Claude Stokes

Colonel Claude Bayfield Stokes CIE DSO OBE (27 October 1875 – 7 December 1948) was an Indian Army officer and diplomat.[1][2] He served in India and was an intelligence officer with Dunsterforce during the First World War.

Claude Bayfield Stokes
Born(1875-10-27)27 October 1875
Died7 December 1948(1948-12-07) (aged 73)
South Kensington, London, England
NationalityUnited Kingdom
OccupationIndian Army Officer and Diplomat

Stokes was educated at St John's School, Leatherhead and Sandhurst.[3] He was commissioned into the East Kent Regiment on 28 September 1895 and served on the North West Frontier 1897–98.[4] He transferred to the Indian Army 7 October 1897 and in July 1900 he joined the 3rd Skinner's Horse, a unit of the Indian Army.[5][4]

Stokes was appointed military attaché to Tehran from 1907–1911. During this period he supplied Edward Granville Browne with sensitive intelligence.[6] In 1908 he saved the life of Ali-Akbar Dehkhoda, the Iranian linguist and Hassan Taqizadeh (a subsequent President of Iran), when he allowed him to take refuge in the British Legation compound.[7] He commanded the first detachment of the British Army to go to Baku arriving on 4 August 1918.[5]

He was appointed British High Commissioner in Transcaucasia, based in the Georgian capital of Tiflis, from 1920 to 1921.[8]

He retired from the Indian Army 1 October 1922.[9]

From 1931–1940 he was British Vice consul in Nice, France.[8]

Family life

Stokes had married Olga Postovsky in Turkey in the early 1920s and they had a daughter. Stokes died at 22B Roland Gardens in South Kensington London on 7 December 1948.[10]

gollark: This is very* practical.
gollark: No, that would be ridiculous. Instead, we force them to speak only through speech synthesis, with their picture obscured, and run the text through a neural network which bland-ifies it and possibly removes some stupid things.
gollark: That sounds like one of those "requires general intelligence" problems.
gollark: Some of the particularly !!FUN!! ones are in probability and uncertainty, which humans are especially awful at.
gollark: ddg! wikipedia list of cognitive biases

References

  1. Hui-Min Lo (1978), The Correspondence of G. E. Morrison 1912–1920, Vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, p. 315, ISBN 9780521215619
  2. Biography, Who's Who
  3. "Who's Who".
  4. January 1908 Indian Army List
  5. "Dunsterforce – part 1". Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  6. Mansour Bonakdarian (30 June 2006), Britain And the Iranian Constitutional Revolution of 1906–1911, Syracuse University Press, ISBN 9780815630425, OCLC 63171146, OL 8049521M, 0815630425
  7. Homa Katouzian (2012), Iran, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, OCLC 830085718, OL 25367437M
  8. Halpern, Paul (2011). The Mediterranean Fleet, 1919–1929. Ashgate Publishing.
  9. Indian Army List 1941 Supplement
  10. "Deaths." Times [London, England] 8 Dec. 1948: 1. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 9 Oct. 2013.
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