France and Belgium After being promoted to the acting rank of brigadier on 22 December 1939, Ritchie became the Brigadier General Staff (BGS) of
II Corps, commanded by
Lieutenant-General Sir
Alan Brooke, which was serving in France as part of the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF). Ritchie seems to have impressed Brooke, as on 3 January 1940 the latter wrote in his diary that "Ritchie, my new BGS, seems to be turning out well and should, I think, be good". When the so-called "
Phoney War" came to an end in May with the German
invasion of western Europe, Ritchie further impressed Brooke by controlling the corps headquarters in a calm and confident manner, thus enabling Brooke to concentrate on running the battle on his corps' front. After being
evacuated to England Ritchie was requested by Brooke when the latter was appointed to command a new "
Second BEF". Accompanying Brooke to France, Ritchie was sent back to England again after Brooke realised that further efforts to fight the Germans were pointless and, in his words, "I sent Neil Ritchie off home this evening [16 June] as I did not feel that any useful purpose could be served by retaining him any longer". For his services in France and Belgium, Ritchie was made a
Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the
1940 Birthday Honours on 11 July, and was mentioned in despatches on 26 July.
Service in the United Kingdom Ritchie served under Brooke as BGS of
Southern Command until Brooke was appointed
Commander-in-Chief, Home Forces, in July 1940. He then served Brooke's successor, Lieutenant-General Claude Auchinleck. At the relatively young age of forty-three, Ritchie received a promotion to the acting rank of
major-general on 28 October 1940, with
service number 9334, and became
General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the
51st (Highland) Infantry Division. Most of the division had been destroyed in France but the decision was taken to reform it by absorbing the
9th (Highland) Infantry Division, the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division's second Line
Territorial Army duplicate. Although not a Scot, Ritchie was a good choice for the role, as he had spent much of his career with the Black Watch, which contributed three of the division's nine infantry battalions, and had experience training troops. Brooke was impressed when he visited the division in May 1941.
North Africa and the Middle East Ritchie remained with the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division until June 1941, when he was sent to the
Middle East, where he served as Deputy Chief of the General Staff (DCGS) to Wavell, the
Commander-in-Chief of
Middle East Command. Ritchie's acting rank of major-general was made temporary on 28 October. Auchinleck succeeded Wavell as C-in-C Middle East, and gave Ritchie his highest field command, the
British Eighth Army, in November, following the dismissal of Lieutenant-General
Alan Cunningham during
Operation Crusader. Although Ritchie had never commanded a division or corps in battle, he was available, whereas the Eighth Army's corps commanders, Lieutenant Generals
Willoughby Norrie and
Reade Godwin-Austen were fighting a battle, and other prospects were outside the theatre and unfamiliar with the situation. He was promoted to the acting rank of lieutenant general on 27 November. For his period of service in the Middle East from July to October 1941, he was mentioned in despatches. ,
William Gott and, with his back facing the camera,
George Erskine. Auchinleck was himself present at Eighth Army headquarters from 1 to 10 December, when the battle was won. The
Siege of Tobruk and the German and Italian forces under
Generaloberst Erwin Rommel were forced to retreat from
Cyrenaica. Auchinleck later wrote that: Ritchie's appointment was originally intended as a temporary one until a suitable commander could be found, but he ended up commanding the Eighth Army for nearly seven months. Auchinleck was satisfied with his performance in Operation Crusader, and thought that it would affect morale to remove another commander, and a victorious one at that, so he retained Ritchie in the post. He was awarded the Polish
Silver Cross of the Virtuti Militari for his part in Operation Crusader. In his book
The Desert Generals,
Corelli Barnett, a British
military historian, wrote that: Victory soon turned to defeat. Rommel struck back on 21 January 1942. At one point Ritchie bypassed Godwin-Austen and countermanded the latter's orders to Major-General
Francis Tuker, the commander of the
4th Indian Division. Feeling that Ritchie had by this action displayed a lack of confidence in him, Godwin-Austen tendered his resignation to Auchinleck, which was reluctantly accepted. Ritchie was in command of the Eighth Army at the
Battle of Gazala in May–June 1942, when he failed to exercise strong command over the Army. He lacked experience in handling large formations, particularly armoured ones. His more experienced subordinates, Norrie and
William Gott saw him as little more than a mouthpiece for Auchinleck and often ignored or undermined him. Even his division commanders were more experienced. Auchinleck kept him on a short leash, paying frequent visits, sending lengthy instructions and positioning his DCGS, Brigadier
Eric Dorman-Smith at Eighth Army headquarters. The British and Commonwealth forces were soundly defeated, resulting in the
Axis capture of Tobruk. On 25 June, Ritchie was sacked by Auchinleck, who assumed personal command of the Eighth Army.
