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| Military History Companion: William Slim |
Slim, FM William (Joseph), 1st Viscount of Yarralumla and Bishopston (1891-1970). Slim and Montgomery, both commissioned into the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, are two of Britain's outstanding commanders of WW II, and could not be more different. Slim had none of the flair or PR skills of Monty, and initially, little of the self-confidence that might have been bestowed by a more comfortable background, like that of Alexander. His core skill—which took him to the top—was his ability to manage men. Slim, of a lower middle-class urban parentage, was a product of the University Officer Training Corps (OTC) system, which taught basic military skills to the better-educated with a view to a Territorial commission. Commissioned in August 1914, Slim was wounded at Gallipoli and in Mesopotamia, where he gained an MC. He was rescued from his fear of returning to an uninspiring office life in Birmingham by transfer to the Indian army, where he gained a permanent commission and could live on his pay. His inter-war career was slow (as it was for all between 1919 and 1939), but he attended staff college and commanded a Gurkha battalion.
As commander of 10th Indian Infantry Brigade, Slim took part in the conquest of Abyssinia in 1940. The campaign did not go well for him, either as a commander, or physically—he was wounded again in January 1941. Later that year, as its COS, he accompanied an Expeditionary Force to attack Vichy French units and native pro-Nazi forces in Iraq. Within days, the GOC of 10th Indian Division had fallen ill, and Slim replaced him. He was a success at this level of command, and in March 1942 was promoted to command the Burma Corps, who had been chased out of Rangoon by the Japanese (see Burma campaign). Here, he was able to employ his best talents—that of talking to soldiers and restoring their morale. Ever since Gallipoli, Slim had possessed the ‘common touch’ of being able to level with his men, and get them to do his bidding.
Although he still had to conduct a 900 mile (1, 448 km) retreat to India, Slim turned it from a disorderly panic into a controlled military withdrawal. By May his force had reached India, but he suffered from a difference of style to his superior, the patrician Alexander. This disagreement and the fact that the reconquest of Burma was a low priority for Churchill meant that it was not until April 1943 that Slim's next command, XV Corps, saw action in the Arakan. Despite the setback there, he was promoted in October 1943 to command of the Eastern Army (later renamed Fourteenth Army), as a result of the arrival of Mountbatten as Supreme Commander South-East Asia. The new supremo recognized in Slim a tenacity and aggressiveness lacking in his contemporaries. Both as XV Corps and Fourteenth Army commander, Slim emphasized jungle warfare training for all his men—even the HQ staff; early Burma garrisons had been little more than a colonial gendarmerie. This provided his soldiers with a new-found confidence, while his pep talks (his only common ground with Monty) added the motivation. Here his service in Gurkha battalions paid off, for his ranks contained many with whom he conversed in their own language. Slim later reckoned that as a senior commander, one-third of all his time was spent talking to his men.
He undertook a partially successful attack into the Arakan region (February 1944) on the Burma-India frontier, and then, in the battles of Imphal and Kohima, he repelled a major Japanese drive to invade north-east India. He devised new tactics adapted to cope with a style of war that had no fixed front lines, and used aerial resupply for formations that were surrounded, or advancing through difficult terrain. Rangoon fell on 3 May 1945, but days later, he was effectively sacked by Leese, who offered him a lesser command. Slim held his ground and requested retirement while his Fourteenth Army rumbled dangerously. Eventually Alanbrooke intervened, and it was Leese who was sacked, Slim taking his place as C-in-C Allied Land Forces, South-East Asia Command.
After the war he served as CIGS and was promoted field marshal in 1949. Between 1953 and 1960 he was governor-general of Australia. His memoirs, Defeat into Victory, which appeared in 1956, were a best-seller, and in their humility and lack of pomposity are as unlike Montgomery's as they could be. Slim is a good example of how in both world wars, a class-ridden British army was blessed with an egalitarian streak, enabling its less privileged, but equally able commanders to rise to the top.
Bibliography
— Peter Caddick-Adams
| Biography: William Joseph Slim |
English General William Joseph Slim (1891-1970) was involved in some lesser-known but still critical battles of World War II. He later served as head of the Imperial General Staff, Britain's top military post, and governor-general of Australia.
As a boy, William Joseph Slim had always wanted to be a military officer. During World War II, he took command of allied forces defeated and demoralized by advancing Japanese troops that had overrun Burma and were threatening to invade India. Slim made it his priority to improve the morale of his men, rebuild their confidence, and teach them to adapt to the jungles of southeast Asia. Consequently, he regained the offensive and re-conquered Burma.
