Background
Alex Birtwistle was born in Accrington and attended Lancaster Royal Grammar School.
Alex Birtwistle was born in Accrington and attended Lancaster Royal Grammar School.
He joined the Army as a university cadet at Cambridge University in 1967 and was commissioned into the Queen"s Lancashire Regiment following his graduation in 1970. He then saw service in Cyprus, Nigeria, Northern Ireland and Germany and as an aide-de-camp to Her Majesty the Queen. He was also Commander of the 1st Battalion Queen"s Lancashire Regiment and was awarded an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in the 1992 Queen"s Birthday Honours.
He was due to retire aged 53 on 2 April 2001 as the commander of the 42 (North West) Brigade based at Fulwood Barracks, Preston when he was asked to oversee the livestock mass burial site at a disused airfield near Great Orton, Cumbria.
He supervised the disposal of thousands of sheep which were culled on site or brought there from Carlisle abattoir. He said at the time:
He was awarded the Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2002 New Year Honours for his role in the crisis.
On 6 February 2011 he appeared on television in an edition of the British Broadcasting Corporation 1 programme Countryfile. He contributed his recollections of the crisis and was seen with John Craven and retired farmer William Littleat, planting an oak tree to mark the tenth anniversary of the crisis at the Watchtree Nature Reserve that has been created on the Great Orton airfield site.