V Corps (United Kingdom)

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V Corps
V corps.svg
Formation Sign of V Corps during the Second World War. [1]
Active1915–1919
1940–1945
CountryFlag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
Branch Flag of the British Army.svg British Army
Type Corps
Engagements First World War: [2] [3]

Second World War:
Tunisia Campaign

Italian Campaign

Commanders
Notable
commanders
Sir Herbert Plumer
Sir Edmund Allenby
Hew Dalrymple Fanshawe
Sir Edward Fanshawe
Cameron Shute
Sir Claude Auchinleck
Sir Bernard Montgomery
Sir Edmond Schreiber
Sir Charles Allfrey
Sir Charles Keightley
Insignia
Corps formation sign during the First World War. [4] V Corps WW1.svg

V Corps was an army corps of the British Army that saw service in both the First and the Second World Wars. It was first organised in February 1915 and fought through the First World War on the Western front. It was recreated in June 1940, during the Second World War and was substantially reorganised in 1942 for participation in Operation Torch. It fought through the Tunisia Campaign and later the Italian Campaign.

Contents

Prior to the First World War

In 1876, a Mobilisation Scheme for the forces in Great Britain and Ireland, including eight army corps of the 'Active Army', was published. The '5th Corps' was headquartered at Salisbury comprising the units of Southern Command. In 1880, its order of battle was as follows:

V Corps was mobilised in July 1876 under the command of General the Hon Sir Augustus Spencer for summer training around the Wylye Valley in Wiltshire. [5] The corps scheme had been dropped by 1881. [6] The 1901 Army Estimates (introduced by St John Brodrick when Secretary of State for War) allowed for six army corps based on the six regional commands: V Corps was to be formed by Northern Command with headquarters in York. It was to comprise 27 artillery batteries (18 Regular, 6 Militia and 3 Volunteer) and 25 infantry battalions (4 Regular, 13 Militia and 8 Volunteers). [7] Under Army Order No 38 of 1907, the corps titles disappeared, but Northern Command continued to be a major administrative organisation. [7]

First World War

V Corps was organised within Second Army of the British Expeditionary Force on 18 February 1915 under the command of Sir Herbert Plumer, who had been commanding Northern Command in England. Initially, V Corps comprised the 27th Division and 28th Division, both composed of Regular Army battalions brought back from various Imperial postings. [8]

Order of Battle February 1915 [9]

1915 fighting

The two infantry divisions had taken over French trenches in front of the Messines-Wytschaete Ridge, south of the Ypres Salient. These trenches were wet and poorly protected, and the Indian-issue boots worn by many of the men were inadequate. They had to endure shelling and occasional trench raids as well as bad weather. [10] V Corps played a peripheral part in the Battle of Neuve Chapelle to the south, and then 27th Division took part in the action at St Eloi (14–15 March 1915). [11]

In April 1915, V Corps shifted northwards, taking over the sector from St Eloi to St Julien from the French Army. Now, with three divisions under command (first the 5th Division and then the newly arrived 1st Canadian Division were added), V Corps held the whole south-eastern and eastern part of the Ypres Salient. [12] Between 17 and 22 April, 5 Division succeeded in capturing Hill 60 after underground mines had been fired. [11]

On 22 April, the Germans launched the Second Battle of Ypres with the first cloud gas attack, which virtually destroyed the French divisions in the north of the salient and drove in the flank of 1st Canadian Division. Over the following days, V Corps struggled to plug the gap and hold the line. [13] [14] On 28 April, the BEF was subjected to renewed Germans attacks and Plumer was given an enlarged command – 'Plumer's force', comprising the Cavalry Corps, 3rd (Lahore) Division, 50th (Northumbrian) Division and brigades from 4th and 5th Division in addition to V Corps – and was ordered to organise a withdrawal to the 'Frezenberg Line'. As a result, Second Army was reduced to a single corps and its commander, Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien, resigned. Plumer was appointed to succeed Smith-Dorrien, and V Corps reverted to Second Army control, with Lt-Gen Edmund Allenby transferred from Cavalry Corps to take command. [15]

During the Battle of Frezenberg Ridge (8–13 May), the Germans shelled the 27th and 28th Divisions off the untenable ridge. V Corps lost 456 officers and 8935 other ranks during this battle. [16] The following Battle of Bellewarde Ridge (24–25 May) involved a renewed German gas attack on V Corps. V Corps lost a further 323 officers and 8936 other ranks during the period 21–30 May. [17]

In October 1915, Allenby was promoted to command Third Army and Lt-Gen Hew Dalrymple Fanshawe was transferred from Cavalry Corps (23 October) to replace him at the head of V Corps. [18]

Order of Battle February 1916 [19]

