Training and Reinforcement embarking onto the LSI 'SS Empire Lance' at
Southampton, 29 May 1944. The 50th Division arrived back in Britain at Liverpool Docks in early November 1943: After two weeks leave the division began to train for the invasion, and the news that it was to be an assault division was not greeted well by the other ranks. On 19 January 1944 the GOC, Major-General Kirkman, had been promoted to command XIII Corps on the Italian Front and was replaced by Major-General
Douglas Graham, a highly experienced and competent soldier who had commanded a brigade in North Africa and a division in Italy before returning to England after receiving an injury. The 69th and 231st Brigades were chosen for the assault and were given specialist training with the
specialist armour around
Inveraray and later, on the south coast. The 50th Division was loaded aboard its ships by the evening of 3 June and had to wait out the 24-hour postponement afloat. The division's GOC, Major-General Douglas Graham, sent a message around this time:
D-Day Objectives The assault brigades were to land on the eastern edge of
Gold, the codename for the area between the fortified villages of
Le Hammel and
La Rivière. Follow on brigades were to widen and deepen the bridgehead to the south and south-west, securing
Arromanches, the future site of the British
Mulberry harbour, capturing
Bayeux and securing the
Caen-Bayeux road (Route National 13). The Commandos were to capture
Port-en-Bessin from the rear. By the end of the day the bridgehead was planned to be 10–12 miles wide and seven miles deep in places, with a link up with the
U.S. 1st Infantry Division landing at
Omaha to the west and the
3rd Canadian Division landing to the east on
Juno. The follow on brigades would begin landing at H+ hours.
The Assault The 50th Division took off from Southampton and on 6 June 1944, 7:25, made landfall on
Gold Beach, alongside the
8th Armoured Brigade,
No. 47 (Royal Marine) Commando,
56th Infantry Brigade. of 50th Division wades ashore D-Day 6 June 1944. The landing craft were deployed from the beach, a shorter run than the Americans (), still due to the weather many of the troops were sea-sick. Rather than risk the DD-tanks with their limited free-board in the rough seas, they were landed directly onto the beaches with or slightly behind the assault infantry. Prior to this the beach group engineers had landed (280th Company for the 69th Brigade and 73rd Company for the 231st, both with supporting armour) and had begun to reduce the beach obstacles and defences. The assault battalions of the 69th brigade landed either side of La Rivière, the East Yorkshires blown to the east of their intended landing, attacking La Rivière from the rear by 10:00. To the west the Green Howards were initially caught in
enfilade fire from La Rivière, but by 10:00 were inland on the
Meuvaines ridge. During this advance
Company Sergeant-Major Stanley Hollis of the 6th Green Howards was in the first of the actions that were to win him the VC, the only one to be won on D-Day. The 7th Green Howards, landing at H+45 minutes, captured the bridge at Creuilly by 15:00. To the west the assault battalions of the 231st brigade landed east of Le Hammel, the Hampshires close to Le Hammel, the Dorsets further east. The pre-landing bombardment had missed the strong points in the village which were staffed by the tougher German 352nd Division. This caused heavy casualties among the Hampshires, who like the Green Howards, were caught in
enfilade, while the Dorsets were off the beach in an hour, it was not until 15:00 that the last strong point in Le Hammel was reduced by an
AVRE. 47 Commando were landed at 10:00, while the Hampshires were still fighting for Le Hammel, three of their landing craft were sunk by obstacles obscured by the rising tide. They conducted a fighting advance inland but did not take Port-en-Bessin until the early morning of 8 June. At 11:00 the 151st brigade began to land, following the 69th brigade, the 56th brigade landed at east of its intended beach to avoid the fire from the strong point at Le Hammel. By nightfall the division held a beach head deep by wide, contact had been made with the Canadians, and patrols from the 56th Brigade had entered Bayeux, but the division was short of the Bayeux—Caen road. During D-Day, in addition to Stanley Hollis' V.C., the men of the division won 32
Military Medals, three
Distinguished Conduct Medals, 15
Military Crosses and five
Distinguished Service Orders (one a
bar). The division suffered 400 casualties while securing their beachhead, 174 of them from the 1st Hampshires.
Normandy Operation Perch began on 7 June and was the attempt to capture Caen after the direct attack on D-day failed. The plan called for the 7th Armoured Division, supported by the 50th Division to strike south to capture
Tilly-sur-Seulles, following which the 7th Armoured Division would capture
Villers-Bocage and
Evrecy. On 7 June, the 50th Division occupied Bayeux and advanced south. On 8 June a column from the division started south over the Caen–Bayeux railway into the
Bocage. The 8th D.L.I was finally withdrawn on 12 June after losing 212 officers and men in the struggle. During this time the remainder of the division had fought forward to hold a line (either side of the 7th Armoured Division) between La Belle Epine and Point 103 (~) to the north-east of Saint Pierre. On 12 June, the 7th Armoured Division was side-stepped to the west to head south and take Villers-Bocage from the west, getting behind the Panzer Lehr Division facing 50th Division. This resulted in the
Battle of Villers-Bocage, and the withdrawal of 7th Armoured from the area on 15 June. The 50th Division attacked on the flank of Tilly-sur-Seulles, up to and along the Tilly–
Balleroy road, with 151st Brigade taking Verrières and half of the town of
Lingèvres and the 231st Brigade taking La Senaudière. After its hard fighting around Cristot, the 69th Brigade had been relieved by the
49th Division and was rested for two days.
