Gabriel Bougrain

General
Gabriel Bougrain
Personal details
Born(1882-04-09)9 April 1882
Saint-Germain-en-Laye (France)
Died31 May 1966(1966-05-31) (aged 84)
Laval (France)
Awards commander of the Legion of honour

Croix de guerre 1914-1918

Croix de guerre 1939-1945
Military service
Allegiance French Third Republic
RankDivision general
Commands4th Tunisian Spahi Regiment
2nd Light Mechanized Division
Battles/warsWorld War I
World War II

Gabriel, Marie, Joseph Bougrain (Laval, April 9, 1882 ; Saint-Germain-en-Laye, May 30, 1966) was a general of the French Army who commanded the 2nd Light Mechanized Division during World War II. He is buried in the cemetery of Sainte-Marie-de-Ré.

Origins

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Gabriel Bougrain was born in Laval in 1882 into a family of bankers, only a few years after the defeat of Sedan and the fall of the Second Empire. He was the son of Auguste Bougrain, owner of the Bougrain bank in Laval, and Marguerite Lelièvre. His grandfather Augustin, a yarn merchant for several generations, bore the surname Bougrain-Dubourg, which originated from the Bougrain, master du Bourg in Vaucé, where Michel Bougrain, son of the royal notary of Couesmes, had settled in the middle of the 18th century. As the yarn industry in Mayenne was in sharp decline, Father Bougrain-Dubourg, chaplain of Sainte-Anne Hospital Center and the Salpêtrière,[1] encouraged his brother Augustin to direct his sons to the banking trades. Auguste Bougrain's son chose another path, the career of arms !

Early career

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He entered Saint Cyr in 1903 - promotion of La Tour d'Auvergne- and left for the cavalry. After his time at the Saumur Cavalry School of Application, he served in the Dragoons and then in the Chasseurs d’Afrique. At the end of the course of instruction, he was appointed sub-squire of the Cadre Noir. In 1909 he married Yvonne O'Mahony, daughter of Count O'Mahony and Marthe d'Amphernet of Pontbellanger.[2] The O'Mahony are descended from an illustrious Irish family who came to serve the King of France. Barthelemy, Count O'Mahony,[3] Lieutenant-General of the King's Armies, Grand Cross of the Order of St. Louis, commanded the Berwick Regiment in 1788.[4]

Lieutenant Bougrain in the Cadre Noir uniform (1914).

World War I

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From the declaration of World War I, he was a reconnaissance officer in the divisional squadron of the 60th Infantry Division. He then served at the headquarter of the same division. This period on the war front earned him three citations:

- September 5, 1914, Lieutenant Bougrain, 24th Dragoon Regiment cited
Reconnaissance officer with rare fearlessness, always willing to get involved. Foch. Croix de guerre with palm.
- November 24, 1915, Captain Bougrain, Gabriel
Officer of unwavering dedication and renowned bravery, has shown during reconnaissance missions that he has performed the most brilliant qualities of intelligence, spirit and fearlessness. Cited to the order of the Army on September 5, 1914. Joffre. Knight of the Legion of honour, Croix de guerre with palm.
- July 23, 1916, Captain Bougrain, Gabriel
Elite officer. During the fighting in Verdun, from 1 to 12 July 1916, demonstrated the most absolute dedication and reported the most accurate information following reconnaissance carried out on the war front. Patey.[5] Croix de Guerre with silver star.

At the end of 1916, he volunteered for the Army of the Orient,[6] arrived in Salonika on 14 December and was successively under the command of General Sarrail, then General Guillaumat and finally General Franchet d'Espèrey. He was first appointed to organize and then lead the Hortackoy training instructions center, learning to fly at the Verria Mikros base (Macedonia) with Captain Victor Denain, head of the French Army's aeronautical service on the Eastern Front. He was appointed to head the 3rd Office headquarter of the Allied Armed Forces of the Orient, with a recommendation from General Franchet d'Espèrey.[7] After the armistice, the Commander-in Chief charged him with accompanying the Ottoman delegation to the Peace Congress in Paris.[8]

On September 15, 1918, he was cited to the order of the Army: Captain Bougrain, Gabriel

-“A first-rate officer whose brilliant military qualities continued to assert themselves during the war. Especially during his time in the Orient, has always been for the command a valuable auxiliary officer, executing with as much intelligence as calm bravery many reconnaissances as an Officer on the war front, either on land or in plane, and leading with as much skill as self-sacrifice the training centers of the Allied Armies where he has achieved quite remarkable results both in the French Army and in the Allied Armies.[9] Franchet d'Espèrey. Croix de Guerre with palm.

