The Path of Duty: The Life and Times of Bill Beyts
(eBook)

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Published
BookBaby, 2014.
Status
Available Online

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Format
eBook
Language
English
ISBN
9781483544359

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APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Ian Trenowden., Ian Trenowden|AUTHOR., & Mark Trenowden|AUTHOR. (2014). The Path of Duty: The Life and Times of Bill Beyts . BookBaby.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Ian Trenowden, Ian Trenowden|AUTHOR and Mark Trenowden|AUTHOR. 2014. The Path of Duty: The Life and Times of Bill Beyts. BookBaby.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Ian Trenowden, Ian Trenowden|AUTHOR and Mark Trenowden|AUTHOR. The Path of Duty: The Life and Times of Bill Beyts BookBaby, 2014.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Ian Trenowden, Ian Trenowden|AUTHOR, and Mark Trenowden|AUTHOR. The Path of Duty: The Life and Times of Bill Beyts BookBaby, 2014.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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Grouped Work ID047860de-291e-e981-a1ba-623625e7075e-eng
Full titlepath of duty the life and times of bill beyts
Authortrenowden ian
Grouping Categorybook
Last Update2023-04-10 20:03:29PM
Last Indexed2024-04-17 23:12:14PM

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Image Sourcehoopla
First LoadedJan 9, 2023
Last UsedNov 11, 2023

Hoopla Extract Information

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    [synopsis] => The Path of Duty charts the progress of a child of the Raj, Brigadier Geoffrey Herbert Bruno Beyts MC, DSO, MBE known less formally as Bill or 'Billy'. During a career with the Indian Army he saw action against Burmese rebels, Waziri tribesman and the Japanese Army. In 1930, aged only 22 and commanding a company of his father's old Regiment, the Third Battalion, Sixth Rajputana Rifles, Beyts was allotted an area of Burmese teak forest the size of Wales to the west of the Irrawaddy river. Large areas of the country were in revolt, and Beyts was given a target list of 100 rebels. By the time he and his company emerged from the jungle, nine months later, every man on the list had been either killed or captured. For his conduct of these operations Beyts was awarded a Military Cross. Thirteen years later, and by now commanding his battalion, Beyts was again in Burma at the forefront of Field Marshal Slim's pursuit of the retreating Japanese. He took part in the crossing of the Irrawaddy and the subsequent breakout, and played an important part in the capture of Maymyo and the Japanese mint there, which contained millions of rupees. After the capture of Mandalay, Beyts was promoted to brigadier and commanded his brigade for the remainder of the campaign. He was also awarded a DSO to add to the three mentions in dispatches he had already earned during the advance from the Chindwin. Commissioned in 1928, he sailed to India to serve the customary year with a British battalion before joining his Indian Regiment. At the end of the year his battalion, the Northumberland Fusiliers, invited him to remain, but he declined, preferring to join the Third Battalion, Sixth Rajputana Rifles. In 1930 he went to Burma. He also spent some time as part of the garrison of Fort Dufferin in Mandalay, which stood him in good stead when that city was captured in 1945. In 1936, he saw action again in the Waziristan campaign, after which he passed the Staff College examination, being the first officer of his battalion to do so. He did not see his men again for another six years. In September 1939 he was appointed as a GSO3 at the War Staff of the India Office, and later with Middle East Operations at the War Office. He then returned to Britain to set up a resistance organisation which became Auxiliary Units. For these services Beyts was awarded the MBE, and in August 1942 he was sent to India as Chief of Staff to Colin McKenzie, who was setting up the SOE resistance organisation (later renamed Force 136) in South East Asia. At the end of 1943, he returned to regimental soldering, commanding his battalion, and later the brigade of which it formed a part, until the end of the Burma campaign. After a short period of leave in England, Beyts helped to plan the program for the Indian Army Victory Contingent, before returning to India in 1946, to take command of the Infantry School at Mhow. At independence, Beyts left India for Kenya, thus severing the last link of a family that had served in India for 340 years. Arriving in Kenya, he planned to start a dairy farm, but finding that, even after diversifying, this project alone could not support his family, he applied for an appointment with the Kenya Administration. While his wife ran the farm, Beyts served as District Commissioner for the Mweiga area. The district included "Treetops" and in 1952, it fell to Beyts to tell Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip that King George VI had died. In 1962, in the wake of the Mau Mau rebellion, Beyts was advised to leave Kenya. He was, however, unable to sell his farm, and received no compensation. The fruits of 13 years' work and the capital put into the farm were thereby lost.
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