7th Armoured Division (United Kingdom)

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Mobile Division (Egypt)
7th Armoured Division
7th armoured division insignia 1944 3000px.png
Shoulder sleeve insignia of the 7th Armoured Division, from 1944. The insigina shown is for the right arm, the left arm had a mirror image.
Active1938–1958
Country United Kingdom
Branch British Army
TypeArmoured Division
SizeDivision, 14,964 men[1]
343 tanks[nb 1][nb 2]
Nickname(s)"The Desert Rats"
Mascot(s)Jerboa
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Sir Percy Hobart
Sir Michael Creagh
William Gott
John Campbell
Sir Frank Messervy
Sir John Harding
Sir George Erskine
Lewis Lyne
George Roberts

The 7th Armoured Division was an armoured division of the British Army that saw distinguished active service during World War II, where its exploits in the Western Desert Campaign gained it the Desert Rats nickname.

After the Munich Agreement, the division was formed in Egypt during 1938 as the Mobile Division (Egypt)[3] and its first divisional commander was the tank theorist Major-General Sir Percy Hobart. In February 1940, the name of the unit was changed to the 7th Armoured Division.[3]

The division fought in most major battles during the North African Campaign; later it would land and fight in the Italian Campaign during the early stages of the invasion of Italy before being withdrawn to the United Kingdom where it prepared to fight in North-west Europe. It began landing in Normandy during the afternoon of D-Day, 6 June 1944, and fought its way across Europe ending the war in Kiel and Hamburg, Germany.

Although the division was disbanded during the 1950s, the history, name and the "Desert Rat" flash was carried on by the 7th Armoured Brigade.[4]

Order of battle[]

History[]

Founding[]

After the Munich Crisis, elements of what would become the 7th Armoured Division arrived in the Middle East in 1938 to increase British strength in Egypt and form a 'Mobile Force'. The Mobile Force – initially the "Matruh Mobile Force" – was established on the coast some 120 mi (190 km) west of Alexandria. It was formed from the Cairo Cavalry Brigade and comprised four armoured regiments (the 7th Queen's Own Hussars, the 8th King's Royal Irish Hussars, the 11th Hussars and the 1st Royal Tank Regiment) and supported by the 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, a company of the Royal Army Service Corps and a Field Ambulance unit.[5]

The Force was equipped with a mixture of vehicles: the Hussar regiments had light tanks, 15-cwt Ford vehicles, and Rolls Royce armoured cars; 1st Royal Tank Regiment had light tanks and 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery had 3.7-inch Mountain guns and tracked vehicles to tow them.[5]

It was joined by the 1st battalion of the King's Royal Rifle Corps from Burma and then its first commander, Major-General Percy Hobart. Hobart was an armoured warfare expert and saw that his troops were properly prepared to fight in the desert despite their poor equipment. Stewart Henry Perowne, the Public Relations Attaché at the British Embassy in Baghdad, perhaps uncharitably referred to the unit as the "Mobile Farce" because it included some obsolete tanks like the Vickers Medium Mark II.[6][7]

By September 1939 the artillery was equipped with 25-pounder gun-howitzers and 37 mm anti-tank guns[5] and, in December 1939, Major-General Michael O'Moore Creagh took command.[5]

North Africa[]

The division was meant to be equipped with 220 tanks. However, at the outbreak of the Second World War, in September 1939, the 'Mobile Force' only had 65. Most of the unit's troops had already been deployed for two years by 1940 and it took as long as three months for mail to arrive. On 16 February 1940, the Mobile Division, which had changed names during the middle of 1939 to be called the Armoured Division,[8] became the 7th Armoured Division.[3]

Light Tank Mk VIs and lorries of the 8th King's Royal Irish Hussars assembled ready to move off for an exercise in the desert, 5 June 1940.

After the Italian declaration of war, the Western Desert Force, under the command of Major-General Richard O'Connor, was massively outnumbered. However, the Italian Army consisted largely of leg infantry; its artillery dated back to the First World War, it had no armoured cars and a few antitank weapons, which were effective only against light and cruiser tanks. As such, it proved to be no match for the British. The Western Desert Force captured 130,000 Italians as prisoners of war (POWs) between December 1940 and February 1941 in piecemeal battles.[9]

During the Italian retreat in January 1941, Major-General O'Connor ordered the Desert Rats to travel south of the Jebel Akhdar and cut off the Italian forces at Beda Fomm, while Australian forces pushed the Italians west. On 7 February, as the tanks were unable to travel fast enough, the manoeuvre was led by an ad hoc brigade of armoured cars, towed artillery and infantry, which completed the trip in 30 hours, that cut off the Italian retreat and destroyed the Italian Tenth Army. Lieutenant Colonel John Combe led this ad hoc group, which was known as "Combe Force" after him. After this, the tanks of the 7th Armoured Division, after eight months of fighting, needed a complete overhaul and the division was withdrawn to Cairo and temporarily ceased to be available as a fighting formation being replaced in the line by the 2nd Armoured Division.[10]

A 2-pounder anti-tank gun being manned by members of the 2nd Battalion, Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own), 24 March 1942.