Stalemate Sir Bernard Montgomery in conversation with
Major General Douglas Graham, GOC 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division, pictured here in Normandy, 20 June 1944. By 19 June, the division, and the equally exhausted Panzer Lehr settled into a lull. On 16 June the 69th had advanced against stiff resistance to
Longraye, about halfway to its goal of a road to the south and on 18 June the division had finally taken Tilly with the 2nd Essex (56th Brigade). Along with the 6th D.L.I. and tanks of the
24th Lancers, the 2nd Essex was preceded by a rolling barrage, described as "The perfect cooperation of artillery, tanks and infantry really showed what could be done". On 19 June two attempts to take
Hottot ( south of Tilly) by the 231st Brigade (1st Hampshires then the 2nd Devons) failed, both time being forced out of the ruined village by armour. The division was now arranged with 231st Brigade north of Hottot, 151st Brigade around Tilly and 69th Brigade south of La Belle Epine. This stalemate still included patrolling, sniping and harnessing mortar fire from both sides. An additional source of discomfort was the large number of dead cattle in the area and the resulting stench, any attempt to deal with this attracting German fire. The division was thus on the sidelines for
Operation Epsom at the end of June. The next advance was an attack was by 231st brigade against Hottot once again on 11 July, after 56th Brigade had been repulsed three days earlier. The Devons and the Hampshires both reached Hottot with the help of a rolling barrage, AVREs, flail tanks and the mortars and machine guns of the Cheshires, but were counter-attacked by
Panzer IVs and
Panthers and accidentally rocketed by
Typhoons. They were forced to retire at night fall. The Hampshires alone had 120 casualties, including 43 dead. On 18 July, Panzer Lehr abandoned Hottot, since D-Day the division had suffered 4,476 casualties, of which 673 were dead.
Advance to the Falaise Pocket (of either the 6th or 7th Battalions) talking to French civilians, 23 August 1944. Timed to support the American break out to the west (
Operation Cobra),
VIII Corps and XXX Corps were to attack south. 50th Division was to advance towards Villers-Bocage with the
43rd Division on its right and the
59th Division on its left. On 30 July the 231st and 56th Brigades took a ridge of high ground (
Anctoville) approximately halfway to Villers-Bocage against slackening opposition. On 2 August 69th Brigade advanced, facing small arms fire only, to Tracy-Bocage just west of Villers-Bocage, capturing a regimental commander and his HQ of the
326th Division, two days later a patrol from the Hampshires entered the ruined and booby-trapped village and saw the wreckage of the armoured clash that had taken place there nearly two months earlier. On 5 August the division was taken out of the line for the first time since D-Day and given three days rest. Returning from its rest after the Germans had launched
Operation Lüttich, the division was tasked with the advance to
Condé-sur-Noireau some from its starting point (Le Plessis-Grimout, captured by the 43rd Division on the night of 7 August) thus preventing the Germans from putting their full strength against the Americans. On 9 August the 151st and 69th Brigade attacked in turn supported by tanks of the 13th/18th Hussars against stiffening resistance to end the day short of
Saint-Pierre-la-Vieille. Over the next two days the 231st Brigade gained ground to the west and south of Saint-Pierre, and after taking hill to the south-east of the village the 151st Brigade was rested for several days. On the night of 12/13 August 7th Green Howards entered Saint-Pierre, this broke the German resistance in this area and Condé was entered the next day, and the reduction of the
Falaise Pocket began. The commander of XXX Corps,
Brian Horrocks praised the division in a letter to its GOC The 50th Division was considered to have performed very well during the Normandy campaign, not suffering the initial problems of the two other veteran divisions. This may have been due to the higher turnover of personnel before D-Day; however, the division still suffered the same problems of
battle fatigue,
desertion and soldiers going AWL as the other veteran divisions, but it did not affect the division's battle readiness. It was noted that in Normandy,
Breakout The division passed through the wreckage of the Falaise Pocket and by 22 August had passed Argenten. It now took up position on the left flank of XXX Corps advance, behind
11th Armoured Division, mopping up bypassed Germans. On one occasion near Beauvais a major, lance corporal and a private of the 2nd Cheshires with three members of the
FFI took 500 Germans prisoner. Other small actions were fought at Picquigny and Oudenarde. On 29 August it crossed the Seine behind the 43rd Division, and on 2 September 231st Brigade entered Brussels behind the
Guards Armoured Division; the brigade took part in the ceremonial liberation parades. After the capture of
Antwerp 231st Brigade garrisoned that city, while 151st Brigade garrisoned Brussels.
