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23rd Armoured Brigade (United Kingdom)

The 23rd Armoured Brigade, originally formed as the 23rd Army Tank Brigade, was an armoured brigade of the British Army that saw service during the Second World War. The brigade was a 2nd Line Territorial Army (TA) formation. It was reorganised and renamed the 23rd Armoured Brigade, when it was assigned to the 8th Armoured Division, although it never operated under command of the division.

23rd Army Tank Brigade
23rd Armoured Brigade
Force 140
Arkforce
Liver bird formation sign of the 23rd Armoured Brigade.[1]
Active1939–1946
Country United Kingdom
Branch British Army
TypeArmoured
SizeBrigade
EngagementsSecond World War
* Western Desert Campaign
* Tunisian Campaign
* Italian Campaign
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Robert Arkwright
Insignia
Formation sign of the unit as an Army Tank Brigade.[2]

Mobilisation

The brigade was formed as the 23rd Army Tank Brigade on the outbreak of the Second World War as a 2nd Line Territorial Army (TA) formation, under the command of Brigadier W. F. Murrogh. The brigade had only a few light armoured vehicles during its existence as an Army Tank Brigade.[3][4] It was reorganised and renamed the 23rd Armoured Brigade on 1 November 1940, when it was assigned to the new 8th Armoured Division (Major General Richard McCreery). As part of the reorganisation it was reinforced with the 1st Battalion, London Rifle Brigade, this motorised infantry battalion was renamed the 7th Battalion, Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own) on 19 January 1941.[5] It began to receive significant numbers of tanks as a consequence of its assignment to the 8th Armoured Division, deliveries of the close-support version of the Matilda II and Valentine tanks beginning about that same time. By November 1941, the brigade had approximately 18 Matildas and 120 Valentines.[6]


North Africa

 
A Matilda tank and a Valentine of the 40th (The King's) Royal Tank Regiment being 'bulled up' at Crowborough in Sussex for a 'Speed the Tanks' parade in London, 28 July 1941.

The division remained in Britain until May 1942 when it was sent to the Middle East to join the Eighth Army, becoming active there in early July. In mid-July the brigade, now commanded by Brigadier L. E. Misa, was detached from the 8th Armoured Division and with the addition of the 5th Regiment, Royal Horse Artillery became known as the 23rd Armoured Brigade Group.[5]

First Alamein

After only 14 days of acclimatisation and without any infantry support training, the brigade was chosen to reinforce an attack by XXX Corps during the Second Battle of Ruweisat Ridge, part of the First Battle of El Alamein. The regiments failed to locate lanes cleared by the leading units through Axis minefields and were virtually annihilated by German anti-tank fire while in the minefield. The brigade had mustered 122 Valentines and 18 Matildas for the attack but at day's end, had lost 116 tanks; the tank crews suffered 44 per cent killed or wounded.[7][6]

Alam el Halfa

The brigade was rebuilt by cannibalising men and tanks from the newly arrived 24th Armoured Brigade and it was retrained as an infantry support unit, although it was not renamed an Army Tank Brigade. On 11 August 1942, the 7th Battalion, Rifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own) was transferred to the 7th Motor Brigade, then part of the 7th Armoured Division but later became part of the 1st Armoured Division. During the Battle of Alam el Halfa in September, the brigade was initially in XXX Corps reserve but was transferred to the 10th Armoured Division, XIII Corps.[5][7]

Second Alamein

 
A Valentine tank of the 50th RTR carries infantrymen of the 5th Battalion, Black Watch during an exercise, 12 March 1943.

