Peter Inge, Baron Inge
Field Marshal Peter Anthony Inge, Baron Inge, KG, GCB, PC, DL (5 August 1935 – 20 July 2022) was a senior British Army officer. He was the Chief of the General Staff, the professional head of the British Army, from 1992 to 1994 and then served as Chief of the Defence Staff before retiring in 1997. Early in his military career he saw action during the Malayan Emergency and Operation Banner in Northern Ireland, and later in his career he provided advice to the British Government during the Bosnian War.
The Lord Inge
Croydon, Surrey, England
20 July 2022
(aged 86)United Kingdom
1956–1997
448984
Deputy Lieutenant of North Yorkshire (1994–2022)
Early life and education[edit]
The son of Raymond Albert Inge and Grace Maud Caroline Inge (née Du Rose), Inge was born in Croydon on 5 August 1935.[1][2] He was educated first at Summer Fields School, Oxford and then at Wrekin College, Shropshire. He was conscripted into the army for National Service in September 1953 and was sent for officer cadet training at Eaton Hall, Cheshire before attending the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.[3]
Military career[edit]
Inge was commissioned into the Green Howards from Sandhurst on 27 July 1956.[4] He was promoted to lieutenant on 27 July 1958,[5] served with the 1st Battalion the Green Howards in Hong Kong and Germany, and was deployed on operational service to Malaya during the Malayan Emergency.[6] Appointed aide-de-camp to the General Officer Commanding 4th Division in 1960,[1] he was promoted to captain on 27 July 1962,[7] and made adjutant of the 1st Battalion the Green Howards in 1963.[1]
After working in the Ministry of Defence, and being promoted to major on 31 December 1967,[8] Inge returned to the 1st Battalion as a company commander in 1969 and was deployed to Northern Ireland.[9] He served as brigade major with the 11th Armoured Brigade from August 1971, before being promoted to lieutenant colonel on 31 December 1972,[10] and becoming an instructor at the Staff College, Camberley in 1973.[1] He was appointed commanding officer of the 1st Battalion the Green Howards in 1974.[1] Promoted to colonel on 31 December 1976,[11] he commanded the Staff College's Junior Division from 1977 and, following his promotion to brigadier on 31 December 1979,[12] he commanded Task Force C of the British Army of the Rhine from 1980.[1] From 1982 he was Chief of Staff of I (British) Corps.[1] He returned to Britain as General Officer Commanding North East District and Commander 2nd Infantry Division, based in York, from 12 January 1984[13] with the substantive rank of major general from 16 April.[14] In 1986, he was appointed Director General, Logistics Policy (Army) at the Ministry of Defence.[9]
Inge was promoted to lieutenant general and became General Officer Commanding I (British) Corps on 8 August 1987.[15] He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath in the 1988 New Year Honours.[16] He relinquished the corps command on 2 October 1989 and,[17] on 27 November, he became the commander of NATO's Northern Army Group and Commander-in-Chief of British Army of the Rhine in Germany with the local rank of general;[18] his rank was made substantive on 3 January 1990.[19]
Having become aide-de-camp general to the Queen on 21 February 1991 and promoted to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath in the 1992 New Year Honours,[20][21] Inge was appointed Chief of the General Staff in February 1992 and Chief of the Defence Staff with the rank of field marshal on 15 March 1994.[22] Inge was the last active officer to be promoted to the rank.[23] He served in this post, in which he provided military advice to the British government on the conduct of the Bosnian War, until he retired in 1997.[1] He was appointed Colonel of the Green Howards in 1982,[24] Colonel Commandant of the Royal Military Police in 1987, and Colonel Commandant of the Army Physical Training Corps in 1988.[1]
Personal life[edit]
Inge enjoyed watching cricket, walking, reading and music. He was a member of the Marylebone Cricket Club, Boodle's and several other gentlemen's clubs.[3]
In 1960 Inge married Letitia Thornton-Berry; they had two daughters, Antonia and Verity.[1] Lady Inge died in 2020.[33] Inge died on 20 July 2022, at the age of 86.[34][35][3]