africa,
Britain's military reactionaries took one last ignominious cut at the brilliant
tank leader.
Because his military views could no
longer be gainsaid, the final effort to oust Hobart was made on medical grounds,
and mainly because he was now 56. His opponents were unfortunate in that they
made their last effort to ruin and remove Hobart in September of 1942, a black
month for the British Army. Only three months earlier, Rommel had sent the
powerful British 8th Army reeling back in a rabble from Tobruk. The Desert Fox
stood now at El Alamein, readying his final thrust at Alexandria. This reverse
had been inflicted by dynamically directed armored forces on the superior
British Army and had left Churchill furious. The prime minister had also
personally visited and inspected Hobart's new 11th Armoured Division only a few
months previously, and had found Hobo in full vigour. Churchill's reaction to
the final attempt to oust Hobart was this second historic minute on the tank
leader, filed on September 4, 1942:
Note 6
Prime Minister to Secretary of State
for War:
I see nothing in these reports [of
the Medical Board report on General Hobart] which would justify removing this
officer from command of his division on its proceeding on active service.
General Hobart bears a very high
reputation, not only in the service, but in wide circles outside. He is a man
of quite exceptional mental attainments, with great strength of character, and
although he does not work easily with others, it is a great pity we do not
have more of his like in the service. I have been shocked at the persecution
to which he has been subjected. I am quite sure that if, when I had him
transferred from a corporal in the Home Guard to the command of one of the new
armored divisions, I had insisted instead on his controlling the whole of the
tank developments, with a seat on the Army Council, many of the grievous
errors from which we have suffered would not have been committed.
The high commands of the Army are not
a club. It is my duty ... to make sure that exceptionally able men, even
though not popular with their military contemporaries, are not prevented from
giving their services to the Crown.
As it happened, the assignment of
Hobart's 11th Armoured Division to North Africa was cancelled at the last
minute. Under Major-General G. P. B. "Pip" Roberts, a Hobart-trained
tank leader of great skill, the 11th later became Britain's finest armoured
division in the whole of the European campaign. Hobart raised and trained the
two finest British armoured divisions of the war, but a more massive challenge
awaited him now, beside which an ordinary divisional command would have been
misuse of his unique talents.
The invasion of Europe and the
subsequent campaign into Germany required a host of new-type tanks and armoured
vehicles. Tanks were needed for bridging ditches and rivers, clearing mine
fields, throwing flame, destroying pillboxes and emplacements and for swimming
ashore from landing craft with the assault waves and crossing rivers. Because
these tanks did not exist in usable form, they had to be developed, together
with the tactics for their employment. Men would have to be trained in the
specialized task of manning these new weapons.
Design and development problems were
enormous, and it was not a job for a riding instructor. Britain's new Chief of
the Imperial General Staff, General Alan Brooke, had not been a Hobart
enthusiast in prewar days. Nevertheless he was man and soldier enough to
recognize that at this juncture there was one man in Britain pre-eminently
qualified to develop specialized armor for the invasion and conquest of Europe.
General Alan Brooke called a somewhat
bewildered and cautious Hobart to his London office in March 1943 and asked him
to train a unit in the handling of specialized armour. This unit was later to
become known as the 79th (Experimental) Armoured Division. After almost two
decades of frustration, disappointment, sidetracking and outright victimization,
Hobart suspected some sort of trap. Sir Alan Brooke's prewar apathy to the
armoured idea remained fresh in his mind. The ex-Home Guard corporal asked for
time to consider the offer of command made to him by the Chief of the Imperial
General Staff. Sir Alan Brooke agreed to this request, and Hobart set out to
track down Liddell Hart and get his views on the proposal.
Hobart found Liddell Hart at the house
of friends in Stoke Hammond, outside London. All urgency and energy, Hobo took
the famed military analyst out in the garden for a private talk. Striding up and
down in an icy wind for an hour, arguing about the new armoured unit as a
vehicle for Hobo's talents, they looked like anything but friends. Liddell
Hart's wife Kathleen took periodic nervous looks out of the window. The
vehemence of their discussion was unmistakable, and she wondered if they were
quarrelling.
Liddell Hart finally convinced the
gun-shy Hobart that it was an opportunity to be seized, and that such a chance
would never come his way again. The 79th was to be the biggest division in the
world, and also the first all-armoured division. Tempted by the prospects,
excited by the challenge, Hobo's resistance crumbled. He took the job.
Hobart's drive, knowledge and
will-power became decisive in the building of the epic 79th. Time was short.
There was virtually no background of previous experience on which to draw, a
situation which placed a premium on Hobart's acumen, experience and military
intuition. Challenge and fulfillment came together.
