翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Tony Jewell
・ Tony Jewell (doctor)
・ Tony Jewell (footballer)
・ Tony Jimenez
・ Tony Joe
・ Tony Hepburn
・ Tony Herbert
・ Tony Herlihy
・ Tony Herman
・ Tony Hervey
・ Tony Heurtebis
・ Tony Hewitt
・ Tony Hewson
・ Tony Hey
・ Tony Hibbert
Tony Hibbert (British Army officer)
・ Tony Hibbert (musician)
・ Tony Hicks
・ Tony Higgins
・ Tony Hill
・ Tony Hill (Australian footballer)
・ Tony Hill (defensive end)
・ Tony Hill (politician)
・ Tony Hill (umpire)
・ Tony Hill (wide receiver)
・ Tony Hiller
・ Tony Hillerman
・ Tony Hills
・ Tony Hills (American football)
・ Tony Hinkle


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Tony Hibbert (British Army officer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Tony Hibbert (British Army officer)
Tony Hibbert, MBE MC (6 December 1917 - 12 October 2014),〔(Roll Call: Major Tony Hibbert, MBE MC ) ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)〕 was a British Army officer who fought in the Second World War. During a military career that began in 1935 and ended in 1947,〔(Obituary—Major James Anthony Hibbert, MBE MC ) Trebah Garden website〕 Hibbert saw action in the Battle of France, the North African Campaign, the Italian Campaign and Operation Market Garden. After these battles, he led a T-Force unit in Operation Eclipse, a campaign carried out by the Allies shortly before V-E Day.
In civilian life, after his time in the army, Hibbert enlarged and diversified his family’s wine and spirits business. His restless first retirement, begun in the early 1970s, was followed by a 1981 retirement attempt that led his wife and him to ownership of Cornwall's Trebah Garden, which they went on to restore to its prewar splendor.〔 In 2009, after nearly sixty years of marriage, Hibbert became a widower.〔 Five years later, he died peacefully, at home.
==Beginning of military career==
James Anthony Hibbert was born in Chertsey, Surrey.〔(Obituary of Major Tony Hibbert ) ''The Independent'', 17 October 2014.〕 Son of a Royal Flying Corps pilot,〔(Major James Anthony Hibbert ), The Pegasus Archive—The Battle of Arnhem Archive〕〔(Major Tony Hibbert - obituary ) ''The Telegraph'', 19 October 2014.〕〔(Extended Biography of Tony Hibbert ) Compiled by Tony Hibbert and Harvey Grenville. ParaData, Airborne Assault (Registered Charity)〕 Hibbert decided to enter the British Army while he was in Germany, working as a vineyard apprentice for his family's wine business.〔〔〔 Having seen that Germany was preparing for war, he returned to England in 1935 and applied to the Royal Military Academy.〔〔 His father, who thought Germany would not go to war, after the defeat it had suffered in World War I, was upset by his decision to abandon his apprenticeship.〔
In January 1938, Hibbert was commissioned into the Royal Artillery.〔 On 9 September 1939,〔 less than ten days after the German invasion of Poland, he arrived in Cherbourg, France, with the British Expeditionary Force.〔 In the Battle of Dunkirk, he commanded a half-battery that defended the Allies' northern perimeter for four days. On 1 June 1940, his ammunition supply depleted, he was forced to destroy his guns.〔〔〔(Trebah My Story, Page 18: Hibbert and Bradshaw Families—Major Hibberts Log ) As captured by Internet Archive Wayback Machine 20 Aug 2011〕 Evacuated from Dunkirk on the tugboat "Sun X," Hibbert was mentioned in dispatches that described his meritorious actions in the face of the enemy and were sent to the high command.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tony Hibbert (British Army officer)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.