The Italians had proven so weak that Hitler was forced to send the Afrika Korps, under Erwin Rommel, as reinforcements. In April 1941, the Allied troops in Tobruk were cut off by the Germans and Italians.[11]

On 7 June, the division was again prepared for battle as part of Operation Battleaxe, having received new tanks and additional personnel.[12] In the attack plan for Operation Battleaxe, the 7th force was divided between the Coast Force and Escarpment Force. However, this Allied push failed, and the 7th Armoured Division was forced to withdraw on the third day of fighting.[13] On 18 November, as part of Operation Crusader the whole of the 7th Armoured Division was concentrated on breaking through. They faced only the weakened 21st Panzer Division. However, the XXX Corps commander, Lieutenant-General Willoughby Norrie, aware that the 7th Armoured Division was down to 200 tanks, decided on caution. During the wait, in the early afternoon of 22 November, Rommel attacked Sidi Rezegh with the 21st Panzer and captured the airfield. Fighting was desperate and gallant: for his actions during these two days of fighting, Brigadier Jock Campbell, commanding the 7th Support Group, was awarded the Victoria Cross. However, the 21st Panzer, despite being considerably weaker in armour, proved superior in its combined arms tactics, pushing the 7th Armoured back with a further 50 tanks lost (mainly from the 22nd Armoured Brigade).[14]

On 27 June 1942, elements of the 7th Armoured Division, along with units of the 3rd The King's Own Hussars, suffered one of the worst friendly fire incidents when they were attacked by a group of Royal Air Force (RAF) Vickers Wellington bombers during a two-hour raid near Mersa Matruh, Egypt. Over 359 troops were killed and 560 others were wounded.[15]

The Western Desert Force later became HQ XIII Corps, one of the major parts of the British Eighth Army which, from August 1942 was commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Bernard Montgomery. The 7th Armoured Division took part in most of the major battles of the North African Campaign, including both battles of El Alamein (the First Battle of El Alamein in July 1942, which stopped the Axis advance, and the Second Battle of El Alamein in October/November 1942, which turned the tide of the war in North Africa).[16]

Infantrymen of the 1/6th Battalion, Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey) marching into Tobruk, Libya, 18 November 1942.

The 7th Armoured Division, now consisting of the 22nd Armoured and 131st Infantry Brigades and commanded by Major General John Harding, fought in many major battles of the Tunisian Campaign, taking part in the Battle of El Agheila in December. By January 1943 the Eighth Army had reached Tripoli where a victory parade was held, with the 7th Armoured Division taking part. Among the witnesses was Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister, and General Sir Alan Brooke, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS).[17]

The division, now commanded by Major General George Erskine after Harding was severely injured in January, next took part in the Battle of Medenine, followed by the Battle of the Mareth Line in March. In late April, towards the end of the campaign, the 7th Armoured Division was transferred to IX Corps of the British First Army for the assault on Medjez El Bab. The attack was successful, with the 7th Armoured Division competing with the 6th Armoured Division of the First Army in a race to the city of Tunis, with 'B' Squadron of the 11th Hussars being first into the city on the afternoon of 7 May, followed closely by the 22nd Armoured Brigade and the 131st Brigade. The fighting in North Africa came to an end just days later, with almost 250,000 Axis soldiers surrendering to the Allies and becoming POWs.[18]

Italy[]

The division was not an assault force in the invasion of Sicily, instead remaining in Homs, Syria for training in amphibious warfare, but did participate in the early stages of the Italian Campaign.[19]

The 7th Armoured Division came ashore at Salerno, on 15 September 1943, to help repel heavy German counterattacks during the Battle for the Salerno beachhead (Operation Avalanche). Shortly after landing on the 18th the 131st (Queen's) Infantry Brigade (which consisted of the 1/5th, 1/6th and 1/7th Territorial battalions of the Queen's Royal Regiment) relieved its 'sister' duplicate, the 169th (Queen's) Infantry Brigade, (consisting of 2/5th, 2/6th and 2/7th Queen's, all formed in 1939), which was part of the 56th (London) Infantry Division, and had been in continuous combat since 9 September. The assembly of six battalions of a single regiment has since been considered a unique moment in the regiment's history.[20] The 169th Brigade was commanded at the time by Brigadier Lewis Lyne, who would later command the 7th Armoured Division from November 1944 onwards.[21]

Then, as part of Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark's U.S. Fifth Army's British X Corps, commanded by Lieutenant-General Richard McCreery, and supported by the British 46th Infantry Division, it drove on and took Naples. The Desert Rats, used to fighting in the desert, had to adjust to the confined Italian roads. The division crossed the river Volturno in southern Italy, constructing a pontoon bridge.[22]

A Sherman tank of the 4th County of London Yeomanry fording the Volturno river at Grazzanise, Italy, 17 October 1943.

