Picture courtesy of the London Medal Company
DSO GV;
OBE 1st/Mil, HM 1918;
QSA (3) Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaal; (LIEUT. J.R. BASSETT. RL. BERKS. RGT.);
KSA (2) (LT. J.R. BASSETT. RL. BERK. RGT.);
British War Medal and Victory Medal with MID (LT.COL. J.R. BASSETT.);
Turkey - Ottoman Empire: Order of Osmanieh, 4th Class, Officer Grade, with Rosette on ribbon, silver and enamels;
France - 3rd Republic: Legion d’Honneur, 5th Class, Knight’s Grade, silver and enamels, with gilt centre;
Jordan - Hedjaz: Supreme Order of the Renaissance - Wisam al-Nahda, 1st type, 2nd Class Grand Officer Grade, neck badge and breast star, silver, gold and enamels, housed in an official presentation case;
Egypt - Kingdom of: Order of the Nile, 2nd Class Grand Office Grade, neck badge and breast star, silver, gilt and enamels, both pieces of insignia makers marked for Lattes, and housed in its fitted presentation case, this also by Lattes of Cairo.
John Retallack Bassett was born on 27th October 1878 in Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, the son of Frederick Bassett and Elizabeth Phoebe Bull. Commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant into the Royal Berkshire Regiment, he went on to first see active service during the Boer War out in South Africa with the 2nd Battalion, being present on operations in the Cape Colony, the Orange Free State, and the Transvaal, and was out there when promoted to Lieutenant on 12th December 1900. Appointed Battalion Adjutant on 5th August 1903, this appointment came to an end on 5th August 1906, and he was then seconded from regimental duty on 15th December 1906 and posted to the Egyptian Army. Bassett was still on seconded duty when he was promoted to Captain on 2nd June 1909.
By the outbreak of the Great War, Bassett was a Major on the Staff with the Egyptian Army, and hence did not gain entitlement to the 1914-1915 Star. He was promoted to Major in the British Army on 1st September 1915, and with the situation in Sudan created by the ongoing Great War, was then involved in operations there, being awarded a Mention in Despatches ‘for gallant and distinguished services’ in the London Gazette for 25th October 1916, this being for intelligence work on the administrative side, and he was also gazetted as a Governor of a Province in the Sudan on 25th October 1916 where he became a trusted member of General Reginald Wingate's inner circle. He was also rated for pay purposes as a General Staff Officer 2nd Grade as of 2nd October 1916. It was almost certainly for his work as a Governor of a Province in the Sudan that Bassett was awarded the Egyptian Order of the Nile, 2nd Class Grand Officer Grade.
This position appears to have come to an end on 4th November 1916, and following this, he took up an important role as intelligence liaison officer with the French in the eastern Mediterranean, working closely with the British Eastern Mediterranean Special Intelligence Bureau. Bassett was then appointed an acting Lieutenant Colonel whilst in command of the 2nd Battalion of the Imperial Camel Corps from 23rd January to 12th March 1917 and seeing active service in the Sinai desert. During this period of command he is most noted for having led the Camel Corps into battle during the Raid on Bir El Hassana. The Raid on Bir el Hassana (Hasna) occurred in the Sinai Peninsula in February 1917. It was a minor action between an augmented battalion of the Imperial Camel Corps on the one side and a score of Turkish troops plus some armed Bedouin on the other. The raid was the third of three actions fought by British forces seeking to recapture the Sinai Peninsula.
At this time British ships on the Mediterranean coast and the Gulf of Aqaba guarded the coast road via El Arish, and the road from Ma'an via Nekhl to the Suez Canal. Ottoman forces continued to occupy the area on the central way across the Sinai south from el Kossaima towards the Suez Canal, including Bir el Hassana and Nekhl. General Archibald Murray, commander of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, ordered attacks against both Nekhl and Bir el Hassana, which lay 40 miles north of Nekhl, between the Gebel Helal and the Gebel Yelleg. Three columns of cavalry and camelry set out with the goal of all attacking on 18th February. One column set out from Serapeaum, and another from Suez on 13th February 1917 to converge on Nekl. Bassett, commanding 2nd Battalion, Imperial Camel Corps, together with the Hong Kong and Singapore (Mountain) Battery, marched from El Arish, via Magdhaba. This column reached Lahfan on the 16th, and on the 17th advanced from Magdhaba. At dawn the next morning they surrounded the Ottoman Army garrison at Bir el Hassana, which consisted of three officers and 19 other ranks, reinforced by armed Bedouin. The Ottoman troops surrendered, but the Bedouin fired on the British, shattering Lance Corporal McGregor's ankle. One of the Turks who surrendered was Nur Effendi, who had commanded the garrison at the unsuccessful British attack on Maghara on 15th October 1916. The troops searched Bir el Hassana and found 21 rifles, a few camels, and 2100 rounds of ammunition. After the surrender of Bir el Hassana, Bassett's force remained in position to capture any Ottoman force withdrawing back from Nekhl towards Bir el Hassana. On 19th February the Royal Flying Corps flew McGregor out with his leg in a box splint, while he sat in the observer's seat of a B.E.2c two-seater biplane. This was the first use of aeromedical evacuation by the British.
Bassett next appears in the London Gazette when appointed a Deputy Assistant Quartermaster General as of 8th April 1917. It was then that he got involved with Lawrence of Arabia and the operations in the Hedjaz Desert of the then Trans-Jordan, now the Kingdom of Jordan during the Arab Revolt.