Boyhood Dream
William Joseph Slim had always dreamed of becoming a soldier. He was born October 6, 1891, in Bristol, England. The son of John Slim, an iron merchant in Bristol, he moved with his family to Birmingham at the turn of the century. There, he attended St. Philip's Catholic School and then King Edward's School, where his favorite subject was literature. At the time, he was a member of the Officers Training Corps, and he often told people that his great ambition was to be an army officer. But in early 20th century England, the army did not financially support those in officers training, and Slim's parents could not pay for their son to pursue his ambition. Consequently, after leaving school, Slim worked as a clerk and a teacher. Also, he was a foreman at an engineering firm. When World War I began, his military dream was abruptly realized. England was desperate for soldiers to fight against the Germans. Slim was commissioned in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, a territorial troop similar to the National Guard in the United States. He joined the regiment as a private, but when his troop was made part of the regular British army, he was promoted to lance-corporal. He was later demoted to private for drinking from a jug of beer while marching with his men as they marched through Yorkshire on maneuvers. It was the only demotion Slim ever received.
He first saw action when his regiment was sent to Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq), followed by an engagement in the Battle of Gallipoli in Turkey, where he was so seriously wounded that it seemed unlikely that he would ever return to active service. However, through a series of subterfuges that Slim never entirely revealed, he was able to rejoin the army and fought in France and Belgium before rejoining his old troops in Mesopotamia. He was wounded again in the battle to capture Baghdad and was evacuated to India.
When World War I ended, he joined the Sixth Ghurka Rifles of the Indian Army and learned to speak their language. From 1917 to 1920 and again from 1929 to 1933 he was part of the General Staff of the Indian Army. During this period he graduated from the Indian Army Staff College in Cambalay and later was an instructor at the college. He returned to England briefly to attend the Imperial Defence School. During the 1930s his effectiveness as a teacher was recognized by British and Indian military leaders; that earned him a promotion to the rank of lieutenant-colonel by 1935. Just before World War II broke out, Slim was commandant of the Senior Officers' School at Belgaum, India.
From the Desert to the Jungle
In 1940 Slim was given command of the Tenth Indian Infantry Brigade and was ordered to use his Indian troops in the Sudan to prevent an invasion of Italian troops. A border town called Gallabat had been occupied by the Italians; Slim and his forces were ordered to retake the town. Although the Indians recaptured Gallabat, Slim decided that defense of the area was untenable and pulled his troops back to safer positions, giving up the town. In retrospect, Slim believed he had made a poor military decision. Yet he gained the admiration of others as a leader who could accept blame during bad times but was quick to praise his subordinates during good times.
Soon after, Slim was again wounded when a low-flying aircraft attacked the vehicle in which he was traveling. While recovering in May 1941, he was given command of the Tenth Indian Division in Iraq and Syria where he successfully fought against the Vichy French forces and later advanced through Iran. He described desert fighting to be suitable because you can see your opponent.
By March 1942, General Archibald Wavell, the commander-in-chief in India, sent Slim to Burma to take command of the British-Indian First Burma Corps. The situation in Burma was dismal for allied forces. Because of allied problems in 1942 in Europe and in the Pacific Ocean, low priority was given to the military situation in Burma and India. There was no air cover for the allied troops. Intelligence and communication were poor. Japanese forces from the east were pushing the Burma Corps westward and northward through the jungle toward India. They had also cut supply lines to the Chinese armies in the north. Slim tried to regain the offensive, but his troops had withstood heavy casualties and were exhausted. Therefore, he was forced to lead his troops in an orderly retreat nearly 1, 000 miles from Rangoon into India. Thirteen thousand men died during the retreat.
Reinvasion of Burma
After the retreat, Slim commanded the newly formed 15th Indian Corps. He oversaw intensive training to prepare the men for future battles against the Japanese. He restored confidence in his demoralized troops. Slim revised and improved their fighting approach. He gave higher priority to medical attention and made sure drugs were on hand to prevent malaria. In addition, he visited as many units as possible and met as many of his subordinate commanders as possible.
