1st (United Kingdom) Division

Mobile Division
1st Armoured Division
1st British Armoured Division
1st (United Kingdom) Division

Insignia of the 1st Armoured Division.
Active 1937–1945
1960–present
Country  United Kingdom
Branch British Army
Type Infantry Division
Size Second World War
14,964 men[1]
343 tanks[nb 1][nb 2].Army 2020 size - around eight brigades, including 102 Logistics Brigade
Part of Land Forces
Garrison/HQ Imphal Barracks, York, United Kingdom
Engagements

Second World War

First Gulf War
Iraq War
Commanders
Current
commander
Major General Giles Hill
Notable
commanders
Willoughby Norrie
Herbert Lumsden
Richard Hull
Rupert Smith

The 1st (United Kingdom) Division, formerly the 1st Armoured Division, is a division of the British Army, currently the only British division to be stationed in Germany. Originally formed in November 1937 as the Mobile Division, it saw extensive service during World War II and was disbanded afterwards; reconstituted in 1976, it remains in service. It should not be confused with 1st Infantry Division which saw service in World War II as a separate formation.

Formation

The division was formed in November 1937 on the initiative of General Sir Archibald Montgomery-Massingberd, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS). At the time, it was named The Mobile Division. The choice of General Officer Commanding reflected the tensions within the army. The Secretary of State for War (Leslie Hore-Belisha) wanted a Royal Tank Corps (RTC) officer as tanks would be the main force of the division but Montgomery-Massingberd wanted a cavalry officer. Supporters of Montgomery-Massingberd proposed that the tank element of the division should be formed from cavalry regiments equipped only with light tanks and that the tank brigade and its heavier tanks be removed from the division. The compromise was the appointment of Major-General Alan Brooke RA.[3] When Brooke was promoted, his replacement was a cavalry officer.

The Mobile Division was formed with the 1st and 2nd Light Armoured Brigades, the 1st Army Tank Brigade, artillery, engineers and signals. Its paper strength was 620 armoured fighting vehicles but 78 of these were reconnaissance vehicles and some were simulated by trucks. The heavier tanks were in the tank brigade and until cruiser tanks deliveries began in December 1938 they had obsolete medium tanks. At the same time, the organization of the division was changed to a Light Armoured Brigade (three regiments with light and cruiser tanks), a Heavy Armoured Brigade (three regiments of cruiser tanks) and a Support Group (motorized rifle battalion, motorized artillery regiment and a company of engineers). In practice, with insufficient cruiser tanks to equip the division, there was no difference in numbers and type of tanks between the light and heavy brigades.[4]

Second World War

The 1st Armoured Division first saw service during the Second World War in incomplete form under the command of Major-General Roger Evans[5] when the second British Expeditionary Force (2nd BEF) was sent to France in May 1940.[6] The 1st Armoured Division, consisting of the understrength 2nd and 3rd Armoured Brigades, along with the 1st Support Group, and with no infantry support (which had been transferred in April to form the 30th Infantry Brigade), landed in France on 14 May 1940[7] and, after suffering heavy tank losses during the Battle of France, was evacuated to England on 16 June, having fought south of the river Somme, isolated from the other British formations.[7]

Cruiser Mk I tanks of the 5th Royal Tank Regiment, 1st Armoured Division, on Thursley Common, Surrey, July 1940.

Until 27 August 1941, the division was stationed in the United Kingdom on anti-invasion duties, anticipating a German invasion, under the command of Major-General Willoughby Norrie, who had taken command on 24 August 1940.[5] It then embarked for Egypt under the command of Major-General Herbert Lumsden and arrived on 13 November 1941.[7] After Major-General Lumsden was wounded, Major-General Frank Messervy took command in January 1942, retaining command until Major-General Lumsden returned in March.[5] The 1st Armoured Division took part in many of the battles of the North African Campaign against Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel, the "Desert Fox", including Gazala, Mersa Matruh, First El Alamein, Second El Alamein, Tebaga Gap, Mareth Line, Akarit, El Kourzia and Tunis.[6] In August 1942, Major-General Raymond Briggs was appointed to command and in July 1943 was succeeded by Major-General Alexander Galloway.[5]

Sherman tanks of the 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays), 1st Armoured Division, at El Alamein, 24 October 1942.