The Low Countries Geel On 7 September the division was reassembled to continue XXX Corps drive toward the
Dutch border. The Corps was to force a crossing across the
Albert Canal, and the division was tasked to attack towards
Geel, which lay in an angle between the Albert and the
Bocholt–Herentals Canals, while the Guards Armoured crossed at
Beringen to the south east. In the early morning of 8 September, 6 Green Howards crossed the canal unopposed using a small number of
Goatley boats as a ferry, taking over three hours to do so. With the rest of 69th Brigade, they captured the Geel road crossing of the canal and its blown bridge by the end of 10 September. On the evening of 8 September, 151st Brigade crossed the canal to the south east, the 8th D.L.I. taking casualties until supported by the heavier weapons of the 2nd Cheshires and beating off a counter-attack that night. The next day, supported by the division's reconnaissance regiment, the 6th D.L.I. pushed forward towards Geel. The next day (10 September) with the arrival of 9th D.L.I. and tanks of the Sherwood Rangers, the brigade advanced on Geel in the face of resistance which began when the Germans attacked as the 6th D.L.I. was starting off. In spite of this the 6th D.L.I. reached Geel, expelling the Germans house by house while the other two battalions fought off additional German attacks between Geel and the canal. Another counter-attack that evening cut off some units of the 6th D.L.I. and forced the rest back to the southern parts of Geel and hard pressed the other battalions on the flanks throughout the next day. The brigade learned that its opponents included parachute troops and Luftwaffe Field Battalions containing some poorly trained but fanatical young troops. On 12 September the order for the 50th to withdraw from the Geel bridgehead was made. Later that day the two brigades were relieved by the 15th Division, who on 13 September entered Geel unopposed, the Germans having fled.
Operation Market Garden After three days reorganisation in the Pael area the division was deployed in the bridgehead over the Escaut (Bocholt-Herentals) canal, part of the ground component of Market Garden. They were to follow the Guards Armoured and the 43rd Divisions in the advance as Corps reserve. At 13:30 on 17 September, the division's field artillery and the mortars of the 2nd Cheshires took part in the opening barrage. The ground advance began at 14:30, and later in the day as the Guards reached
Valkenswaard, the 231st Brigade were called up to clear woods on the left of the Guards' advance, hunting
'bazooka' teams. The following day the 2nd Devons took over Valkenswaard, the Battalion C.O. becoming town governor, and 9th D.L.I. repelled a counter-attack on the Escaut bridgehead. Following the capture of
Nijmegen the 69th Brigade, and 124th Field Regiment were pushed forwards and reached its area on the evening of 21 September. The next day the Germans began to attempt to cut the supply rout of the advance and attacked the road and with two battalions of infantry and a regiment of tanks near
Uden, south of the bridge at
Grave. This left the 5th East Yorkshires to the north of the cut and the remainder of the brigade to the south. The next day, the Germans attempted to strengthen their grip on the road by attacking
Veghel, farther south. The American infantry, British tanks and artillery, working in an improvised but close co-operation, drove off the enemy with heavy losses. This allowed the brigade to rejoin and push on to Nijmegen, where they moved into the bridgehead over the
Waal and come under command of the Guards Armoured Division. Due to the road congestion and the Germans attempts to cut the road, 69th Brigade were forced to eat captured German rations, the jam tasted like rubber, the margarine was rancid and the regimental medical officers confirmed the meat was bad. The remainder of 50th Division were now tasked with keep the road open between Uden and Veghel. On 23 September the road was temporarily cut and one of the 9th D.L.I.s dispatch riders led the Corps commander across the gap along back roads. Reinforced with the 131st Brigade, the division together with the Americans fought for the next two days keeping the road open, and on 26 September the German attempts ended. The next day the 6th Green Howards were ordered to occupy
Haalderen, but the infantry were overlooked by German observers and ran into severe opposition from concealed tanks, and failed to capture their objective. The 7th Green Howards on their left made further progress, and the fighting for Haalderen continued the next day.
The Nijmegen Salient By this time (27 September) the airborne troops farther north at Arnhem had been
withdrawn. The Germans regrouped and assaulted the new salient and on 30 September 69th Brigade supported by 13th/18th Hussars, faced the first assault. The next day seventy tanks and the equivalent of an infantry division attacked the brigade, The brigade was relieved by the rest of the 50th Division which continued the attack around Haalderen (151st Brigade) and straightening the line between there and Bemmel (231st Brigade). On 29 November the division was relieved and pulled back into Belgium. ==Return to England==