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Sir Frank Fox

First World War and WW2 Author, author of Breaker Morant

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The King’s Pilgrimage 100 year anniversary 2022

December 18, 2022 by Ed Goodson


In May 1922, King George V took a very small party to visit the opening of military cemeteries in Belgium and France which culminated in Etaples. Sir Frank Fox was invited to join them and wrote an evocative account (“The King’s Pilgrimage”) accompanied by unposed photographs and an introductory verse by Rudyard Kipling. This Limited Edition hardback book has been made available to commemorate the 100-year Anniversary of the Pilgrimage and Fox´s great-grandson Dr. Charles Goodson-Wickes, a veteran of the First Gulf War himself, contributes a new introduction to the book
The King´s Pilgrimage
The King´s Pilgrimage – Princess Royal 2022 Étaples
Royal Twitter - The King´s Pilgrimage
Royal Twitter – The King´s Pilgrimage
Buy the hardback book https://www.amazon.co.uk/Kings-Pilgrimage…/dp/0992890160/

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Lecture on GHQ, The King´s Pilgrimage and Sir Frank Fox in Montreuil-sur-Mer by Fox´s great grandson

September 23, 2022 by Ed Goodson


In the theatre of Montreuil-sur-Mer, Sir Frank Fox´s great grandson, Dr.Charles Goodson-Wickes, the first sitting member of the House of Commons to see active service in the armed forces since World War II, gave a lecture on G.H.Q. which has also been translated. It was the heart of the British Army’s Military machine between 1916 and 1919 in the First World War. The lecture followed the unveiling of the restored Haig statue.

Transcript of the lecture:
This lecture follows the most memorable and stirring occasion to endorse Entente Cordiale, epitomised by the restoration of Haig´s statue. That statue is a poignant Anglo-French symbol of our shared endeavours in times of war when our joint liberties have been under threat from malign forces.
Haig Statue Unveiling

As Monsieur Bruno Béthouart, the former mayor stated, Montreuil-sur-Mer was surprised to find itself at the heart of the British Army’s military machine between 1916 and 1919. How curious indeed it was for this charming mediaeval town to become the nerve centre of the Allied planning of the ultimate defeat of the German forces. Life in Haig’s GHQ was described by my great grandfather, Sir Frank Fox, under the nom de plume “GSO”, for serving officers were not allowed to write under their true names.

No remote relation was he to me, few people are lucky enough to know their great grandfather. I knew him well. I was 15 when he died and he was my childhood hero.

Sir Frank Fox and Dr.Charles Goodson-Wickes
Sir Frank Fox and his great grandson Dr.Charles Goodson-Wickes

As his literary executor, I have taken enormous pleasure in republishing three of his World War One related books, all of which can be bought, I hope, after this lecture.

Let me tell you something about him. Fox was a remarkable man, having first experienced battle as the Morning Post war correspondent in the Balkan wars, he was in Belgium in August 1914 to report the German invasion. So horrified was Fox by the atrocities meted out to the civilian population, the first use of Zeppelins for air warfare and the destruction of historical buildings that he was determined to become a combatant.

Sir Frank Fox painted by Normal Lindsay
Sir Frank Fox painted by Norman Lindsay

During hostilities he had become close to King Albert who invested him with the Order of the Crown and awarded him the Belgian Military Cross.

Antwerp cathedral

Commissioned (over-age) in the British Army, he was twice wounded on the Somme and sent to convalesce in England. Whilst there he worked in MI7 (Propaganda) writing to encourage the US to enter the fight. He then pulled springs to get back to France and was posted to the Quartermaster General´s Department. He must have been quite a sight, missing half his right foot, having a withered left arm, and on top of his disabilities, being profoundly deaf from shellfire. I’m not surprised that no photographs of him in uniform survive!

He was awarded the OBE military and was mentioned in Dispatches.

Some Staff Officers were criticised for being “desk warriors” far from the front. At least he was immune from such remarks. Indeed it seems from his account that many Staff Officers were, in his own words, “cropped”, having “taken a knock”. Fox appreciated regular physiotherapy for his wounds at the hospital which is now the Hermitage Hotel, where some of you may be staying. But enough of him for the moment.

What did he record of life here from 1916 to 1919, when Montreuil was the hub of the most extraordinary planning and logistical exercise, leading up to the final defeat of the German army?