Slim believed that as an officer, he had to set an example for his men. "Officers are there to lead," he was quoted in Phoenix, the South East Asia Command magazine. "As officers, you can neither eat, nor drink, nor sleep, nor smoke, nor even sit down until you have personally seen that your men have done these things. If you will do this for them, they will follow you to the end of the world." Slim often paraphrased, as he did in Phoenix, the famous line ascribed to Napoleon, "There are no bad soldiers, only bad officers."
The situation in Burma was soon made worse by allied commitments to the Soviet Union. In an agreement with Soviet leader Josef Stalin, England and the United States agreed to conquer Germany first in return for a Soviet declaration of war on Japan. The re-invasion of Burma was not considered critical to the war effort. Landing craft in the Burma theater were transferred to Europe for invasions against the Nazis. Slim, then, was forced to fight the Japanese through the dense jungle rather than by sea.
By October 1943, Slim was commander of the newly established British 14th Army. In 1944, he deliberately let the Japanese cross the frontier into India, thus stretching thin their supply and communication lines. His fully provisioned army waited for the Japanese to arrive then beat the Japanese forces in decisive victories at Imphal and Kohima. As his troops regained the offensive and marched eastward and southward through the jungle. He and Mountbatten developed a plan in which the army was supplied by air drop, thus precluding the need for supply lines. A total of 600, 000 tons of supplies was dropped by parachute to Slim's advancing army. Also, Slim's reconquest of Burma was based on a two-pronged attack that confused the Japanese and caused them to concentrate forces in the wrong locations. His army forced the Japanese out of Burma and inflicted 347, 000 casualties. Slim was the only general in World War II to defeat a major Japanese army on the Asian mainland. After retaking Burma until the end of the war, Slim's forces fought clean-up campaigns against small pockets of Japanese resistance.
Beloved Leader
By July 1945, Slim was promoted to full general and then commander-in-chief of all allied land forces in southeast Asia. By 1946, with the war over, he was called back to England to be commandant of the recently reopened Imperial Defence College. He then retired from the army to pursue a private life. But by the end of 1948, he was recalled to the army to be chief of the Imperial General Staff. Two months later, he was promoted to field marshall.
In 1953, Slim was appointed governor-general of Australia, representing the Queen of England and British interests in Australia. He made it a point to meet the people and, thus, he became one of the most popular governor-generals in the history of Australia. The Australian prime minister often commented on the affection the Australians had for Slim.
Occasionally, Slim took his mind off his duties by reading murder-mystery novels. He also wrote mystery serials, as well as poems and short stories, under the pseudonym Anthony Mills. In 1956, he wrote Defeat into Victory, considered one of the finest books about World War II.
In 1960, Slim was made a Knight of the Garter by the British monarchy. Eleven universities, including Oxford and Cambridge, conferred honorary degrees on him. He was then appointed Constable of Windsor Castle and left Australia. He held the Windsor Castle position until shortly before his death ten years later, on December 14, 1970. When he died in London, he was given a public funeral with full military honors.
Further Reading
Dictionary of National Biography: 1961-1970, edited by E. T. Williams and C. S. Nicholls, Oxford University Press, 1981.
Keegan, John, and Andrew Wheatcroft, Who's Who in Military History: From 1453 to the Present Day, Rutledge, 1996.
Leckie, Robert, The Story of World War II, Random House, 1964.
The Oxford Companion to World War II, edited by I.C.B. Dear, Oxford University Press, 1995.
"General Bill Slim, CBI Info,http://www.chiinfo.com/billslim.htm (March 13, 1998).
| British History: William Slim |
Slim, William, 1st Viscount Slim (1891-1970). Soldier. Born in Bristol and brought up in Birmingham, Slim joined the army in 1914, emerging with the rank of major. He spent most of the inter-war years with the army in India and in 1940 was sent with a brigade to Eritrea to fight the Italians. In 1942 he was given a command in Burma and in October 1943 took over the 14th Army. The following year he won a great victory in repelling a major Japanese offensive and was able to launch acounter-attack to recover Burma. After the war he served as chief of the imperial general staff from 1948 and was governor-general of Australia 1953-60.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: William Joseph Slim, 1st Viscount Slim |
Bibliography
See his Unofficial History (1959) and Defeat into Victory (rev. ed. 1961); G. C. Evans, Slim as Military Commander (1969); biography by R. Levine (1976).
| Quotes By: William Joseph Slim |
Quotes:
"When you cannot make up your mind which of two evenly balanced courses of action you should take -- choose the bolder."
