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30th July 1913 - November 2007 
   
  
Lt Col Wingate Charlton taken at the unveiling ceremony of the village sign in 2004.  
   
    
   
  
  
  
From The Telegraph obituaries 15/11/2007  
 
  Lieutenant-Colonel  Wingate Charlton, who has died aged 94, won a Distinguished Service Cross, one  of America's highest gallantry awards, in the last weeks of the campaign in  Europe.  
   
  On April 19 1945 the  tanks of the 8th King's Royal Irish Hussars (8KRIH) were advancing on Elstorf,  near Hamburg,  with "B" Squadron, commanded by Charlton in the lead. As they turned  on to the autobahn, German 88mm guns opened up on them and the whole squadron  took a hull down position, returned fire and quickly destroyed two guns. 
   
  At the next village  they ran into another enemy strongpoint, consisting of four 88mm guns protected  by infantry who were well dug in. Charlton went forward to reconnoitre and then  overran the position, knocked out four guns and took a number of prisoners. 
   
  The citation for his  DSC paid tribute to his inspiring leadership, fearlessness and aggression. 
  Dorrien Richard Wingate  Graham Charlton, the son of a general who had fought in the First World War,  was born at Woolwich on July 30 1913. He was educated at Eton,  where he was a keen oar and whipped in for the Eton Beagles. 
   
  After Sandhurst he was  commissioned into 8KRIH and posted to Egypt. There he met Lee Miller, the  American beauty and fashion model who subsequently became the war photographer  for London Vogue. They were attracted to each other and became close friends. 
  
    
She and Charlton  journeyed together to the Sinai, the Suez Canal,  and the Coptic monasteries at Wadi Natrun, known to expats as the Troon. 
  According to Carolyn  Burke's recent biography of Lee Miller: "They packed picnic lunches and  occasionally gear for the night; the young officer introduced Lee to medieval  romances, which he read aloud in their tent. During the day, he accompanied her  as she photographed the rounded buildings from arresting angles." 
   
  Charlton saw active  service in Palestine in 1936 before being  seconded to the Transjordan Frontier Force as adjutant and ADC to King Abdullah  of Jordan.  A good Arabist, at the outbreak of war he became one of the young squadron  leaders of John Bagot Glubb "Pasha" in the Arab Legion. 
 
  In 1941 Charlton was  badly wounded in the Syrian campaign. After recovering he returned to England,  where he trained as a parachutist with the SOE. He was given the field name  "Major Graham", but two SOE missions were aborted at the last minute  and he rejoined his regiment after D-Day for the final phase of the campaign. 
   
  Charlton returned to Germany  after the war as second-in-command of 8KRIH, taking with him a pack of beagles  of which he became Master. His war wounds meant that he had little use of his  left arm and shoulder, but this did not prevent him point-to-pointing or  hunting. 
   
  A secondment to the  Northamptonshire Yeomanry allowed him the chance to indulge his passion for  hunting with the Midland packs. 
   
  He then attended Middle East Staff  College before being appointed British  military and air attaché in Damascus, where he  served during the Suez  crisis. After a posting to HQ Allied Forces Central Europe at Fontainebleau, in 1962 he retired from the  Army. 
   
  For the next 30 years  Charlton worked for the Royal Humane Society, first as secretary and later as  deputy chairman.  
   
  He settled in Essex, where he was High Sheriff in 1976 and a Deputy  Lieutenant of the county from 1972. 
   
  He served on the  Diocesan and Deanery Synods and on the Council of Essex University where,  during the "swinging sixties", he proposed (unsuccessfully) that the  university should have a pack of beagles and a chapel. 
   
  An accomplished poet,  he was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and had poems published publicly  and privately. He was appointed MBE (Military Division) in 1961 and OBE in  1975. 
   
  Wingate  Charlton died on September 9. He married, in 1945, Angela Windle. She  predeceased him and he is survived by their two sons. 
  
  
  
  
Lt Col Charlton as he wil be remembered by many Takeley people as he inspects a Poppy Day parade, on this occasion held inside because of bad weather.  
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