In 1891–92 he served in Burma, including operations in the Kachin Hills, and received the operational medal with clasp. In 1895 he served with the ChitralRelief Force under Sir Robert Low as adjutant and quartermaster at the British Military Depot. Promotion to captain followed on 18 January 1897,[5] and he served as adjutant of the 2nd Battalion of his regiment from 17 February 1899.[6]
Bols, who in January 1905 returned to his regiment as captain,[11] was in February made commander of a company of gentlemen cadets.[12] Promoted to major in October 1906,[13] he was in January 1907 made a brigade major.[14]
Group photo of the 1st Battalion, Dorset Regiment Football XI, with several officers. Belfast 1913/14. Middle row, third from left is Lieutenant Colonel L. J. Bols; third from right, middle row is Captain Algernon Ransome, the battalion's adjutant.
In May 1910 he went to the Staff College, Camberley as a deputy assistant quartermaster general and was promoted to the temporary rank of lieutenant colonel while in this role,[15] before succeeding Lieutenant Colonel Charles Hull as a GSO2 at the Staff College in February 1912.[16] He transferred from the Devonshires to the Dorsetshire Regiment as a lieutenant colonel in February 1914 and took command of the 2nd Battalion of his new regiment,[17] five months before the start of the First World War.[18]
The investiture by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught, February 1918. Decorated Generals Allenby, in conversation with Lieutenant General Chetwode, in foreground. Stood nearby is Allenby's MGGS, Major General Bols.
In October that year he was promoted again, now to temporary major general,[23] and served as major general, general staff (MGGS) of the Third Army of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), commanded briefly by General Sir Charles Monro before he was replaced by General Sir Edmund Allenby. Bols was to serve with Allenby, both on the Western Front in 1916 and in 1917, and later in 1917–18 in Palestine.[24]
Bols died in his 63rd year on 13 September 1930 in a nursing home in the city of Bath, Somerset, while on leave from Bermuda.[31]
Personal life
Bols married Augusta Blanche Strickland and had two sons, Major-General Eric Bols, and Major Kenneth Bols (killed in action in Italy in the Second World War).[32]