| Wikipedia: William Slim, 1st Viscount Slim |
Field Marshal William Joseph "Bill"[1] Slim, 1st Viscount Slim, KG, GCB, GCMG, GCVO, GBE, DSO, MC, KStJ (6 August 1891 – 14 December 1970) was a British military commander and the 13th Governor-General of Australia. He fought in both the First World War and the Second World War and was wounded in action three times. He was later Governor-General of Australia, he was a popular choice as an authentic war hero who had fought with the Anzacs at Gallipoli.[2]
Contents |
Slim was born in Bishopston, near Bristol to John and Charlotte Slim (née Tucker), a lower-middle class family. He grew up in Birmingham and attended St. Philip's School and King Edward's School. After leaving school, he taught at an elementary school and worked as a clerk in Stewarts & Lloyds, a metal-tube maker, between 1910 and 1914. He joined Birmingham University Officers' Training Corps in 1912, and was thus able to be commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment on 22 August 1914, at the outbreak of the First World War; in later life, as a result of his modest social origins and unpretentious manner, he was sometimes wrongly supposed to have risen from the ranks. He was badly wounded at Gallipoli. On return to England, he was granted a regular commission as a second lieutenant in the West India Regiment. In October 1916, he returned to his regiment in Mesopotamia. On 4 March 1917, he was promoted to lieutenant (with seniority back-dated to October 1915).[3] He was wounded a second time in 1917. Having been previously given the temporary rank of captain, he was awarded the Military Cross on 7 February 1918 for actions in Mesopotamia.[4] Evacuated to India, he was given the temporary rank of major in the 6th Gurkha Rifles on 2 November 1918.[5] He was formally promoted to captain and transferred to the British Indian Army on 22 May 1919.[6] He became adjutant of the battalion in 1921.
He married Aileen Robertson in 1926 (died 1993), with whom he had one son and one daughter.
In 1926, Slim was sent to the Indian Staff College at Quetta. On 5 June 1929, he was appointed a General Staff Officer, Second Grade[7] On 1 January 1930, he was given the brevet rank of major,[8] with formal promotion to this rank made on 19 May 1933.[9] His performance at Staff College resulted in his appointment first to Army Headquarters India in Delhi and then to Staff College, Camberley in England (as a General Staff Officer, Second Grade),[10] where he taught from 1934 to 1937. In 1938, he was promoted to lieutenant-colonel[11] and given command of the 2nd Battalion, 7th Gurkha Rifles. In 1939 he was briefly given the temporary rank of brigadier as commander of his battalion.[12] On 8 June 1939, he was promoted to colonel (again with temporary rank of brigadier)[13] and appointed head of the Senior Officers' School at Belgaum, India.[14]
On the outbreak of the Second World War, Slim was given command of the Indian 10th Brigade of the Indian 5th Infantry Division and was sent to Sudan. He took part in the East African Campaign to liberate Ethiopia from the Italians. Slim was wounded again during the fighting in Eritrea. On 21 January 1941, Slim was hit when his position was strafed during the advance on Agordat.
Slim joined the staff of General Archibald Wavell in the Middle East Command. He was given the rank of acting major-general in June 1941.[15] He led the Indian 10th Infantry Division as part of Iraqforce during the Anglo-Iraqi War, the Syria-Lebanon Campaign, and the invasion of Persia. He was twice mentioned in despatches during 1941.[16]
In March 1942, Slim was given command of Burma Corps, also known as BurCorps, consisting of the 17th Indian Infantry Division and 1st Burma Division). Slim was made acting lieutenant-general on 8 May 1942.[17] The corps was under attack in Burma by the Japanese and, heavily outnumbered, he was soon forced to withdraw to India. On 28 October 1942, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE).[18]
He then took over XV Corps under the command of the Eastern Army. His command covered the coastal approaches from Burma to India, east of Chittagong. He had a series of disputes with Noel Irwin, commander of Eastern Army and, as a result, Irwin (although an army commander) took personal control of the initial advance by XV Corps into the Arakan Peninsula. The operations ended in disaster, during which Slim was restored to command of XV Corps, albeit too late to salvage the situation. General Irwin and Slim blamed each other for the result but in the end Irwin was removed from his command and Slim was promoted to command the new Fourteenth Army—formed from IV Corps (United Kingdom) (Imphal), XV Corps (Arakan) and XXXIII Corps (reserve)—later joined by XXXIV Corps. On 14 January 1943, Slim was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) for his actions in the Middle East during 1941.[19]
He quickly got on with the task of training his new army to take the fight to the enemy. The basic premise was that off-road mobility was paramount: much heavy equipment was exchanged for mule- or air-transported equipment and motor transport was kept to a minimum and restricted to those vehicles that could cope with some of the worst combat terrain on Earth. The new doctrine dictated that if the Japanese had cut the lines of communication, then they too were surrounded. All units were to form defensive 'boxes', to be resupplied by air and assisted by integrated close air support and armour. The boxes were designed as an effective response to the tactics of infiltration practiced by the Japanese in the war. Slim also supported increased offensive patrolling, to encourage his soldiers to lose both their fear of the jungle and also their belief that Japanese soldiers were better jungle fighters.
