His studies, however, were interrupted by the Second World War. In February 1942, he was one of a group consisting mostly of classicists from Oxford and Cambridge who were assigned to study Japanese at the secret Bedford Japanese School run by Captain Oswald Tuck of the Royal Navy. Lloyd-Jones was in the first course run at the school, which lasted for only five months. After Bedford he was sent to the Military Wing at Bletchley Park, and then he received further training at the Foreign Office and the Ministry of Economic Warfare. He was granted an emergency commission as a second lieutenant in the British Indian Army on 15 December 1942.[4] Subsequently he was posted to the Wireless Experimental Centre, Delhi, where he worked as an officer in the Intelligence Corps. According to Oswald Tuck's account, these three were the "key men" at the Wireless Experimental Centre. He transferred to the British Army on 1 September 1945, with seniority in the rank of lieutenant from 15 June 1943.[5] Following the end of the war, he was invited to join the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan, but turned it down as he was eager to get back to his studies.[6][7] He ended the war as a captain.[2]
Career
Lloyd-Jones took a first degree in Greats in 1948 and gained several university prizes. For a while he was a Fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge, and while there met his first wife, Frances Hedley, a classics student at Newnham College, whom he married in 1953. The couple had two sons and a daughter and were divorced in 1981. In 1951 Lloyd-Jones returned to Oxford where he became the first holder of the E. P. Warren Praelectorship at Corpus Christi College.[2]
Lloyd-Jones supervised many distinguished D. Phil. students, including Martin Litchfield West. In his inaugural address as Regius Professor in 1961 he called for a reduction in the emphasis laid on composition taught to undergraduates and suggested that Honour Moderations might have to be reformed to encompass studies taken from ancient philosophy and history as well as the traditional literature and language.[1]
— (1990). Greek Comedy, Hellenistic Literature, Greek Religion, and Miscellanea: The Academic Papers of Sir Hugh Lloyd-Jones. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN0198147457.
— (1990). Greek Epic, Lyric, and Tragedy: The Academic Papers of Sir Hugh Lloyd Jones. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN0198146809.
^Peter Kornicki, Captain Oswald Tuck and the Bedford Japanese School, 1942-1945 (London: Pollino Publishing, 2019).
^Peter Kornicki, Eavesdropping on the Emperor: Interrogators and Codebreakers in Britain's War with Japan (London: Hurst & Co., 2021), pp. 125-126, 140-142, 144-145.