Lieutenant-Colonel Chick Thomson
5th Battalion, The Black Watch

Thomson was in a dreadful state. He came back the following day and I had to get the doctor and the padre to keep him for a few hours. And there he was a D.S.O., he got two or three D.S.O.s altogether; it was too much. It wasn’t their fault. They had been fighting in the desert. They’d been sitting around north London or wherever it was they sat without being properly trained, and they were thrown into this bocage country with Germans popping out.
(Lt-Col. Terence Otway, interview, 1989)
Born on 17 January 1907 in Monifieth, Angus, Scotland, Charles Newbigging Thomson was a Territorial Army officer with the 4/5th Battalion, Black Watch. He became captain in 1932 and served during the Battle of France in 1940. When the 5th Black Watch embarked for Egypt in June 1942, Thomson served as second-in-command under Lieutenant-Colonel T.G. Rennie. Wounded during the Battle of El Alamein, Thomson returned to the unit in December 1942, succeeding Rennie who had been promoted to 154th Infantry Brigade.