At the start of 1944, Slim held the official rank of colonel with a war-time rank of major-general and the temporary rank of lieutenant-general.[20] In January 1944, when the Second Arakan Offensive was met by a Japanese counter-offensive, the Indian 7th Infantry Division was quickly surrounded along with parts of the Indian 5th Infantry Division and the 81st (West Africa) Division. The 7th Indian Division's defence was based largely on the "Admin Box"—formed initially from drivers, cooks, suppliers, etc. They were supplied by air—negating the importance of their lost supply lines. The Japanese forces were able to defeat the offensive into Arakan, but they were unable to decisively defeat the allied forces or advance beyond the surrounded formations. While the Second Arakan Offensive ended in failure, it proved tactics that were very effective against the Japanese.
In early 1944, Slim was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB).[21] Later in 1944 the Japanese launched an invasion of India aimed at Imphal—hundreds of miles to the north. Slim airlifted two entire veteran divisions (5th & 7th Indian) from battle in the Arakan, straight into battle in the north. Desperate defensive actions were fought at places such as Imphal, Sangshak and Kohima, while the RAF and USAAF kept the forces supplied from the air. While the Japanese were able to advance and encircle the formations of 14th Army, they were unable to defeat those same forces or break out of the jungles along the Indian frontier. The Japanese advance stalled. The Japanese refused to give up even after the monsoon started and large parts of their army were wrecked by conducting operations in impossible conditions. As a result their units took unsupportable casualties and were finally forced, in July 1944, to retreat in total disorder, leaving behind many dead. On 8 August 1944, Slim was promoted to lieutenant-general,[22] and, on 28 September 1944, he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB).[23] In December during a ceremony at Imphal in front of the Scottish, Gurkha and Punjab regiments, Slim and three of his corps commanders (Christison, Scoones and Stopford) were knighted by the viceroy Lord Wavell and invested with their honours: Slim was presented with his insignia as KCB, the others with their KBEs. Slim was also mentioned in despatches.[24]
In 1945, Slim launched an offensive into Burma, with lines of supply stretching almost to breaking point across hundreds of miles of trackless jungle. He faced the same problems that the Japanese had faced in their failed 1944 offensive in the opposite direction. He made the supply of his armies the central issue in the plan of the campaign. The Irrawaddy River was crossed (with the longest Bailey bridge in the world at the time—most of which had been transported by mule and air) and the city of Meiktila was taken, followed by Mandalay. The Allies had reached the open plains of central Burma, sallying out and breaking Japanese attacking forces in isolation, maintaining the initiative at all times, backed up by air-land co-operation including resupply by air and close air support, performed by both RAF and USAAF units.
In combination with these attacks, Force 136 helped initiate a countrywide uprising of the Burmese people against the Japanese. In addition to fighting the allied advance south, the Japanese were faced with heavy attacks from behind their own lines. Toward the end of the campaign, the army raced south to capture Rangoon before the start of the monsoon. It was considered necessary to capture the port because of the length of the supply lines overland from India and the impossibility of supply by air or land during the monsoon. Rangoon was eventually taken by a combined attack from the land (Slim's army), the air (parachute operations south of the city) and a seaborne invasion. Also assisting in the capture of Rangoon was the Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League lead by Thakin Soe with Aung San (the future Prime Minister of Burma and father of Aung San Suu Kyi) as one of its military commanders.
