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22 Facts About Richard Trant

1.

General Sir Richard Brooking Trant, KCB, DL was an officer in the British Army.

2.

Richard Trant was Land Deputy Commander in the Falklands War, and served as Quartermaster-General to the Forces from 1983 to 1986.

3.

Richard Trant attended the Bangalore Officer Training School in 1947, receiving an emergency commission in the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry.

4.

Richard Trant transferred to a regular commission in the Royal Regiment of Artillery in 1949, and served with anti-aircraft units in the United Kingdom.

5.

Richard Trant joined the 32nd Medium Regiment in Hong Kong in 1952, and served in the Korean War with 74th Medium Battery in 1953.

6.

Richard Trant returned to Europe in 1957, joining A Battery of the 1st Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, serving with the British Army of the Rhine.

7.

Richard Trant was posted back to India in 1961, to study at the Indian Army Staff College in Wellington Cantonment, and then served as GSO 2 to the Federal Regular Army in Aden Protectorate.

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8.

Richard Trant returned to England in 1964, to study at the Joint Services Staff College.

9.

Richard Trant commanded C Battery of 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, and then became an instructor at the Staff College, Camberley.

10.

Richard Trant took command of 3RHA, and after another year at Camberley as Colonel GS of the Staff College Division, he became commander of the 5th Airportable Brigade in 1972, when the unit was temporarily sent to Northern Ireland, to reinforce British forces at the height of the Troubles.

11.

Richard Trant was Deputy Military Secretary in the Ministry of Defence for two-year before being promoted to Major General and appointed Command Land Forces in Northern Ireland, Operation Banner, in 1977.

12.

Earl Mountbatten of Burma was killed just after Richard Trant left to become Director Army Staff Duties in the Ministry of Defence.

13.

Richard Trant was promoted to Lieutenant General in 1982, and became GOC South East District, taking charge of the British Army's rapid reaction forces for operations outside the NATO area shortly before Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands.

14.

Richard Trant succeeded Royal Marines Major General Jeremy Moore as adviser to the overall commander, Admiral Sir John Fieldhouse, based at Northwood, when Moore flew south to become overall commander of British land forces in theatre.

15.

Richard Trant became a Freeman of the City of London in 1984, and retired from the Army in 1986.

16.

Richard Trant became a senior military adviser to Belfast aircraft manufacturer Short Brothers, later joining the boards of Hunting Engineering and Wilson Hogg Robinson.

17.

Richard Trant was vice-president of the Defence Manufacturers' Association from 1989 to 1996.

18.

Richard Trant was colonel commandant of the Royal Army Educational Corps from 1979 to 1982, of the Royal Regiment of Artillery from 1982 to 1987, of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps from 1984 to 1989, and of Honourable Artillery Company, and honorary colonel of 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery.

19.

Richard Trant was a commissioner at the Royal Hospital Chelsea for 6 years.

20.

Richard Trant served as a Deputy Lieutenant of Cornwall from 1997, and was a Cornish bard, Chairman of the Cornwall Heritage Trust for 14 years, chairman of the Devon and Cornwall Historic Society, Patron of St Bartholomew's church in Lostwithiel, and president of the Royal Cornwall Show in 2004.

21.

Richard Trant married, Diana Clare Edwards, in 1957.

22.

Richard Trant was survived by his wife and their three children.