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To encapsulate the British Army in one book is no easy task, but here, George Forty presents it as it was during the Second World War. When war was declared in 1939, the British Army was very much the 'Cinderella' of the three armed services, with a total strength of around 865,000 men. However, just four years later when the Allies invaded north-west Europe, the British Army had grown into a powerful, well-organised and well-equipped fighting force of 3 million men and women. George Forty presents a comprehensive overview of the British Army during this important time. He includes full details of mobilisation and training, higher organisation and arms of the service; divisional organisations and non-divisional units; HQs and Staff; the combat arms and the services; the individual soldier, his weapons and equipment; tactics; vehicle markings and camouflage; the Auxiliary Territorial Service and other Women's Corps. Fully illustrated with an unusual collection of photographs and line illustrations, this is an indispensable reference guide for anyone interested in this fascinating period of British history.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2009
COMPANION TO THE
BRITISH ARMY
1939–1945
COMPANION TO THE
BRITISH ARMY
1939–1945
GEORGE FORTY
Cover Illustrations: Front: British infantrymen double through the narrow streets of Flushing, keeping a lookout for snipers (IWM SFD 15). Back: What an infantryman carries with him into battle c. June 1944 (IWM B 9005 & B 9006).
First published in 1998
This edition published in 2009
The History Press
The Mill, Brimscombe Port
Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2QG
www.thehistorypress.co.uk
This ebook edition first published in 2013
All rights reserved
© George Forty 1998, 2002, 2009, 2013
The right of George Forty to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
EPUB ISBN 978 0 7509 5139 5
Original typesetting by The History Press
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1
Historical Background
Chapter 2
Mobilization and Training
Chapter 3
Higher Organizations down to Army Level and Arms of the Services
Chapter 4
Non Divisional Units, Headquarters and the Staff
Chapter 5
The Combat Arms
Chapter 6
The Services
Chapter 7
Divisional Organizations
Chapter 8
The Soldier
Chapter 9
Weapons, Vehicles and Equipment
Chapter 10
Tactics
Chapter 11
Vehicle Markings, Flag Codes and Camouflage
Chapter 12
ATS and other Women’s Corps
Appendix 1
British Army Divisions of the Second World War
Appendix 2
Military Symbols
Appendix 3
Appreciations of the Situation and Operation Orders
Appendix 4
Composition of 21 Army Group
Appendix 5
Ground Radios
Appendix 6
Personalities
Bibliography
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I must thank the staff of the MoD Library for their usual courteous and unfailing support – how fortunate we are to have such a precious resource and long may it prosper!
Most of the photographs come from the Imperial War Museum Department of Photographs and I must thank them also for their help and kindness. The same applies to David Fletcher, Curator and Librarian of the Tank Museum, Bruce Robertson and others who have given me photographs to use – some of those marked ‘Author’s Collection’ have been in my possession since I wrote my very first book on the 7th Armoured Division nearly twenty-five years ago.
Finally I must thank my son Jonathan, who has been responsible for many of the drawings and charts, the Royal Signals Institution for allowing me to use their table of radio sets, the Dorset Military Museum, Airborne Forces Museum, RA Institution and the Tank Museum Library, for their help with organizational tables.
ABBREVIATIONS
Given below are a selection of abbreviations used by the British Army during the Second World War. Only authorized abbreviations could be used, plus those in general use, such as lb, yd, mph, etc. Different abbreviations were used by the US Army and there was no Allied standardization until after the war had ended.
