Background
Croft was the third son of Conservative Member of Parliament Sir Herbert George Denman Croft, 9th Baronet and his wife, Georgiana Eliza Lucy Marsh.
General lieutenant Central Bank
Croft was the third son of Conservative Member of Parliament Sir Herbert George Denman Croft, 9th Baronet and his wife, Georgiana Eliza Lucy Marsh.
He was educated at Oxford Military College.
He served as a brigadier general in the British Army in the, and afterwards in India. He was one of seven British officers to be awarded the Defence Science Organisation four times in the He was Home Guard commander in Cornwall during the Second World War. He joined the 4th battalion of the The King"s (Shropshire Light Infantry) as a second lieutenant in February 1898, and was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in June 1899.
He transferred to the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) in 1900 to replace an officer killed in the Second Boer War.
He was seconded to the Colonial Office in 1903, and served in Nigeria, where he is reputed to have been wounded by a poisoned arrow in 1907. In 1912, Croft married Esmé Sutton, daughter of Sir Arthur Edwin Sutton, 7th Baronet.
They had at least four children, including two sons who served in India in the Second World War, where one was killed in action. Croft served on the Western Front in the, and was mentioned in despatches ten times.
At the beginning of the war, Captain Croft was serving as adjutant of the 5th Battalion of the Cameronians (Scottish Rifles).
By December 1915, he was temporary lieutenant colonel in command of the 11th Battalion of the Royal Scots. He was then promoted to the rank of temporary brigadier general to command the 27th Infantry Brigade, in the 9th (Scottish) Division, in September 1917, remaining in command until 1919. In little over two years, from January 1917 to February 1919, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (Defence Science Organisation) four times.
He received his first Defence Science Organisation on 1 January 1917, and a first bar was gazetted 9 days later.
He received a second bar in July 1918, and a third bar in February 1919. After the war, Croft published an account of his war service, under the title Three years with the 9th (Scottish) Division.
Croft transferred to the Royal Tank Corps in 1920 where he became a lieutenant colonel in 1923. He was temporary brigadier again while Commandant of the Royal Tanks Corps Centre between 1929 and 1931.
He was promoted to thank rank of colonel in 1925, with seniority from 1922, and served as an instructor at Senior Officers" School in 1927
He became temporary brigadier and commander of the Nowshera Brigade in India in 1931.
He fought in the Mohmand Operations in 1933, where he was mentioned in despatches, and retired from the military in 1934 with the rank of honorary brigadier general. He became an Companion of the Order of the Bath (Central Bank) in 1935. In the Second World War, Croft was a Home Guard commander in Cornwall.