Michael Carver, who later served under Ritchie in North-West Europe, and became a
field marshal and a military historian, wrote:
Return to the United Kingdom After being replaced as the Eighth Army commander Ritchie returned to the United Kingdom. He met with Brooke, who was now the
Chief of the Imperial General Staff, at the War Office on 15 July 1942, and Brooke decided to give him a second chance. Brooke later wrote: Ritchie was appointed to command the
52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division on 11 September 1942. The division was a first line Territorial Army formation made up of infantry battalions from all five Scottish
Lowland regiments, and at the time was being trained in
mountain warfare, in the United Kingdom in preparation for
possible operations in Norway. The training took place in the
Grampian Mountains and culminated in Exercise Goliath II in October 1943. Judged fit to command a corps, Ritchie relinquished command to Major-General
Edmund Hakewill-Smith on 11 November. He was selected to command
XII Corps in place of Lieutenant-General
Montagu Stopford, who was sent to India. In the
1944 New Year Honours, Ritchie was made a
Companion of the Order of the Bath. He became a temporary lieutenant-general and war substantive major-general on 3 April 1944, and a substantive major-general on 19 May, with seniority backdated to 25 December 1943.
Northwest Europe on 26 March 1945. Unlike his Eighth Army predecessor Cunningham, who never regained an active command following his dismissal, Ritchie's XII Corps was chosen to participate in the
invasion of Normandy as part of Lieutenant-General
Miles Dempsey's
British Second Army, which in turn was part of
General Sir
Bernard Montgomery's
21st Army Group. Although Ritchie was not one of Montgomery's protégés, the latter never considered removing him before or during the campaign. When Ritchie asked for another division and more artillery after the
breakout from Normandy, Montgomery provided it.
James Cassels served as Ritchie's GSO1 in the 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division and then, after a brief period as commanding officer of the
Tyneside Scottish in the
49th (West Riding) Infantry Division, became Ritchie's BGS at XII Corps headquarters in January 1944. After Cassels was appointed commander of the
152nd Infantry Brigade on 27 June 1944, Ritchie was not satisfied with his replacement, and asked Montgomery for Brigadier Gilbert Minto (Jim) Elliot, the Commander, Royal Artillery, of the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division, who had been a fellow student at the Staff College, Camberley. Montgomery granted this request, and Elliot served as Ritchie's BGS in the
Battle of Normandy and the subsequent
campaign in North Western Europe, ending in May 1945 with the
end of the war in Europe. In the advance across France, Ritchie demonstrated a mastery of high-tempo operations and the employment of armour. He had the
15th (Scottish) Infantry Division seize a
bridgehead over the
Seine at
Muids on 27 August. His
7th Armoured Division crossed the river on 1 September and reached its objective,
Ghent, four days later. The following year, during
Operation Plunder, the crossing of the
Rhine, Ritchie demonstrated technical acumen, sound planning, and the coordination of the forces under his command. (right) and Ritchie (left) inspect men of XII Corps near
Nijmegen on 13 October 1944. Ritchie could be tough and occasionally ruthless with his subordinates. One of his first actions as commander of XII Corps was to relieve Major-General
William Bradshaw from command of the 59th (Shropshire) Infantry Division because Ritchie felt he was not up to the task of handling a division in operations. During the advance into Germany, Ritchie was concerned at the slow advance of the 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division and went to see Hakewill-Smith for an explanation. When Hakewill-Smith seemed unsure of what troops were deployed to lead the advance, Ritchie said: "I'll tell you, I've just come down from there, you've got three squadrons of your Recce Regiment deployed, and there's not another bloody thing in your whole division deployed, and yet you say you're held up." Ritchie then drew a line on the headquarters map with a grease pencil and told Hakewill-Smith that he would be going home if his units were not on that position by the next day. They were. For his service in North West Europe, Ritchie was knighted, being appointed a
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire on 5 July 1945, and he was mentioned in despatches for "gallant and distinguished services", on 22 March and 9 August 1945. He also received several foreign awards, including being made a
Commander of the Legion of Merit by the United States, a
Knight Grand Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau with Swords by the Netherlands, and a
Commander of the Legion of Honour by France, which also awarded him the
Croix de guerre. He became a substantive lieutenant-general on 30 October 1945, with seniority backdated to 21 December 1944. The historian Richard Mead had kind words for Ritchie: ==Post-war==