accommodation
accn
administrative order
admin O
advance or advanced
adv
aide de camp
ADC
airborne
ab
aircraft
ac
ambulance
amb
amendment
amdt
ammunition
amn
anti-aircraft
AA
anti-gas
AG
anti-tank
A tk
armoured
armd
armoured car
armd C
armoured recovery vehicle
ARV
artillery
arty
assault
aslt
battalion
bn
battery
bty
boundary
bdy
bombardier
bdr
bridge
br
brigade
bde
brigadier
brig
camouflage
cam
captain
capt
carrier
carr
cavalry
cav
centre line
CL
chemical
chem
colonel
col
column
colm
commanding officer
CO
command post
CP
commando
cdo
communications
comms
company
coy
confidential
confd
construct or construction
constr
coordinate
coord
corporal
cpl
craftsman
cfn
crossroads
x rds
decontamination
dcn
defence, defended, defensive
def
defensive fire
DF
demolition
dml
depot
dep
detachment, detach
det
district
dist
distribution
distr
division
div
driver
dvr
dropping zone
DZ
drummer
dmr
echelon
ech
embark
emb
enemy
en
engineer
engr
establish
estb
estimated time of arrival
ETA
estimated time of departure
ETD
evacuate
evac
field
fd
field marshal
FM
flight
flt
follow, followed, following
fol
formation
fmn
forming up place
FUP
forward
fwd
forward observation officer
FOO
frequency
freq
gallon
gal
general staff
GS
general
gen
group
gp
guard
gd
guardsman
gdsm
gunner
gnr
headquarters
HQ
heavy
hy
high explosive
HE
high power
HP
howitzer
how
hygiene
hyg
identification, identify
ident
including, inclusive
incl
independent
indep
infantry
inf
information
info
intelligence
int
junction
junc
killed in action
KIA
labour
lab
lance corporal
LCpl
landing craft infantry
LCI
landing craft tank
LCT
leader
ldr
light aid detachment
LAD
liaison officer
LO
lieutenant
lt
light
lt
line(s) of communication
LofC
locate, location
loc
low power
LP
machine gun
MG
magazine
mag
maximum
max
major
maj
mechanized
mech
medical
med
medium
med
memorandum
memo
message
msg
military
mil
minimum
min
miscellaneous
misc
mobile
mob
mortar
mor
motor, motorized
mot
motorcycle
MC
necessary
nec
night
ni
non-commissioned officer
NCO
nothing to report
NTR
observation post
OP
objective
obj
officer
offr
operation
op
operation order
OO
organization
org
other rank
OR
parachute
para
patrol
ptl
paymaster
pmr
petrol, oil and lubricants
POL
pioneer
pnr
platoon
pl
point
pt
position
posn
pounder
pdr
private
pte
provost marshal
PM
quartermaster
QM
quartermaster sergeant (as used, for example, with CQMS – company . . . or SQMS – squadron . . .)
QMS
ration(s)
rat(s)
railhead
RH
reconnaissance
recce
relief
rel
rendezvous
RV
rifleman
rfn
regiment
regt
regimental sergeant major
RSM
regimental police
RP
reserve
res
restricted
restd
road
rd
sapper
spr
searchlight
SL
section
sec
self-propelled mounting
SP
serjeant/sergeant
sjt/sgt
signal(s)
sig(s)
small arms ammunition
SAA
soldier
sldr
sound ranging
S rg
squadron
sqn
staff sergeant
SSgt
start line
SL
starting point
SP
sten machine carbine
SMC
strength
str
support
sp
subject
subj
supply point
sup P
survey
svy
switchboard
swb
tactical, tactics
tac
tank
tk
target
tgt
technical
tech
telegraph
tele
telephone
phone
temporary
temp
top secret
TOPSEC
transport
tpt
traffic control post
TCP
troop carrying vehicle
TCV
troop(s)
tp(s)
trooper
tpr
unclassified
unclas
unserviceable
unsvc
vehicle
veh
vehicle collecting point
VCP
verbal order
VO
veterinary
vet
warning order
wng O
warrant officer
WO
war department
WD
war establishment
WE
water point
WP
weapon
wpn
wounded in action
WIA
workshop
wksp
INTRODUCTION
This is the second ‘World War II Handbook’ I have written for Sutton Publishing, the first being my attempt to cram the build-up, training, organization, weapons and equipment of the vast American Army of the Second World War, into a couple of hundred pages. Although it was difficult enough on that occasion, I misguidedly thought that it would be easier trying to do the same with the somewhat smaller British Army of the same period. It wasn’t and I am quite certain that the reader will find many omissions for which I apologize in advance – but it is a vast subject to cover in such a little book so I could only include the bare essentials.
