Richard Worsley


Sir Richard Edward Worsley was a senior British Army officer who fought in the Second World War and later commanded 1st Corps.

Early life

Worsley was born on 29 May 1923 at Ballywalter, County Down, Northern Ireland, the son of Herbert Henry Knight Worsley, JP of Lough House, Grey Abbey, County Down, by Rose Austen, only daughter of John Alfred Hives of Upper Plain, Masterton, New Zealand, farmer, and widow of Major Meyrick Myler Magrath, DSO, Royal Field Artillery, of Dorking House, Cosham, Hampshire. He was educated at Radley College.
His uncles were the first-class cricket batsmen A. E. Worsley and C. E. A. Worsley, who both played for Northamptonshire.

Military career

During the Second World War Worsley was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the British Army's Rifle Brigade in 1942. He served in the Middle East and Italy.
After the war he then served in the Malayan Emergency in 1948. He became an instructor at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst later in 1948 and then became Commanding Officer of the 1st The Royal Dragoons in 1962.
He took command of the 7th Armoured Brigade in 1965 and Chief of Staff Far East Land Forces in 1969. He became General Officer Commanding 3rd Division in 1972 and GOC 1st Corps in 1976. His final appointment was as Quartermaster-General to the Forces in 1979; he retired in 1982. He was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1963 and a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath in 1976.
He lived at Goring Heath in South Oxfordshire and died on 23 February 2013.

Personal life

He married on 6 May 1959 at Holy Trinity Church, Brompton, London, to Sarah Anne "Sally", eldest daughter of Brigadier J. A. H. Mitchell of the British Embassy, Paris, and they went on to have a son, Henry, and a daughter, Charlotte. On 7 Nov 1980, he married Caroline Carnegie, Duchess of Fife.