On the wishes of the British Eighth Army commander, General Sir Bernard Montgomery, the 7th Armoured Division was recalled to the United Kingdom, along with the 4th and 8th Armoured Brigades, and the 50th (Northumbrian) and 51st (Highland) Infantry Divisions, all of which had seen extensive service alongside the 7th Armoured Division in the Mediterranean and Middle East, to participate in the invasion of North Western Europe with the British Second Army. The 7th Armoured, handing over its battered vehicles and equipment to the recently arrived 5th Canadian (Armoured) Division, left Italy in late December 1943, arriving in Glasgow, Scotland in early January 1944.[23]

North West Europe[]

In November 1943, the division left Italy for the United Kingdom; with the last units arriving on 7 January 1944.[24][25] The division was re-equipped with the new Cromwell cruiser tanks and in April and May received 36 Sherman Vc Fireflies; enough to organise each troop so that they had a complement of three 75 mm gun Cromwell tanks and a 17-pounder gun Firefly.[24] The Desert Rats were the only British armoured division to use the Cromwell as their main battle tank.[26]

German prisoners being searched by soldiers of the 1st Battalion, Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own) near Tilly-sur-Seulles, Normandy, 13 June 1944.

The 7th Armoured Division was one of the three British follow-up divisions of the two British assault corps earmarked for the Normandy landings.[27] The 22nd Armoured Brigade embarked on 4 June and most of the division landed on Gold Beach by the end of 7 June, a day after the initial landings.[24][28] The division, part of Lieutenant General Gerard Bucknall's XXX Corps, initially took part in Operation Perch and Operation Goodwood, two operations that formed part of the Battle for Caen, itself part of Operation Overlord, codename for the Allied invasion of Normandy. During Perch, the division was to spearhead one arm of a pincer attack to capture the city. Due to a change in plan, elements of the division engaged tanks of the Panzer-Lehr-Division and the Heavy SS-Panzer Battalion 101 in the Battle of Villers-Bocage.[29] Following the capture of Caen, the division took part in Operation Spring, which was intended to keep the German forces pinned to the British front away from the Americans who were launching Operation Cobra and then Operation Bluecoat, an attack to support the American break-out and intercept German reinforcements moving to stop it. After the Battle of the Falaise Gap, which saw most of the German Army in Normandy destroyed, the 7th Armoured Division then took part in the Allied advance from Paris to the Rhine.[30]

Major General Gerald Lloyd-Verney, GOC 7th Armoured Division, enters Ghent in his Staghound armoured car, 8 September 1944.

The division's performance in Normandy and the rest of France has been called into question and it has been claimed they did not match those of its earlier campaigns. In early August 1944, Major General George Erskine, the division's GOC, who had been in command of the division since January 1943, Brigadier William Hinde, commanding the 22nd Armoured Brigade, and up to 100 other officers of the division were removed from their positions and reassigned. Erskine was replaced by Major General Gerald Lloyd-Verney. Historians largely agree that this was a consequence of the "failure" at Villers-Bocage and had been planned since that battle.[31][32][33][34] Historian is of the opinion that the battle's result provided an excuse and that the sackings took place to "demonstrate that the army command was doing something to counteract the poor public opinion of the conduct of the campaign".[33] Historian and former British Army officer Mungo Melvin has commented approvingly of the 7th Armoured Division's institution of a flexible combined arms structure, which other British armoured divisions did not adopt until after Operation Goodwood.[35]

The replacement of the division's GOC, following Normandy, did not change the performance of the division and in November 1944, Erskine's replacement, Major General Lloyd-Verney, was relieved, by Major General Lyne, after he "was unable to cure the division's bad habits well enough to satisfy Montgomery and Dempsey."[36] There is almost no doubt that the division was suffering from collective and cumulative battle fatigue. As Lloyd-Verney put it, with some prescience: "There is no doubt that familiarity with war does not make one more courageous. One becomes cunning and from cunning to cowardice is but a short step."[37] This was not an isolated incident; the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division and several of the other veteran formations Montgomery had brought back from the Mediterranean for Operation Overlord experienced similar difficulties, although, curiously, not with the 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division, which performed well throughout the Normandy Campaign.[38]

Men of the 9th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry run along a street in , Germany, 29 March 1945.