I am of course not the first to attempt such a project. The American Army was well to the fore, producing their excellent training manual (TM 30–410) entitled Handbook on the British Army early in 1943. Fortunately there was an old, well-thumbed copy in the MoD Library, so I was able to read it and have quoted from it in some cases. However, the main problem with that excellent TM is that it only portrayed the British Army of the early war years, before it had been modernized and altered by battle experience. Therefore it was a study of the Second World War British Army from a somewhat old-fashioned viewpoint. In addition, it contained information concerning the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force, which clearly need not be included this time. Indeed, the TM appeared to draw heavily on a most marvellous book, which I had read when a very young school-boy, entitled Britain’s 'Wonderful Fighting Forces by Capt Ellison Hawkes RA, which was published before the war by Odhams Press Ltd. So, for example, the section on AFVs dealt with the early lights, cruisers and infantry tanks, stopping with the early marks of Churchill, thus not covering Cromwell, Challenger, Comet, etc., or any of the amazing ‘Funnies’ of 79th Armd Div, which helped so much towards the success of the Normandy landings. Infantry anti-tank (a tk) weapons were far more concerned with the obsolescent Boys a tk rifle and the 2 pdr, with little information on the 6 pdr and no mention whatsoever of the 17 pdr or of SP a tk weapons, because obviously they had not yet come into service so could not be included. The same applied to much other equipment and to many vehicles and weapons, while there was little mention of the activities of the British Army outside temperate climes, again for obvious reasons.
I have tried, in this volume, to give a more balanced and complete picture of the British Army in wartime from the early days of the BEF, through the years of defeat and struggle in the early 1940s, culminating in the eventual Allied victory, in which the officers and men of the British Army and their Commonwealth comrades played such an important role. The Commonwealth soldiers deserve far more coverage than I have been able to give them, but I hope that they will not feel I have forgotten them. They, the Australians, Canadians, Indians, New Zealanders, South Africans and all the rest, made a mighty contribution that must never be forgotten.
As far as the main general descriptions of the individual soldier, his weapons and equipment are concerned I have tried to base everything on the army that went into NW Europe in 1944, but at the same time not forgetting what went before and what came after, so the ‘Forgotten Armies’ that fought in Italy and Burma are mentioned as well. The format follows the same sequence as that in the US Army Handbook, so past readers will, I hope, be on familiar ground.
George Forty Bryantspuddle
CHAPTER 1
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
THE BRITISH PEOPLE GO TO WAR
‘At 11.0am on September 3rd 1939, Britain entered a new era. The transition from peace to war was swift and dramatic. The country had put on uniform. The sky over the cities was dotted with balloons. Everywhere, people were digging trenches, filling sandbags. Gas masks were given out. There was a rush for black paper and cloth to screen windows and skylights. Grim, grey vehicles thundered along the roads on mysterious errands. There was in the air a feeling of change, complete, inevitable, tremendous.’
(Opening paragraph of The British People at War published by Odhams Press Ltd in 1942.)
300 YEARS OF HISTORY
The formation of a permanent regular army in Great Britain had taken place over 300 years before the Second World War began and ever since those days it had occupied a rather uncomfortable position in British society, owing its allegiance to the Crown, yet being under the effective control of Parliament. Invariably reduced to a ridiculously small size during peacetime – thanks to political fears that a large standing army would threaten civil liberty – it had nevertheless performed incredible feats of endurance and bravery, winning and then helping to maintain a vast, worldwide Empire. It has to be emphasized, however, that apart from the First World War, the country had relied more upon British-officered mercenary levies to perform these miracles, rather than upon large numbers of her own regular soldiers. Nevertheless, the British Army had a remarkable record of success, losing only one major war (American War of Independence 1775–83) in the last 300 years, and, in more recent times, being engaged as an unsupported nation at the turn of the century in the South African War, then as a member of the Allied Powers in the First World War, the greatest war the world had ever known, in which the Motherland and its Empire suffered well over a million military battle-deaths. Now, only some twenty years after the ‘War to end all Wars’ had ended, the world was about to be plunged into an even greater conflict.
