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Brigadier Young was of the opinion that in all armies there exists a small company of exceptional young men. Numbered among this small company, thought Brigadier Young, was Erwin Rommel, but "on the wrong side"!
In chapter 2 of "Rommel" appears a paragraph which contains Brigadier Young's remembrance of a very young Brigadier-General Bradford whom he had met 34 years previously. When you consider the time lapse between their meeting and the publication of the book, it would seem that the young Roland Bradford must have made a big impression upon the author of "Rommel". Young's second chapter, "Our Friend Rommel", seeks to provide readers with an overall impression of the "type" of man who was arguably Germany's greatest and most charismatic army general during the Second World War. And the paragraph in question reads as follows:
In all armies there is a small minority of professional soldiers (and a few amateurs) who find in war the one occupation to which they are perfectly adapted. Year by year, in the In Memoriam column of The Times, my eye catches the name of Brigadier-General "Boy" Bradford, V.C., D.S.O., M.C., killed in the Cambrai battle in 1917 at the age of 24, and I remember riding over, unduly conspicuous, I felt, on a white horse, to his brigade headquarters in front of Bourlon Wood and thinking, as I talked to him, that here was someone at last who knew his trade and was equal to any demands that war might make. I remember too, A.N.S. Jackson, the Olympic runner, my contemporary at Oxford, and in the regiment, whom I saw married in 1918 on Paris leave, wearing one ribbon only, the D.S.O. with three bars. There were others like them but not many.
Of this small company of exceptional young men was Rommel, on the wrong side." [Italics by Editor]
Mr Stephen D Shannon, the Curator of the D.L.I. Museum, in his account of the Durham Light Infantrymen who were awarded the Victoria Cross, makes the following intriguing observation:
"In 1942, when General Montgomery [* See note below] took over the 8th Army in North Africa, he was already fifty-four. Roland Bradford would have been just fifty years old."
This comment by Mr Shannon follows on from his consideration of Roland Bradford that "When he died , aged still only twenty-five years old, Roland Bradford was the youngest Brigadier-General in the British Army. It is impossible to guess what higher rank he might have achieved by the end of the Great War had he lived. And what of the Second World War?"
.......... What indeed?!
Roland Boys BRADFORD, son of George and Amy Bradford, of Darlington, Co. Durham.
Remembered with honour
HERMIES BRITISH CEMETERY, Pas de Calais, France.
In the perpetual care of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Summary page about all four brothers
List of V Cs awarded at the Battles of the Somme
Durham Light Infantry Museum Details concerning Roland Bradford
Summary details and short biography of Roland Bradford by Malcolm McGregor
Roland B. Bradford:- Details from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records
Click here to see page with details of Memorials & Plaques in Roland's memory
Click here for Roland's Address to his New Troops fresh out from England
Click here for page of Tribute Letters about Roland Bradford
TRIBUTE LETTERS about Lieutenant-Commander George Bradford, V C, Royal Navy
George N. Bradford:- Details from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records
James B. Bradford:- Details from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records
Thomas A. Bradford:- Details and photographs from the family
Amy Isabelle Bradford - the younger schoolgirl sister
LINK to Memorial to George Bradford at Blankenberghe Town Cemetery
LINK to Albert McKenzie and the other Zeebrugge V.C.'s
LINK to Mike Chapman's Victoria Cross Reference
LINK to British Light Infantry Regiments' site
LINK to the Durham Light Infantry site
LINK to D. L. I. Museum website
LINK to The War Graves Commission
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