Ronald Weeks, 1st Baron Weeks


Ronald Morce Weeks, 1st Baron Weeks was a British Army General during the Second World War.

Military career

Weeks was commissioned into the South Lancashire Regiment of the Territorial Army in 1913. He served in the Rifle Brigade during the First World War and then retired from military service in 1919.
He was re-employed during the Second World War initially as Chief of Staff for the Territorial Division and then as a Brigadier on the General Staff of Home Forces in 1940. He was promoted to acting major-general on 17 March 1941 and was appointed Director General of Army Equipment in 1941 and Deputy Chief of the Imperial General Staff in 1942. He then became Deputy Military Governor and Chief of Staff of the British Zone for the Allied Control Council in Germany in 1945; in that capacity he was involved in negotiations to avoid the Berlin Blockade. He retired from the British Army later that year.
He was awarded the Military Cross in 1917, and a Bar to the Military Cross in 1918. He was appointed to the Distinguished Service Order in 1918, made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1939 and a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in 1943.

Later life

After the war Weeks became Chairman of Vickers. In 1956 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Weeks, of Ryton in the County Palatine of Durham.

Marriages and children

Weeks married firstly Evelyn Elsie Haynes on 21 April 1922. They were divorced in 1930 and on 3 February 1931 he married secondly Cynthia Mary Irvine. With his second wife he had two daughters:
Weeks died on 19 August 1960, aged 69, when, in the absence of male heirs, the barony became extinct.