Puttick was commanding the Central Military District when the
Second World War broke out and, as a skilled administrator, played a key role in the raising of the Second New Zealand Expeditionary Force (2NZEF) for service overseas. The
4th Infantry Brigade with Puttick, promoted to temporary
brigadier, as its commander was to be the first brigade of the newly formed
2nd New Zealand Division, under the overall command of Major General
Bernard Freyberg. The brigade duly departed for the Middle East in January 1940. , British Chief of the Imperial General Staff, visits Maadi Camp, Egypt. From left to right: Brigadiers
R. Miles and E. Puttick, Major General
Freyberg and General Dill, Brigadiers
J. Hargest and
H. E. Barrowclough. Puttick oversaw the training of the brigade once it settled in its base in Egypt. In June 1940, Freyberg travelled to England to where the second infantry brigade of the division had been shipped. In his absence, Puttick was temporary commander of the New Zealand forces in Egypt. Anticipating a German invasion of Greece, the division was one of the Allied units transferred to that country. Arriving in April 1941, he led the brigade competently during the
Battle of Greece as it retreated from the Aliakmon Line in northern Greece to the Servia Pass and onto the beaches at Porto Rafti from where it was evacuated on 27 April to
Crete. He was later awarded a
Bar to his DSO for his "gallantry and devotion to duty" during this period. On Crete, Puttick was promoted to temporary major general and, following Freyberg's appointment as the commander of
Creforce, took over responsibility for the 2nd New Zealand Division. During the
Battle of Crete his failure to pressure
James Hargest, one of his brigade commanders, to make a counterattack to support the defenders of Maleme airfield resulted in its eventual loss to the Germans. With reinforcements and supplies landed at the airfield the Germans were able to consolidate the tenuous gains made in the opening days of the invasion. Any meaningful chance of the Allies successfully preventing the capture of the island was lost and the survivors of Creforce were eventually evacuated to Egypt. On his return to Egypt, Puttick was offered the opportunity to become
Chief of the General Staff, effectively the commander of the New Zealand Military Forces, by the visiting New Zealand prime minister,
Peter Fraser. He accepted the role and returned to New Zealand in September 1941. Puttick's focus was on ensuring the manpower of the 2NZEF in North Africa was adequately maintained by reinforcements. In the face of the increasing threat of the
Japanese Empire in the Pacific, he also put considerable effort into improving New Zealand's defences. After the Japanese entered the war, he considered the actual threat of invasion to be minimal but continued to encourage improvements in home defence as a means of boosting morale. In April 1942 Puttick was promoted to
lieutenant general, the first New Zealand-born soldier to reach this rank. In the
1942 King's Birthday Honours, he was appointed a
Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB). As the war progressed he was faced with the difficulty of juggling resources to maintain both the 2nd New Zealand Division in the Middle East and the
3rd New Zealand Division in the
Pacific theatre. Later in the war, he was in favour keeping the 2nd Division in Italy to deal with what he considered to be the greater priority, the defeat of Germany, rather than have it be used against the Japanese. ==Later life==