240636 Peter DOYLE, 1 Irish Guards

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    Last edited: Nov 12, 2019
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    Personal Number: 240636
    Rank: Major
    Name: Peter DOYLE
    Unit: Irish Guards

    London Gazette : 14 August 1942
    https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/35666/supplement/3550/data.pdf
    FOOT GUARDS
    The undermentioned Cadets to be 2nd Lts.:—
    1st Aug. 1942:—
    I..G'ds.
    Peter DOYLE (240636).

    London Gazette : 1 January 1946
    https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/37416/supplement/194/data.pdf
    I. G'ds.
    The undermentioned 2nd Lts. to be Lts., 2nd Jan. 1946, with seniority as shown:—
    War Subs. Lt.. Peter DOYLE (240636) from emerg. commn., 2nd Feb. 1945.

    London Gazette : 23 August 1949
    https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/38696/supplement/4062/data.pdf
    Short Serv.Commn.
    I. G'ds.
    Lt. P. DOYLE (240636) to be Capt., 2nd Aug. 1949.

    London Gazette : 21 September 1956
    https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/40882/supplement/5343/data.pdf
    I.G.
    REGULAR ARMY.
    Capt. P. DOYLE (240636) to be Maj., 2nd Aug. 1956.

    London Gazette : 2 August 1977
    https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/47289/supplement/9974/data.pdf
    GUARDS DIVISION
    REGULAR ARMY
    Maj. P. DOYLE (240636) I.G. retires on retired pay, 2nd Aug. 1977.
     
    Last edited: Oct 24, 2019
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    The Guards Magazine

    Major Peter Doyle
    Late Irish Guards
    by Brigadier R T P Hume
    formerly Irish Guards


    [​IMG]
    Peter Doyle
    was born in 1922 in London and he went to school first at Lambrook in Ascot and then to Eton where he excelled at both cricket and tennis. At the start of the War in 1940 his grandfather persuaded Peter to join the Army, in order to follow him into the Seaforth Highlanders. To this end he enlisted into the Black Watch young soldiers’ Battalion, where he had the odd distinction of sharing a billet, and in the next bed to a ‘not-proven murderer’, as they were known in those days.

    Peter’s father died in action early in the War and his godfather prompted him to join the Irish Guards into which he was commissioned in 1942. He joined the 3rd Battalion and he served with them with gallantry and distinction from Normandy as a platoon commander through to Cuxhaven at the end of the War when he was Second in Command of his Company. During this time he was in action with the Guards Armoured Division in Ops Goodwood, Bluecoat, Grouse and Market Garden and at Joe’s Bridge. Although his Battalion suffered heavy causalities during this time, he came through unscathed.
    He then went to Palestine with 1st Guards Brigade and whilst there he sadly contracted Polio. The army doctors initially and incorrectly treated him for Sand Fever and transferred him to a hospital in Jerusalem where he received little help with his Polio. He recalled a somewhat callous nurse there saying ‘none of you lot can die tonight as the slab is full’. Thankfully he then went back home to Cambridge Military Hospital at Aldershot where he recovered after a year but was left disabled for life.

    With great courage he continued to play cricket and tennis, albeit with the help of a fellow officer as a runner. He served then in the 1st Battalion in England, and in Rhine Army. He was also Company Commander of 5 Company at Caterham. In 1953 he was an Usher inside the Abbey at the Queens’s Coronation.

    In 1955 he married Anne Stevenson-Hamilton, and his career continued at the MOD in Military Intelligence under Pat Robertson. His options were obviously limited by his disability (lameness) and he did a number of staff jobs in BAOR and UK.

    Peter retired from the Regular Army in 1977 and then did various RO jobs for a further 10 years. Until his illness he had been a keen athlete and a talented games player and in later life he became a golfer playing with a number of his old comrades from the Regiment.

    His final years were spent in a nursing home in Brockhampton until in his 93rd year when appropriately on St Patrick’s Day 2015 he became ill and shortly after died. He was one of that rare breed of men who served a full 47 years in the Army; a popular and well respected Mick Officer throughout his long and exemplary life in both war and peace. Quis Separabit.
     
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    His father:

    Casualty
    Lieutenant Colonel DOYLE, JAMES OWEN
    Service Number 11666
    Died 02/07/1943
    Aged 44
    North Staffordshire Regiment (formerly Cdg. 5th (A.A.) North Staffs. Regt.) seconded to General Staff East African Command; East African Forces
    T D
    Son of Amos and Rose Doyle; husband of Jean Doyle.
    Commemorated at BROOKWOOD 1939-1945 MEMORIAL
    Location: Surrey, United Kingdom
    Cemetery/memorial reference: Panel 13. Column 3.


    Person Page
     

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