Before the Second Battle of El Alamein, the brigade was reinforced by the addition of the 8th Royal Tank Regiment to a strength of about 186 Valentines; the 5th RHA was exchanged for the 107th Field Regiment, Royal Artillery, with sixteen Bishop self-propelled guns. During that battle, most of the regiments supported the infantry divisions of XXX Corps. The 8th RTR was attached to the 1st South African Division, 40th RTR was attached to the 9th Australian Division and the 50th RTR was attached to 51st (Highland) Division. The brigade suffered heavily during the battle and it remained in Egypt to refit and reorganise. The 8th RTR was transferred to Palestine in early November, after having turned over its surviving tanks while the 46th RTR was removed from the brigade, as was 107th Field Regiment.[5][7]

Tunisia

In December 1942, elements of the brigade, now with the 11th (Queen's Westminsters) Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps (KRRC) under command, began to move forward but it saw no combat until it entered Tunisia on 17 February 1943. In the Tunisian Campaign the brigade served as an independent armoured formation under XXX Corps, Eighth Army and fought in most of the battles of the campaign. On 3 May, the 50th RTR was withdrawn to convert to M4 Sherman tanks. After the campaign, the 46th RTR was reassigned to the brigade, although it was still converting to Shermans and the 40th RTR began to convert to the new tank.[7]

Sicily

 
A Sherman tank of 'A' Squadron, 50th Royal Tank Regiment, silhouetted by the setting sun, Sicily, 1 August 1943.

The 23rd Armoured Brigade took part in the Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky) in July 1943, although only the 50th RTR and B Squadron of the 46th RTR participated in the initial landings. The remainder of the 46th RTR was still converting to Shermans and did not land in Sicily until 23 July. The brigade did not fight as a unit in Sicily, its units being detached to support other formations. the brigade historian commented that "Sicily was the hardest, the bloodiest, and above all, the most disillusioning campaign in which the brigade had served during the war". The two regiments of the brigade had a short rest before the next operation.

Italy

 
A Sherman tank of the 46th Royal Tank Regiment towing a German 155 mm gun, captured by the 2nd Battalion, North Staffordshire Regiment, 23 January 1944. The gun was a French piece of First World War French vintage.

Only the 40th RTR participated in the initial landings at Salerno during Operation Avalanche, part of the Allied invasion of Italy, which began the Italian Campaign. It was assigned to the British 46th Infantry Division. The brigade, now under Brigadier Robert Arkwright, took command of various units from the British X Corps and the US VI Corps during the big German counterattacks of 12 to 14 September, to defend the boundary between the two armies. It commanded American and British units up through the occupation of Naples on 1 October 1943. By October, the brigade had consolidated once more and had joined X Corps, containing the 7th Armoured Division, the 46th and 56th Infantry Division, on the left wing of the US Fifth Army, taking part in the fighting from the Volturno Line to the Winter Line (Gustav Line).[5][7]

In early January 1944, the 46th RTR was detached from the brigade to come under command of the British 1st Infantry Division for the Battle of Anzio landings (Operation Shingle) and rejoined the brigade in July. In March 1944 the brigade was transferred to the British V Corps which had a holding role on the eastern side of the Gustav Line by the Adriatic Sea while the Eighth and Fifth Armies combined to launch Operation Diadem in the Cassino sector. The Allies finally broke the German defences there after three unsuccessful attempts in the Battle of Monte Cassino since January.

Arkforce

 
British Sherman tank and paratroops, together with Greek troops, fighting ELAS in Athens, 18 December 1944.

In late May 1944, the brigade was withdrawn from Italy and returned to Egypt. In August 1944, the brigade was renamed Force 140, later Arkforce after its commander, Brigadier Arkwight and was dismounted from its tanks. The 40th and 50th RTR were retrained as infantry while 46th RTR was reorganised with one squadron of armoured cars and one squadron of infantry, this being attached to the 50th RTR but kept one squadron of Shermans.[5][7] Arkforce arrived at Piraeus on 12 October 1944 as part of the British occupying force in Greece when the Germans withdrew. It participated in the repression of the Greek People's Liberation Army (ELAS) during the Greek Civil War (the Dekemvriana). Arkforce was disbanded on 8 January 1945 and the 23rd Armoured Brigade regained its name and had its tanks restored by the end of January. It remained in Greece beyond VE Day until the end of the Second World War.[5][7]