Following the advance across France, the division took part in the Allied advance through Belgium and the Netherlands; liberating Ghent on 6 September. The division then took part in the advance to and securing of the River Maas, where the division, now commanded by Major General Lewis Lyne, a highly experienced commander, was slightly reorganized, with many experienced men who had been overseas with the division for five years returning home. In January 1945 the division, with the 8th Armoured and 155th Infantry Brigades (from the 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division) under command, took part in Operation Blackcock to clear the Roer Triangle. The division had a short rest for training in late February. This was followed by Operation Plunder; the 7th Armoured Division crossed the River Rhine near Xanten and Wesel and advanced on the German city of Hamburg as its destination, as part of the Western Allied invasion of Germany, where the division ended the war. On 16 April 1945, the 7th Armoured Division liberated Stalag 11B in Fallingbostel,[39][40] which was the first prisoner-of-war camp to be liberated. The 7th Armoured Division's final battle of the war was the Battle of Hamburg.[41]

Cromwell tank with Challenger tank behind of 8th Hussars, 7th Armoured Division, outside Hamburg Dammtor station, 5 May 1945.

In July 1945 the 7th Armoured Division moved to Berlin where it took part in the Berlin Victory Parade of 1945, alongside American, French and Russian troops. Among the many witnesses in the parade were Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister, who was particularly fond of the division, Field Marshal Sir Alan Brooke, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS) and Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery, the 21st Army Group commander.[42]

Post war[]

The Division remained in Germany as part of the occupation forces and then into the 1950s as part of the British Army of the Rhine standing watch against the Warsaw Pact. As the British Army became smaller, its higher numbered divisions were removed from the order of battle. The Division's long and illustrious career finally came to an end in this fashion, in April 1958, when it was converted into 5th Division. However, the traditions and iconic nickname ("Desert Rats") of the Division are maintained by 7th Armoured Brigade, which forms part of 1st Armoured Division.[43]

Nickname[]

The first divisional commander, Major-General Percy Hobart, found inspiration in the pet jerboa, or "desert rat" of Rea Leakey, then GSO 3 Intelligence. Hobart took to the animal and decided to adopt "The Desert Rats" as a nickname for the division. The shoulder flash was designed by the wife of his successor, Major-General Michael O'Moore Creagh, using a jerboa from Cairo Zoo as a model. The resulting shoulder patches were made of scarlet thread. These were unofficial; the War Office did not adopt the flashes until the summer of 1943 and then redesigned them to look, in the opinion of Leakey, more like a kangaroo than a jerboa. The colour was also changed to black.[44]

General Officer Commanding[]

Commanders included:

Appointed General Officer Commanding
3 September 1939 Major-General Percy Hobart[45]
16 November 1939 Brigadier John A. L. Caunter (acting)[45]
4 December 1939 Major-General Michael O'Moore Creagh[45]
1 April 1941 Brigadier J.A.L. Caunter (acting)[45]
13 April 1941 Major-General Michael O'Moore Creagh[45](replaced after failure of Battleaxe)
3 September 1941 Major-General William Gott[45] (promoted to command of XIII Corps)
6 February 1942 Major-General John Campbell VC (killed in motor accident 23 February)[45]
23 February 1942 Brigadier A.H. Gatehouse (acting)[45]
9 March 1942 Major-General Frank Messervy[45] (dismissed after battle of Gazala)
19 June 1942 Major-General James Renton[45]
14 September 1942 Major-General John Harding (wounded on 18 January 1943)[45]
20 January 1943 Brigadier George Roberts (acting)[45]
24 January 1943 Major-General George Erskine[45]
4 August 1944 Major-General Gerald Lloyd-Verney[45]
22 November 1944 Major-General Lewis Lyne[45]
1947 Major-General George Roberts[46]
March 1949 Major-General Robert Arkwright[46]
May 1951 Major-General Charles Jones[46]
November 1953 Major-General Kenneth Cooper[46]
March 1956 Major-General John Hackett[46]
February 1958 Major-General Geoffrey Musson[46]

Notable soldiers of the 7th Armoured Division[]

Monument[]

There is a monument to the 7th Armoured at Brandon in Thetford Forest where the 7th trained prior to D-day.

