John 
            H Crook was the son of Richard Hermon Crook, who had an architect's 
            practice in Bolton, Lancashire and Irene Heald- a well read woman 
            who wrote poetry, studied world religions and became a dedicated pacifist. 
          
           
 
          
          Thomas 
            Heald - John Crook's uncle: Far left and serving as an infantry officer 
            during the First World War 
          John's 
            uncle Thomas Heald (the brother of Irene) won the Military Cross while 
            serving in the Cheshire Regiment in the trenches of the First World 
            War. Heald's war diaries were discovered by his daughter Anne Wolff 
            after his death at the age of 91 and further research by her of other 
            diary accounts of other officers in the regiment led to the publication 
            of 'Subalterns of the Foot' by Square One Publications in 1991. The 
            military background of the family was further deepened by the fact 
            that John's great uncle on his father's side was Colonel Harry Crook. 
            John's grandfather John Crook was a merchant and stockbroker living 
            in Southport. On his mother's side his grandfather was a solicitor 
            also living in Southport.
          His 
            great grand uncle Joseph Crook was Radical/Liberal MP for Bolton between 
            1851 and 1861 at the height of the Victorian Empire when the economic 
            engine of Britain was the Cotton spinning industry of Lancashire. 
            Joseph Crook and his brothers were key figures in a cotton trade that 
            depended on importing raw cotton from the southern American states 
            and using the latest manufacturing technology driven by steam power 
            to spin cloth exported to the Empire, primarily India.
          This 
            was a dramatic and exciting time in Britain's history. Joseph Crook 
            arrived in the new neo-gothic Parliament building designed by Barry 
            at Westminster. The constitution was developing from the Reform Act 
            of 1832 to widen the franchise to include more of the expanding Middle 
            Class. Elections were still by public ballot and associated with bribery 
            and intimidation. 
          Joseph 
            Crook was an example of the patrician reforming Whigs/Liberals, a 
            member of the anti-Corn Law league, who introduced a private member's 
            act that improved the pay and conditions of women working in the dying 
            and bleaching industry. He was treasurer of Bolton's Liberal Association, 
            and responsible for the reopening of the Reform Club in Derby Street. 
            He was presented with a cheque for £70 as a testimonial to his 
            work on the "Bleachers and Dyers Short Time Bill" of 1859. 
            As one of the founders of the Mechanics' Institute; he gave support 
            to the Bolton Education League formed in 1869, and £250 towards 
            the association for the founding of nondenominational schools. 
          Joseph 
            Crook was philosophically opposed to war and campaigned for substantial 
            reductions in military expenditure. He also served on a Parliamentary 
            reform committee to improve democracy through the introduction of 
            the secret ballot and extension of the franchise.
          The 
            historian for the Bank Street chapel, G.M. Ramsden writes: 'Throughout 
            his life, he was a believer in freedom of religious thought and a 
            supporter of the chapel and of the British and Foreign Unitarian Association. 
            He spoke at the opening of the new Chapel building. He married in 
            1856 Mary Dorothy Biggs (1828-1909) and died in 1884, his funeral 
            at Deane Church being conducted by the Vicar and the Rev. C.C.Coe. 
            There is a memorial to him in the chapel.'
          John 
            H Crook's great great grandfather was Joshua Crook (1779-1849) who 
            founded the cotton spinning firm of Joshua Crook & Son, in Blackburn 
            Street. It was to become the second largest employer of labour in 
            the town. He married Anne Tipping and they built the house "White 
            Bank" in Deane. His son Joseph (the Liberal MP born in 1809) 
            took over the firm and steered it through all the turbulent economic 
            and political crises of the 19th Century. By resigning as MP in 1861 
            and 'taking the Chiltern Hundreds' he was able to find alternative 
            cotton suppliers to the Southern American states' plantations. The 
            American civil war had blocked the supply of cotton and brought about 
            a deep recession in the cotton trade. He was also able to manage the 
            reconstruction of the mills when they were badly damaged by fire in 
            1879 at a cost of £20,000.
          The 
            Crook family made a key civic, industrial and social contribution 
            to the history of Bolton and this is reflected in the fact there is 
            still a street with the family name in the town and the library contains 
            archives containing the architectural designs by John H Crook's father 
            Richard Hermon Crook. The Unitarian chapel in Bank Street includes 
            a memorial on the South wall to a second cousin Lieutenant Phillip 
            Crook who was killed in action in 1917 during General Alenby's campaign 
            in Palestine in the First World War:
          'In 
            proud and loving memory of Phillip Joseph Crook Lieutenant in the 
            Duke of Lancasters Own Yeomanry. Killed in Action at Wadi Hesi, Palestine 
            November 17th 1917. This was erected by his parents Edward and Hilda 
            Crook and systers, Evelyn, Anne and Sybil.'
          
