Military Wiki
Register
Advertisement
112th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps (Foresters)
Active 1941–1944
Disbanded 14 October 1944
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Branch Flag of the British Army British Army
Type Armoured car regiment
Role Reconnaissance
Part of Royal Armoured Corps
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Col Claude Lancaster, MP

112th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps (Foresters) (112 RAC) was an armoured car regiment of the British Army's Royal Armoured Corps during World War II.

Origin[]

112th Regiment RAC was formed on 1 November 1941 by the conversion to the armoured car role of 9th Battalion of the Sherwood Foresters.[1][2] This was an infantry battalion raised in 1939 that had seen action at Dunkirk[3][4] and had since been serving in the lorried infantry role in the Support Group of 1st Armoured Division.[5] The battalion had been under orders to accompany 1st Armoured to the Middle East, but these were cancelled and the men returned their tropical uniforms to store.[2]

In common with other infantry units transferred to the Royal Armoured Corps, 112's personnel would have continued to wear their Foresters cap badge on the black beret of the RAC,[1] and the regiment continued to add the parenthesis '(Foresters)' after the RAC title.[2] The first Commanding Officer was Lieutenant-Colonel Claude Lancaster, a Member of Parliament and Reserve officer who had raised 9th Foresters and commanded it at Dunkirk. He was made an Honorary Colonel in the Royal Armoured Corps when his term of command ended.[3][6][7]

Service[]

112 RAC was assigned to the newly formed 42nd Armoured Division as its armoured car regiment.[8] The regiment's initial equipment was the Bison concrete armoured lorry with extemporised armour and Standard Beaverette armoured cars handed over by 42nd Division's Reconnaissance Regiment, with Daimler Dingo scout cars as armoured command vehicles.[2]

112 RAC left 42nd Division in February 1943[8] and later became a draft-finding unit for other armoured car regiments fighting in Normandy. One of the regiment's last duties was to carry out trials on the 95mm gun version of the Harry Hopkins light tank, even though no-one in the regiment had ever seen a 95mm gun.[9]

Despite personal appeals from the Commanding Officer, Lt-Col A.G. Miller, DSO, to General Miles Dempsey commanding Second Army in North-West Europe, and from Col Lancaster to the War Office, to allow the unit to go overseas, 112 RAC ceased to exist on 14 October 1944, when it reverted to the title of 9th Foresters, which was placed in suspended animation. The last entry in the War Diary notes:

The history of this Regiment is a pure example of the complete ineffciency of 'A' Branch at the War Office, in as much as many hundreds of officers and men have wasted valuable years of their lives training for precisely nothing.[9]

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Forty pp. 50–1.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 War Diary 112th Regt RAC, November–December 1941, The National Archives, Kew, file WO 166/1429.
  3. 3.0 3.1 'Colonel C.G. Lancaster', Times 27 July 1977.
  4. Lord Gort's despatch, London Gazette, Supplement 10 October 1941 http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/35305/supplements/5899
  5. Joslen, pp. 213, 215.
  6. Monthly Army List September 1939.
  7. Quarterly Army List January 1944.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Joslen, p. 29.
  9. 9.0 9.1 War Diary 112th Regt RAC, January–October 1944, The National Archives, file WO 166/14603.

References[]

  • George Forty, British Army Handbook 1939-1945, Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1998, ISBN 0-7509-1403-3.
  • Lt-Col H.F. Joslen, Orders of Battle, United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War, 1939–1945, London: HM Stationery Office, 1960/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2003, ISBN 1843424746.
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at 112th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps and the edit history here.
Advertisement