I hope you’ll read for yourselves, however, I will pick up one or two points. Montreuil was selected for its all important role owing to its accessibility, both to the trenches, and to Paris, and to London. GHQ was moved here from Saint-Omer in March 1916. The British Expeditionary Force, BEF, with Haig as its commander in chief, could thus communicate with ease with the Secretary of State for War and the government in London. Fox describes its attributes as, quotes “central remoteness”. There was a military population of up to a maximum of 5,000 including 300 regular officers, supplemented by temporary officers referred to irreverently by some as “temporary gentlemen”.

This is the officer’s mess, the building on the left is now, I think, the music academy. The wall has disappeared. That was where the officers, obviously, lived.

The next photograph was the one of the École Militaire which was where the G.H.Q. was based. It is a very fine building but unfortunately it has been demolished. In more enlightened days it would have had a blue plaque or whatever, however the French commemorate such buildings.

ECOLE MILITAIRE

Fox says that life here was, quotes: “a fantastic life, serious, monkish and the almost total absence of the female sex, sober, disciplined, and exciting.”
Typical hours worked were nine in the morning till ten thirty at night with no distinction for weekends. Leave was given only every six months. It is curious that he uses this last adjective “exciting” as elsewhere, in contrast, he describes life in the trenches as quotes, “tedious with only rapid moments of high excitement and horror.”

General Travers Clarke, the distinguished Quartermaster General under whom Fox served was insistent that staff work should be seamless between the office and the trenches. Despite the difference in rank, although they were close in age, Travers Clarke and Fox became close friends. It is very odd, I mean, a Lieutenant General and a Captain. In the remarkable Game Book of Statistics, which I have republished for the first ever time as an appendix of the GHQ book, it is inscribed to Fox, from Travers Clarke, quotes: “from his sincere friend.” They worked together later in peacetime, staging the British Empire exhibition. I recently had the pleasure of presenting a copy of GHQ to Travers Clarke’s son John.

Now there is the 98-year-old, John Travers Clarke and I’m sure he’s with us in spirit, I will have the greatest pleasure when I go back to London to tell him that we gave the lecture and the book narrating his father and of course, Haig, much more so, who was well received here. Five British divisions were deployed, each of 20,000 men, larger than the standard. Perhaps the most significant statistic is that for every rifleman or gunner in the front line there were three soldiers in support.
I say British, but let us not forget that this included men from throughout the British Empire, let alone brave soldiers from France, of course, Belgium, the United States, Italy and Portugal.
An early and truly international headquarters had missions here, and we’ll try to see if we get that map back again. Now – there we are – now I think it’s a fascinating map because it shows throughout the town how the various missions are spread and the key buildings. But I can’t find any reference to the Belgian and Portuguese missions that must have been here.

But the other nationalities are represented in this slide. So what were the main headline functions of GHQ? It was the link between the army in the field and the political leaders
of the Allies formulating strategy in the British sector in order to deliver one of the most complex logistical exercises of all time. By the end of 1918, the British army consisted of no less than 3.8 million men. The Quartermaster General’s role involved no less than 17 directorates and five inspectorates. Supply of all clothing, food, munitions and pay, transport by road, by horse, by motor and by rail and by water, agriculture and food supply, medical, veterinary and spiritual support, etc. all vital for maintaining morale.
Although it was noted by Fox that GHQ officers were poor churchgoers, in contrast to the very religious Haig. Travers Clarke was also praised subsequently for his humane handling of German POWs.
There was occasional recreation here in this very building, in the theatre, and in sport. Fox particularly enjoyed riding and took a special interest in the welfare of the many horses, and mules, at the front. Whilst British soldiers were described as quotes: “lions in the trenches” he maintains that they behaved as quotes, “lambs in the villages”.

The relationship between the army and the civilian population was a crucial one being the unusual state of a country being occupied by friendly forces. This required civilian assent and cooperation, which was complicated by the movement of refugees.
New insights in the book are given into the importance of a Labour Corps, of up to a third of a million men. Elderly and disabled French civilians did sterling service. More demanding physical work was carried out by Labour companies made up of Indian, Caribbean, Chinese, Fijian, native South African and Egyptian men, supplemented of course, by German prisoners of war. I will not go into descriptions of the waxing and waning of the campaign all which you can read elsewhere, but I wanted to concentrate on the logistics behind the whole operation.