“Without Colonels Cyril Wilson and John Bassett there would be no Arab Revolt. Without them there would be no call for Lowell Thomas to promote T.E. Lawrence as a hero, no iconic 1960s, film, and libraries around the world would have space for other subjects. Wilson and Bassett shored up the revolt when collapse was a serious threat. Their lost stories show that the Arab Revolt could not have had its success without their unsung interventions.” Philip Walker, Behind the Lawrence Legend: the Forgotten Few who Shaped the Arab Revolt, Oxford University Press, published 8 February 2018-quotation & Image.
“Bassett is one of the forty officers listed by T.E. Lawrence in the preface to Seven Pillars of Wisdom as being able to ‘tell a like tale’ to his. But Lawrence deliberately downplays the indispensable diplomatic and intelligence roles played by Wilson, Bassett and others in the Jeddah circle. Recognition of their essential roles would dilute the impact of the Lawrence-centred narrative.” – Philip Walker, Behind the Lawrence Legend.
Bassett was sent to join the British Military Mission in the Hejaz where he met King Hussein and his son Feisal to discuss military strategy. Bassett gained information on Ottoman railway lines from a network of local spies, which even included the number of spare rails stockpiled at each station.
Bassett was thrust into the high politics of the revolt almost immediately, deputising for Colonel Cyril Wilson, who was suffering from a life-threatening dysentery and evacuated for half a year to Cairo (he would later have to have a leg amputated). The British plans for the region had been leaked in the Sykes-Picot agreement, possibly direct from Lawrence to prince Feisal. His father, King Hussein, was so shaken by what looked like British skulduggery that he not only threatened to pull the plug on the entire revolt but also talked despairingly of suicide. Bassett had to cope with this and the diplomatic fallout of the Balfour Declaration being made public. The British sent Bassett and Commander Hogarth, former Director of the Arab Bureau, to mollify King Hussein aboard HMS Hardinge. General Wingate later expressed how much he valued Bassett’s key role in helping keep the revolt on an even keel: ‘From all Hogarth tells me you have “made good” with the King and are carrying on the Wilson tradition most successfully. Bassett stepped into the breach and brokered a number of vital meetings, sidestepping diplomatic snares before Hogarth’s arrival and helping steer Hussein back from the brink.
On 8th Feb 1918, he delivered what was to become known as ‘The Bassett Letter’ from London Foreign Office to King Hussein. The letter, written in Arabic, dismissed the publication of the Sykes-Picot Agreement as an attempt by the Ottoman Empire to derail the Arab Revolt by creating mistrust between the Arabs and the British. It was this lie that eventually led Lawrence himself to alienation, disillusionment and depression. Bassett later shaped General Allenby’s approach after King Hussein had resigned in writing on 28 July 1918. Although Bassett thought this a bluff, he urged Allenby to press Whitehall to openly back the King against Ibn Saud incursion into Kurma. The Cabinet agreed, and the policy averted crisis and brought back Hussein once more.
Having cracked the cipher of the Ottoman intelligence secret service, Bassett analysed accounts that provided insight into a complex network of agents, deserters, tribal sheiks, factions and bribes that mirrored British activity. The reality of a hidden intelligence war was far removed from the legend of the Bedouin tribes rising as one behind ‘Lawrence of Arabia’. Following Ottoman surrender, Bassett was sent to interrogate Fahkri Pasha, the obstinate commandant of the Turkish garrison at Medina who had continued to resist after the official armistice. He explained to Bassett that it had been beneath his dignity to surrender to a mere Captain (Herbert Garland who was attached to Emir Abdullah’s forces). Bassett’s intelligence background persuaded him that Fakhri was hiding something and seized his diary and accounts, concluding that Fakhri had been intending a belated alliance with Ibn Saud against Hussein.
For his ‘distinguished services in connection with Military Operations in Egypt and the Hedjaz, Bassett was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in the London Gazette for 4th September 1918, and was awarded another Mention in Despatches ‘for gallant and distinguished services’ in the London Gazette for 7th October 1918. He was further appointed a Croix de Chevalier of the French Legion d’Honneur in the London Gazette for 14th October 1918. Bassett was ultimately appointed an Officer of the Military Division of The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in the London Gazette for 3rd June 1919.
In a bizarre footnote, after the war in 1929, Bassett married Evelyn Mary Gillman Burgess, a widow, and thus became stepfather to Guy Burgess, the future Soviet spy and defector. Andrew Lownie’s ‘Stalin’s Englishmen’ provides an insight: “The man Eve Burgess marries is a rather interesting man called Jack Bassett, a retired Army officer who’d served with Lawrence of Arabia in the Arab Bureau. He was an intelligence officer – indeed he had one of the first copies of Seven Pillars of Wisdom – but he and Burgess did not get on very well. You can imagine Burgess feels that this man has come between him and his mum, and he calls him The Colonel. He does everything he can to irritate The Colonel – there’s nothing you can do that irritates The Colonel more than passing the port the wrong way.” To fellow scholars at Trinity College, Cambridge University, Guy always referred to his stepfather as a ‘professional gambler’. Although Bassett was a keen race-goer and lived near both Ascot and Newbury racecourses, it was likely that he funded Guy through the banking industry, into Eton and then one of the richest of Cambridge colleges, arguably sparking another of history’s great intelligence affairs, this time to Britain’s detriment.
Bassett was transferred to the Regular Army Reserve of Officers after the war, but ceased to belong to the reserve on attaining the age limit on 27th October 1933, retiring in the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He died in 1961.
£19,750.