(centre left); Lieutenant General
Sydney Wason (centre), and Lieutenant General Sir Frederick Pile (centre right) at
Anti-Aircraft Command on 14 February 1941 during a visit by
David Margesson, the
Secretary of State for War. Pile served in the
First World War and was involved in the
retreat from Mons and was a Staff Captain with 1st Division before becoming a Brigade Major with 40th Division in 1916. and the
Distinguished Service Order during the war. After the war he was appointed a Brigade Major at Brighton and Shoreham District. In 1928 he became
commander of the 1st Experimental Mechanized Force and assistant director of mechanisation at the
War Office. In 1939, at the start of the
Second World War, he was made General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of
Anti-Aircraft Command, a position he held throughout the war. His plan for "Engagement of Long Range Rockets with AA Gunfire" (gunfire into a radar-predicted airspace to intercept the
V-2 rocket) was ready on 21 March 1945 but the plan was not used due to the danger of shells falling on
Greater London.
Tim Pile was considered as
CIGS to replace
John Dill in October 1941 at
Beaverbrook's urging (Pile had been spending weekends with Beaverbrook).
Alan Brooke who replaced Dill said that "Tim" Pile had certain valuable qualities but he could not think of a
worse selection as CIGS. In March 1944,
MI5 considered him the most likely source of the classified information leak concerning the location of the planned
Normandy landings to
B. H. Liddell Hart. Pile was created a
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB) in the
1945 New Year Honours. After the War he became Director General of Housing with the
Ministry of Works. He was also Colonel Commandant of the Royal Artillery from 1945 to 1952. == Personal life ==