Second World War Order of battle

The 23rd Armoured Brigade was constituted as follows during the war:[3][5]

Brigade Commanders

The following officers commanded the 23rd Armoured Brigade during the war:[3][5]

  • Brigadier W. F. Murrough (until 16 December 1941)
  • Brigadier L. E. Misa (from 16 December 1941 until 31 July 1942)
  • Brigadier G. W. Richards (from 31 July 1942 until 23 July 1943)
  • Brigadier R. H. E. Arkwright (from 23 July 1943 until 4 December 1944)
  • Brigadier R. A. Hermon 4 December 1944 (acting, from 4 December 1944 until 8 January 1945)
  • Brigadier R. H. E. Arkwright (from 8 January until 1 April 1945)
  • Colonel R. A. Hermon 1 April 1945 (acting, from 1 to 22 April 1945)
  • Brigadier R. H. E. Arkwright (from 22 April 1945)

Postwar

The brigade was disestablished in May 1946 but when the TA was revived on 1 January 1947 it reformed as an independent Armoured Brigade in Western Command with the following organisation:.[7][9]

The brigade was finally disbanded in the late 1950s.[7]

See also

Citations and notes

  1. ^ Cole p. 125
  2. ^ Cole p. 126
  3. ^ a b c Joslen, p. 201.
  4. ^ Hughes et al. 2001, pp. 66, 94
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Joslen, pp. 170–2.
  6. ^ a b Hughes, et al. (1999), p. 61
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hughes, et al. (2002), pp. 37–41.
  8. ^ a b
  9. ^ Watson, TA 1947.
  10. ^ Lord & Watson, p. 202.

References

  • Cole, Howard (1973). Formation Badges of World War 2. Britain, Commonwealth and Empire. London: Arms and Armour Press.
  • Holland, James (2005). Together we Stand: Turning the Tide in the West: North Africa 1942–1943. London: Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-717647-2.
  • Hughes, David; Broshot, James; Philson, Alan (1999). British Armoured and Cavalry Divisions. The British Armies in World War Two: An Organizational History. Vol. I. Nafziger. ISBN 978-1-58545-050-3.
  • Hughes, David; Ryan, David A.; Broshot, James (2001). Orders of Battle 1939 to 1941. The British Armies in World War Two: An Organizational History (Supplement). Vol. I. West Chester, OH: Nafziger. pp. 66, 94. ISBN 978-1-58545-052-7.
  • Hughes, David; Ryan, David A.; Rothwell, Steve (2002). British Tank and Armoured Brigades, 79th Armoured Division, Armoured Car Regiments, African, Malayan and other Colonial Forces. The British Armies in World War Two: An Organizational History. Vol. IV. George F. Nafziger. ISBN 978-1-58545-085-5.
  • Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1960]. Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield, East Sussex: Naval and Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84342-474-1..
  • Lord, Cliff; Watson, Graham (2003). Royal Corps of Signals: Unit Histories of the Corps (1920–2001) and its Antecedents. Solihull: Helion. ISBN 1-874622-92-2.
  • Moreman, Timothy Robert (2007). Desert Rats: British 8th Army in North Africa 1941–43. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84603-144-1.
  • . Orders of Battle.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2007. Retrieved 25 September 2008.

Further reading

  • Perrett, Bryan (1972). The Valentine in North Africa 1942–43. London: Arms & Armour Press. ISBN 978-0-7110-0262-3.

