Tom Adlam


Lieutenant-Colonel Tom Edwin Adlam VC was an English recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. A soldier with The Bedfordshire Regiment during the First World War, he was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions on 27 September 1916, during the Battle of the Somme. He later served in the Second World War.
Adlam was twenty two years old, and a temporary second lieutenant in the 7th Battalion, The Bedfordshire Regiment, British Army during the First World War when the following deed took place on 27 September 1916 at Thiepval, France, for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross.
Major-General Ivor Maxse, commanding 18th Division later wrote that Adlam’s bravery and example and also his skilful handling of his unit was ‘chiefly responsible for the success of the two companies of the Bedfordshire regiment, who cleared and made good the last bit of the Thiepval objective...It was, in fact, a successful minor operation without which the main attack on Schwaben Redoubt could not take place’.
When interviewed in 1973, Adlam declared: ‘Some officers would think that they had to do better than their own men. But if I found a man who could do something better than me I’d say ‘Well do that’. And I think they like it... A man likes to be recognised as being a responsible person.’ Simkins would argue that this was an example of initiative being delegated down from division to the man on the spot, as early as the Somme battles.
In civilian life, Adlam was a teacher at Brook Street School in Basingstoke and a member of the National Union of Teachers.
Adlam served in the Second World War with the Royal Engineers, and achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel.
His Victoria Cross is displayed at Salisbury Guild Hall.
Adlam's voice was used in Peter Jackson's World War I film, They Shall Not Grow Old.

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