As the Burma campaign came to an end Slim was informed in May by Oliver Leese, the commander of Allied Land Forces South-East Asia (ALFSEA) that he would not be commanding Fourteenth Army in the forthcoming invasion planned for Malaya but would take command of the new Twelfth Army being formed to mop up in Burma.[25] Slim refused the appointment, saying he would prefer to retire. As the news spread Fourteenth Army fell into turmoil and Alan Brooke, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, furious at not having been consulted by Leese, and Claude Auchinleck, the C-in-C India who was at the time in London, brought pressure to bear.[26] The Supreme Allied Commander of the Southeast Asia Theatre, Louis Mountbatten was obliged to order Leese to undo the damage. On 1 July 1945, Slim was promoted to general[27] and was informed that he was to succeed Leese as C-in-C ALFSEA. However, by the time he took up the post, having taken some leave, the war was at an end.[25]
At the end of 1945 Slim returned to the UK. On 1 January 1946, he was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE).[28] and took the post of Commandant of the Imperial Defence College for its first course since 1939. On 7 February 1947 he was made an Aide-de-camp (ADC) to the King.[29] At the end of his two year appointment at the Imperial Defence College Slim retired as ADC and from the army on 11 May 1948.[30] He had been approached by both India and Pakistan to become C-in-C of their respective armies post independence but refused and instead became Deputy Chairman of British Railways.[31]
However, in November 1948 the British Prime Minister Clement Attlee rejected the proposal by Viscount Montgomery that he should be succeeded as Chief of the Imperial General Staff by John Crocker and instead brought back Slim from retirement in the rank of field marshal in January 1949.[32] Slim thus became the first Indian Army officer to be so appointed.[31] Also in 1948 the United States awarded Slim the Commander of the Legion of Merit.[33]
In September 1949, he was appointed to the Army Council.[34] On 2 January 1950, he was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB)[35] and later that year was made a Chief Commander of the Legion of Merit by the United States.[36] On 1 November 1952, he relinquished the position of Chief of the Imperial General Staff[37]
On 10 December 1952 Slim was made a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG) on his appointment as Governor-General of Australia[38] which post he took up on 8 May 1953.
On 2 January 1953, he was appointed a Knight of the Order of St. John (KStJ).[39]
Slim was a popular choice for Governor-General since he was an authentic war hero who had fought alongside Australians at Gallipoli and in the Middle East. In 1954 he was able to welcome Queen Elizabeth II on the first visit by a reigning monarch to Australia. For his services to the Queen during the tour, he was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO) on 27 April 1954.[40]
The Liberal leader Robert Menzies held office throughout Slim's time in Australia. His Official Secretary throughout his term was Murray Tyrrell.
Slim's duties as Governor-General were entirely ceremonial and there were no controversies during his term. However, during his tenure he was patron of the Fairbridge Farms child migration homes in Australia and in 2007 allegations were made by three former residents that as young boys Slim had sexually assaulted them during visits to the farms.[41] These allegations were dismissed out of hand at that time by those who had served under Slim in the army and by his son John Slim, 2nd Viscount Slim.[42] The allegations were aired again on ABC television in the program The Long Journey Home, broadcast on 17 November 2009, the day after the parliamentary apology to the Forgotten Australians.
In 1959, Slim retired and returned to Britain, where he published his memoirs, Unofficial History and Defeat into Victory. On 24 April 1959, he was appointed a Knight Companion of the Order of the Garter (KG).[43] On 15 July 1960, he was created "Viscount Slim of Yarralumla in the Capital Territory of Australia and of Bishopston in the City and County of Bristol".[44] After a successful further career on the boards of major UK companies, he was appointed Constable and Governor of Windsor Castle on 18 June 1964.[45] He died in London on 14 December 1970.
He was given a full military funeral at St. George's Chapel, Windsor and was afterward cremated. A remembrance plaque was placed in the crypt of St. Paul's Cathedral.
The road William Slim Drive, in the district of Belconnen, Canberra is named after him.
Slim had a unique relationship with his troops - the "Forgotten Army", as they called themselves and despite being very close to defeat at the hands of the Japanese, who had driven them back to the Indian border by 1942, Slim raised training and morale within the ranks. He was also concerned with the health of his troops and the impact of this on their fighting efficiency. In his book "Defeat into Victory" he tells of the malaria rates among his units being 70%, largely due to noncompliance by his soldiers with the foul-tasting quinine medication they refused to take. Slim did not blame his medics for this problem, but placed the responsibility on his officers. "Good doctors are no use without good discipline. More than half the battle against disease is fought not by the doctors, but by the regimental officers."[46] After Slim dismissed a few officers for high unit malaria rates, the others realized he was serious and malaria treatment was enforced, dropping the rate to less than 5%. The combat effectiveness of his army was thus greatly enhanced.
