Joseph Baillon | |
---|---|
Born |
Wandsworth, London, England |
6 October 1895
Died | 11 April 1951 | (aged 55)
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service/ |
British Army |
Years of service | 1915–1949 |
Rank | Major-General |
Unit | South Staffordshire Regiment |
Commands held | Aldershot District |
Battles/wars |
World War I World War II |
Awards |
Commander of the Order of the British Empire Military Cross |
Other work | Director, Messrs Beamish and Crawford Ltd, Brewers, Cork, 1949-1951. |
Major-General Joseph Aloysius Baillon CB CBE MC (1895–1951) was a senior British Army officer who served in both World War I and World War II.
Joseph Baillon was the seventh son of Louis Augustin and Mary Julia Baillon (at some time residents of the Falkland Islands). He was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham and at St Bede's College.
He married, in 1925, Gertrude Emily Fellowes Prynne of Plymouth; the couple had two sons and one daughter.
Baillon was commissioned into the South Staffordshire Regiment in 1915 during World War I. After a period stationed in Egypt, he was He earned his MC during the advance to Abancourt in 1918.
As Adjutant during the advance through Abancourt on the afternoon of 9 October 1918, he frequently, under heavy fire, proceeded in advance of the battalion in order to find the route. Both before and after this event he carried out his duties regardless of his personal safety under the most adverse conditions, and often under heavy artillery fire.
Baillon remained with the South Staffordshires until 1931, as adjutant or as staff captain. From 1936 and 1945, he was employed as a General Staff Officer in the Middle East, Australia and Britain.
In World War II, from September 1942 until November 1943 as an Acting Major-General, Baillon was Chief of the General Staff for Persia and Iraq Command in 1942, under General Wilson, its new head. They were concerned about the influence of Fazlollah Zahedi, the general in charge of the Persian forces in the Isfahan area, who, their intelligence told them, was stockpiling grain, liaising with German agents, and preparing an uprising. Baillon and Bullard asked Fitzroy Maclean, one of the inspirations for James Bond, to remove Zahidi alive and without creating a fuss. Maclean devised a Trojan horse plan: he and a senior officer would call on Zahidi to pay their respects, and then arrest him "at the point of a pistol" within his walled and guarded residence. At the end of this posting, he was awarded a CBE.