The current reassessment of Haig’s reputation is supported by this first hand and contemporary record. He is given fulsome praise for his faithfulness to friends -despite political and Press criticism; of which he had more than his fair share, his brilliant insight for Appointments; his religious convictions; his great trust in others; and perhaps, in a particularly neglected quality, his enlightened promotion of education of soldiers, to prepare them as better citizens for their return to civvy street after such an extraordinary and exceptional experience in battle. The book ends with Marshal Foch´s appointment as Commander in Chief of the Allied Armies, a move which was wholeheartedly supported by the British and American generals Haig and Pershing, in an enlightened demonstration of international cooperation. And I was absolutely delighted to hear that Foch´s great grandson was at the ceremony that we just all attended. He wrote Johnny Astor a charming letter, praising the relationship that his great grandfather and Haig had on a deeply personal relationship. I think I’m right in saying that when the statue of Foch was… yes… the statue of Foch, outside, Victoria station? AUDIENCE: “Victoria, yes”

I believe that that epitomized the relationship that the two of them had. Once we all know of the ultimate victory, one only has to visit the serried ranks of graves of the military cemeteries to recognise the appalling human cost. Particularly poignant an inscription was actually pointed out to me by John Hussey the other day, it read: “How beautiful is victory, but how dear. His loving wife. Extraordinarily moving inscription.

The King´s Pilgrimage
The King´s Pilgrimage – Princess Royal

Frank Fox accompanied King George V and Haig to pay their respects on a small,
very small, private visit to those cemeteries in Belgium and France, exactly a century ago, culminating in Étaples where many of us will be tomorrow.
He recorded this emotive journey which is accompanied by evocative and unposed photographs
in the King’s Pilgrimage. Next slide please which should be the King´s Pilgrimage one.
I think this is a lovely portrait of the King.
All the photographs in this book are unposed. The Princess Royal came a couple of weeks ago to Étaples to celebrate the centenary of this tiny journey of the King and his private secretary and private staff the King just wanted calm reflection and to pay his respects and you will see if you’re kind enough to acquire the book the very, very moving photographs because they are all unposed.

There is the book which is on sale, to be commercial about it, outside, and I rather like this photograph of Haig and all his commanders. A curious aside that really has got nothing to do the military at all, but when I was helping Johnny Astor, I said it would be rather nice to track the descendants of all Haig´s commanders and it’s absolutely extraordinary that of the peerages awarded to his commanders, every single one is extinct. Quite extraordinary. They may have been marvelous generals but they were bad breeders, or bad breeders of males anyway! And I think only one peerage went down one generation, and the nearest we got was Rawlinson. Rawlinson didn’t have a son, but he inherited a baronetcy, his brother inherited the baronetcy on his death and Sir Alfred Rawlinson is alive today but unfortunately he’s not well enough to come out to the ceremony.

I would like to end this talk with the photograph, I love this photograph because it epitomises the close relationship between the King and Haig and Foch.

This also comes up from the book The King´s Pilgrimage.

There’s no better demonstration, I think, of the Entente Cordiale which we celebrate today.

Thank you all very much for coming and I hope that you might acquire the books as a memento of what I think you will agree has been a remarkable weekend.

Thank you very much.

Buy G.H.Q. by Sir Frank Fox
Buy The King´s Pilgrimage

Filed Under: G.H.Q. Montreuil-sur-Mer, The King's Pilgrimage Tagged With: world war one, ww1

The Haig Statue Restoration Ceremony in Montreuil-sur-Mer, on 18 June 2022. First World War G.H.Q.

July 20, 2022 by Ed Goodson

The restored statue was formally presented to the public in a moving ceremony.

Standing in the beautiful, peaceful town of Montreuil-sur-Mer in front of the theatre, is the equestrian statue of Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig. It was home to his WW1 G.H.Q. from March 1916 to April 2019.

The original statue, by the world famous sculptor, Paul Landowski, was paid for entirely through public subscription and the generosity of the French veterans. The campaign was organised in the 1920s by French Veterans’ Associations, in recognition of the crucial contribution of a WW1 army consisting of British and Empire troops in winning the war.
Haig is the only British military figure to be commemorated in France with an equestrian statue.

Thanks to Morgane Quere and her great team for their amazing work on the video.

Sir Frank Fox’s G.H.Q., first published in 1920 and now reissued in a limited edition by his great-grandson, Dr. Charles Goodson- Wickes is an absorb­ing study of Haig’s chateau-HQ at Montreuil-sur-Mer. Fox paints a vivid picture of the comprehensive com­plexity of the British Ex­peditionary Force, with organisational dia­grams, statistics and vi­gnettes of day-to-day life.
Buy G.H.Q. by Sir Frank Fox: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0992890128/ #ww1

Filed Under: G.H.Q. Montreuil-sur-Mer

The National WW1 Museum and Memorial in Kansas – A Place Where History Meets Star Wars

May 10, 2022 by Ed Goodson


Last month, in April, I had the great fortune to visit the WW1 Museum and Memorial in Kansas. It has one of the largest collections of items from the First World War in the world, and 300,000 people a year visit to experience its fascinating displays and collections.


