Background
Derek Lang was born on October 7, 1913, in Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom.
2015
Veules-les-Roses, France
Captain Derek Lang Path Unveiled by his daughter.
Duke's Ride, Berkshire, Crowthorne RG45 7PU, United Kingdom
Derek Lang attended Wellington College.
Haig Rd, Royal Military Academy, Camberley GU15 4PQ, United Kingdom
Derek Lang attended the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, United Kingdom.
Derek Lang
Derek Lang
Lieutenant Derek Boileau Lang, 4th Bn. Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders
Derek Lang was born on October 7, 1913, in Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom.
Lang was educated at Wellington College, Berkshire and attended the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, United Kingdom.
Commissioned into the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders in 1934, Derek Lang served with the 1st battalion in Sudan before joining the 2nd battalion in Palestine during the Arab rebellion. In February 1938 he was posted, as adjutant, to the 4th battalion, with which he served until his capture in France in 1940.
After his escape from Belgium and the journey to Palestine, he joined the 2nd battalion, with which he served as adjutant in the Eritrean campaign, including the battle of Keren, which involved heavy mountain fighting against well-led and determined Italian troops. In August 1941 he was posted to the Middle East Battle School, from which he went, as Chief Instructor, to the School of Infantry at Barnard Castle.
In 1940, Lang went to France as adjutant of the 4th Camerons, which formed part of the 51st Highland Division. This division, having been detached from the main body of the British Expeditionary Force, found itself, after Dunkirk, defending positions south of the Somme.
Outnumbered, and menaced from the south by the 5th and 7th Panzer Divisions, the division withdrew to St Valery-en-Caux where, on June 12, after a heroic resistance, they were surrounded and forced to surrender. Among the prisoners was Lang, who had been manning a Lewis gun on one of the last boats to leave port when it was ripped open and sunk by German artillery fire from the clifftops. Lang spent a week in hospital before joining a long march of prisoners-of-war into Germany. Seizing an opportunity to break away from the column he made his way to the coast but was recaptured a week later and taken to a prison camp in Belgium.
From here he escaped a second time and, making his way across France, reached Marseilles, where he stowed away in a ship bound for Beirut, in Vichy-controlled Syria. Here he contacted an Englishman who helped him to avoid the attentions of the French police and make his way to Matulla on the Palestine border, where there was an outpost of the Somerset Yeomanry. For this exploit, he was awarded the Military Cross.
By July 1944, Lang was back in France commanding the Camerons' 5th Battalion (having been offered in error the command of a battalion of the Cameronians). The 5th Battalion, part of the reformed 51st Highland Division, had suffered heavily in the fighting in the Normandy bridgehead. Lang was their fifth commanding officer in six weeks and they had suffered 25 percent casualties in the previous three.
Lang's combination of personal courage, perseverance, and great tactical skill proved inspirational. After leading his battalion during the final phase of the Caen-Falaise battle, he was delighted to be received by the mayor of St Valery, when the Highland Division liberated that town in September.
Lang continued to command the 5th battalion in the advance to the Maas during November and December of 1944.
Acting on his own initiative, Lang managed to infiltrate men across the Zig canal to seize and hold a bridgehead. This speeded the whole Army's advance by four days, and he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order.
At the end of the war, he took over the BAOR School of Infantry at Sennelager, which he ran until 1947, before joining the Staff College, Camberley. There followed staff appointments in Australia, the War Office, the School of Infantry and the Canadian National Defence College. In 1958, he rejoined the 51st Highland Division as Commander of the 153rd Highland Brigade.
There followed a period as Chief of Staff at Headquarters, Scottish Command, after which Lang returned to the Highland Division, in 1962, as its Commander. He returned to Scotland in 1966, as General Officer Commanding-in-Chief of Scottish Command.
Lang retired from the Army in 1969. In retirement he continued to play a significant part in the life of the Cameron Highlanders, and after the amalgamation with the Seaforths in 1961, the Queen's Own Highlanders.
Having organized the first Highland Division reunion in Perth during his time as commander, Lang remained closely involved in its affairs. He never failed to attend divisional lunches and dinners, and was a leading light of the 60th Anniversary Pilgrimage to St Valery.
His book Return to St. Valery: An Escape through Wartime France, told of his escape from the Germans during World War II. It was published in 1974.
One of Lang’s greatest non-war accomplishments was his involvement in the Military Aid to the Civilian Community project, in which soldiers under his command were trained in public works projects such as the building of roads, airfields, and bridges. He continued to serve the military and public in many ways until shortly before his death. Lang’s last public work was to help create the Liberating Scots Museum, a portion of the Dutch National War Museum at Overloon. It is dedicated to the Scottish regiments that helped liberate the region and opened in 2001.
A keen sportsman, Derek Lang represented Sandhurst at rugby, tennis, golf, and rackets - but his first love was polo, which he played with great skill.
Possessed of a quick-fire and inventive mind, Lang was affectionately nicknamed "the Unguided Missile" by his staff. His hand on a shoulder, and the opening words "Dear boy..." announced to many a young officer the launch of a new project.
A man of enormous personal charm, Lang took a great interest in people of all ages and conditions; he particularly enjoyed the company of young people and was always keen to hear their point of view.
His erudition and his personal courage he wore lightly: Derek Lang belonged to that unusual breed of Scottish soldiers who were at once men of learning and men of action.
Driven by a strong sense of duty, he always made a point of visiting his forward companies, however late the hour and however bad the weather. Despite this, his personal style was far from austere - he once delayed a battalion attack to celebrate, with captured champagne, his daughter's birth, of which he had just been informed.
In 1942 Derek Lang married his first wife, Morna Massy-Dawson, who died in 1953. He was married for the second time in 1953, to Anita Maclean, who died in 1969. His next wife was Elizabeth Balfour who died in 1982. In 1983, he married Maartje McQueen who survived him, together with the son and daughter of his first marriage.