Montgomery, Bernard

From Astro-Databank
Jump to: navigation, search
Name
Montgomery, Bernard Gender: M
Bernard Law Montgomery
born on 17 November 1887 at 21:17 (= 9:17 PM )
Place London, England, 51n30, 0w10
Timezone GMT h0e (is standard time)
Data source
From memory
Rodden Rating A
Collector: Blackwell
Astrology data s_su.18.gif s_scocol.18.gif 25°15' s_mo.18.gif s_capcol.18.gif 00°05 Asc.s_leocol.18.gif 07°52'



Bernard Montgomery

Biography

British military leader, commander of the British 8th Army during World War II, noted for heroic, winning victories in both North Africa and Europe. Hard driving, self-confident and a highly individual leader, he inspired his men and became an idol in Great Britain. He began as an Infantry Lieutenant in 1908 and served in France during WW I, beginning WW II as a Major General. In later years, he served as deputy supreme commander of NATO.

The son of an Episcopal bishop, Bernard Law Montgomery was educated at the Royal Military College. He entered the British Army in 1908 and served in World War I as a captain. Wounded twice, he received the D.S.O. in 1914, and the Croix de Guerre. By 1931, he was a lieutenant colonel and was given command of the 1st Battalion. In 1934, he was promoted to colonel, and became an instructor in the Staff College at Quetta, India. Various upward commands continued to be assigned to him, and he was a major general when England entered World War II. In December 1941, he was named general officer commander in chief of the South Eastern Command. In 1942, he was appointed commander of the British Eighth Army in Africa. In 1943, he gained victory over Rommel in southern Tunisia. He served under General Dwight D. Eisenhower from December 1943 to August 1944, when he was promoted to field marshal.

In 1946, Montgomery was created viscount and made chief of the imperial general staff. In later years, after the war, he was deputy supreme commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization from 1951-1958. His writings include his memoirs, published in 1958, and "The Path to Leadership," published in 1961.

He married a widow, Betty Carver, in 1927. They had one son. She died in 1937, and he died on 24 March 1976, aged 88, in Alton, England.

Link to Wikipedia biography

Relationships

  • associate relationship with Tedder, Arthur (born 11 July 1890). Notes: Tedder advocated Montgomery's removal
  • other associate with Hunter, Robert (born 14 July 1915). Notes: Personal Physician
  • role played of/by Richardson, Ian (born 7 April 1934). Notes: 1979 TV miniseries "Ike;" 1979 BBC play "Churchill and the Generals"

Events

  • Relationship : Marriage 1927 (Betty Carver)
  • Death of Mate 1937 (Betty Carver)
  • Work : Gain social status August 1944 (Promoted to Field Marshall)
    chart Placidus Equal_H.

Source Notes

Fagan in AFA 7/1948 quotes "mom's memory." Given as GMT. Blackwell gives Kensington, London.

Categories

  • Traits : Personality : Aggressive/ brash (Self-confident, driving)
  • Family : Childhood : Family noted (Dad famed general)
  • Family : Relationship : Number of Marriages (One)
  • Family : Relationship : Widowed (Widowed after ten years)
  • Family : Parenting : Kids 1-3 (One son)
  • Personal : Death : Long life more than 80 yrs (Age 88)
  • Vocation : Military : Military career (General)
  • Vocation : Military : Military career (Field Marshall)
  • Vocation : Misc. : Farmer/ Rancher (Farmer after retirement)
  • Notable : Famous : Top 5% of Profession