Lt-Col. R.W. Craddock

Lieutenant-Colonel R.W. Craddock
2nd Battalion, South Wales Borderers
1st Battalion, Suffolk Regiment (The Buffs)

The speech he made on the 9th October marked him out as a great man, knowing the men he commanded. True to his word he was indefatigable in visiting the forward positions till, later in the battle, falling a victim to a German mine, he was very badly wounded . Even so, with a shattered leg, he had crawled out of the mine field before being picked up, and he could still joke about the limb he had lost. His name was for long a legend in the First Battalion.

(Walter Norris Nicholson, The Suffolk Regiment, 1928 to 1946, 128)

Born on 3 August 1910, Calcutta, British India, Richard Walter Craddock was Sandhurst educated and a commissioned officer in the Royal East Kent Regiment (Buffs) since 1930. He served during the Battle of France as captain and adjutant in the 2nd Battalion, Buffs, which was recognized with an award of the Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire. In 1943, he was posted to Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s delegation for the conferences in Washington, D.C., Quebec City and Cairo.

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