At the outbreak of the
Second World War in September 1939, Freeman-Attwood (having added Attwood to his name in 1937) by now a
lieutenant colonel, was serving as a
General Staff Officer (GSO) with the
50th (Northumbrian) Motor Division, a TA formation. He was sent with the division to France in January 1940 where it became part of the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF). He served with the division throughout the
Battle of France in May 1940 and took part in the
Dunkirk evacuation, and, in late July, was promoted to
brigadier and assumed command of the 5th London Brigade, another TA unit, part of the 2nd London Division (both redesignated in November 1940 as the
141st (London) Infantry Brigade and
47th (London) Infantry Division). In November 1941 he was promoted to
major general and became
General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the
46th Infantry Division, another TA unit, in succession to Major General
Miles Dempsey. The division, recruiting from the
North Midlands and the
West Riding of Yorkshire, was composed of the
137th,
138th and
139th Infantry Brigades and divisional troops. In January 1943, Freeman-Attwood led the division overseas to
French North Africa, where, upon its arrival in
Tunisia, came under command of
V Corps, (
Lieutenant General Charles Allfrey),
First Army (Lieutenant General
Kenneth Anderson). The division fought in the
Tunisian campaign, most notably in the final stages of the
Battle of Kasserine Pass and in
Operation Ochsenkopf, until the campaign came to an end in May 1943, with Freeman-Attwood being awarded the
Distinguished Service Order (DSO) for his division's actions at Djebel Abiod. ==Retirement and later years==