From the end of the campaign in Tunisia in May 1943, which saw the surrender of almost 250,000 German and Italian soldiers, the 1st Armoured Division remained in North Africa until May 1944. The division, minus the 18th Lorried Infantry Brigade (previously 7th Motor Brigade, on loan to the 1st Infantry Division in the Anzio beachhead, only rejoining 1st Armoured in August),[8] then transferred to the Italian Front, arriving in Italy in late May.[7]

The division came under command of V Corps,[8] under Lieutenant-General Charles Keightley, of the Eighth Army, commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese. The 1st Armoured Division was the only British division, of six in total, to have fought at Alamein under Eighth Army command, to rejoin the army in Italy.[9] During the fighting in front of the Gothic Line throughout August and September, the 2nd Armoured Brigade suffered severe losses in tanks in the Battle of Coriano, with the 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays), losing 31 tanks, out of 52.[6][10] Major-General Richard Hull, aged just 37 and three months who became Chief of the General Staff, took over command for this part of the campaign in August 1944.[5] The division was broken up soon after, due to a lack of sufficient drafts to replace casualties but the 2nd Armoured Brigade survived as an independent brigade and the 18th Infantry Brigade was broken up and used to fill gaps in other British divisions, mainly for the 46th and 56th Infantry Divisions.[11] The division was officially disbanded on 11 January 1945.[12]

Order of battle

The 1st Armoured Division was constituted as follows and shows some of the changes that were made to British armoured formations during the war.[13][14][15]

3 September 1939

23 October 1942

Other brigades were part of the division for varying lengths of time:

Post Second World War

Ground operations during Operation Desert Storm, showing the 1st Armoured Divisions movements.

It was not until 1960 that the Division re-emerged in the British Army. It was reformed as the 1st Division following the disbandment of the 1st Infantry Division and was initially based at Verden an der Aller in Germany.[16]

During the 1970s, the division consisted of two "square" brigades, the 7th Armoured Brigade and 22nd Armoured Brigade.[17] It became the 1st Armoured Division in 1976 and served with I (BR) Corps being based at Shiel Barracks in Verden in Germany from 1978.[18] After being briefly reorganised into two "task forces" ("Alpha" and "Bravo") in the late 1970s, it consisted of the 7th Armoured Brigade, the 12th Armoured Brigade and 22nd Armoured Brigade in the 1980s.[19] The divisional badge dates from 1983, and combines the hollow red triangular "spearhead" badge of the 1st Infantry Division with the charging rhinoceros badge of 1st Armoured Division as displayed in the Second World War.

Divisional formations and units have deployed on many other operations such as occupation duties in Northern Ireland, the Falkland Islands, Belize and United Nations tours in Cyprus, Bosnia and Kosovo. The headquarters of the division was deployed to Saudi Arabia in 1990 to command British land forces. It had the 4th Armoured Brigade and 7th Armoured Brigade under command. During the war, it came under the US VII Corps and was part of the great armoured left-hook that destroyed many Iraqi Republican Guard formations. The two brigades in the division alternated heading the advance.[20] The division participated in the Battle of Norfolk.[21] During this engagement the division destroyed several Iraqi companies of T-55 tanks.[22] After 48 hours of combat the division destroyed or isolated four Iraqi infantry divisions (the 26th, 48th, 31st, and 25th) and overran the Iraqi 52nd Armored Division in several sharp engagements. The British 1st Armoured Division had traveled 217 miles in 97 hours. The British 1st Armoured Division had captured or destroyed about 200 tanks and a very large number of armoured personnel carriers, trucks, reconnaissance vehicles, etc.[22][23]

1993 to 2014

Structure 1st Armoured Division before the Army 2020 changes.

