When the Second World War began in September 1939, Bols moved through several staff officer positions, serving in several institutions and Army formations before being promoted to colonel and taking charge of all training for the troops under the command of 21st Army Group and helping to plan Operation Overlord, the Alliedinvasion of Normandy. Bols was then promoted again and commanded the 185th Infantry Brigade during the Allied advance through Western Europe, before taking over command of the 6th Airborne Division from Major General Richard Gale in late 1944. He led the division in the Battle of the Bulge, as well as Operation Varsity, the airborne operation to cross the River Rhine, then led the division into northern Germany until the end of the conflict. Canadian paratroopers captured the town of Wismar in the late days of the war, in order to stop the Soviet army from invading Denmark. Bols was the officer who met face-to-face with the Soviets in Wismar, insisting on allied hold of the captured city, contrary to Yalta conference agreements. He effected a temporary Soviet halt. In the meantime, Lübeck and Hamburg could surrender to allied troops, and finally Denmark was liberated by the allies under the command of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery. After the end of the war Bols remained in command of the division in peace-keeping duties in the Middle East, and then retired in 1948 as a major general.[2]
Early life
Eric Bols was born in Camberley, Surrey, on 8 June 1904. His father, Louis Jean Bols, was born in Cape Town, South Africa, and was the son of the Belgian Consul stationed in Quebec and later London, Louis Michel Guillaume Joseph Bols. Louis Bols, who was a dual British and Belgian national, travelled around the world and mastered some foreign languages, before eventually meeting his wife and settling down. He served as an officer in the British Army during the First World War, acting as the chief of staff for General Sir Edmund Allenby for the majority of the conflict.[3] Eric Bols was born when his father was attending the Staff College, Camberley, and was educated in several institutions.[1][4][5]
Military career
Early career
"I liked him a lot. He was very good with the young chaps and was popular[...]He had the ability to get on well with people who were a couple of decades younger than himself. He was very proud of the Grenadier Guards and made people look up and not down, but with no personal arrogance."
After attending the Royal Military College at Sandhurst he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Devonshire Regiment, his father's regiment, on 30 January 1924.[6][1][4][5][2]Robert King and Cecil Firbank were among his graduates, both also future major-generals. Bols was promoted to lieutenant on 31 January 1926,[7] and in 1927, Bols was sent with the 1st Battalion, Devonshire Regiment to China, first being stationed in Hong Kong but later moving to Shanghai, his battalion being tasked with helping to keep the peace in the region. However, he did not stay for very long in China, with his early career being marked by a series of rapid transfers from region to region, and by 1928 he was stationed in Malta, where he found himself playing polo with then-LordLouis Mountbatten of the Royal Navy, who was also stationed on the island at the same time.[8] From here his career progressed rapidly, appointed an instructor at the Signals School at Catterick Garrison from 27 June 1928 to 29 December 1931 and then becoming an officer of a Company of Cadets at Sandhurst from 6 May 1934 to 21 January 1935 and then to study at the Staff College, Camberley.[8][9][10][11][12][13] He was also promoted to captain from that date, transferring to the King's Regiment (Liverpool), there being no vacancies in the Devonshires.[8][14][2]
Bols returned to regimental duty for a few months from 22 December 1936,[15] having completed the staff course. On 30 August 1937 he was seconded to the staff of the Ceylon Defence Force with the local rank of major.[16][2]