However, this time Britain was a little better prepared. It had been obvious to most people even before the Munich Crisis of 1938, that another war with Germany was inevitable. Despite maintaining a policy of appeasement, Britain and its main ally, France, had embarked upon a programme of rearmament from the mid-thirties, which became more and more hurried and frenetic when it was realized just how far behind Germany they had fallen. Nevertheless, between the spring of 1936 and the autumn of 1939, while the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force enjoyed a period of intense expansion and modernization, the fortunes of the army were, to quote the official history, ‘. . . altogether less happy. This was the period in which the Army became the “Cinderella Service”.’1 Despite this lethargy, the British Army eventually began to modernize, albeit very slowly, as is evidenced by the 1935–36 Army Estimates, which allowed for a paltry £4 million increase in budget, of which just £270,000 was allowed for the provision of tracked vehicles including tanks. Despite the fact that ‘gurus’ of armoured warfare such as ‘Boney’ Fuller and Basil Liddell-Hart had long been expounding their theories on how the next war would be fought, only Adolf Hitler’s Germany had been listening. The attitude of mind towards mechanization that pervaded the British Army at that time can be gauged by the apology made to the Cavalry by the then Secretary of State for War, when introducing the 1936–37 Estimates, in which he likened the ‘unpalatable’ decision to mechanize eight of their regiments to being like ‘. . . asking a great musical performer to throw away his violin and devote himself to the gramophone’. Such stupidity at such a high level would ensure that Britain had only two incomplete armoured divisions in September 1939, as compared with Germany’s six.
Despite all the problems, 1937 saw a rearmament programme begin that was on a scale far larger than anything attempted since the end of the First World War. It was proposed to spend £1,500 million over five years, three times as much as was being spent when Hitler came to power and a 50 per cent increase on the previous year’s expenditure. During the Chamberlain administration there was, however, a school of thought which argued that Britain should only participate in a continental war using her sea and air power. However, neither the British nor the French General Staff agreed and shortly before the war, the broad strategic policy was summarized by both parties as follows:
‘We should be faced by enemies who would be more fully prepared than ourselves for war on a national scale, would have superiority in air and land forces, but would be inferior at sea and in general economic strength. In the circumstances, we must be prepared to face a major offensive directed at either France or Great Britain or against both. To defeat such an offensive we should have to concentrate all our initial efforts and during this time our major strategy would be defensive.’2
They went on to say that it might be possible to conduct counter-offensive operations against the Italians in both North and East Africa, thus reducing Italy’s will to fight without undue cost! Subsequent policy would be directed against holding Germany and dealing decisively with Italy, while building up military strength to a point when it would be possible to take the offensive against Germany. Diplomacy would be used to ensure the active support, or at worst, the benevolent neutrality of other world powers, especially the USA. No mention was made of Japan, but in the last few weeks before war was declared in Europe, relations between Britain and Japan were under strain. However, for the time being, the Japanese had enough to contend with in China, while they – the Japanese – were deeply suspicious of Hitler’s long-term objectives after his agreement with the USSR.
The Anglo-French military strategy was thus aimed at maintaining the integrity of French terrority. If the Low Countries were involved then the Allies would attempt to stop the enemy as far forward as possible. It would be necessary, therefore, for the British to send an Expeditionary Force to fight on the Continent, but it would be considerably smaller than the one sent in the First World War. Many politicians did not like this commitment, although there was general agreement for the need to maintain an adequate army in the Middle East. Egypt and the Suez Canal were considered to be of prime importance, while Palestine was necessary as a buffer to an invasion of Egypt from the north. India and the Far East were not thought to be in any immediate danger.
NATIONAL SERVICE
Conscription had ended in December 1918 and the massive British Army – larger than ever before in its history – had been rapidly whittled down, so that by the early 1920s there were under 250,000 men serving, thinly spread all over the Empire. The Territorial Army (TA), which had been created in 1908, had also been greatly reduced and its weapons and equipment were now seriously outdated. As has been explained, the Munich Crisis finally jolted the country out of its lethargy, mechanization, modernization and expansion all being put into effect. The strength of the British Army, as given by the Secretary of State for War in April 1939, was: Regular Army 224,000; Territorial Army Field Force 325,000; and Territorial Army Anti-Aircraft Units 96,000, giving a total of men under arms of 645,000. However, much of the regular army was in India, or scattered in small garrisons worldwide, so more forces had to be built up at home. It had been agreed in March 1939 to double the size of the TA and the following month it was decided to re-introduce some conscription. Parliament passed the Military Training Act on 27 April 1939, more than 200,000 men between the ages of 20 and 21 registering in June 1939. These men, known as the Militia, were allowed to state their preferred choice of service, between the navy, army and air force, and were drafted accordingly. During the middle of July the first batch of militiamen, numbering 34,000 for the army, were called up by age group, while the additional recruiting for the TA between April and September 1939 brought in some 36,000 extra men. To these were added the men of the Army Reserve (men who had returned to civilian life having completed their service with the Colours, but who were still liable to recall in case of emergency) and the Supplementary Reserve (mainly technicians), called out by proclamation on the outbreak of war and numbering a further 150,000. Thus, on 3 September 1939, the British Army numbered approximately 1,065,000.