Early 1916 fighting

In February 1916, V Corps was still holding a sector of Second Army's line from St Eloi to Hooge. On 14 February, the Germans blew mines and attacked and captured The Bluff, held by 17th Division, which suffered casualties of 67 officers and 1227 men, including 311 missing, of whom around a hundred were captured and many others buried in mine craters. The ground was recaptured on 1 March using innovative artillery preparation techniques pioneered by V Corps' artillery commander Brig-Gen H.C.C. Uniacke. [20] [21]

Meanwhile, on 28 February, Fanshawe ordered 3rd Division to begin preparations for a surprise attack at St Eloi, preceded by mines but without the normal long preparatory bombardment. The attack was made on 27 March and was initially successful, but the weather and ground conditions were awful and 3rd Division was exhausted and unable to consolidate the position in the craters. After it was relieved by 2nd Canadian Division, there were still weeks of bitter trench fighting. [22] [23] On 4 April, Canadian Corps HQ, which had been responsible for the sector south of St Eloi, changed places with V Corps, the first time that a whole corps of the BEF relieved another. [24]

On 30 April, V Corps was the victim of a gas attack by the Germans on the line in front of the Messines-Wytschaete Ridge at the Gas attacks at Wulverghem, followed by an attack on the trenches, but the raiders were driven out. [25] On 4 July, H.D. Fanshawe was relieved from command of V Corps (he reverted to the rank of major-general and later took command of a second-line Territorial division in Home Forces). He was replaced by his elder brother, Lt-Gen Edward Arthur Fanshawe, promoted from command of 11th (Northern) Division. [18] [26] [27]

Later fighting in 1916

On 16 August 1916, V Corps HQ was transferred from Second Army to Reserve Army (later renamed Fifth Army) to take over the sector on the River Ancre, where fighting had bogged down during the Somme Offensive. When V Corps took over, the line was held by the Guards, 6th and 20th (Light) Divisions. These were replaced by the fresh 2nd, 39th and 48th (South Midland) Division for the renewed attacks on the Ancre Heights, which continued from September to November 1916 with regular rotation of divisions as they became exhausted. V Corps finally took some of the 1 July objectives, such as Beaumont Hamel (by the 51st (Highland) Division), but ended with a failure at Redan Ridge during the action known as the Battle of the Ancre. [28] [29]

Order of Battle 26 February 1917 [30]

1917 Fighting

Winter Operations on the Ancre included the capture of Ten Tree Alley by 32nd Division of V Corps on 10–13 February 1917. [31] When the Germans began their retreat to the Hindenburg Line (14 March – 5 April 1917) V Corps followed up slowly against rearguards. [30] [32] On 11 April, Fifth Army attacked the new line at Bullecourt, with the 62nd Division of V Corps in action alongside I Anzac Corps. The same forces met the German attack on Lagnicourt on 15 April 1917. V Corps took part in the second attack on Bullecourt with the 7th Division, the 58th (2/1st London) Division and the 62nd (West Riding) Division. The Corps lost approximately 300 officers and 6500 other ranks between 3 and 17 May. [30] [33]

After Bullecourt, Fifth Army HQ and many of its divisions moved north to prepare for the Ypres Offensive and V Corps HQ was made available to command reserves.

V Corps' staff for the Ypres Offensive comprised: [34]

On 7 September, V Corps relieved XIX Corps, taking command of 9th (Scottish) Division and 55th (West Lancashire) Division in the line. [35] On 20 September, V Corps was assigned stiff objectives for the Battle of the Menin Road, and the 55th Division took heavy casualties. [36] For the succeeding Battle of Polygon Wood, the frontline divisions were relieved, and V Corps attacked with the 3rd and 59th (2nd North Midland) Divisions. [37] [38]

On 1 December, V Corps HQ was transferred to Third Army and relieved IV Corps along part of the line that had been captured during the Battle of Cambrai. The very next day, the Germans made a heavy counter-attack, and V Corps was forced to withdraw to the Flesquières Line. [39] [40]

Order of Battle March 1918 [41]

