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Major General The Honourable
George Randolph Pearkes
VC PC CC CB DSO MC CD
File:GeorgePearkes.jpg
20th Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia

In office
1960–1968
Monarch Elizabeth II
Preceded by Frank Mackenzie Ross
Succeeded by John Robert Nicholson
Personal details
Born (1888-02-28)28 February 1888
Died 30 May 1984(1984-05-30) (aged 96)
Nationality Canadian
Military service
Allegiance Canadian Red Ensign 1921-1957 Canada
Service/branch Canadian Army Flag Canadian Army
Years of service 1915 – 1945
Rank Major General
Commands Pacific Command
Canadian Corps
1st Canadian Infantry Division
2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade
Battles/wars First World War

Second World War

Awards Victoria Cross
Companion of the Order of Canada
Companion of the Order of the Bath
Distinguished Service Order
Military Cross
Canadian Forces Decoration
Croix de guerre (France)
Legion of Merit (United States)

Major General George Randolph Pearkes, VC, PC, CC, CB, DSO, MC, CD (February 28, 1888 – May 30, 1984) was a Canadian politician; soldier; recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy awarded to British and Imperial forces; and the 20th Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.

Early life[]

Born in Watford, Hertfordshire, England in 1888, the oldest child of Louise and George Pearkes, he attended Berkhamsted School. In 1906, he and his brother emigrated to Alberta where they settled near Red Deer. In 1911, George joined the North-West Mounted Police and served in Yukon until the outbreak of the First World War.[1]

Military career and Victoria Cross[]

In 1915, he enlisted in the 2nd Regiment, Canadian Mounted Rifles; transferring in September 1916 to the 5th Battalion Canadian Mounted Rifles.[2] During the Battle of Passchendaele his gallantry as detailed in the following citation won him the Victoria Cross.

"For most conspicuous bravery and skilful handling of the troops under his command during the capture and consolidation of considerably more than the objectives allotted to him, in an attack. Just prior to the advance Major Pearkes was wounded in the thigh. Regardless of his wound, he continued to lead his men with the utmost gallantry, despite many obstacles.
At a particular stage of the attack his further advance was threatened by a strong point which was an objective of the battalion on his left, but which they had not succeeded in capturing. Quickly appreciating the situation, he captured and held this point, thus enabling his further advance to be successfully pushed forward.
It was entirely due to his determination and fearless personality that he was able to maintain his objective with the small number of men at his command against repeated enemy counter-attacks, both his flanks being unprotected for a considerable depth meanwhile.
His appreciation of the situation throughout and the reports rendered by him were invaluable to his Commanding Officer in making dispositions of troops to hold the position captured.
He showed throughout a supreme contempt of danger and wonderful powers of control and leading."[1]

During the war, he was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel. He received the Victoria Cross, the Military Cross and the Distinguished Service Order.

Following the First World War he became a career officer in the army. He was appointed to Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry. During the 1920s and early 1930s he was stationed as a staff officer in Winnipeg, Manitoba and in Calgary, Alberta. He also served as staff officer at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario. In 1925 Pearkes married Constance Blytha Copeman and they had two children. In 1936, he attended the Imperial Defence College for two years.

From 1938 to 1940 he was District Officer Commanding 13th Military District in Calgary. With the opening of hostilities with Germany in the Second World War, Brigadier Pearkes was given command of the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade, a component of the 1st Canadian Infantry Division.

This comprised a number of units raised in western Canada. In December 1939, Pearkes and his staff left for England where the 1st Division was finally concentrated in a single place as a formation.[3] In February 1940 he developed a serious case of spinal meningitis, but soon recovered.

In November 1941 Pearkes was asked to assume temporary command of the expanding Canadian Corps, taking the place of Andrew McNaughton who was on an extended leave. General Montgomery of the British Army, whose opinions of Canadian officers were crucial in the careers of senior officers overseas in the mid-war period, felt that Pearkes was a "gallant soldier" with "little brains".[4]

In August 1942 Pearkes was returned to Canada and became General Officer Commanding in Chief Pacific Command, primarily a home defence organization for western Canada. He oversaw defences on Canada's West Coast.