Liability was extended on 6 September 1939, when the war was just a few hours old, Parliament passing the National Service (Armed Forces) Act, which not only merged all these forces into a single entity but also made all physically fit males between the ages of 18 and 41 liable for military service. This was followed in 1941 by another Act, which extended the upper age limit for men to 51 and also made women liable for military service. In fact, only a few men over 41 were ever conscripted, and none over 45. By October all these measures had ensured that a million men were under intensive training, the cost of an infantryman’s uniform being approximately £20 and comprising eighty items!
By the end of 1939, 727,000 men had registered; in 1940 the figure was 4,100,000 and in 1941 a further 2,222,000 were called up. From then on the numbers dropped sharply, as the only eligible men left were those in reserved occupations, plus each new generation as it reached the minimum call-up age. The armed forces, which in 1938 had numbered just 381,000, rose after only one year to 2.25 million and by D-Day (June 1944) nearly one-third of the entire male population of working age was serving in the forces. By April 1945 the British forces had reached a peak figure of just under 5 million, of whom 3 million were serving in the army. They made up some 47 divisions (11 armoured, 34 infantry and 2 airborne) of which 11 (2 armoured and 9 infantry) saw no combat as complete divisions.
BRITAIN STANDS ALONE
Once the ‘Phoney War’ was over and the Battle for France had begun, there would be few bright patches in the early war years, with defeats all over the world being more the order of the day, until Britain stood virtually alone in its embattled islands. Most of the men of the once-proud BEF had been miraculously rescued, although the majority of their heavy equipment – including most of their precious tanks – had been lost. Fortunately the Germans did not react immediately, so Britain was allowed time to dig in and to build up her forces. One of the most important decisions at this time was to create an Anti-Aircraft (AA) Command of five TA divisions, which would prove vital against the enemy bomber threat. The regimental system remained the cornerstone of the army, for both infantry and armour, although there was inevitably some cross-posting when the casualties mounted. Mechanization had brought new roles for existing units – such as medium reconnaissance for the now fully mechanized cavalry regiments, while new units like the Reconnaissance Corps were also formed to provide recce units for infantry divisions. Specialized troops, such as paratroops, glider-borne troops and commandos, all came into being, but the three main supporting arms – artillery, engineers and signals remained predominant, the Royal Artillery (RA) having the largest proportion of manpower among all the supporting arms and services. In addition to field artillery, they were also responsible for all AA, coastal and some a tk units.
COMMONWEALTH FORCES
Prewar, the two prime duties of the British Army were Home Defence and Empire Defence, the latter relying primarily upon the Royal Navy, which required well-protected bases in all parts of the world. Protecting these bases was an army responsibility, the size of such garrisons depending upon how quickly they could be reinforced. Some were small and relatively isolated, such as the fortress command of Malta. The major dominions of course maintained their own armies, which were, like the British Army, small professional bodies, recruited on a volunteer basis. Although this book is primarily about the British Army it would be unforgivable to omit the forces of the British Commonwealth, which still covered one quarter of the world’s surface. As in the First World War, India, together with the ‘old’ dominions of Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa, plus all the other colonial parts of the Empire, had immediately joined Britain against the Axis, only Eire choosing to remain neutral. Their commitment was just as generous as it had been during the First World War, despite the understandable reluctance of some of the governments to repeat the levels of sacrifice. The global nature of the conflict meant that the Australians and Indians lost more soldiers against the Japanese than they did against the Germans and Italians. Canada, on the other hand, played a major part in the war against Germany, first in Italy then in NW Europe, while North Africa then Italy were the main battlegrounds for the South Africans.