Interwar Period

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Promoted to squadron leader in 1919, he entered the elite École supérieure de guerre and, upon his release, was assigned to the Headquarter of the Fourth Army Corps, which he left to become a professor at the Ecole Superieur de Guerre (1922-1925). Among his pupils, Charles De Gaulle, Eugène Bridoux and Georges Loustaunau-Lacau. During a one-year leave of absence, he assumed the duties of general manager of the Montlhéry Autodrome.[10] He then took over the direction of Studies at Saumur (1926-1931) and then became Chief of Staff of the Cavalry Inspection (General Brécard[11]). In 1932, he became an auditor at the Center for Hautes Etudes Militaires. During this period, he defended the offensive concept of mobile and maneuverable warfare[12] and in particular the interaction between tanks and aircraft.[13] Colonel in 1933, he takes command of the 4th Tunisian Spahis Regiment in Sfax[14] which has just experienced a resounding scandal (the colonel has just been murdered by his wife's lover, a lieutenant of the regiment.)[15] In 1937, he is in command of the 4th Mechanized Light Brigade at Saint-Germain-en-Laye.[16]

World War II

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In January 1940, he was appointed head of the 2nd Light Mechanized Division (D.L.M.).[17] Its division was the only major unit to bear the Croix de Lorraine as its emblem;[18] together with the 3rd D.L.M it formed the Cavalry Corps. On 10 May, this French Corps entered Belgium and on 12 May in Hannut, engaged in the first major armoured battle in history : D.L.M. against Panzers. The two D.L.M. will resists assaults from the tanks of General Hoepner's 16th Corps - outnumbered and supported by their Air force - in an extremely violent battles that will last until 14 May. In these clashes, attacks and counter-attacks of the armoured vehicles will follow, one after another at a hellish pace, the adversaries competing with audacity and courage. The two D.L.M. lost about 100 tanks and inflicted on the Germans the loss of about one hundred and sixty tanks.[19] This battle will continue at Gembloux, and will halt the enemy offensive allowing the First Army to retain its positions.[20] Cited to the Order of the Army[21]

- Officer General of great value, showed, in the most difficult circumstances, af calmness and lucidity that allowed him to lead the fight of his division with a tenacity never denied. Weygand. Croix de Guerre with palm.
- A large elite unit, engaged against a far superior enemy in numbers, the 2nd D.L.M. under the command of General Bougrain, succeeded thanks to the tenacity and the spirit of sacrifice , to break the momentum of the German Armoured divisions launched against him during the period 10 to 13 May. Allowing the Army to retain and keep their strategic positions. Weygand. Croix de Guerre with palm.

He then, took part in the violent battle at Dunkirk that allowed the evacuation of nearly 340,000 soldiers for England, 115,000 were French.[22] On June 1, General Bougrain's division embarked on several ships to England. He himself was aboard the English trunk SS Prague, which departed Dunkirk at 9 a.m. with three thousand cavalrymen. It was attacked by twelve bombers planes but continues its voyage despite rough seas and an engine troubles. The destroyer HMS Shikari docked while still in motion, taking more than five hundred men. On the orders of the ship's captain, the remaining personnel were carried at the front of the vessel, awaiting rescue. Without any more delay, the PS Queen of Thanet, a smaller vessel, took on board the remainder of the 1st R.D.P., as well as General Bougrain, the Director of the Health Service and the medical commander Ricard. Prague then ran aground on the Sandwich Flats off the coast of Kent.[23] Back in France and partially reconstituted, the division of General Bougrain together with the 4th D.C.R.[24] will become the core Army of Paris of General Héring, military governor of Paris - But Paris being declared an open city - on June 12, 1940, he withdrew the troops that were under his command to the South next to the Loire valley. During the army's retreat, General Bougrain protected the left flank of the main Army Corps threatened by a vastly superior Armoured enemy forces, and then cleared himself out by precise and efficient counter-attacks, with the help of the 4th DCR, the rearguards of the Army Corps.[25] Cited to the Order of the Army:

-Commander first a brigade of the 2nd D.L.M, then the 2nd D.L.M. itself during the Battle of Belgium and Flanders, was able to communicate to his division the burning flame that animated him and make his great unit an incomparable element of combat. Attached to the 10th C.A. from June 12 to 22, 1940 and tasked with covering a particularly threatened flank, fulfilled a difficult mission with skill, energy and tenacity. In particular, his division, which was violently attacked, succeeded in maintaining his positions with his energetic resistance and his attacks on 16 and 22 June.[26] . Weygand. Croix de Guerre with palm.