In 1993, HQ 1st Armoured Division was disbanded and the 1st (UK) Armoured Division formed from the 4th Armoured Division. The headquarters were established at Wentworth Barracks in Herford in 1993.[24] The divisional headquarters was deployed in command of the Multi-National Division (South-West) in Bosnia in 1996–1997 and 1998–1999.[25]

The Division headquarters again deployed to the Persian Gulf area in 2003. It again commanded British forces in the area, this time with three full brigades under its control. Those were 7th Armoured Brigade again, along with 16 Air Assault Brigade, and 3 Commando Brigade. In a combined arms operation the division secured southern Iraq, including the city of Basra during the invasion. It came under I Marine Expeditionary Force during the 2003 conflict.[26]

The following brigades made up the 1st (United Kingdom) Armoured Division during that period:[16]

The 4th Armoured Brigade (The Black Rats) was part of 1st Armoured Division until the division was reduced to two brigades in 2007.[27]

Current formation

Under Army 2020, the division was renamed 1st (United Kingdom) Division in July 2014 and given responsibility for commanding the Adaptable Force which comprises:[28][29][30]

The division moved to Imphal Barracks in York on 1 June 2015.[31]

Structure of 1st (UK) Division under Army 2020 (click image to enlarge)

General Officers Commanding

Herford Army Base

Commanders have been:[32]
GOC The Mobile Division

GOC 1st Armoured Division

GOC 1st Division

GOC 1st Armoured Division

GOC 1st (UK) Armoured Division

GOC 1st (United Kingdom) Division

See also

Notes

Footnotes

  1. 63 light tanks, 205 medium tanks, 24 close support tanks, 25 anti-aircraft tanks and 8 artillery observation tanks.[2]
  2. These two figures are the war establishment 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. AFV Profile Book No. 2 British and Commonwealth Armoured Formations (1919–1946) Profile Publishing p24
  4. AFV Profile Book No. 2 pp24–25
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Joslen, p. 13
  6. 1 2 3 Chappell, p.12
  7. 1 2 3 4 Joslen, p. 15
  8. 1 2 Joslen, p. 14
  9. Alexander's Generals, the Italian Campaign 1944–45, Gregory Blaxland, p. 167
  10. Alexander's Generals, the Italian Campaign 1944–45, Gregory Blaxland, p. 182
  11. Alexander's Generals, the Italian Campaign 1944–45, Gregory Blaxland, p. 202-203
  12. Joslen p. 13
  13. Niehorster, Dr. Leo. "1st Armoured Division, British Army, 03-09-1939". World War II Armed Forces. Orders of Battle and Organisations. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  14. Niehorster, Dr. Leo. "1st Armoured Division, 23 October 1942". World War II Armed Forces. Orders of Battle and Organisations. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  15. Joslen pp. 13–15
  16. 1 2 British Army Units
  17. Watson, Graham (2005). "The British Army in Germany: An Organisational History 1947-2004". Tiger Lily. p. 95.
  18. "Shiel Barracks". BAOR Locations. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  19. Black, Harvey. "The Cold War Years. A Hot War in reality. Part 6.".
  20. Order of Battle for VII Armored Corps
  21. Bourque, p.260
  22. 1 2 Bourque, p.275
  23. Bourque, p.377
  24. "Wentworth Barracks". BAOR locations. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  25. NATO ARRC, COMARRC
  26. 1st (UK) Armoured Division in Iraq Field Artillery, January–February 2004
  27. "Quebec Barracks". BAOR Locations. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  28. Army basing plan
  29. "Army 2020 Report" (PDF). Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  30. "Division Redesignated to 1 (UK) Division". Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  31. "Homecoming of a Yorkshire general". The Press. 4 June 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  32. 1 2 Army Commands Archived 5 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  33. Corps Commanders: Five British and Canadian Generals at War, 1939–45 By Douglas E. Delaney, p.128
  34. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Armoured Division Unit Histories - 1st Armoured Division

References

External links

Coordinates: 52°07′00″N 8°41′49″E / 52.11667°N 8.69694°E / 52.11667; 8.69694

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