           
          John 
            H Crook was actually signed up as an articled clerk (trainee solicitor) 
            in Thomas Heald's firm of solicitors in Wigan at the age of 19 in 
            1934. Heald finished the First World War as a staff captain. In 1937 
            he raised the 6th Battalion the Manchester Regiment as Lieutenant 
            Colonel until 1940. After entrepreneurial travels in the Middle East 
            he had taken over his father's law practice.
         
          
          John 
            Crook aged 21
           
           John 
            Crook married Sylvia Napier in May 1943, two years after she was widowed 
            by the death of her first husband, Alan Brian - an Australian pilot 
            - during a bombing raid in Italy. They had a son, Peter in 1944. 
            John enlisted in his uncle's territorial battalion in Manchester in 
            1939 and in March 1940 was accepted for emergency officer training 
            at the Infantry Training Centre in York. 
          
          John 
            Crook's first wife Sylvia Napier - the daughter of a General in the 
            First World War 
          As 
            he had been in the Army cadet corps at St Peter's School, York in 
            the early 1930s, it was perhaps understandable that he would join 
            the York and Lancaster Regiment. He was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant 
            and formally attached to the 1st battalion York and Lancasters. The 
            battalion had taken a battering during the ill-fated attempt to pre-empt 
            the German invasion of Norway in April 1940. 
          It 
            has to be said the Norwegian campaign was chaotic, badly planned and 
            the evacuation something of a shambles. He would have been fully aware 
            of the plight and anxieties of the York and Lancaster battalions sent 
            to Scandinavia ill-equipped and poorly trained while he was being 
            drilled and instructed as a young officer at the York Infantry Training 
            Centre. They would have been on stand by as replacements to assist 
            in either the York and Lancaster 1st Battalion operation at Andalsnes 
            or the operation involving the Hallamshire Battalion of the York and 
            Lancaster regiment at Namsos. 
          After 
            the Norwegian debacle John Crook was assigned to a platoon of the 
            1st Battalion to undertake anti-German paratroop duties in Scotland 
            during the invasion threat following Dunkirk. He was then transferred 
            to the Hallamshire Battalion as a Second Lieutenant in "D" 
            Company and went to Iceland. Whilst there he was promoted to full 
            lieutenant and when the Battalion returned to Britain in 1942 for 
            re-equipping and retraining for the invasion of Europe he was promoted 
            to temporary captain while attached to 146th Infantry Brigade Headquarters. 
            
          After 
            Lieutenant-Colonel Trevor Hart Dyke took command of the Hallamshires 
            towards the end of 1943, John Crook was transferred back to the Hallamshires 
            to "D" company as a platoon lieutenant and second in command. 
            Rather than land with the Hallamshires in Normandy his service records 
            indicate he was posted to '105 Reinforcement Group'. It is possible 
            he had been recruited in the month before D-Day to form a special 
            reinforcement force called 'First Line Reserve' to plug the gaps in 
            the initial invasion of the beaches.
          Ministry 
            of Defence records now indicate that he was posted to Normandy on 
            14th June 1944, ten days after the D-Day invasion of the beaches and 
            only four days after the Hallamshires were landed somewhat chaotically 
            with 146th Infantry Brigade. 
          In 
            the end the losses on the British and Canadian invasion beaches were 
            lighter than expected. And so he, along with other Hallamshire Battalion 
            officers and other ranks recruited for this special purpose were moved 
            to Normandy to help build up the infrastructure for the campaign inland.
          The 
            invasion troops had failed to break out quickly enough to Caen and 
            German counterattacks and defence consolidation into Bocage country 
            led to the exhausting and bloody campaign that lasted until the end 
            of July and cost the Allies 100,000 casualties. 
          It 
            was as this operation become bogged down in heavy losses that John 
            Crook was posted from 105 Reinforcement Group to take on the role 
            of second in command of "D" company on the 29th June 1944. 
            By this time the original "D" company had been more or less 
            'wiped out.' 
          He 
            found himself commanding a terrified and brave group of soldiers made 
            up of traumatised veterans and nervous replacements experiencing near 
            First World War conditions of shelling and mortar bombardments and 
            sniper fire. This was the front line of the British and Canadian army 
            commanded by General Bernard Montgomery. For more than two and a half 
            weeks the Hallamshires had to bear an appalling casualty rate of several 
            men killed or wounded every day from German artillery.
          On 
            July 16th John Crook had to help lead the soldiers of "D" 
            company in a suicidal run towards the heavily defended village of 
            Vendes that left many of his men dead and maimed in the treacherous 
            fields and hedgerows of Bocage country. They were machine-gunned and 
            blown up by rockets, mortars and artillery. 
          The 
            flanks of this British army attack collapsed and the original Hallamshire 
            attack force of "A" and "C" companies and a borrowed 
            "D" company from KOYLI (King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry) 
            had to retreat back over the same ground to battalion headquarters. 
            