From June 18 to 20, 1940, the 2nd D.L.M was in the vicinity of Tours to contain the German advance towards the Loire Valley. At the time armistice negotiations were announced, two allegiances clashed : that of the officers who were given the task of containing the Germans forces on the Loire border line and that of the civil authorities of Tours who wanted to avoid fighting fearing above all the destruction of their city.[27] The “ prefect “ of Indre-et-Loire insisted that the main bridges over the river Loire should not be destroyed and that all troops be withdrawn from the city of Tours. The following day, the radio announced the congratulations from the French Government sent to the prefect of Indre-et-Loire, promoting him to Commander of the Legion of Honneur,[28] and to the people of Tours, for their heroic stand and defense of their city. The Army and troops positioned on the left bank of the Loire river did contain the Germans forces and fulfill part of their mission: to allow the withdrawal of men who will escape from German captivity.[29] The 2nd D.L.M will continue to fight until 25 June 1940, actual date of the ceasefire. In August 1940, General Bougrain was assigned in the 2nd Section under the terms of the armistice.

Family

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In this section links are to French wiki pages

  • General Henri Garçon, grand officer of the Legion of Honor, his brother-in-law.
  • Marcel Brossard de Corbigny, naval officer and explorer, officer of the Legion of Honor, his uncle.
  • Louise Abel de Pujol, granddaughter of Abel de Pujol, her aunt.
  • His sons: Henri, Lieutenant at the 24th Infantry Regiment, killed in action on June 9, 1940, military medal, Croix de Guerre;[30] Yves, Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, Croix de Guerre ; Maurice-Patrice, Deputy of Saône and Loire in 1945, officer of the Legion of Honor, officer of the Resistance, Croix de Guerre.
  • Lieutenant general Bertrand O'Mahony, Commander of the Legion of Honor, Grand Officer of the National Order of Merit, his nephew.

