Wilfrid Grigson
Sir Wilfrid Vernon Grigson CSI was a British soldier and civil servant.
Biography
Wilfrid Grigson was born in 1896 in the Vicarage at Pelynt in Cornwall, south-west England, to Canon William Shuckforth Grigson and Mary Beatrice Boldero, and was one of seven brothers, including Geoffrey, Kenneth and John. Five of the brothers died during the First and Second World Wars. Wilfrid Grigson was educated at St John's School, Leatherhead, in Surrey, before matriculating to Christ Church, Oxford.During the First World War, Grigson served as a lieutenant in the Machine Gun Corps, serving in four different theatres of war.
After the war, he joined the Indian Civil Service and rose up through the ranks. At one point, while resident in Hyderabad State, his house was burned by people connected with the Razakars. The highest rank he achieved was serving as deputy commissioner of the Central Provinces and Berar. He was made a Companion of the [Order of the Star of India] in the 1945 New Year Honours, and in 1948 was knighted. On 26 November 1948, the plane he was travelling on crashed, killing all 16 passengers and five crew. An obituary was published in the journal Nature.