The German March 1918 Offensive

Although offering strong defences, the Flesquières position formed a dangerous salient in front of the British line. When the Germans opened their Spring Offensive on 21 March 1918, one of their first objects was to pinch it out. Accordingly, they did not attack frontally, but drenched the salient's defenders (2nd Division and 63rd (Royal Naval) Division) with mustard gas, causing many casualties in the days before the attack. On the evening of 21 March, unaware of the depth of the German penetration against the neighbouring Fifth Army, Third Army (Gen Sir Julian Byng) only ordered V Corps to withdraw 4000 yards to its intermediate defence line in the salient. In the following days, as the situation on the flanks deteriorated, Byng had to issue hasty orders to extricate V Corps from the trap. The Official Historian, Sir James Edmonds, wrote in 1932 that 'Byng the bungler was mainly responsible for clinging to the salient. I will exonerate Fanshawe, who is merely stupid'. [42] Regardless of who was responsible, the setback at the Flesquières salient was nearly disastrous, and led to a dangerous gap opening up between Third and Fifth Army. V Corps attempted to form a defensive flank to Third Army, but the Germans penetrated the gap, and the corps withdrew again on 24 March. [43] During this period (the First Battle of Bapaume, [44] ) V Corps' command structure descended into 'extraordinary confusion and lack of orders', according to a battalion commander. [45] The withdrawal entailed a retreat across the devastated zone in front of the Hindenburg Line and the old Somme battlefields, and by the end of 26 March V Corps was back on the Ancre Heights, where the troops held off fresh Germans attacks on 27–28 March (First Battle of Arras (1918)) and 5 April (Battle of the Ancre (1918)). [44] [46]

After the Flesquières fiasco, Byng insisted on Fanshawe being relieved of command. [47] On 25 April, he was replaced as GOC of V Corps by Lt-Gen Cameron Shute, promoted from command of 32nd Division. (Fanshawe later commanded XXIII Corps in England.) [18]

Order of Battle 21 August 1918 [48]

Later fighting in 1918

During the Allied counter-offensive known as the Second Battle of the Somme (1918), V Corps took part in the Battle of Albert (21–23 Aug) and the Second Battle of Bapaume (31 Aug – 3 Sept). [49] Then, during the Battles of the Hindenburg Line, V Corps participated in the Battles of Havrincourt (12 Sept), Epehy (18 Sept), St Quentin Canal (29 Sept-2 Oct), Beaurevoir (3–5 Oct) and Cambrai (8–9 Oct). In the Final Advance in Picardy, V Corps was in the pursuit to the River Selle (9–12 Oct), the Battle of the Selle (17–25 Oct) and the Battle of the Sambre (4 Nov). [50] [51]

V Corps crossed the Canal du Nord unopposed on 30 September and occupied the Hindenburg Main and Support Lines when the Germans withdrew to the Beaurevoir Line, which it overran on 8 October. [52] For the follow-up on 9 October there were no trenches or wire in front, so Shute's orders were for open warfare, and no barrages were fired, the artillery moving up behind the infantry in support. As a result, V Corps gained more ground than formations that made conventional setpiece attacks behind a barrage. Reaching the River Selle German resistance stiffened, but V Corps got outposts over the river on 10 October. Third Army attacked and crossed the Selle 12–17 October. Between 8 and 19 October, V Corps, which had done much of the fighting, suffered 5740 casualties. [53]

The advance was renewed on 20 October, with V Corps seizing a series of ridges in four planned bounds. On 23–4 October, it took a series of objectives, crossing the German Hermann II position. By now, the Germans were showing little fight, and V Corps' night attacks were able to take positions with few casualties. Even so, the British dug in for about a week, preparing for the next offensive beginning on 1 November. V Corps renewed its advance on 4 November with an attack into the Forest of Mormal. The advance was now in the nature of a pursuit, held up only by rearguards and the dreadful condition of the road. [54]

When the Armistice ended hostilities on 11 November 1918, V Corps was within a mile or two of the Franco-Belgian border, with cavalry out in front. [55]

Second World War

(The Corps should not be confused with the French 5th Army Corps, which took part in the Battle of France in 1940, nor with the US V Corps of the US First Army, which took part in the D-Day landings of 6 June 1944.)

Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery consulting a map with his officers during a V Corps exercise. Field Marshal the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Kg Gcb Dso 1887-1976 H8485.jpg
Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery consulting a map with his officers during a V Corps exercise.

In the early part of the Second World War, V Corps was based at Bhurtpore Barracks in Tidworth Camp within Southern Command. [56] Lieutenant-General Claude Auchinleck was briefly its commander from 14 June 1940 until he was promoted to take over Southern Command on 19 July 1940. [57] He was succeeded by Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery from 22 July 1940 until 27 April 1941, when he was transferred to command XII Corps. [58]

Order of Battle Autumn 1940 [59]

The Dorset County Division was also under the corps' command during 1941.

The Corps was then included as part of the Allied land forces, British First Army, in Operation Torch (8 November 1942), the amphibious landings in French-held Morocco and Algeria. The Army was commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Kenneth Anderson. First Army was formed on 9 November 1942.

Campaigns

V Corps participated in the following campaigns and battles during its Second World War existence.

