Wilfrid Smith (British Army officer)

Major General Wilfrid Edward Bownas Smith CB, CMG (March 1867 – May 1942) was a senior British Army officer.

Smith transferred from the Militia (the 3rd Brigade, Eastern Division, Royal Artillery, formerly the Suffolk Artillery Militia) into the South Wales Borderers on 9 May 1888.

[1] Promoted to lieutenant in October 1891,[2] he saw action with the British expedition to Tibet in 1903 and then became a brigade major in India in March 1905[3] and, promoted in September 1907 to major,[4] became a deputy assistant adjutant general in India in 1908.

[7] In March 1915 he was promoted to the temporary rank of brigadier general and took over command of the 80th Infantry Brigade from Brigadier General Charles Granville Fortescue,[8] leading the brigade, which formed part of the 27th Division, on the Western Front and later on the Macedonian front.

[9] He was promoted to brevet colonel in June 1915[10] and in July 1916, after being made a temporary major general,[11] became general officer commanding (GOC) of the 52nd (Lowland) Division in Egypt in June 1916 and saw action with the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) in the Middle Eastern theatre before removed from his division in September by General Sir Edmund Allenby, commander of the EEF, who believed Smith had "not shown the necessary tactical capacity for the command he held".

Major General Wilfrid Smith memorial plaque
Memorial plaque in Church of St Michael, Princetown dedicated to Major General Wilfrid Smith.