Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Arthur Ernest Percival
(Redirected from Arthur Percival)
Lieutenant-General Arthur Ernest Percival December 26 1887 – January 31 1966.
In 1942 he surrendered Singapore to the Japanese.
- 1914 at the outbreak of WWI at the age of 27 he volunteered in the army joining as a private.
- 1916 As a first lieutenant he goes with the Bedfordshire Regiment to France for the battle of the Somme. He wins the Military Cross.
- 1917 promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and given command of a battalion shortly after a brigade.
- 1918 He was recommended for the staff of Sandhurst
- 1919 volunteered to serve in the north of Russia
- 1920 he served with the Essex Regiment in Ireland
- Served in Nigeria
- 1930 Enterd the Staff College, whose commander was General Sir John Dill.
- Spent the next ten years working for General Dill.
- 1939 command the 43rd Division of the British Expeditionary Force .
- 1940 after the Dunkirk evacuation he commandwd the 44th Division protecting the English coast.
- 1941 spring, placed in command of British forces in Malaya.
- Tuesday December 8 1941 Japanese Army lands on the Malay peninsula (about a day after Perl Harbour, but +24h because of international date line).
- January 25 1942 he ordered a general retreat across the Johore Strait to the island of Singapore.
- February 8 13000 Japanese troops landed on the northwest corner of the island.
- February 9 17000 Japanese troops landed in the west.
- February 15 1942 Percival surrendered Singapore to Lieutenant-General Tomoyuki Yamashita of the Imperial Japanese Army. 130,000 Allied personnel surrendered to less than 30,000 Japanese. He was held prisoner in Manchuria until the end of World War II.
- 1949 His book "The War in Malaysia" was published
- January 31 1966 died.
10-26-2009 08:16:03
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