External links

  • Graham Watson, The Territorial Army 1947

23rd, armoured, brigade, united, kingdom, 23rd, armoured, brigade, originally, formed, 23rd, army, tank, brigade, armoured, brigade, british, army, that, service, during, second, world, brigade, line, territorial, army, formation, reorganised, renamed, 23rd, a. The 23rd Armoured Brigade originally formed as the 23rd Army Tank Brigade was an armoured brigade of the British Army that saw service during the Second World War The brigade was a 2nd Line Territorial Army TA formation It was reorganised and renamed the 23rd Armoured Brigade when it was assigned to the 8th Armoured Division although it never operated under command of the division 23rd Army Tank Brigade23rd Armoured BrigadeForce 140ArkforceLiver bird formation sign of the 23rd Armoured Brigade 1 Active1939 1946Country United KingdomBranch British ArmyTypeArmouredSizeBrigadeEngagementsSecond World War Western Desert Campaign Tunisian Campaign Italian CampaignCommandersNotablecommandersRobert ArkwrightInsigniaFormation sign of the unit as an Army Tank Brigade 2 Contents 1 Mobilisation 2 North Africa 2 1 First Alamein 2 2 Alam el Halfa 2 3 Second Alamein 2 4 Tunisia 3 Sicily 4 Italy 5 Arkforce 6 Second World War Order of battle 7 Brigade Commanders 8 Postwar 9 See also 10 Citations and notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksMobilisation EditThe brigade was formed as the 23rd Army Tank Brigade on the outbreak of the Second World War as a 2nd Line Territorial Army TA formation under the command of Brigadier W F Murrogh The brigade had only a few light armoured vehicles during its existence as an Army Tank Brigade 3 4 It was reorganised and renamed the 23rd Armoured Brigade on 1 November 1940 when it was assigned to the new 8th Armoured Division Major General Richard McCreery As part of the reorganisation it was reinforced with the 1st Battalion London Rifle Brigade this motorised infantry battalion was renamed the 7th Battalion Rifle Brigade The Prince Consort s Own on 19 January 1941 5 It began to receive significant numbers of tanks as a consequence of its assignment to the 8th Armoured Division deliveries of the close support version of the Matilda II and Valentine tanks beginning about that same time By November 1941 the brigade had approximately 18 Matildas and 120 Valentines 6 North Africa Edit A Matilda tank and a Valentine of the 40th The King s Royal Tank Regiment being bulled up at Crowborough in Sussex for a Speed the Tanks parade in London 28 July 1941 The division remained in Britain until May 1942 when it was sent to the Middle East to join the Eighth Army becoming active there in early July In mid July the brigade now commanded by Brigadier L E Misa was detached from the 8th Armoured Division and with the addition of the 5th Regiment Royal Horse Artillery became known as the 23rd Armoured Brigade Group 5 First Alamein Edit After only 14 days of acclimatisation and without any infantry support training the brigade was chosen to reinforce an attack by XXX Corps during the Second Battle of Ruweisat Ridge part of the First Battle of El Alamein The regiments failed to locate lanes cleared by the leading units through Axis minefields and were virtually annihilated by German anti tank fire while in the minefield The brigade had mustered 122 Valentines and 18 Matildas for the attack but at day s end had lost 116 tanks the tank crews suffered 44 per cent killed or wounded 7 6 Alam el Halfa Edit The brigade was rebuilt by cannibalising men and tanks from the newly arrived 24th Armoured Brigade and it was retrained as an infantry support unit although it was not renamed an Army Tank Brigade On 11 August 1942 the 7th Battalion Rifle Brigade The Prince Consort s Own was transferred to the 7th Motor Brigade then part of the 7th Armoured Division but later became part of the 1st Armoured Division During the Battle of Alam el Halfa in September the brigade was initially in XXX Corps reserve but was transferred to the 10th Armoured Division XIII Corps 5 7 Second Alamein Edit A Valentine tank of the 50th RTR carries infantrymen of the 5th Battalion Black Watch during an exercise 12 March 1943 Before the Second Battle of El Alamein the brigade was reinforced by the addition of the 8th Royal Tank Regiment to a strength of about 186 Valentines the 5th RHA was exchanged for the 107th Field