Major-General Ladislaus Herbert Richard Pope-HennessyCBDSO (18 August 1875 – 1 March 1942) was a British Army officer of Irish Catholic descent who served in both the Second Boer War and First World War.[1] In 1905, he led a punitive expedition which resulted in the killings of 1,850 men, women and children of the Kipsigis tribe.
In June 1905, in response to attacks on native Maasai people by the Kipsigis people in the East Africa Protectorate, Pope-Hennessy led an expedition to subdue the latter. During the expedition, Pope-Hennessy's men raided the town of Sotik, resulting in a massacre which involved the deaths of 1,850 men, women and children.[3][4]
Following the success of the expedition, Pope-Hennessy, promoted to major in March 1906,[5] was made commandant of the 4th Battalion, King's African Rifles in 1906 for which service was appointed a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order in 1908.[2]
After the war he was promoted to brevet colonel in January 1919[7] and, promoted again, now to colonel (with seniority backdated to January 1919[8]), he served as a staff officer at the War Office and then was Military Inter-Allied Commissioner of Control in Berlin. Subsequently, he spent three years as military attaché in Washington D.C.[9] He was promoted to substantive major general in August 1930[10] and became general Officer Commanding 50th (Northumbrian) Division in 1931 before retiring in 1935.[11]
Pope-Hennessy published a number of books an articles on military matters and in one of them he predicted the technique of the German Blitzkrieg.[6]
Political career
He took particular interest in military matters and in issues affecting his native Ireland. In 1919 he had published 'The Irish Dominion: a Method of Approach to a Settlement'.[2]
He was Liberal candidate for the Tonbridge Division of Kent at the 1935 General Election. Tonbridge was a safe Conservative seat that they had won at every election since it was created in 1918. The Liberal Party had not fielded a candidate at the previous general election and he was not expected to win and finished a poor third.[12]
He married, in 1910, Una Birch a writer, historian and biographer. They had two sons,[2] both of whom were gay: James, who became a writer, and Sir John, an art historian.[13]