inspects American soldiers of the
108th Regiment, with the
27th Division, 6 August 1918. From left to right: Brigadier General
Norman MacMullen, Chief of Staff,
XIX British Corps;
aide-de-camp to Lieutenant General Sir Herbert Watt GOC XIX Corps; Lieutenant General Sir Herbert Watts; Brigadier General
Palmer E. Pierce, commanding 51st Brigade, 27th Division; Major General
John F. O'Ryan, the 27th Division commander, and King George V. Shortly after Watts's retirement, the outbreak of the
First World War meant that he returned almost immediately to the army. He was promoted to the temporary rank of
brigadier general in August and given command of the recently raised
21st Infantry Brigade in the
7th Division; the division was composed of battalions of the
Regular Army recalled from overseas service on the outbreak of war and formed into a new division in England. Watts remained with the brigade until the
Battle of Loos in September 1915, when Major-General
Thompson Capper, commanding the division, was killed in action and Watts, promoted to temporary
major general, took over as
general officer commanding (GOC) of the 7th Division. With the brief exception of a few days in July 1916 as GOC
38th (Welsh) Division - under Watts, the division took its objective,
Mametz Wood, though with severe losses - he would remain with the division for the next year and a half. In January 1917 he was promoted to major general on the active list and later to the temporary rank of
lieutenant general in February and became GOC of the
XIX Corps, which he led for the rest of the war. He was awarded the Companion of the
Order of St Michael and St George in February 1915, as well as the French
Legion of Honour in 1919. Watts was regarded by Field-Marshal Sir
Douglas Haig,
commander-in-chief (C-in-C) of the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF), as "a plucky hard little man" and "a fine leader" but also "a distinctly stupid man [who] lacks imagination". While his courage and fighting spirit were well-regarded, planning and organisation were left to his divisional staff. His personality impressed regimental officers; he required
Territorial Force (TF) officers of the
61st (2nd South Midland) Division to repeat after him in chorus a salutary maxim: “The natural corollary of delegation of authority is intelligent supervision”. Watts had never attended the
Staff College, Camberley, spending his earlier career entirely on regimental service. Watts unveiled the War Memorial at
Mitcham in
Surrey in 1920. He retired from the army on 14 February 1920 and was granted the honorary rank of lieutenant general. ==Family==