For an extra fee visitors can also take the elevator, hidden in the core of the 217-feet tall Liberty Memorial Tower, to its viewing balcony, and the spectacular ‎360º view of the city skyline.


Inaugurated on November 11, 1926, the Museum is dedicated to remembering, interpreting, and understanding the Great War and its enduring impact on the global community. To enter the exhibition halls, people first must walk over a glass-floored bridge, suspended above 9,000 red poppies (each representing 1,000 combatant deaths).

Once inside the main part of the museum visitors can enjoy a 20-feet walk-in crater, a recreation of No Man’s Land, a 90 foot-long replica trench and see the remnants of the Pantheon de la Guerre (formerly the world’s largest painting).

The Virtual Reality experience of the War Remains exhibit is in another section of the building and is the most famous new addition to the museum. Produced by MWM Interactive, directed by Brandon Oldenburg and developed by Flight School Studio, the audio was designed by Skywalker Sound which is the sound and music division of Lucasfilm (with the company’s main facilities being located at George Lucas’s Skywalker Ranch in Lucas Valley, near Nicasio, California.) The video below is shot without VR to show a part of “the stage”, which is the trench one walks through with the headset on.

War Remains exhibit – a part of the trench

The live experience with the headset is completely immersive and realistic. Presented by the legendary “Hardcore History” podcaster Dan Carlin, War Remains transports viewers to the Western Front of the First World War where they can witness history unfold from a soldier’s point of view.

Watch a video with the director of the museum Dr.Naylor and Dan Carlin.

Filed Under: The King's Pilgrimage

George V- Grandpa England

July 7, 2020 by Ed Goodson


George V (Captain General 1910-1936) is a much under-rated King. At this year of the Centenary of the WW 1 Armistice it is appropriate to examine his legacy.

As Duke of York he was serving as a Commander aged 27 in the Royal Navy when his elder brother Albert died unexpectedly. He was thus required to abandon his naval career as he became the heir to his father King Edward VII. The next year he married, somewhat unusually , his dead brother’s fiancée, Mary of Teck.

There could hardly be more of a contrast between the characters of father and son. Edward, as Prince of Wales, had scandalised the country by his high life of philandering and gambling; George’s life has been described as epitomising “Upper Middle Class respectability”. He was devoted to Queen Mary, to whom he was faithful, and brought up 5 sons and a daughter. Having no intellectual pretensions, his prime personal interests were shooting and stamp collecting.

It would seem that he was ill prepared to cope with the many challenges that he would face following his Accession in 1910.

Storm clouds were gathering over Europe ; there were new political under-currents at home and throughout the Empire. He toured his Empire extensively in the wake of the Boer War, thanking those countries which had sent troops in that conflict, and held a Durbar in India in 1911 where there were early rumblings of Independence.

However nothing could have prepared him for the outbreak of the Great War when Britain was obliged to declare war when an expansionist Germany, led by his first cousin the Kaiser, invaded Belgium in August 1914.

The King shared the hope (and the belief) of many that the war would be of short duration. This optimism proved to be ill-founded as trench warfare brought stagnation and slaughter in equal measure.

Haig had been appointed as an ADC to the King in February 1914 and this was the prelude to frequent meetings throughout the war. Haig lunched with the King and Kitchener in London in 1915, and the King regularly visited the Front.

Contact continued either directly or indirectly, often through the medium of Haig’s wife who had important contacts at Court.

Haig had expressed “ grave doubts” about Sir John French in August 1914, and eventually replaced him as Commander in Chief, BEF in December 1915. Unsurprisingly there was intermittent criticism of his own conduct of the War as it dragged on, but his influence at the Palace probably protected him from political pressure from Lloyd George and others.

It was significant that in promoting him to Field Marshal on New Year’s Day 1917, the King sent him a personal message “ A New Year’s gift from myself and the country”. Later he insisted that Haig be created an Earl in contrast to French’s Viscountcy.

In the aftermath of the War the King was anxious to visit the Military Cemeteries in Belgium and France as soon as it were possible. Nothing better illustrated his sensitivity and common sense in that he insisted on taking a very modest entourage.

Thus he was able quietly to pay his respects in a dignified manner in the face of such huge sacrifice, and to talk to bereaved families and local people.

Frank Fox, an Imperialist who had worked with Fabian Ware on The Morning Post, had been selected to record the Pilgrimage. Fox was later knighted by the King in 1926 for his work organising the British Empire Exhibition.

