V C for Colonel Keyes

SValentineJRM1251404v10009.jpg

Title

V C for Colonel Keyes

Description

Commando raid on Rommel's HQ, Posthumous award. Account of award of Victoria Cross to Lieutenant Colonel G C T Keyes for his part of a raid on Rommel's headquarters in Libya in November 1941 and an account of the action.

Date

1942-06-20

Temporal Coverage

Spatial Coverage

Language

Type

Format

One newspaper cutting mounted on a scrapbook page

Rights

This content is available under a CC BY-NC 4.0 International license (Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0). It has been published ‘as is’ and may contain inaccuracies or culturally inappropriate references that do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the University of Lincoln or the International Bomber Command Centre. For more information, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ and https://ibccdigitalarchive.lincoln.ac.uk/omeka/legal.

Identifier

SValentineJRM1251404v10009

Transcription

THE TIMES SATURDAY JUNE 20 1942

V.C. FOR COLONEL KEYES

COMMANDO RAID ON ROMMEL’S H.Q.

POSTHUMOUS AWARD

The posthumous award of the Victoria Cross to Lieutenant-Colonel G.C.T. Keyes, aged 24, the eldest son of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Keyes, who lost his life during a daring Commando raid on General Rommel’s headquarters in Libya in November, 1941, is announced in the [italics] London Gazette [/italics].

The official announcement says that the award, which has been approved by the King, is made to:-

Major (temp. Lieutenant-Colonel) GEOFFREY CHARLES TASKER KEYES, M.C., The Royal Scots Greys (2nd Dragoons), R.A.C.

Lieutenant-Colonel Keyes (the citation states) commanded a detachment of a force which landed some 250 miles behind the enemy lines to attack headquarters, base installations, and communications.

From the outset Colonel Keyes deliberately selected for himself the command of the detachment detailed to attack what was undoubtedly the most hazardous of these objectives – the residence and headquarters of the General Officer Commanding the German forces in North Africa. This attack, even if initially successful, meant almost certain death for those who took part in it.

He led his detachment without guides, in dangerous and precipitous country, and in pitch darkness, and maintained by his stolid determination and powers of leadership the moral of the detachment. He then found himself forced to modify his original plans in the light of fresh information elicited from neighbouring Arabs, and was left with only one officer and an n.c.o. with whom to break into General Rommel’s residence and deal with the guards and headquarters staff.

UP TO FRONT DOOR

At zero hour on the night of November 17-18, 1941, having dispatched the covering party to block the approaches to the house, he himself with the two others crawled forward past the guards, through the surrounding fence, and so up to the house itself. Without hesitation, he boldly led his party up to the front door, beat on the door and demanded entrance.

Unfortunately, when the door was opened, it was found impossible to overcome the sentry silently, and it was necessary to shoot him. The noise of the shot naturally aroused the inmates of the house, and Colonel Keyes, appreciating that speed was now of the utmost importance, posted the n.c.o. at the foot of the stairs to prevent interference from the floor above.

Colonel Keyes, who instinctively took the lead, emptied his revolver with great success into the first room and was followed by the other officer, who threw a grenade. Colonel Keyes, with great daring, then entered the second room on the ground floor, but was shot almost immediately on flinging open the door, and fell back into the passage mortally wounded. On being carried outside by his companions he died within a few minutes.

By his fearless disregard of the great dangers which he ran and of which he was fully aware, and by his magnificent leadership and outstanding gallantry, Lieutenant-Colonel Keyes set an example of supreme self-sacrifice and devotion to duty.

Citation

“V C for Colonel Keyes,” IBCC Digital Archive, accessed July 22, 2024, https://ibccdigitalarchive.lincoln.ac.uk/omeka/collections/document/20869.

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