Deciding to follow a military career Garnons Williams was accepted into the
Royal Military College Sandhurst, and is also recorded as representing the Sandhurst rugby team. He completed his officer training in 1876, and was commissioned as a
sub-lieutenant on 26 February. He was posted to the
38th Regiment of Foot, promoted
lieutenant on 17 January 1877, and with his
army rank (but not regimental seniority) backdated to his original commission as sub-lieutenant, and a month later, on 17 February 1877, transferred to the
7th Regiment of Foot. By February 1885 he had been promoted to
captain, and his unit had been renamed the
Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment). On 10 January 1887 he was appointed
adjutant of the 4th Battalion of the regiment, the
Militia unit of the regiment. A regular officer was normally given this post in Militia units to organise training and generally maintain standards. His posting lasted the usual 5 years. He then retired from the regular army on 4 May 1892. On 8 August 1894 he was commissioned
major in the 1st (Brecknockshire) Volunteer Battalion,
South Wales Borderers, and on 1 November 1895 was appointed
brigade major for the South Wales Brigade of the
Volunteer Force. On 12 July 1899 he was granted the honorary rank of
lieutenant colonel. He resigned his Volunteer commission on 26 May 1906, retaining his rank and with permission to continue wearing his uniform.
First World War He rejoined the British Army shortly after the outbreak of
World War I and was posted to his original regiment, joining the 12th (Service) Battalion of the
Royal Fusiliers as a major on 26 September 1914. He was promoted temporary lieutenant colonel on 3 October 1914, and transferred back to the South Wales Borderers to command the Brecknockshire Battalion. He was later posted back to 12th Royal Fusiliers, and, according to official sources, was killed on 25 September 1915 while leading his battalion at the
Battle of Loos. He is commemorated on the
Loos Memorial to the Missing. At 59 years of age, he was the eldest of the 13 Wales international players to be killed during the war. A soldier under the command of Colonel Garnons Williams wrote an account of his commanding officer's death, which puts the date of his death as 27 September. Col Garnons Williams was in temporary command of the 12th Royal Fusiliers when on 25 September he led his battalion in an attack on German trenches. However, the flanks were exposed and on 27 September, Garnons Williams gave the order to retreat. He was at that moment shot in the head from a house nearby. The soldier who gave the account said: "I was very sorry for him, as we could not have had a better, braver officer. He was with us all the time in the front trench, and looked after us as well as he could; no man could have done better. Nobody could get back to him." The following evening, the battalion was relieved, Garnons Williams being declared officially wounded and missing in action, unofficially reported killed. ==See also==