Not long afterwards, Bols was unexpectedly offered the command of the 6th Airborne Division by Field MarshalSir Bernard Montgomery, commander of the 21st Army Group on the Western Front. Surprised by the news, he later claimed that, "I nearly fell backwards."[21] Prior to this, Bols had not previously commanded a military formation as large as a division.[22] Bols took command shortly before Christmas of 1944, superseding the previous General Officer Commanding (GOC), Major General Richard Gale, who had raised the division in May 1943 and commanded it during Operation Tonga, the British airborne landings in Normandy some six months earlier.[23] He was granted the acting rank of major-general from 6 December 1944.[24][2] The division was composed of the 3rd Parachute Brigade, under Brigadier James Hill, the 5th Parachute Brigade, under Brigadier Nigel Poett, and the 6th Airlanding Brigade, under Brigadier Edwin Flavell (although he was soon replaced by Brigadier Hugh Bellamy), along with various other supporting units. When Bols took command the division was back in the United Kingdom, expecting a quiet Christmas training and reorganising after being withdrawn from Normandy, where it had suffered heavy casualties, in September. However, with the situation in the Ardennes deteriorating the division was instead sent to Belgium and thrown into the Battle of the Bulge, the largest battle fought on the Western Front during the Second World War, to support American forces in repelling the German counter-offensive between December 1944 and January 1945, one of only a small number of British formations to be engaged in the predominantly-American battle.[1] The 6th Airborne Division conducted a counter-attack, beginning on 3 January alongside other British units, advancing against fierce German resistance until the division linked up with elements of Lieutenant General George S. Patton's U.S. Third Army.[1]
The division was not engaged in heavy fighting and was withdrawn back to England towards the end of February to prepare for its next mission. Bols then commanded the division as it participated in Operation Varsity, the Allied airborne assault over the Rhine, which the Allied armies has by now reached and were preparing to cross.[22] Serving alongside the 6th Airborne Division was the U.S. 17th Airborne Division, commanded by Major GeneralWilliam M. Miley, both of which were serving under the command of Major General Matthew Ridgway's U.S. XVIII Airborne Corps.[1] Bols landed with the divisional glider troops in the initial phases of the operation and commanded from the front, for which he received both a Bar to his DSO and the American Silver Star (upon the recommendation of Ridgway, the corps commander) as a result.[25][26][27][28][29] Despite both divisions sustaining heavy casualties, Ridgway wrote about the operation, stating that:
The impact of the airborne divisions at one blow shattered hostile defence and permitted the prompt link-up with ground troops. The increased bridgehead materially assisted the build-up essential for ultimate success.[30]
After the division had crossed the Rhine, it then advanced through the North German Plain until it linked up with Russian forces at Wismar on the Baltic on 2 May, the first British unit to do so,[1] most of the 350-odd mile advance being made by the airborne troops largely on foot.[31] The end of the Second World War in Europe followed just days later. On 5 July 1945 Bols was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB).[32]
Post-war
At the end of the war Bols retained the temporary rank of major-general (and his war substantive rank was increased to colonel)[33][2] and with it command of the 6th Airborne Division. On 21 September 1945 he traveled to Egypt with his HQ staff, arriving shortly after at his final destination, Tel Aviv. The rest of the division followed.[34] He commanded the division whilst it conducted peace-keeping duties in Palestine during the Palestine Emergency.[3] He returned to England, where he attended the Imperial Defence College the following year, before returning to his division in December 1946, succeeding Major General James Cassels who had been in command in Bols's absence.[2]
After almost three years service in the Middle East, Bols retired from the British Army with the honorary rank of major-general (his actual regimental rank was still that of lieutenant colonel) on 8 January 1948.[1][35][36][2]
Later life
In 1965, it was reported by The Times that the former Russian General and then Soviet Deputy Defence Minister Konstantin Rokossovsky argued in a journal article that Bols had attempted to use the 6th Airborne Division to 'infiltrate' Russian lines. Rokossovsky claimed that the division had manoeuvered behind Soviet troops advancing towards Lübeck, and Russian troops had only avoided opening fire on the airborne troops when they had recognized the British uniforms they wore.[37]
Bols died at his home at Peppering Eye, near Battle in East Sussex on 14 June 1985 at the age of 81.[1]
References
^ abcdefghi"Obituary—Maj-Gen E. L. Bols—Command of airborne assault over the Rhine". Obituaries. The Times. No. 62164. London. 14 June 1985. col G, p. 16.