Francis Earl Johnston

Brigadier-General Francis Earl Johnston, CB (1 October 1871 – 7 August 1917) was a New Zealand born British Army officer of the First World War, who was seconded to the New Zealand Military Forces, serving at Gallipoli and on the Western Front. He commanded both the 1st Infantry Brigade and 3rd New Zealand (Rifle) Brigade, and was one of three New Zealand brigadier-generals killed during the war.

Early life
Johnston was born in Wellington, New Zealand on 1 October 1871, the eldest son of merchant (and later politician) Charles John Johnston (1845–1918). He was educated at Stonyhurst College in Lancashire and the Royal Military College Sandhurst, where he was awarded the Sword of Honour as the best of his intake.

Military career
Johnston was commissioned in the Prince of Wales’s North Staffordshire Regiment in 1891, and saw service in the Sudan as well as during the Second Boer War. In 1914, prior to the outbreak of the First World War, Johnston was in New Zealand on leave from his regiment, then serving in India. He had been seconded to the New Zealand Military Forces as a temporary lieutenant colonel, and was appointed commander of the Wellington Military District.

First World War
When the New Zealand Expeditionary Force (NZEF) was raised in response to the declaration of war by the New Zealand government, Major General Alexander Godley, the commandant of the New Zealand Military Forces, promoted Johnston to the rank of colonel and put him in command of the New Zealand Infantry Brigade (the brigade would subsequently be designated the 1st Infantry Brigade in 1916).

Shipped to Egypt in October along with the rest of the NZEF, Johnston's brigade was primarily engaged in training before it deployed along the Suez Canal late in January 1915 to support Indian troops defending from a rumoured Turkish attack. The brigade assisted the Indian defenders in dealing with a Turkish attack during early February, and suffered its first combat casualties. The attack was repulsed with 3,000 Turkish soldiers killed, wounded or captured, and three weeks of sentry duty ensued before the brigade returned to Cairo, where it had been previously based.

Gallipoli
By this time, the New Zealand and Australian Division, under the command of Godley, was being formed for operations in the Dardanelles, and the brigade formed one of the two infantry brigades (the other was the Australian 4th brigade). In April, the division embarked for Gallipoli. Landed on the beaches on 25 April, the brigade was under the temporary command of Brigadier-General Walker, the chief of staff of the division. Johnston had taken ill on 23 April and missed the landing, returning to his command in early May.

On 2 May, shortly after his return to the brigade, Johnston led it in operations to capture Baby 700, a hill on the slopes overlooking ANZAC Cove. Johnston did not conduct a reconnaissance of the difficult terrain which needed to be traversed by his men prior to the commencement of the attack. As a result, many units had not reached their assigned starting positions by the designated start time of the offensive. The attack, planned by Godley and with ambitious objectives, was beaten off with heavy losses. In Godley's subsequent report on the battle, Johnston was not criticised for his handling of the brigade.

Johnston then led the brigade in the Second Battle of Krithia and the Battle of Chunuk Bair in August. During the latter battle, he displayed poor judgement in coordinating the battalions of the brigade following the initial capture of Chunuk Bair by Colonel William Malone's Wellington Battalion. Chunuk Bair was lost two days later to the Turks. Johnston, still in poor health, had spells in hospital in September, before leaving Gallipoli altogether in November for Cairo to be with his wife, who later died on 15 December. He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath and mentioned twice in dispatches for his conduct during the Gallipoli campaign.

Western Front
Following the withdrawal of Allied forces from Gallipoli to Egypt, the NZEF, now reinforced, had sufficient men to form a standalone divisional size formation, the New Zealand Division. Johnston's brigade would be one of three infantry brigades in the division. The division was sent to France, where it was involved in operations on the Western Front, and Johnston was again mentioned in dispatches for his leadership during the Battle of the Somme.

Still in poor health, in December 1916, Johnston went to England for medical treatment and was diagnosed with neurasthenia. He later took command of the 4th New Zealand Infantry Brigade Reserve Camp, better known as Sling Camp. He returned to the Western Front in late July 1917, this time as commander of the 3rd New Zealand (Rifle) Brigade. Visiting the front lines, he was killed on 7 August 1917 by sniper fire.

Johnston is buried on the edge of Bailleul, in the Bailleul Communal Cemetery Extension. His grave is close to that of Brigadier-General Charles Henry Brown, Johnston's successor as commander of the 1st Infantry Brigade. Brown had been killed just a few weeks previously.