Gough, known as "Johnnie", was the son of General
Sir Charles Gough, and nephew of General
Sir Hugh Gough, both of whom won the
Victoria Cross (VC) during the
Indian Mutiny in 1857. This gave the family the rare distinction of holding the VC simultaneously by father, brother and (father's) son. He was also the younger brother of General
Sir Hubert Gough (1870–1963), who led the
British Fifth Army on the Western Front during the First World War. Gough was, after graduating from the
Royal Military College, Sandhurst, commissioned as a
second lieutenant in the
Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own) on 12 March 1892, and promoted to
lieutenant on 6 December 1893. He served with the
Central African Rifles in 1896, the Sudan in 1898, and took part in the
Occupation of Crete (1898–99). Promoted to
captain on 5 December 1898, he served in the
Second Boer War from 1899 until 1902, and received a
brevet rank of
major on 29 November 1900. After the war ended in June 1902, Gough was among a number of officers who left
Cape Town on the in late July, arriving in
Southampton the following month. In late 1902 he left the United Kingdom for
Berbera, to be a
staff officer in a flying column in the
Somaliland Field Force, serving in
British Somaliland during the
Third Somaliland Expedition. He was seconded from his regiment in order to attend the
Staff College, Camberley from 1904–05, was back in Somaliland in 1909, then returned to the college as an influential lecturer on war studies from 1909 to 1913. He was promoted to colonel in December 1909.
Award of the VC Gough was 31 years old, and a brevet major in the Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own) during the
Third Somaliland Expedition when the following event took place for which he was awarded the VC. On 22 April 1903, Gough was in command of a column on the march which was attacked by an enemy force in superior numbers, that is the Darawiish army of
Diiriye Guure near
Daratoleh, British Somaliland. After conducting a successful defence, then a fighting withdrawal, Gough came back to help two captains (
William George Walker and
George Murray Rolland). The captains were helping a mortally wounded officer. They managed to get the wounded officer onto a camel, but then he was wounded again and died immediately. The two captains won the VC for their actions. However, Gough played down his own part in the event. It was not until late in the year that the true story came out indicating that Gough was equally deserving of recognition. He was subsequently awarded the Victoria Cross in January 1904. The
King Edward VII presented the medal to him at Buckingham Palace on 29 February 1904. Promoted from supernumary captain to captain in January 1905, he was appointed an
aide-de-camp to the King in August 1907 and promoted to major in May 1908. ==Curragh Incident==