Witwatersrand Command
Witwatersrand Command | |
---|---|
The Drill Hall,[1] Johannesburg, South Africa | |
Type | Command (military formation) |
The Witwatersrand Command was a Command of the South African Army. It was one of the ten regional commands, which, with the Walvis Bay Military Area, made up the Territorial Force.
History[]
Origin[]
Based in Johannesburg, it was responsible for the security of the region, forming the primary level of command for military operations in support of the Police. It also provided logistic, administrative and service support to units and formations operating in its area of responsibility.[2][3]
When 6th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment SAA became operational in 1966 with its headquarters at Brakpan, it was originally administratively responsible to Headquarters Witwatersrand Command, but was later transferred to I South African Corps.
In 1987, the command headquarters installation was the target of a bomb by Umkhonto we Sizwe operative, .[4]
Amalgamation with Northern Transvaal Command into Gauteng Command[]
Groups and Commando Units[]
Group 16 (Marievale)[]
- Delmas Commando
- Nigel Commando
- Springs Commando
Group 17 (Midvaal)[]
- Iscor Commando
- Krugersdorp Commando
- Meyerton Commando
- Vanderbijl Park Commando
- Vereeniging Commando
Group 18 (Doornkop)[]
- East Park Commando
- Gatsrand Commando
- Johannesburg East Commando
- Johannesburg West Commando
- Randburg Commando
- Roodepoort Commando
- Wemmerspan Commando
- West Rand Commando
Group 41 (Primrose)[]
- Atlas Commando
- Benoni Commando
- Brakpan Commando
- Boksburg Commando
- Germiston Commando
- Kempton Park Commando
Group 42 (Lenz)[]
- Alberton Commando
- Edenvale Commando
- Modderfontein Commando
- Sandton Commando
Leadership[]
From | Commanding Officers | To |
1936 | Major-General Christoffel Venter CB DFC & bar[5] | 1936 |
c. 1939 | Lt Col Charlie Ross[1] | 14 February 2022 |
c. 1945 | Maj Gen Bertram Frank Armstrong[6][7] | 14 February 2022 |
August 1940 | Lt Col (Later Major General CMG)[8]: Footnote 4 |
October 1940 |
1974 | Brigadier G.W. Germishuizen[9] | 14 February 2022 |
1987 | Brigadier Joffel van der Westhuizen[10] | 14 February 2022 |
From | Command Sgts Major | To |
References[]
- ^ a b "The Drill Hall - Historical Snippets". heritageportal.co.za. Retrieved 24 December 2014. quoting Col D.R. Smitherman OBE ED
- ^ "Unit Profiles: Witwatersrand Command". Warinangola.com. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- ^ "Leër Kommandemente - Army Commands". sadf.info. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- ^ "Hein Grosskopf recounts 1987 bomb attack". news24.com archives. NASPERS. 21 November 2000.
- ^ Who's Who of Southern Africa 1959. Ken Donaldson (Pty) Ltd. 1959. p. 589.
- ^ Hancock, William Keith (2007). Van Der Poel, Jean (ed.). Selections from the Smuts Papers Volume III August 1945 - October 1950. Selections from the Smuts Papers (annotated ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521033701. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- ^ Nöthling, C.J.; Meyers, E.M. (1982). "Leiers Deur die Jare (1912-1982)" (Online). Scientia Militaria: South African Journal of Military Studies (in Afrikaans). 12 (2). doi:10.5787/12-2-631. ISSN 2224-0020.
- ^ Uys, Ian S. (December 1986). "The South Africans at Delville Wood". Military History Journal. The South African Military History Society. 7 (2). ISSN 0026-4016. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- ^ Els, Paul. We Fear Naught but God (3rd ed.).
- ^ "Volume 2, Chapter 5, Sub-Section 22, Paragraph 161b". TRC Final Report. SABC. p. 440. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- Commands of the South African Army
- Disbanded military units and formations in Johannesburg
- Military units and formations disestablished in the 1990s
- South African military stubs