British East African Campaign 19 January - 27 November 1941 signed Lieutenant Colonel Wilson VC

Cover depicts scenes feom the campaign including the Surrender of Gondar and British troops advancing through Keren. Cover bears 20p Victoria Cross Stamp cancelled with BFPS 2261 for the 50th Anniversaey of the British East African Campaign.
Cover has been signed by Lieutenant Colonel E C T Wilson VC who was a member of the East Surrey Regiment attached to the Somaliland Camel Corps

Lieutenant Colonel E C T Wilson VC

Born at Sandown, Isle of Wight, on 2nd October 1912, he was educated at Marlborough and Sandhurst.

Commissioned into The East Surrey Regiment on 2nd February 1933, he was seconded to The King’s African Rifles in 1937 and The Somaliland Camel Corps in 1939.

He served in the Western Desert with the Long Range Desert Group and in Burma, between 1941 and 1944 with 11th (Kenya) Bn The Kings African Rifles. He was seconded to The Northern Rhodesian Regiment in 1946. He retired from the Army in 1949. Although his citation said he was killed in action this was not so and he was decorated with his Victoria Cross by King George VI at Buckingham Palace in July 1942.

His Citation reads:-

“For most conspicuous gallantry on active service in Somaliland. Captain Wilson was in command of machinegun posts manned by Somali soldiers in the key position of Observation Hill, a defended post in the defensive organisation of the Tug Argan Gap in British Somaliland.

The enemy attacked Observation Hill on 11th August 1940. Captain Wilson and Somali gunners under his command beat off the attack and opened fire on the enemy troops attacking Mill Hill, another post within his range. He inflicted such heavy casualties that the enemy, determined to put his guns out of action, brought up a pack battery to within seven hundred yards, and scored two direct hits through the loopholes of his defences which, bursting within the post, wounded Captain Wilson severely in the right shoulder and in the left eye, several of his team also being wounded. His guns were blown off their stands but he repaired and replaced them and, regardless of his wounds, carried on, while his Somali sergeant was killed beside him.

On 12th and 14th August, the enemy again concentrated field artillery fire on Captain Wilson’s guns, but he continued, with his wounds untended, to man them. On 15th August two of his machine-gun posts were blown to pieces, yet Captain Wilson, now suffering from malaria in addition to his wounds, still kept his own post in action. The enemy finally over-ran the post at 5pm on the 15th August when Captain Wilson, fighting to the last, was killed”.

Wilson was resuced from a prison of war camp a few months later

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