Major General John Matthew Blakiston-Houston, CB, DSO, DL (18 April 1881 − 16 December 1959) was a senior British Army officer.
Blakiston-Houston transferred from the militia into the 11th Hussars on 15 February 1902.[4] He was promoted to lieutenant in September 1904.[5]
He served in the First World War as deputy assistant adjutant and quartermaster-general for the 3rd Cavalry Division and then as assistant adjutant and quartermaster-general for the 1st Cavalry Division.[6]
After graduating from the Staff College, Camberley in 1919,[3] Blakiston-Houston became commanding officer of the 12th Royal Lancers in September 1923, commander of the 2nd Cavalry Brigade in October 1927, and Chief Administration Officer, Northern Command in November 1931, for which he was granted the temporary rank of brigadier.[6][7]
Subsequently, he became commandant of the Army School of Equitation in Weedon Bec in August 1934 before retiring in August 1938.[8] In 1937, the year before his retirement, he was considered for the command of the Mobile Division, later the 1st Armoured Division, but Leslie Hore-Belisha, the Secretary of State for War, rejected the idea, believing that all Blakiston-Houston could do was "slap his thigh and shout".[1]
Blakiston-Houston was recalled to become General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the GOC 59th (Staffordshire) Infantry Division in September 1939 and GOC Midland Area in May 1940 before returning to retirement with his wife in January 1942.[6][1]