Trials and tests were endless. Hobart's
gift for arousing enthusiasm for a new idea found full scope. The 79th
(Experimental) Armoured Division took a bull's head as its insignia and soon
boasted the same kind of soaring élan and confident professionalism that
characterized other Hobart-trained formations. Urgency and excitement pervaded
Hobart's environment, and no longer were there blockheads in brass hats to
scrutinize and obstruct his requirements. On the contrary, men with wide
authority moved heaven and earth to provide him with the necessary resources.
Field Marshal Montgomery, the conqueror
of Rommel, was Percy Hobart's brother-in-law. Although a Hobart admirer for many
years, Monty had tended to shy away from the tank idea when it was unpopular at
the War Office. The hero of El Alamein now put his prestige behind Hobart's work
and took up the needs of the 79th with General Eisenhower. The Supreme Commander
quickly recognized Hobart's vital role and his unique abilities in developing
specialized armour. Eisenhower slashed red tape and gave top priority to the US
manufacture of the odd-looking tanks and attachments Hobart required. High-level
push of this kind, and Eisenhower's unstinting support of anything likely to
save lives, soon provided the resources to assemble Hobart's
"Menagerie," as it became known.
Liddell Hart has called the 79th
Armoured Division "the tactical key to victory." Because it was not a
division that fought as a unit, but had its elements farmed out to the Allied
armies wherever they were needed, the 79th has far less historical fame than
most of the Allied divisions that stormed through Europe. How far many other
divisions would have been successful without the "funnies" of the 79th
is a question for debate.
By the time the Allies reached the
Rhine, Hobart's 79th Division consisted of eight brigades and a total of 17
regiments, quadrupling the complement of armoured and tracked vehicles on the
establishment of any normal armoured division. This huge metal menagerie was
spread out at times over a front of ninety miles, and the direction and
allocation of its 1,900 armoured vehicles kept Hobo hopping.
As the US Army in the beginning did not
have specialized armour of its own, the 79th frequently worked in close support
of US troops, and was the only British unit to do so. This situation suited
Hobart. He liked Americans and they liked him. He was direct, frank and
forceful, knew what he was talking about and understood the American character
as few British commanders ever did. He would verbally thrash any officer or man
he heard speaking against the Anglo-American alliance, to which he was deeply
devoted. At one time, he even had an American aide, New York oilman George
Thomson Jr., who served with the British Army. Hobart's radiant admiration for
things American, such as know-how and mechanical skill, was not a superficial or
transitory thing. He had an intimate knowledge of American commanders and their
views, and an extensive knowledge of US military history. He held America's top
generals in the highest regard.
The directness and honesty of most
American generals appealed greatly to Hobart. With the US 9th Army commander,
General W.H. "Big Bill" Simpson, the feeling was mutual. Simpson was
taken aback by Hobo's quiet boast that he was "the oldest major-general
serving in Europe." Simpson says of the amazing Englishman: "He was
the outstanding British officer of high rank that I met during the war, and from
his mind and bearing no one could possibly have guessed his age."
Vigorous and vitally alive, Hobart
served with his fantastic steel menagerie until the final gun of the war from
which he had almost been excluded. The case for armour had been proved. The
basis for future manifold developments of tanks had been laid by the
accomplishments of the 79th. Wrote General Eisenhower in his report:
Note
7
Apart from the factor of tactical
surprise, the comparatively light casualties which we sustained on all
beaches, except OMAHA, were in large measure due to the success of the novel
mechanical contrivances which we employed, and to the staggering moral and
material effect of the mass of armour landed in the leading waves of the
assault. It is doubtful if the assault forces could have firmly established
themselves without the assistance of these weapons.
Hobart had probably done more than any
other single individual to advance both tanks and specialized armour on the
practical level. Had Hobart's 79th Armoured Division, with its fearsome bull's
head insignia, not been such a spectacular success, tank innovations may well
have halted as they did after the First World War. Tanks are today an integral
part of atomic battlefield planning.
Percy Hobart was knighted by King
George VI, and from the US received the Legion of Merit, Degree of Commander, a
decoration of which he was extremely proud. When he went into retirement after
the Second World War, it was in an honourable and upright way, with his admirers
far outnumbering his critics. His death in 1957 saw him deeply honoured and
widely mourned, and to have "served with Hobo" is a real distinction
in the British Army, where his one-time juniors and students are now in the
highest commands.
From persecution, victimization, and
his incredible misemployment as a Home Guard corporal, Hobart's resurrection to
a decisive command in the Allied armies is one of the more startling personal
stories of the Second World War. His story was hardly the kind of thing likely
to impress the public with the efficiency of the war effort, or the quality of
Britain's military leadership. Thus he remained almost unknown outside army
circles.