Regiment Royal Artillery with sixteen Bishop self propelled guns During that battle most of the regiments supported the infantry divisions of XXX Corps The 8th RTR was attached to the 1st South African Division 40th RTR was attached to the 9th Australian Division and the 50th RTR was attached to 51st Highland Division The brigade suffered heavily during the battle and it remained in Egypt to refit and reorganise The 8th RTR was transferred to Palestine in early November after having turned over its surviving tanks while the 46th RTR was removed from the brigade as was 107th Field Regiment 5 7 Tunisia Edit In December 1942 elements of the brigade now with the 11th Queen s Westminsters Battalion King s Royal Rifle Corps KRRC under command began to move forward but it saw no combat until it entered Tunisia on 17 February 1943 In the Tunisian Campaign the brigade served as an independent armoured formation under XXX Corps Eighth Army and fought in most of the battles of the campaign On 3 May the 50th RTR was withdrawn to convert to M4 Sherman tanks After the campaign the 46th RTR was reassigned to the brigade although it was still converting to Shermans and the 40th RTR began to convert to the new tank 7 Sicily Edit A Sherman tank of A Squadron 50th Royal Tank Regiment silhouetted by the setting sun Sicily 1 August 1943 The 23rd Armoured Brigade took part in the Allied invasion of Sicily Operation Husky in July 1943 although only the 50th RTR and B Squadron of the 46th RTR participated in the initial landings The remainder of the 46th RTR was still converting to Shermans and did not land in Sicily until 23 July The brigade did not fight as a unit in Sicily its units being detached to support other formations the brigade historian commented that Sicily was the hardest the bloodiest and above all the most disillusioning campaign in which the brigade had served during the war The two regiments of the brigade had a short rest before the next operation Italy Edit A Sherman tank of the 46th Royal Tank Regiment towing a German 155 mm gun captured by the 2nd Battalion North Staffordshire Regiment 23 January 1944 The gun was a French piece of First World War French vintage Only the 40th RTR participated in the initial landings at Salerno during Operation Avalanche part of the Allied invasion of Italy which began the Italian Campaign It was assigned to the British 46th Infantry Division The brigade now under Brigadier Robert Arkwright took command of various units from the British X Corps and the US VI Corps during the big German counterattacks of 12 to 14 September to defend the boundary between the two armies It commanded American and British units up through the occupation of Naples on 1 October 1943 By October the brigade had consolidated once more and had joined X Corps containing the 7th Armoured Division the 46th and 56th Infantry Division on the left wing of the US Fifth Army taking part in the fighting from the Volturno Line to the Winter Line Gustav Line 5 7 In early January 1944 the 46th RTR was detached from the brigade to come under command of the British 1st Infantry Division for the Battle of Anzio landings Operation Shingle and rejoined the brigade in July In March 1944 the brigade was transferred to the British V Corps which had a holding role on the eastern side of the Gustav Line by the Adriatic Sea while the Eighth and Fifth Armies combined to launch Operation Diadem in the Cassino sector The Allies finally broke the German defences there after three unsuccessful attempts in the Battle of Monte Cassino since January Arkforce Edit British Sherman tank and paratroops together with Greek troops fighting ELAS in Athens 18 December 1944 In late May 1944 the brigade was withdrawn from Italy and returned to Egypt In August 1944 the brigade was renamed Force 140 later Arkforce after its commander Brigadier Arkwight and was dismounted from its tanks The 40th and 50th RTR were retrained as infantry while 46th RTR was reorganised with one squadron of armoured cars and one squadron of infantry this being attached to the 50th RTR but kept one squadron of Shermans 5 7 Arkforce arrived at Piraeus on 12 October 1944 as part of the British occupying force in Greece when the Germans withdrew It participated in the repression of the Greek People s Liberation Army ELAS during the Greek Civil War the Dekemvriana Arkforce was disbanded