Awards

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Notes & References

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  1. ^ Guillemain Diriger les consciences, guérir les âmes La Découverte, Paris, 2006
  2. ^ Gil Blas, Nov 13, 1909 p. 2
  3. ^ See this page (in french)
  4. ^ Saint-Allais, 1873, T. III, p. 70-74
  5. ^ Henri Hippolyte Patey (1867-1957), X 1886, G.O of the Legion of Honor, general (1916) he commanded the 60th infantry division. See (in french)
  6. ^ Général Paul Azan, Franchet d'Espèrey, 1949, Flammarion.
  7. ^ L’ILLUSTRATION, No 3944, 05/10/1918
  8. ^ L’Homme libre, June 10th, 1919, p.1 ; La Croix June 13th, 1919 p. 1 ; Le petit journal June 11th, p. 1
  9. ^ Journal Officiel de la République Française june 24, 1919 p. 6494
  10. ^ Excelsior, feb 18, 1925 p. 5
  11. ^ Charles Brecard 1867-1952 division general, great chancellor of the Legion of honnor (1949-1944), has been Military governor of Srasbourg and Cavalry Inspector general
  12. ^ General Prioux, Cavalry Inspector and Commander of the Cavalry Corps in 1940 told me that following my internship at the Center des Hautes Études Militaires in 1932, that I had been criticized for considering as indispensable the use of armored units in combat, "en masse" and towards distant targets, in close connection with the air forces (reconnaissance and bombardment). The doctrine was then based on the advance of tanks under the protection of artillery trajectories. Gabriel Bougrain, Sous la Croix de Lorraine, les batailles de la 2e DLM, May–June 1940.
  13. ^ At the end of 1935, Colonel Bougrain, who commanded the 4th Tunisian Spahis regiment in Sfax, sent Marshal Franchet d'Espèrey a study in which he emphasizes the role of tanks in a mobility war concept as well as the combined interaction of aviation and tanks. The Marshal replied : I read with great interest your study on the physiognomy of a modern warfare situation. It is full of new and often relevant ideas, although sometimes a little radical: I fear that the squadrons to which you entrust all the artillery actions other than direct support, will bring you many disillusions on days of bad weather (...) I would be happy to help bring your work to life: its purpose could be achieved if many people who still live had their eyes and mind not only fixed on the past, but rather on the future. Marshal Franchet d'Espèrey, correspondances, letter jan 6, 1936 to colonel Bougrain
  14. ^ R. Noulens, Les Spahis, cavaliers de l'armée d'Afrique, Paris, 1997.
  15. ^ Le Casoar, nr233, april 2019, p. 46
  16. ^ Erik Barbanson, Les 2e et 3e Divisions Légères Mécaniques, Edition Arès.
  17. ^ " ... Lieutenant-Colonel Bougrain was also an officer convinced of the revolution of engines would be increasingly effective for the army. Very attracted by mechanics, he could not convince the cavalry generals who surrounded him, even if they showed him their esteem, notably by entrusting him with the command of the 2nd DLM which was going to be illustrated in May 1940 as part of the Cavalry Corps". Gérard Saint-Martin, L’Arme blindée Française.
  18. ^ La Lorraine, Itinéraires de découvertes, Bruno Barbier, Editions Ouest-France.
  19. ^ " From a tactical point of view, the success was total for General Prioux. Its mission had been to provide a limited duration of resistance and to allow time for the 1st Army until the fifth day of fighting (May 14) to settle in the Gembloux position. Since the Germans were not able to carry out a massive attack on this area until 15 May, his mission was more than fulfilled. First, his tanks had inflicted severe losses on those of the enemy. The Germans had to accept enormous damages not only in Hannut, but also in Gembloux. Thus, the 4th Panzer Division, on the morning of May 16, had only 137 battle tanks, including 4 IV tanksThe statistics drawn up the same day announce 20 to 25% of unusable tanks in the 3rd Panzerdivision and up to 45 to 50% in the 4th. Of course, many of the broken down battle tanks could be quickly restored; However, initially, the attack force of this armored corps was greatly weakened." Karl-Heinz Friezer, Le mythe de la guerre-éclair.
  20. ^ " The light mechanized division was intended to carry out reconnaissance, or to cover troop movements and not at all to combat with the German Panzers: it did, however, that day. The first major tank battle of the Second World War began. Throughout the day of the 12th, between Tirlemont and Huy, General Prioux stood up with his cavalry corps (2nd and 3rd light mechanized divisions) to the corps of General H-pner, whose 824 armoured vehicles did not defeat the French 520. When the evening fell, the enemy had withdrawn. The Somua tanks, each division having 80, were superior to the Mark III and IV and the Hochkiss 35 to their two light models. But the Panzers were supported by waves of Stuka that operated without much opposition, while Prioux had no air support. Moreover, its units were handicapped by the lack of radio links - the light tanks were not equipped with radio - which prevented them from manoeuvring in large formations as the Germans did (...) Prioux's valiant resistance had given the first army time to settle in Gembloux's hole.. ". William L. Shirer, La chute de la Troisième République, une enquête sur la défaite de 1940.
  21. ^ Liste des bénéficiaires de citations accordées par les autorités de l'Armée de terre: homologuées après révision et donnant droit au port de la nouvelle Croix de guerre 1939-1940, war ministry, order 128/C p.833
  22. ^ David Divine, Les 9 jours de Dunkerque, Calman-Lévy
  23. ^ Hervé Cras, Dunkerque, Editions France Empire.
  24. ^ The 4th Armored Division (4th D.C.R.) which was created on May 10, 1940 is made up of tank battalions. It was commanded until June 6, 1940 by Colonel (then General) De Gaulle. On the 7th, it was commanded by General de La Font and formed with the 2nd D.L.M. a group under the orders of General Bougrain.
  25. ^ Erik Barbanson, Les 2e et 3e Divisions Légères Mécaniques, Edition Arès
  26. ^ Journal Officiel de la République Française - march 17th, 1941 p. 1203
  27. ^ Général Grandsart, Le Xe Corps d’Armée dans la bataille 1939-1940, Editions Berger-Levrault.
  28. ^ On October 24, 1940, Marshal Pétain, head of state since July 10, stops at the prefecture of Tours. Henry du Moulin de Labarthète, his director of the civil cabinet says: " The prefect of Indre-et-Loire, Mr. Vernet, I believe, introduces himself, took the Marshal and I in the salons of the Prefecture, and then in the dining room. A nice dining room. But an old-fashioned prefect, who finds nothing better to tell us than his disappointment at having been so poorly rewarded for his attitude, during the bombing of the city: "I was promised the tie, on the radio. I didn't see anything coming. Besides, I'm just a knight and I'm not entitled to the tie. But the rosette, a simple rosette, Marshal, what do you think?. This man annoys me.. ". Le temps des illusions.
  29. ^ Rear admiral Alain du Vigier, Le Général Jean Touzet du Vigier, éditions Fernand Lanore, Paris.
  30. ^ " Model officer of conscience and duty. During the battle of June 9, 1940, commanding a foothold on the Aisne, attacked head-on and flank by an enemy who had managed to cross the river after a huge bombardment and thanks to a thick artificial fog slick , sustained a fierce struggle from 4:30 a.m. to 11 a.m., resisting on the spot, without failure, despite renewed bombardments throughout the morning. He had his section largely destroyed. Seriously injured during the action, died as a result of his injuries. Has been cited" . Weygand.