In most cases, the Commonwealth forces were organized and equipped on British lines, using mainly British or US (Lend-Lease) equipment, although in some cases such equipment was produced within the Commonwealth country. Thus, when describing such weapons, vehicles, uniforms and equipment, I have deliberately included information and photographs of as many of these gallant Commonwealth warriors as possible, as a small tribute to the immense part they all played in securing victory. The numbers serving in these various armies were just about equal to those who served from Great Britain, namely, 4½–5 million men and women, including a staggering 2½ million from India, the largest volunteer army in history.
OVERSEAS SERVICE
The need for regular soldiers ‘Empire-wide’ had been resolved in peacetime by the ‘linked battalion’ system. One battalion, known as the Foreign Service Battalion, was always abroad – up to eighteen years of foreign service was not unusual – while a second battalion, the Home Service Battalion, remained in the UK, being fed with drafts from the Regimental Depot and sending drafts to the battalion abroad, as and when needed. Within the Indian Army there was one British battalion in every Indian brigade, a policy that had been instituted following the 1857 mutiny. Fortress garrisons, such as Malta and Gibraltar, were similarly manned by Foreign Service Battalions. In the rest of the colonial and mandated territories, the forces were maintained by the principle of having a nucleus of British troops (largely for training purposes) with native levies recruited and built up around them. Most were highly efficient, but inadequately armed, and all had proved their bravery in the First World War.
THE 1944 ARMY
In describing the uniform, weapons, vehicles and equipment of the British Army I have decided, in the main, to base this book on the army that emerged as a main combatant in NW Europe. This is deliberately at variance with the Handbook on the British Army 1943 (TM 30–410), which was produced by the US Army early in 1943 to give an overall picture of the British Army for their troops coming over for the Second Front. Although an excellent primer, this manual, as previously stated, understandably gave a rather old-fashioned picture of the British forces and did not include some of its important newer weapons – such as the 17 pdr a tk gun and the PIAT (Projector Infantry Anti-Tank) light a tk weapon. Armoured fighting vehicle coverage was also out of date, with the obsolete ‘Queen of the Desert’, the Matilda II being included. In line with most of the Allied armies, the British used a large range of Lend-Lease items from the USA. These have been mentioned but not described as full details can be found in the companion volume the US Army Handbook 1939–1945 (The History Press, 1997).
1. See N.H. Gibbs, History of the Second World War – Grand Strategy, Volume 1 (HMSO, 1976)
2. Gibbs, History of the Second World War.
CHAPTER 2
MOBILIZATION AND TRAINING
MAKING A CITIZEN ARMY
At the outbreak of war the British Army comprised the Regular Army and the TA, to which was being added the conscripted manpower. Initially, this was as a result of the Military Training Act of April 1939, which was aimed directly at creating the five extra TA divisions of AA Command. In the UK, the army was organized into eight geographic commands and districts (see Chapter 3), within which were a number of regular and territorial divisions, most of which were needed to form the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) that would cross the Channel in September 1939. Added to this were of course the regular units spread throughout the Empire, but they were miniscule when compared with the vast conscripted armies of the continental powers like Germany and France. The nation had to be turned swiftly into an ‘armed camp’, a vast training machine had to be organized, equipped and then put into action to deal with the ever increasing flood of recruits that full conscription brought in.
TRAINING POLICY
‘Training is a wide subject and its necessity to an army in peace and war is unquestioned. However well-equipped, however perfect the plan, an army will not succeed unless the officers and men which it comprises are well trained both individually and as a body.’
This is the opening sentence of Training in the Army, which was to have been published as a volume in the series of British official histories of the Second World War, but was only ever produced in draft form. Nevertheless, it does outline in considerable detail how all forms of training were carried out. In its opening pages the fundamental statement is made that there is nothing to equal actual engagement with the enemy for learning the best way to fight: ‘Everything else is make-believe. It follows therefore that the more practically and realistically troops are taught when they are not fighting the better they will perform when they are, and the impact of battle will be less strange to them.’ Although this was fully appreciated from the outset, it was initially hampered by the shortage of arms and equipment.
Post Dunkirk, a new conception of realistic training also began to appear under the name of ‘Battle Drill’ (more fully covered later) although this was not officially adopted until mid-1942. The Battle School at Barnard Castle was then transformed into a School of Infantry, while a separate School of Advanced Handling and Fieldcraft was taken over by the War Office from Western Command. CinC Home Forces was charged after Dunkirk with the dual tasks of defending Great Britain against a probable invasion and of preparing an army to become an invasion force itself.