Fox, as a War Correspondent, had recorded the German Invasion of Belgium, and having been seriously wounded on the Somme, joined Haig’s GHQ at Montreuil-sur-Mer in the planning of the final offensive.

The resulting book “ The King’s Pilgrimage “ ( see below) records a visit, devoid of pomp, in words, evocative photographs, and verse by Rudyard Kipling. Once again the King had demonstrated his instinctive decency and sense of duty. Embarrassed by praise at his Silver Jubilee, he declared “ I’m a very ordinary sort of fellow”

After the War the King played a critical role in developing cordial relations with leaders of the Labour Party and the TUC. This served the Monarchy- renamed as the House of Windsor to replace the Germanic Saxe-Coburg- Gotha -and the country well when Ramsay MacDonald became the first Labour Prime Minister in 1924.

During the General Strike of 1926 the King, true to his role as a Constitutional Monarch, advised understanding of the issues, and urged moderation dealing with the strikers. The introduction of the annual Christmas Broadcast further enhanced his popularity.

This admirable King ( called “Grandpa England” by Princess Elizabeth) had on his death left the Monarchy more secure- in stark contrast to the fate of his German and Russian first cousins, both of whom had lost their thrones.

Thus it was appropriate that his life ” moved peacefully to a close”

NOTE. “ The King’s Pilgrimage” has been republished by Fox’s Great Grandson, Dr Charles Goodson- Wickes (Representative Deputy Lieutenant for Islington and a Member of the HAC)

In the words of John Terraine:-

“Few people, unless the subject is brought particularly to their attention can realise to what an extent GHQ itself marked a revolution in the art of waging war……. the whole machine became a remarkable fusion of the best available talent, civilian and military, in the country.”

Filed Under: King George V Tagged With: george V, ww1

An insider´s view of G.H.Q. review by Professor Gary Sheffield

July 6, 2020 by Ed Goodson


‘Gary Sheffield has established himself as one of the foremost authorities on the British Army of the First World War’
Professor Saul David, University of Buckingham

‘Gary Sheffield is one of Britain’s foremost historians of the First World War – insightful, original, and superbly informed’
Sir Max Hastings, military historian

AN INSIDER’S VIEW OF GHQ- Review by Professor Gary Sheffield

G.H.Q. (Montreuil-sur-Mer) by SIR FRANK FOX

London: Beaumont Fox, 2015
216pp., hardback, many illustrations, foldout chart, ,ISBN 978-0-9928901-2-4

G.H.Q., first published in 1920, is something of a hidden gem.It is a long time since I first read this book, and I had forgotten how interesting and useful it is. Written by Sir Frank Fox, originally under the pseudonym ‘G.S.O’, it is an account of what went on at the BEF’s General Headquarters written by a staff officer who served there.

It serves as an excellent introduction to some vital aspects of the BEF’s war. Administration, logistics and staff work are not numbered among the glamourous aspects of warfare, and so, far too often, are overlooked. Tellingly, the one part of this book which may be familiar to readers focuses on the human element. Fox mentions that Haig was rarely seen, and when he did appear, staff officers rushed to a window ‘to catch a glimpse of him’. This annoyed Haig, who crossly annotated his copy of the book, perhaps sensitive to the accusations of remoteness from the rest of GHQ.

Fox wrote the book to defend GHQ against its critics, by explaining what went on there. He takes us through the various branches of GHQ, covering such matters as munitions, salvage, and the medical services, enlivening what might have been a rather dry account with anecdotes.

Lieutenant-General Sir Travers Clarke, the relatively youthful Quartermaster-General from 1917, emerges as one of the unsung heroes of the British army. All of this repays reading, but needs to be supplemented by recent works, such as Craig Gibson on relations with French civilians. Fox wrote as an outsider; an Australian and a journalist, not a professional soldier.

So, he was well placed to see the extent to which GHQ became civilianised, and this is one of his most interesting themes. In his view, the prejudice against New Army officers, which was strong in 1916, had largely vanished by the end of the war. These citizen-soldiers had not only brought their civilian skills into the army, but had made GHQ more interesting, with the Mess a far less stuffy place: ‘I was struck by the general good temper with which the Trade Union of Officers ultimately took its “dilutees”’ (p.133).

Both as a memoir and a history, G.H.Q. is valuable, and it is very good to see this new edition in print. It has a foreword from the author’s great grandson, Dr Charles Goodson-Wickes, a former MP, and, as a bonus, the ‘Game Book’, a statistical annex compiled by Travers Clarke for King George V.

Gary Sheffield

Buy the book: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0992890128/

Filed Under: G.H.Q. Montreuil-sur-Mer

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