Military service Bridges then fought in the
First World War with the
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, eventually achieving the rank of
captain and being awarded the
Military Cross.
Public service He later joined the
Civil Service and in 1938 he was appointed
Cabinet Secretary, succeeding
Sir Maurice Hankey. Bridges remained in this post until 1946, when he was made
Permanent Secretary to the Treasury and
Head of the Home Civil Service, a position he held until 1956. In his
post-war memoirs,
Winston Churchill praised Bridges' wartime work as Secretary to the War Cabinet, writing that not only was Bridges "an extremely competent and tireless worker, but he was also a man of exceptional force, ability, and personal charm, without a trace of jealousy in his nature". During his time as the Head of the Home Civil Service, Bridges promoted the opening of the
Civil Service Club, which was a gift from
Queen Elizabeth II by her wish, to be applied to some object of general benefit to the Civil and Foreign Services using the balance of the Wedding Fund collected by the Home Civil Service and the
Foreign Service on the occasion of
her wedding to
Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten. The Civil Service Club has a meeting room named in honour of Bridges. After his retirement, Bridges served as Chancellor of the
University of Reading. He was given
honorary degrees from several universities and appointed a
Fellow of the Royal Society. He also published
The State and the Arts,
Romanes Lecture for 1958, Oxford, and
The Treasury (Oxford University Press, 1964). ==Personal life==