David Tyacke had the honour of being the last Commanding Officer of the Duke of Cornwalls Light Infantry (DCLI). He ordered from 1957 until 1 Oct 1959, when the Battalion amalgamated with the Somerset Light Infantry.
A renowned infantryman who served underneath such wartime leaders as Montgomery, Wingate, Mountbatten and Slim, he was innate and brought up in the Cornish encampment of Breage. "I can snippet back, father and son, to at slightest 1620," he said. His father had fought at Ypres and Arras prior to being killed nearby the River Somme in 1918, and David was preoccupied by troops story not merely the weapons and strategy but the concomitant amicable aspects. After Malvern College (1929-33) and Sandhurst, he assimilated the 2nd Battalion DCLI in 1935 and trafficked to India the following year to stick on the 1st Battalion. While he was on leave fight was spoken and he was sent to France with the 2nd Battalion.
Following Dunkirk the DCLI was reformed at Sherborne, where Tyacke tied together Diana in Jun 1940. "Six days after we were sent to man the defences of Selsey Bill, where we remained via the Battle of Britain," he said. "By the autumn we had changed to Southampton, where we came underneath the authority of General Montgomery. He was a tough taskmaster but most reputable by the soldiers since they knew he would keep them informed. He was a autarchic e.g. of meaningful the worth of communications."
In 1943, right away a Major, he was drafted to Burma to work underneath General Orde Wingate, after whose genocide the Chindits came underneath the approach authority of the US ubiquitous "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell who, Tyacke said, "lived up to his nickname." Of all the wartime leaders with whom Tyacke served he defended his biggest indebtedness for General Bill Slim. "His feat in defeating an stern rivalry with his "Forgotten XIV Army" in the face of all the logistic and meridian difficulties involved, contingency put him between the biggest troops commanders of all time," he said.
After a spell at the War Office he was second-in-command of the DCLI in the West Indies. On the Battalions lapse to Bodmin from the West Indies and graduation to Commanding Officer in 1957, Tyacke took piece in the centenary jubilee of the successful counterclaim of Lucknow. Promoted to Major General, Tyacke became General Officer Commanding the Singapore District with shortcoming over a far-flung area together with Brunei and Bangkok. In 1970 he late from the Army, vital in Winchester and operative in London as Controller of the Army Benevolent Fund.
Major General David Tyacke: innate Breage, Cornwall eighteen Nov 1915; tied together Diana (one son); CB; OBE; died Winchester 10 Feb 2010.
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