Henry Cecil Prescott
Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Cecil Prescott CMG CIE was Inspector-General of Police in Iraq and Chief of Police of the Southern Railway in India.
Early life
Henry Cecil Prescott was born in Cheshire on 1 March 1882, the son of Arthur Edward Prescott and Kathleen Ann Augusta Prescott. He was educated at Bedford Modern School.Career
Prescott was commissioned in the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers, and served as a lieutenant in the Second Boer War, for which he received the Queen's Medal with five clasps. While in South Africa, he received a commission in a regular regiment when he was appointed second lieutenant in The South Wales Borderers on 30 April 1902. He stayed there for several months after the end of hostilities, returning home again on the SS Norman in late December 1902. In 1903 he transferred to the Indian Army in the 69th Punjabis until his appointment as Assistant Superintendent in the Burma Police in January 1908. In December 1910 he was made District Superintendent of three districts in Burma.At the outbreak of World War I, Prescott rejoined the Indian Army; he was promoted Major in August 1916. In June 1917 he was appointed Deputy Commissioner of the Iraq Police firstly in Basra and then in Baghdad. In 1918 he was made Commissioner. In 1920, Prescott was made Inspector-General of the Iraq Police until his resignation in 1935. In a statement of service, he later wrote, ‘If it had not been for the seizing of power by the opposition I should have remained in command for some years longer’.
Prescott was later made Chief of Police of the Southern Railway in India for 12 years until his retirement in 1947.