The most memorable tribute to Hobart
came from Captain B. H. Liddell Hart, whose exposure of the Home Guard episode
started the tank pioneer on the road back. All the high British commanders and
most of the Americans had passed before the famed analyst in a living parade, as
they pursued their careers and often aroused his criticism. Liddell Hart also
knew the Germans well -- perhaps better than any other military writer and
thinker outside Germany. As Britain's leading military brain, his judgment has
many times been vindicated, although his warnings all too often went unheeded.
In Liddell Hart's opinion, the
independence of a top command would probably have proved Hobart to be the best
of the British commanders, capable of matching the best of the Germans on equal
terms. In summing up, Liddell Hart writes of Hobart: "He was one of the few
soldiers I have known who could be rightly termed a military genius."
Notes
- Personal reminiscence provided by
General Sir John Crocker, Hobart's brigade-major in 1934.
- Personal
remembrance of General Sir John Crocker.
- Personal
recollection of Lady Dorothea Hobart.
- General Sir
Richard O'Connor, commander of the Western Desert Force, 1940-41. Cited in:
B.H. Liddell Hart, The Tanks (Praeger, 1959), vol. I, p. 404.
- Winston S.
Churchill, The Second World War, vol. II, "Their Finest Hour," 1st
ed., pp. 602-603.
- Winston S.
Churchill, The Second World War, vol. IV, "The Hinge of Fate," 1st
ed., p. 791.
- Cited in: B. H.
Liddell Hart, The Tanks (Praeger, 1959), vol. II, p. 332.
Author's
Note
This article is slightly adapted from a
chapter of my book Hidden Heroes, which was published in London in 1971 by
Arthur Baker, Ltd. Since then, this unique collection of biographical sketches
has received no exposure or publicity.
Consequently, the little-known Second
World War tale of Percy Hobart's victimization and vindication is presented
here, for the first time ever, to an American readership.
I remain much obliged, even after more
than 30 years, to the late eminent military historian and analyst, Captain Sir
Basil H. Liddell Hart. He gave freely of his professional time to assist me with
numerous details, insights and clarifications. He patiently corrected my drafts
of this story, in which he himself had been intimately involved from first to
last.
The late General William H. Simpson,
former commander of the US Ninth Army, enthusiastically shared his reminiscences
of General Hobart. George Thomson, Jr., of New York, and Major John Borthwick of
Britain, military aides to General Hobart after his "resurrection,"
provided valuable insights, each from his own perspective, into a many-sided
military genius.
The late Generals Sir John Crocker and
Sir Harold "Pete" Pyman, similarly contributed to this portrait of
Hobart, as former students who lived not only to see their visionary teacher's
predictions come true, but to be developed further in scarcely conceivable ways.
Lady Dorothea Hobart, the great man's widow, rendered indispensable aid by
rallying these eminent men to help me, and was throughout the soul of kindness.
Liddell
Hart on Hobart
"Much of the credit [for the
February 1941 British victory against larger Italian forces at Beda Fomm, Libya]
was due to a man who took no part in the campaign -- Major-General P.C.S.
Hobart, who had been appointed to command the armoured division in Egypt when it
was originally formed in 1938, and had developed its high pitch of manoeuvring
ability. But his ideas of how an armoured force should be handled, and what it
could achieve when operating in strategic independence of orthodox forces, had
been contrary to the views of more conservative superiors. His 'heresy,' coupled
with an uncompromising attitude, had led to his removal from command in the
autumn of 1939 -- six months before the German panzer forces, applying the same
ideas, proved their practicability."
-- B. H. Liddell Hart, in his History
of the Second World War (New York: 1971), p. 117.
About
the Author
Trevor J.
Constable, born in New Zealand in 1925, has an international reputation as an
aviation historian and author. With Colonel Raymond F. Toliver, he has authored
a number of successful works on fighter aviation and ace fighter pilots. He has
lived in the United States since 1952. He now makes his home in southern
California.
Bibliographic Information:
Author: Constable, Trevor J.
Title: The Little-Known Story of Percy Hobart
Source: The Journal for Historical Review (http://www.ihr.org)
Date: January/February 1999
Issue: Volume 18 number 1
Location: Page 2
ISSN: 0195-6752
Attribution: "Reprinted from The Journal of Historical Review, PO Box 2739,
Newport Beach, CA 92659, USA. Domestic subscriptions $40 per year; foreign
subscriptions $50 per year."
Please send a copy of all reprints to the Editor.
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