Brian Surtees Phillpotts
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brian Surtees Phillpotts | |
|---|---|
Lt Col Brian Surtees Phillpotts | |
| Nickname | Broo |
| Born | 1875 Bedford, England |
| Died | 4 September 1917 (aged 41–42) Ypres, Belgium |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Service years | 1895–1917 |
| Rank | Lieutenant-Colonel |
| Unit | Royal Engineers |
| Conflicts | First World War |
| Awards | Distinguished Service Order |
Brian Surtees Phillpotts DSO (1875 – 4 September 1917) was an officer of the Royal Engineers who fought in the First World War and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order. He was killed in action in September 1917.
Brian "Broo" Surtees Phillpotts was the second surviving son of James Surtees Phillpotts, the reforming headmaster of Bedford School, and of Marian Hadfield Phillpotts. His sisters included Dame Bertha Surtees Phillpotts, a scholar of Scandinavian studies, and Marjory Surtees Phillpotts, captain of the England Ladies Hockey Team.[1][2]
He was born in 1875 and educated at Bedford School, where he showed an aptitude for craft work including the construction of small boats. He opted for a military career and in 1893 entered the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich (headquarters of the Royal Corps of Engineers), from where he pursued a course at the Royal School of Military Engineering in Chatham. After leaving Chatham he specialised in submarine mining and was stationed successively at Plymouth, Bermuda, Halifax (Nova Scotia), Gravesend and Hong Kong. He was in charge of the submarine defences of the Thames till these were transferred to the Navy. When the Great War broke out he was at Fort Camden, County Cork. He was promoted major on 30 October 1914 and appointed to train a field company, which he took to the front in September 1915. In the autumn of 1916 he was appointed chief royal engineer of a division, with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was slightly wounded in the Somme offensive. He was mentioned in despatches twice in 1916 and once again in 1917, and received the Distinguished Service Order in January 1917. He was wounded in action on 2 September 1917 and died of his wounds two days later.[3]