          John 
            Crook had to take command of "D" company after the company 
            commander Captain Mackillop was seriously wounded. He had to lead 
            what was left of "D" company in a desperate defence against 
            German counterattacks in this close country. This he did successfully. 
            
          After 
            the battle of Vendes, he remained a front-line infantry platoon officer 
            with the Hallamshires during the race across the River Seine to chase 
            the retreating Germans and prepare for the attack on Channel port 
            of Le Havre. He was at the heart of six weeks of battles and skirmishes 
            which took another heavy toll of casualties. By the time he broke 
            his leg in a motorcycle accident outside Le Havre on 9th September 
            1944 "D" company had suffered another wave of casualties. 
            
          The 
            officer roll call for the week ending 21st July 1944 states he was 
            2nd in Command of "D" Company. By the week ending 29th July 
            he was recorded as reverting to platoon leader (assumed 7th July 1944).
          For 
            the week ending 7th October 1944 the roll states 'Officers Quitted 
            during week: Lieutenant J. H Crook. Cause: X(ii) List. 'X(ii list' 
            was an army designation for wounded. The MOD records indicate he ceased 
            his overseas service in North West Europe on 11th September 1944. 
            
          Veterans 
            contacted by the author say John Crook was well liked by most of the 
            men and remembered as a quiet and nice man. 
          Recently 
            released MOD records indicate that he retained his category A fitness 
            status until injured in the motorcycle crash on September 9th 1944. 
            The Ministry of Defence has confirmed that he remained with the Hallamshire 
            Battalion during their campaign in France throughout August to early 
            September. MOD 
            documents also record his knowledge of French and familiarity of this 
            area of Normandy. 
          We 
            will never know the full detail of his experiences in Normandy. Most 
            of these civilian volunteers did their duty and never thought anyone 
            would be interested in their stories. 
           
          
          John 
            Crook when a private in his uncle's territorial Manchester Regiment 
            in 1939
          It 
            is a fact that John H Crook suffered from post traumatic stress for 
            most of his life. The details of what happened at Vendes on 16th July 
            1944 and the dreadful pounding he and his soldiers experienced from 
            artillery, mortar fire and machine guns for nearly three weeks in 
            slit trenches before this battle provide some idea of the stress British 
            soldiers were subjected to in Normandy. The danger and horrors continued 
            after the breakout from Bocage country and the Hallamshires chased 
            the Germans across France. 
           
            His war 
            was typical of many men of his generation. It was a combination of 
            hard training, long periods of patrolling and intense periods of action 
            and danger. 
          Like 
            most of the veterans of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy he spoke 
            very little of his experiences. He wanted no credit for what he had 
            done. He always remembered his fallen comrades with quiet dignity 
            and profound respect. He won no medals for gallantry. He would never 
            be celebrated in films or television documentaries as 'a war hero.' 
            
          
          John 
            Crook's Officer's record of service was released to his family by 
            the MOD in 2005 
          If 
            he were alive today and approached by a television documentary team 
            to do an interview, it is probable he would decline wishing to keep 
            his thoughts to himself. 
          In 
            many respects he was typical of most of the civilian soldiers of the 
            British army of 1944 that fought in a bloody, exhausting and terrifying 
            battle after the D-day beach invasion. The British contribution has 
            been diminished by American chauvinism and the distortion of Hollywood 
            histories. It seems to have received little understanding apart from 
            a few outstanding published histories. 
          John 
            Crook was "demobbed" in 1946. He was discharged with the 
            rank of honorary captain. He received four medals for his war service: 
            1939/45 Star, France and Germany Star, Defence Medal, and War Medal 
            1939/45. 
          He 
            was an enthusiastic supporter of the British Legion and retained a 
            love of France and Normandy long after his experiences in 1944. 
          It 
            is perhaps obvious that the D-day commemorations for 2004 had been 
            hijacked politically to equate with 'the war on terror' or to mean 
            something about Britain's relationship with Europe. John H Crook had 
            an abiding respect for the French people. He could make polite and 
            respectful friendships with Germans of the same generation as his 
            and who had fought against him in 'an enemy' uniform. 
          Trying 
            to tell his story after his death has not been easy. 
            It was difficult tracking down relevant official records and those 
            that exist contain some obvious inaccuracies and mysteries. The Hallamshire 
            Battalion War Diary for May 1944 is missing from the Public Record 
            Office files. It has also emerged that many of the published histories 
            are subjective and prone to partiality when recounting events, particularly 
            battles. 
          
