Gus March-Phillipps

British Army officer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gus March-Phillipps

Gustavus Henry March-Phillipps, DSO, MBE (1908 – 12 September 1942; sometimes spelled "March-Phillips"[1]) was the founder of the British Army's No. 62 Commando, also known as Small Scale Raiding Force (SSRF), one of the forerunners of the Special Air Service (SAS).[a] He was also noteworthy as being one of Ian Fleming's main inspirations for the character of James Bond.

Quick Facts Gustavus Henry March-Phillipps, Born ...
Gustavus Henry March-Phillipps
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Born1908
England
Died12 September 1942 (aged 34)
Sainte-Honorine-des-Pertes, France
Buried
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service / branchBritish Army
RankMajor
Service number39184
Battles / warsSecond World War
AwardsDistinguished Service Order
Member of the Order of the British Empire
Mentioned in Despatches
Spouse(s)
(m. 1942)
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Military career

Summarize
Perspective

March-Phillipps was a special operations veteran who proved remarkably successful in his missions.[1]

In The Daily Telegraph, Max Hastings noted: "In January 1942 he launched Operation Postmaster, a picaresque 'cutting-out expedition', which seized two Italian merchantmen from the neutral Spanish colonial port of Santa Isabel in West Africa, and towed them triumphantly to Lagos."[2] After the raid March-Phillipps was awarded the Distinguished Service Order.

He was killed in action during Operation Aquatint, which took place on the German-occupied French coastline in September 1942. Intending to harass the enemy and boost the Allied morale, March-Phillipps led a raiding team of 11 men onto a beach in Goatley canoes. The landing was on an incorrect area of the beach, and they came under heavy fire from a German patrol. Four of the raiders were injured and taken prisoner, four men went on the run but were eventually captured; the rest of the team were killed, including March-Phillipps who was shot when trying to swim ashore after his canoe got damaged.[3]

On the Commando Veterans website, the following note accompanies the text on his gravestone:[4] "In Memory of Major 39184 Gustavus Henry March-Phillipps DSO MBE Royal Artillery and Commando, Small Scale Raiding Force who died age 34 on 12 September 1942. Remembered with honour at ST. LAURENT-SUR-MER CHURCHYARD"

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Grave of Gus March-Phillipps, Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer, Normandy, France

Personal life

March-Phillipps married fellow SOE agent Marjorie Stewart (an actress before and after the war, later Lady Marling) on 18 April 1942.[5][6][7]

He was the nephew of Gustavus Hamilton Blenkinsopp Coulson.

March-Phillipps is portrayed by Henry Cavill in the 2024 film The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare which depicts a heavily fictionalised version of the events of Operation Postmaster.[8]

Notes

  1. SAS was founded in 1941 by David Stirling (under the original name "L Detachment, SAS Brigade"); in 1942, it was renamed into "1st SAS"; in 1943, "2nd SAS" was formed in North Africa from the renamed SSRF.

References

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