V Corps was assigned to British Eighth Army for the rest of the war (as part of the 15th Army Group) 11.44

Orders of Battle for V Corps, Second World War

V Corps (British First Army) 20 April 1943

V Corps (British First Army) 4 May 1943

V Corps British Eighth Army (9 April 1945)

General Officers Commanding

Commanders included: [68]

Notes

  1. Cole p. 28
  2. Official History.
  3. The Long, Long Trail. "The British Corps of 1914–1918". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  4. JPS card no. 61
  5. Holden, pp. 226–8.
  6. Army List 1876–1881.
  7. 1 2 Dunlop.
  8. Official History 1915, Volume I, p.27.
  9. Official History 1915, Volume I, Appendix I.
  10. Official History 1915, Volume I, pp 27–30.
  11. 1 2 The Long, Long Trail. "The Battle of Neuve Chapelle March 1915". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  12. Official History 1915, Volume I, p 159.
  13. Official History 1915, Volume 1, p 171ff.
  14. McWilliams & Steel.
  15. Official History 1915, Volume I, p 351.
  16. Official History 1915, Volume 1, pp 310, 335.
  17. Official History 1915, Volume I, p 340.
  18. 1 2 3 Army Lists.
  19. Official History 1916 Volume I, p 162.
  20. Official History 1916 Volume I, pp 162–74.
  21. The Long, Long Trail. "The actions of Spring 1916". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  22. Official History 1916 Volume I, pp 177–93.
  23. The Long, Long Trail. "The actions of Spring 1916". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  24. Official History 1916 Volume I, p 185.
  25. Official History 1916 Volume I, pp 199–203.
  26. Burke's Landed Gentry 18th Edn, 1965.
  27. H.D. Fanshawe obituary, Times 26 March 1957.
  28. Official history 1916 Volume II.
  29. The Long, Long Trail. "The Battles of the Somme 1916". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  30. 1 2 3 Official History 1917 Volume I.
  31. The Long, Long Trail. "The operations on the Ancre January–March 1917". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  32. The Long, Long Trail. "The German retreat to the Hindenburg Line March–April 1917". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  33. The Long, Long Trail. "The Arras Offensive April–June 1917". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  34. Official History 1917 Volume II, p 238.
  35. Official History 1917 Volume II, p 243.
  36. Official History 1917 Volume II, pp 263–8.
  37. Official History 1917 Volume II, p 288-9.
  38. The Long, Long Trail. "The Battles of Ypres 1917 ("Third Ypres") July–November 1917". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  39. Official History 1917 Volume III, p 246.
  40. The Long, Long Trail. "The Cambrai operations November–December 1917". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  41. Official History 1918 Volume I, p 546.
  42. Travers pp 235–6.
  43. Official History 1918, Volume I, p 400.
  44. 1 2 The Long, Long Trail. "The First Battles of the Somme 1918". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  45. Travers p 238.
  46. Official History 1918, Volume I, p 519.
  47. Travers p 237.
  48. Official History 1918 Volume IV, pp 192, 522.
  49. The Long, Long Trail. "The Second Battles of the Somme 1918". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  50. The Long, Long Trail. "The Battles of the Hindenburg Line 1918". 1914-1918.net. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  51. Official History 1918 Volumes IV and V.
  52. Official History 1918, Volume V, pp 147, 219–20.
  53. Official History 1918, Volume V, p 329.
  54. Official History 1918, Volume V.
  55. Official History 1918, Volume V, pp 522, 529–30.
  56. Newbold, p. 202
  57. Philip Warner, 'Auchinleck', in Keegan, Churchill's Generals.
  58. Michael Carver, 'Montgomery', in Keegan, Churchill's Generals.
  59. "RA 39–45 5 Corps". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  60. "RA 1939–45 66 Med Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  61. 1 2 "RA 1939–45 5 Svy Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  62. "RA 1939–45 54 SHvy Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  63. "RA 1939–45 57 HAA Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  64. "RA 1939–45 52 LAA". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  65. "RA 1939–45 17 Fld Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  66. "RA 1939–45 57 A/Tk Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  67. "RA 1939–45 55 HAA Rgt". Ra39-45.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  68. "Army Commands" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 July 2015. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  69. Herbert Plumer at Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  70. Edmund Allenby at Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  71. Travers, Tim (1982). "The Hidden Army: Structural Problems in the British Officer Corps, 1900-1918". Journal of Contemporary History. 17 (3). JSTOR   260559., p.535
  72. Travers, Tim (1987). The Killing Ground: The British Army, the Western Front, and the Emergence of Modern Warfare. London: Unwin Hyman., p. 237
  73. Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives
  74. Hamilton, Nigel (1981). Monty: The Making of a General 1887-1942. McGraw-Hill Book Company. p. 418-476.

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References