          A 
            page from his Officer's service record setting out in his own handwriting 
            his postings overseas
          His 
            arrival to join the Hallamshires on 29th June is not even recorded 
            in the Battalion records. This is probably because the Hallamshires 
            adjutant and replacement adjutants had been repeated casualties in 
            the days before he made his way to the slit trenches in front of Tessel 
            Wood separated from the village of Vendes by Bocage fields and a road. 
            The adjutant was the administrative manager of the Battalion. He would 
            keep all the written records in order. He would order replacements 
            in men and equipment. The officer roll call sheets are also not comprehensive. 
            
          When 
            the research project began the York and Lancaster Regiment's association 
            disclosed that they were no longer aware of any officers from the 
            2nd World War period who were still alive. However, there has been 
            some success in contacting Other Ranks who are now in their 80s and 
            90s who remembered him as a quiet man who was liked and respected.
          Transport 
            driver Corporal James Addison recalled driving him at great speed 
            off the road to overtake a military convoy in Iceland in order to 
            make an appointment with Brigadier Procter. Addison recalls Lieutenant 
            Crook expressing his gratitude and admiration for the Corporal's impressive 
            racing driver skills. 
          The 
            full story of his war may never be told.
           
        
          Acting 
            in a school play..
          
          John 
            Crook's first marriage ended in divorce in 1950. Sylvia emigrated 
            with Peter to Australia. John married Sheila in 1952 while he was working as a solicitor. He had finally 
            qualified in 1947. The war had interrupted his legal studies. He joined 
            the Colonial Service and worked as a land agent in Kampala, Uganda 
            until 1957.  John and Sheila subsequently moved to Calcutta, India, after 
            he obtained a solicitor's position in a Bengal legal practice. John, Sheila and their two sons, Nicholas and Timothy
            lived in France for several years before settling in London 
            in the 1960s.
           
        
          In 
            the 1st XV Rugby team at St Peter's School, York, 1933-34. John 
            is fourth from right, back row. John 
            had written on the back of this photo: 'Played 
            13 Won 10 Lost 3 Drawn 1, Pts For 229 Pts Against 48'. St Peter's 
            School librarian and alumni officer Avril Pedley believes the player 
            extreme right in the scrum cap is rugby XV captain Norman Yardley 
            the famous cricketer and captain of England between 1947 and 1950. 
            John H. Crook went on to play for Liverpool Rugby Union club in the 
            1930s. This was originally founded in 1856 and one of England's first 
            football clubs. Unfortunately it lost its City ground in the 1980s 
            and merged with St Helens. As a result it has lost some of its identity 
            and individual history. John H. Crook would continue supporting Liverpool 
            RUFC throughout the rest of his life by going to most away games in 
            the Greater London area. He also played amateur tennis winning a number 
            of English tournaments. His enthusiasm for tennis continued with an 
            annual attendance at the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis championships. 
          John 
            Crook had a modest law career specialising in conveyancing and property. 
            For many years he worked for Baileys Shaw and Gillett which was based 
            in Queen's Square, Holborn. He died in Chelsea on 14th November 1986 
            after developing lung cancer. His sons wanted to research and develop 
            a resource to honour his memory. Peter has commissioned award-winning 
            Australian author Alan Gill to write a biography of Sylvia which includes 
            detailed chapters on the romantic and moving love affair with John 
            Crook. 
          This 
            website seeks to portray the story of a man who served his country 
            so that his children and grandchildren could live in peace and freedom. 
            
          It 
            is also dedicated to the memory of all those comrades who served with 
            him during WWII and seeks to mark profound respect for those who died 
            in France in 1944 and the families who mourn them.