In 1943 Pearkes was part of the planning for Operation Greenlight, retaking the Aleutian Islands from the Japanese.

During the Second World War, in 1944, Pearkes was instrumental in suppressing the Terrace Mutiny, a revolt by conscripts stationed in Terrace, British Columbia resulting from the announcement that conscripts would be deployed overseas. Although successful, Pearkes was extremely critical of the actions that led to it in the first place, stating he had been placed in the "intolerable position of being ordered to enforce a policy which his past experience gained in applying similar policies has proven ruinous to discipline of [troops], and of being in an utterly dishonourable position, and [Pearkes said] that he will NOT issue instructions to his [junior commanders] placing them in an impossible situation."[5]

When it became clear that the government was not considering deploying troops for the fighting in the Pacific, Pearkes requested a change of command, or to be allowed to retire. The Cabinet War Committee eventually decided on the latter, and he retired from the Army in February 1945. He went into federal politics, winning the Nanaimo, British Columbia riding for the Progressive Conservative Party.

Political career[]

In the 1945 federal election, he was elected as a Progressive Conservative Party candidate in the riding of Nanaimo, British Columbia. He was re-elected in 1949. In the 1953 election, he was elected in the riding of Esquimalt—Saanich, British Columbia. He was re-elected in the 1957 and 1958 elections.

He was Minister of National Defence from 1957 to 1960 under Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. In 1958, Pearkes recommended that the Avro Arrow programme be cancelled. In a historic turningpoint for Canadian aviation, the costly programme was cancelled in 1959 in favour of a costly alliance on missile defense with NORAD. He resigned from federal politics in 1960.

Lieutenant governor[]

He became Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia on October 13, 1960, and became one of the few Lieutenant Governors to agree to an extended term, serving until July 1968.

In 1967, he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada.

Family[]

In August 1925, he married Constance Blytha Copeman. A daughter, Priscilla Edith ("Pep"), was born in 1928 though she died while still a young child. A son, John Andre, was born in 1931.

Legacy[]

Pearkes' name has been honoured in various ways, including:

  • George R. Pearkes Arena in Saanich, British Columbia.
  • Mount Pearkes, along the mainland British Columbia south coast.
  • The George R. Pearkes Children's Foundation
  • The George R. Pearkes Centre for Children, a treatment facility for children with cerebral palsy, now part of the Queen Alexandra Centre for Children's Health in Victoria, British Columbia.
  • General George R. Pearkes Elementary School in Hudson's Hope, British Columbia.
  • The George R. Pearkes Building which houses the Canadian Department of National Defence Headquarters, in Ottawa.
  • The George R. Pearkes, VC Branch of the Royal Canadian Legion in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.
  • CCGS George R. Pearkes, a Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker.
  • There are numerous thoroughfares named for him.

He donated a ceremonial sword to Berkhamsted School to be awarded each year to the school's best senior NCO cadet.

Victoria Cross[]

Details[]

He was 29 years old, and an Acting Major in the 5th Canadian Mounted Rifles, Canadian Expeditionary Force during the First World War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC.

On 30 October 1917 near Passchendaele, Belgium, Major Pearkes, although wounded in the right thigh, continued to lead his men with the utmost gallantry, despite many obstacles. It was entirely due to his determination and fearless personality that he was able to maintain his objective with the small number of men at his command against repeated enemy counter-attacks. His appreciation of the situation and the reports rendered by him were invaluable to his commanding officer. He showed throughout a supreme contempt of danger and wonderful powers of command and leadership.

Further information[]

He later achieved the rank of Major General. His grave/memorial are at Holy Trinity Cemetery, West Saanich, Sidney, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Section 4 - West. Headstone.

The medal[]

His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Canadian War Museum (Ottawa, Canada).

References[]

External links[]

Unrecognised parameter
Preceded by
Alan Chambers
Member of Parliament for Nanaimo
1945-1953
Succeeded by
Colin Cameron
Preceded by
The electoral district was created in 1952.
Member of Parliament for Esquimalt—Saanich
1953-1960
Succeeded by
George Louis Chatterton
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at George Pearkes and the edit history here.
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