During the war Tickell served in the Middle East, and in 1940 was appointed Director of Works with Middle East Command. In 1944, still in the Middle East, he was briefly made Engineer-in-Chief with Middle East Command, before being made Director of Works with the 21st Army Group, from 1944−1945.[1] Engineer-in-Chief with the British Liberation Army in 1945, he returned that year to the War Office to be made Engineer-in-Chief.[1][4]
Tickell was invested as a Companion of the Order of the Bath in 1942[5] and as a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1945.[6] After being made President of the Institution of Royal Engineers in 1948, a post he retained until 1951, he retired from the British Army in 1949 but the next year he was made Colonel Commandant of the Royal Engineer Corps until 1958, as well as, in 1953, becoming Honorary Colonel of the Army Emergency Reserve Royal Engineers Resource Unit, until 1959.[1] Tickell died in Surrey on 28 December 1972, shortly after turning 79.[1]
Family
His father, Charles Tickell, was a Civil Engineer who worked for the Maharajah of Kashmir. His son was Major General Marston Tickell, also a Royal Engineer.[7]