on 8 January 1945 and the 23rd Armoured Brigade regained its name and had its tanks restored by the end of January It remained in Greece beyond VE Day until the end of the Second World War 5 7 Second World War Order of battle EditThe 23rd Armoured Brigade was constituted as follows during the war 3 5 40th The King s Royal Tank Regiment 46th Liverpool Welsh Royal Tank Regiment left 1 December 1942 rejoined 28 June 1943 left 4 January 1944 rejoined again 22 July 1944 50th Royal Tank Regiment 1st Battalion London Rifle Brigade from 2 November 1940 until 18 January 1941 7th Battalion Rifle Brigade The Prince Consort s Own from 19 January 1941 until 11 August 1942 11th Queen s Westminsters Battalion King s Royal Rifle Corps from 4 November 1942 23rd Armoured Brigade Signal Squadron Royal Corps of Signals 8 Brigade Commanders EditThe following officers commanded the 23rd Armoured Brigade during the war 3 5 Brigadier W F Murrough until 16 December 1941 Brigadier L E Misa from 16 December 1941 until 31 July 1942 Brigadier G W Richards from 31 July 1942 until 23 July 1943 Brigadier R H E Arkwright from 23 July 1943 until 4 December 1944 Brigadier R A Hermon 4 December 1944 acting from 4 December 1944 until 8 January 1945 Brigadier R H E Arkwright from 8 January until 1 April 1945 Colonel R A Hermon 1 April 1945 acting from 1 to 22 April 1945 Brigadier R H E Arkwright from 22 April 1945 Postwar EditThe brigade was disestablished in May 1946 but when the TA was revived on 1 January 1947 it reformed as an independent Armoured Brigade in Western Command with the following organisation 7 9 Cheshire Yeomanry RAC at Chester Staffordshire Yeomanry RAC at Stafford 40th The King s Royal Tank Regiment at Bootle 41st Oldham Royal Tank Regiment at Oldham 304 Signal Squadron Armoured Brigade RCS at Chester 8 10 The Liverpool Scottish motorised infantry at LiverpoolThe brigade was finally disbanded in the late 1950s 7 See also Edit United Kingdom portal War portal World War II portalBritish Armoured formations of World War II List of British brigades of the Second World War British Army Order of Battle September 1939 Citations and notes Edit Cole p 125 Cole p 126 a b c Joslen p 201 Hughes et al 2001 pp 66 94 a b c d e f g h i Joslen pp 170 2 a b Hughes et al 1999 p 61 a b c d e f g h i Hughes et al 2002 pp 37 41 a b 304 Sqn at Kelly 42 Signal Sqn Watson TA 1947 Lord amp Watson p 202 References EditCole Howard 1973 Formation Badges of World War 2 Britain Commonwealth and Empire London Arms and Armour Press Holland James 2005 Together we Stand Turning the Tide in the West North Africa 1942 1943 London Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 00 717647 2 Hughes David Broshot James Philson Alan 1999 British Armoured and Cavalry Divisions The British Armies in World War Two An Organizational History Vol I Nafziger ISBN 978 1 58545 050 3 Hughes David Ryan David A Broshot James 2001 Orders of Battle 1939 to 1941 The British Armies in World War Two An Organizational History Supplement Vol I West Chester OH Nafziger pp 66 94 ISBN 978 1 58545 052 7 Hughes David Ryan David A Rothwell Steve 2002 British Tank and Armoured Brigades 79th Armoured Division Armoured Car Regiments African Malayan and other Colonial Forces The British Armies in World War Two An Organizational History Vol IV George F Nafziger ISBN 978 1 58545 085 5 Joslen H F 2003 1960 Orders of Battle Second World War 1939 1945 Uckfield East Sussex Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 84342 474 1 Lord Cliff Watson Graham 2003 Royal Corps of Signals Unit Histories of the Corps 1920 2001 and its Antecedents Solihull Helion ISBN 1 874622 92 2 Moreman Timothy Robert 2007 Desert Rats British 8th Army in North Africa 1941 43 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 84603 144 1 Second World War Military Unit Database Orders of Battle com Archived from the original on 17 July 2007 Retrieved 25 September 2008 Further reading EditPerrett Bryan 1972 The Valentine in North Africa 1942 43 London Arms amp Armour Press ISBN 978 0 7110 0262 3 External links EditMaj I G Kelly 42 Signal Squadron History archive site Graham Watson The Territorial Army 1947 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 23rd Armoured Brigade United Kingdom amp oldid 1128159059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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