One of the many continuing problems on Britain’s tiny crowded islands was to find sufficient and appropriate accommodation and ground for housing and practising a large army. Military camps, barracks and installations were initially few and scattered, while there was neither the space nor the time to build vast camps as was possible in the USA, with ranges and training areas on the doorstep. So hotels and private houses were requisitioned to make do until more camps could be built. However, there were never enough and it was a policy of ‘make do’, which was very expensive on the manpower needed to run the requisite scattered administrative facilities.
During the latter part of 1942 there were enormous changes. The mood of the country was now on the offensive and the tempo and spirit of training changed to make trainees, as the War Office history puts it, ‘more offensively minded’, the main difficulty, initially anyway, being how to deal realistically with all that was required by a modern army in the field, when the once-proud BEF had been evacuated from Dunkirk and to all intents and purposes no longer existed.
Pamphlets The Directorate of Military Training (DMT) also had the unenviable task of writing the pamphlets for use by not only the training organization but also the army as a whole. It is very easy to work out the ideal sequence – fight a battle, discover what has been learnt from it, write it all down, then print and distribute the findings, together with the procedure to be followed. Thus those having to fight future battles will benefit from the lessons as to what to do and what not to do. As one can imagine, this was extremely difficult to achieve, although many pamphlets were indeed written and issued, and proved extremely valuable, but inevitably mistakes were made.
GENERAL TRAINING
PRIMARY TRAINING CENTRESAND WINGS
Formed under the aegis of the Director of Military Training (MT 2) and later known as the General Service Corps, which came into being in June 1942, it was responsible for most General Military Training (GMT) at Primary Training Centres (PTC). It was at these PTCs that recruits received their initial six weeks basic infantry training, to give them a comprehensive grounding in general military subjects such as drill, rifle and pistol shooting, PT, gas training, elementary map reading and tactics. Recruits were also tested by a ‘personnel selection board’, who decided for which of the arms of the Service each recruit was best suited. Requirements did not always match ‘first choices’, so recruits might well go to a second or even third choice. Some received this training in Primary Training Wings (PTW) attached to Corps Training Centres however; whether at PTC or PTW, the syllabus (devised by the War Office) was common to all. Details of Tests of Elementary Training (TOETs), which were common to all arms, are given in Annex ‘A’ to this chapter.
OFFICER TRAINING
The rapid expansion of the army meant that potential officers had to be selected and trained urgently. At first, the policy was to create numerous small officer cadet units all over the country, where the emphasis was placed more on technical efficiency and physical endurance rather than on character and leadership. After two years, however, it was found that officer production units had to become more homogeneous and were better controlled by a common doctrine from one military training branch in the War Office. Potential Officers (PO) would usually be selected, at the Corps Training Centre stage and sent to a War Office Selection Board (WOSB). If selected, a PO would then go to a pre-OCTU (Officer Cadet Training Unit) where a final decision was made. A PO could spend up to nine weeks there or be sent to OCTU after a week. Others, deemed unsuitable at any time, would be Returned to Unit (RTU). The OCTU course length varied according to the degree of technicality; for example, at an Infantry OCTU it was seventeen weeks, while at the RE OCTU it was thirty weeks.
Staff Training The enforced expansion also led to a shortage of trained staff officers so more had to be produced in a hurry. However, it was quickly realized that time did not allow the course to be as long as prewar, so merely the essentials were taught. This worked well in practice and students with ability soon excelled. There were three Staff Colleges – at Camberley, Haifa (Palestine) and Quetta (India) – but no Senior Staff College nor Combined Services Staff College, both of which would probably have been an advantage, while a common form of Staff Duties (SD)1 between the Services did not come into being until after the war.
TECHNICAL TRAINING
It soon became apparent in some of the more technical arms, such as the RAC, RA and REME, that each should have some form of central training establishment, each commanded by a major general (who later became a deputy director under DMT). Their task was to organize all the training of their particular arm and to use all available instructors and equipment so that the instruction was properly co-ordinated and a common policy maintained throughout their arm.
ARMOURED TRAINING