Louis Le Bailly

Vice Admiral Sir Louis Edward Stewart Holland Le Bailly KBE, CB (18 July 1915 – 3 October 2010) was a Royal Navy officer who became Director-General of Intelligence and later a writer.

Naval career
Le Bailly was born the son of Robert Francis Le Bailly and Ida Gaskell Le Bailly (née Holland). He attended the Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth between 1929 and 1932 and joined HMS Hood as a midshipman. He attended the Royal Naval Engineering College in Keyham between 1933 and 1937 returning to HMS Hood as an engineer Lieutenant. He left the Hood in 1940 and served aboard HMS Naiad, surviving the sinking of that ship in 1942. After serving at the RN Engineering College Le Bailly was posted to the battleship HMS Duke of York in 1944 where he served as Lieutenant Commander and was present at the Japanese Surrender.

Le Bailly served at the Admiralty from 1946 and aboard HMS Bermuda from 1950. He subsequently served at the Admiralty from 1955 to 1958 and as Staff Officer to Dartmouth Review Committee in 1958. He was appointed Assistant Engineer-in-Chief in 1958 and Naval Assistant to Controller of the Navy in 1960. He went on to be Deputy Director of Marine Engineering in 1964, Naval Attaché and Head of the Royal Navy staff in Washington D. C. in 1967 and Deputy Chief of Defence Staff (Intelligence) in 1971 before retiring from the Royal Navy in 1972.

In retirement he was appointed Director-General of Intelligence at the Ministry of Defence in 1972. Later he became vice chairman of the Institute for Study of Conflict, and chairman of the Civil Service Selection Board.

He is survived by his wife, Pamela (née Berthon) (Sir Louis died on their 64th wedding anniversary, having been wed on 2 October 1946 at Holy Trinity Brompton Church), daughters Susanna, Charlotte and Belinda, and their children.

Works
Le Bailly was a prolific writer with four published books;
 * A Man Around The Engine (1990),
 * Old Loves Return (1994),
 * We Should All Look To Our Moat (2007)
 * From Fisher To The Falklands (1991).