PropertyValue
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rdfs:label
  • Frederick Browning
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  • Lieutenant-General Sir Frederick Arthur Montague Browning GCVO, KBE, CB, DSO (20 December 1896 – 14 March 1965) was a British Army officer who has been called the "father of the British airborne forces". He is best known as the commander of the I Airborne Corps and deputy commander of First Allied Airborne Army during Operation Market Garden. During the planning for this operation he memorably said: "I think we might be going a bridge too far." He was also an Olympic bobsleigh competitor, and the husband of author Daphne du Maurier.
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Unit
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dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
serviceyears
  • 1915
Birth Date
  • 1896-10-20
Commands
death place
  • Menabilly, Cornwall
Spouse
Nickname
  • Tommy
  • Boy
Name
  • Sir Frederick Arthur Montague Browning
Caption
  • Browning as Commander, 1st Airborne Division, October 1942
Birth Place
  • Kensington
Title
Awards
death date
  • 1965-03-14
Rank
Battles
Years
  • 1941
  • 1943
  • 1946
Alt
  • View from waist up of a man with short hair and moustache in battle dress with campaign ribbons. He is wearing a tie, airborne shoulder tabs, a maroon beret with a general's badge on it, and major-general's rank badges.
Relations
laterwork
servicenumber
  • 22588
abstract
  • Lieutenant-General Sir Frederick Arthur Montague Browning GCVO, KBE, CB, DSO (20 December 1896 – 14 March 1965) was a British Army officer who has been called the "father of the British airborne forces". He is best known as the commander of the I Airborne Corps and deputy commander of First Allied Airborne Army during Operation Market Garden. During the planning for this operation he memorably said: "I think we might be going a bridge too far." He was also an Olympic bobsleigh competitor, and the husband of author Daphne du Maurier. A graduate of Eton College and the Royal Military College Sandhurst, Browning was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Grenadier Guards in 1915. During the First World War he fought on the Western Front, and was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for conspicuous gallantry during the Battle of Cambrai in November 1917. In September 1918, he became aide de camp to General Sir Henry Rawlinson. After the war, he competed in the bobsleigh at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz, Switzerland, in which his team finished tenth. He married Daphne du Maurier in July 1932. During the Second World War, Browning commanded the 1st Airborne Division and I Airborne Corps. He led the latter during Operation Market Garden, travelling by glider to participate in the assault. In December 1944 he became Chief of Staff of Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten's South East Asia Command. From 1946 to 1948, he was Military Secretary of the War Office. In January 1948, Browning became Comptroller and Treasurer to Her Royal Highness Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh. After she ascended to the throne to become Queen Elizabeth II in 1952, he became treasurer in the Office of the Duke of Edinburgh. He suffered a severe nervous breakdown in 1957 and retired in 1959. He died at Menabilly, the mansion that inspired his wife's novel Rebecca, on 14 March 1965.
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