Sir Napier Crookenden | |
Birth Date: | 31 August 1915 |
Death Date: | 31 October 2002 (aged 87) |
Birth Place: | Chester, Cheshire, England[1] |
Allegiance: | United Kingdom |
Serviceyears: | 1935−1972 |
Servicenumber: | 66121 |
Rank: | Lieutenant General |
Unit: | Cheshire Regiment |
Commands: | 9th (Eastern and Home Counties) Parachute Battalion 16th Parachute Brigade Royal Military College of Science Western Command |
Battles: | Second World War Malayan Emergency |
Awards: | Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath Distinguished Service Order Officer of the Order of the British Empire |
Lieutenant General Sir Napier Crookenden (31 August 1915 − 31 October 2002) was a British Army General who reached high office in the 1960s.
Educated at Wellington College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst,[2] Crookenden was commissioned into the Cheshire Regiment in August 1935.[3] [4]
He served in the Second World War as a brigade major in the 6th Airlanding Brigade in 1943 planning and implementing glider assaults to secure bridges over the River Orne on the day of the Normandy landings.[2] He served as commanding officer of 9th (Eastern and Home Counties) Parachute Battalion between 1944 and 1946[3] leading his regiment in the Battle of the Bulge and then the crossing of the River Rhine.[2]
He was Director of Operations during the Malayan Emergency between 1952 and 1954 and served as Commander of 16th Parachute Brigade from 1960 to 1961.[3] He went to the Imperial Defence College in 1962.[3] He was appointed Director of Land/Air Warfare at the Ministry of Defence in 1964 and then Commandant at the Royal Military College of Science in Shrivenham in 1967.[3] He became the last General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Western Command in 1969 and retired in 1972.[3]
In retirement he became a Deputy Lieutenant for Kent.[2] He was also a lecturer on military history on the P&O steamship SS Uganda.[2]
In 1948 he married Patricia Nassau, daughter of Hugh Kindersley, 2nd Baron Kindersley, and they went on to have two sons and two daughters.[2]
|-