It was this physical and mental turnaround in the army under him that was a contributing factor to the eventual defeat of the Japanese in Burma. Of all the memorials to Slim the one that he would perhaps have cherished most was the impact he made on those he commanded. A half-century later, one of them recalled:
"But the biggest boost to morale was the burly man who came to talk to the assembled battalion … it was unforgettable. Slim was like that: the only man I've ever seen who had a force that came out of him[47]...British soldiers don't love their commanders much less worship them; Fourteenth Army trusted Slim and thought of him as one of themselves, and perhaps his real secret was that the feeling was mutual".[48]
Lieutenant General Sir John Kiszely has recommended Slim's memoirs (Defeat into Victory) describing Slim as "perhaps the Greatest Commander of the 20th Century" and commenting on Slim's "self-deprecating style"[49] Slim's 14th Army was composed of an amalgam of Indian (Hindu, Sikh and Muslim troops), British, African, and other troops; he was on the far end of a long logistical pipeline and generally had the oldest equipment of any Allied army. By all accounts, he was a superb logistician, imaginative in his tactics and operational concepts, and - unusually - very popular with his troops.
As a British commander on the Asian mainland, Slim's contribution to the U.S. war effort in the Pacific has often been undervalued.[citation needed] For three years, Slim's soldiers tied down tens of thousands of Japanese troops in Burma that could have been otherwise redeployed against U.S. forces in New Guinea, the Philippines, Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
Military historian Max Hastings:
"In contrast to almost every other outstanding commander of the war, Slim was a disarmingly normal human being, possessed of notable self-knowledge. He was without pretension, devoted to his wife, Aileen, their family and the Indian Army. His calm, robust style of leadership and concern for the interests of his men won the admiration of all who served under him ... His blunt honesty, lack of bombast and unwillingness to play courtier did him few favours in the corridors of power. Only his soldiers never wavered in their devotion".[50]
The spirit of comradeship Slim created within 14th Army lived on after the war in the Burma Star Association, of which Slim was a co-founder and first President.[51]
A statue to Slim is on Whitehall, outside the Ministry of Defence, was unveiled by Queen Elizabeth II in 1990. Designed by Ivor Roberts-Jones, the statue is one of three of British Second World War Field Marshals (the others being Alanbrooke and Montgomery).[52]
Slim's papers were collected by his biographer, Ronald Lewin, and given to the Churchill Archives Centre by Slim's wife, Aileen, Viscountess Slim, and son, John Slim, 2nd Viscount Slim, and other donors, 1977-2001.[53] Lewin's biography, entitled Slim: The Standardbearer was awarded the 1977 WH Smith Literary Award
| Military offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by ' |
Commander, Senior Officers' School at Belgaum, India 8 June 1939–September 1939 |
Succeeded by ' |
| Preceded by H.R.C. Lane |
Commander, 10th Brigade of the Indian 5th Infantry Division September 1939–January 1941 |
Succeeded by B.C. Fletcher |
| Preceded by W.A.K. Fraser |
Commander, Indian 10th Infantry Division May 1941–March 1942 |
Succeeded by T.W. Rees |
| Preceded by Lieutenant-General Noel Beresford-Peirse |
Commander, XV Corps June 1942–October 1943 |
Succeeded by Lieutenant-General Philip Christison |
| Preceded by new creation |
Commander, Fourteenth Army October 1943–August 1945 |
Succeeded by Lieutenant-General Miles Dempsey |
| Preceded by Vice Admiral TH Binney (then gap during WWII) |
Commandant, Imperial Defence College 1 January 1946–11 May 1948 |
Succeeded by Air Chief Marshal Sir John C Slessor |
| Preceded by The Viscount Montgomery of Alamein |
Chief of the Imperial General Staff 1948–1952 |
Succeeded by Sir John Harding |
| Government offices | ||
| Preceded by Sir William McKell |
Governor-General of Australia 1953–1960 |
Succeeded by The Viscount Dunrossil |
| Peerage of the United Kingdom | ||
| New title | Viscount Slim 1960–1970 |
Succeeded by John Slim |
| Honorary titles | ||
| Preceded by Post Vacant Last held by The Earl of Athlone in 1957 |
Constable and Governor of Windsor Castle 1964–1970 |
Succeeded by The Lord Elworthy |
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| Worshipful Company of Clothworkers | |
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| Viscount Slim |
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