See also[]

Notes[]

Footnotes
  1. ^ 223 cruisers, 25 anti-aircraft tanks, 24 close support tanks, 63 light tanks, and 8 observation tanks.[2]
  2. ^ These two figures are the war establishment, the paper strength, of the division for 1944–1945; for information on how the division size changed over the war please see British Army during the Second World War and British Armoured formations of World War II.
Citations
  1. ^ Joslen, p. 129
  2. ^ Joslen, p. 9
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c "4th Mechanised Brigade: History". British Army. Archived from the original on 3 March 2008.
  4. ^ "Welcome to the new British Army Website – British Army Website". Archived from the original on 5 April 2008. Retrieved 29 March 2008.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Forty, George (2014). Desert Rats at War: North Africa. Italy. Northwest Europe. Air Sea Media Services. ISBN 978-0957691520.
  6. ^ Kelly, Saul, The Lost Oasis, p. 121
  7. ^ British and Commonwealth Armoured Formations 1919–1946
  8. ^ Playfair, Volume I, p. 36
  9. ^ Dupuy (1986), p. 1071
  10. ^ Wavell, Archibald (1946). Operations in the Middle East from 7th February to 15th July 1941. Wavell's Official Despatches. first published in "No. 37638". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 July 1946. pp. 3423–3444., p. 2 (see "No. 38177". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 January 1948. p. 310.)
  11. ^ Playfair Volume II, pp. 35–36
  12. ^ Playfair, Volume II, pp. 1–2, 32, 163–164
  13. ^ Liddell Hart, Basil H.. The Tanks: The History of the Royal Tank Regiment and its Predecessors, Heavy Branch, Machine-Gun Corps, Tank Corps, and Royal Tank Corps, 1914–1945, pg. 90
  14. ^ "CHAPTER 7 – A disastrous Beginning - NZETC". nzetc.victoria.ac.nz.
  15. ^ The Rommel Papers, Liddell-Hart, Basil Henry pp. 238–239 (New York, NY: Harcourt, Brace, Javanovich, 1953)
  16. ^ Playfair Volume IV, p.34
  17. ^ "The British Army in North Africa". Imperial War Museum. 4 February 1943. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  18. ^ "The Struggle for North Africa 1940-1943". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  19. ^ "Thomas Campbell RE". The Desert Rats. 1 February 2018. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  20. ^ "The Italian Campaign". The Queen's Royal Surrey Regimental Association. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  21. ^ "Major-General Lewis Owen Lyne CB, DSO". Lancashire Fusiliers. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  22. ^ Bowlby, Alex (1994). Countdown to Cassino: The Battle of Mignano Gap, 1943. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-0850524109.
  23. ^ "Fifth Canadian Armoured Division: Introduction to Battle". Canadian Military History. 23 January 2012. p. 44. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b c Fortin, p. 4
  25. ^ Delaforce, pp. 1–2
  26. ^ Taylor, p. 6
  27. ^ Ellis, p. 79
  28. ^ Forty, p. 36
  29. ^ Buckley, pp. 23–27
  30. ^ Ellis, Lionel Frederic (1968). Victory in the West: The defeat of Germany Volume 2 of Victory in the West. H.M. Stationery Office. pp. 123–27.
  31. ^ Fortin, p. 10
  32. ^ Forty, p. 104
  33. ^ Jump up to: a b Taylor, p. 84
  34. ^ Wilmot, p. 398
  35. ^ Buckley (2006), pp. 28–29
  36. ^ D'Este, Carlo (1983). Decision in Normandy. London: William Collins Sons. p. 286.
  37. ^ D'Este, p. 273
  38. ^ Williams p. 90
  39. ^ British Movietone. "FREE! Prisoners of war released by the "Desert Rats" Stalag XIB and 357" – via YouTube.
  40. ^ "16 April 1945: The first POW camp liberated – Fallingbostel". ww2today.com.
  41. ^ Delaforce, Patrick (2015). The Fourth Reich and Operation Eclipse. Fonthill Media. ISBN 978-1781554005.
  42. ^ "Winston Churchill in Berlin". Imperial War Museum. 21 July 1945. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  43. ^ "Fact file: 7th Armoured Brigade". BBC. 20 January 2003. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  44. ^ Rea Leakey, Leakey’s Luck, paperback edition 2002, pp 23–25n; photographs of original and redesigned flashes between pp. 102–103.
  45. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Joslen, p. 19
  46. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Mackie, Colin (June 2015), Army Commands (PDF), p. 195, archived from the original (PDF) on 5 July 2015

References[]

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  • Playfair, Major General I.S.O. (2004) [1960]. The Mediterranean and Middle East, Volume 3: British Fortunes Reach Their Lowest Ebb. History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Military Series. Uckfield, UK: Naval & Military Press. ISBN 1-84574-067-X.
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