William Slim

Miscellaneous

Popular As William Joseph Slim

Birthday August 6, 1891

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Bishopston, Bristol, England

DEATH DATE 1970-12-14, London, England (79 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#33382 Most Popular

1891

Field Marshal William Joseph Slim, 1st Viscount Slim, (6 August 1891 – 14 December 1970), usually known as Bill Slim, was a British military commander and the 13th Governor-General of Australia.

Slim saw active service in both the First and Second World Wars and was wounded in action three times.

During the Second World War he led the Fourteenth Army, the so-called "forgotten army" in the Burma campaign.

After the war he became the first British officer who had served in the Indian Army to be appointed Chief of the Imperial General Staff.

1910

After leaving school, his father's failure in business as a wholesale ironmonger meant that the family could afford to send only one son, Slim's older brother, to the University of Birmingham, so between 1910 and 1914 Slim taught in a primary school and worked as a clerk in Stewarts & Lloyds, a metal-tube maker.

1914

Despite having no other connection to the university, in 1912 Slim joined the Birmingham University Officers' Training Corps, and he was thus able to be commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant into the Royal Warwickshire Regiment on 22 August 1914, on the outbreak of the First World War; in later life, as a result of his modest social origins and his unpretentious manner, he was sometimes wrongly supposed to have risen from the ranks.

He was badly wounded at Gallipoli.

On return to England, he was granted a regular commission as a second lieutenant in the West India Regiment.

1916

In October 1916, he rejoined the Royal Warwickshire Regiment in Mesopotamia.

1917

On 4 March 1917, he was promoted to lieutenant (with seniority back-dated to October 1915).

He was wounded a second time in 1917.

1918

Having been previously given the temporary rank of captain, he was awarded the Military Cross on 7 February 1918 for actions in Mesopotamia.

Evacuated to India, he was given the temporary rank of major in the 6th Gurkha Rifles on 2 November 1918.

1919

He was formally promoted to captain and transferred to the Indian Army on 22 May 1919.

1921

Slim became battalion adjutant with the 6th Gurkha Rifles in 1921.

1926

On 1 January 1926, he married Aileen Robertson, daughter of Rev John Anderson Robertson (d.1941) minister of Cramond near Edinburgh.

They had one son and one daughter.

Later that year Slim was sent to the Staff College, Quetta.

1929

On 5 June 1929, he was appointed a General Staff Officer, Second Grade.

1930

In the early 1930s, Slim also wrote novels, short stories, and other publications under the pen name Anthony Mills.

William Slim was born at 72 Belmont Road, St Andrews, Bristol, the son of John Slim by his marriage to Charlotte Tucker, and was baptised there at St Bonaventure's Roman Catholic church, Bishopston.

He was brought up first in Bristol, attending St Bonaventure's Primary School, then St Brendan's College, before moving to Birmingham in his teens.

In Birmingham, he attended St Philip's Grammar School, Edgbaston and King Edward's School, Birmingham.

On 1 January 1930, he was given the brevet rank of major, with formal promotion to this rank made on 19 May 1933.

1934

His performance at Staff College resulted in his appointment first to Army Headquarters India in Delhi and then to Staff College, Camberley, in England (as a General Staff Officer, Second Grade), where he taught from 1934 to 1937.

During this period, he also wrote novels, short stories, and other publications under the pen name of Anthony Mills, in order to further his literary interests, as well as to supplement his then modest army salary.

1937

He attended the Imperial Defence College in 1937.

The following year he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and given command of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Gurkha Rifles.

1939

In 1939 he was briefly given the temporary rank of brigadier as commander of his battalion.

On 8 June 1939, he was promoted to colonel (again with temporary rank of brigadier) and appointed head of the Senior Officers' School, Belgaum in India.

1941

On 21 January 1941, he was hit when his vehicle was strafed by Fiat CR.42 fighters during the advance on Agordat.

Recovering from his wounds but still unfit for active service, Slim was temporarily employed on the General Staff at GHQ in Delhi.

He was involved in the planning for potential operations in Iraq where trouble was expected.

By early May 1941 Slim had been appointed Brigadier General Staff (chief staff officer) to Edward Quinan the commander designate for operations in Iraq, arriving in Basra on 7 May.

Not long afterwards, Major-General Fraser, commanding the 10th Indian Infantry Division, fell ill and was relieved of his command, and Slim was promoted to take his place on 15 May 1941 with the acting rank of major-general.

1953

From 1953 to 1959 he was Governor-General of Australia.

2010

On the outbreak of the Second World War, Slim was given command of the 10th Indian Infantry Brigade of the 5th Indian Infantry Division and was sent to Sudan.

He took part in the East African campaign to liberate Ethiopia from the Italians.

Slim was wounded again in Eritrea.

He led the Indian 10th Infantry Division as part of Iraqforce during the Anglo-Iraqi War, the Syria–Lebanon campaign (where the division advanced up the river Euphrates to capture Deir ez-Zor), and the invasion of Persia.