Detachment of 12th Motorised Brigade Regrouping was still in progress after arrival in Italy, when the 12th Motorised Brigade with artillery and support elements was ordered to move to the area of Isernia to prepare to relieve the 11th Canadian Infantry Brigade in the Cassino area and to come under command of the
2nd New Zealand Division in the
British X Corps. These were the first division troops to enter combat in Italy.
Initial advance after the fall of Rome Having formed part of
British Eighth Army's reserve, the division was moved forward and attached to the Canadian I Corps after the Canadians and
Polish II Corps had breached the
Hitler Line north of
Cassino. After Rome had been taken by the Allies in early June 1944, the division was ordered to move up the Via Casalina to take over the spearhead of the Eighth Army's
British XIII Corps. To bring the division up to a full complement of three brigades, the
British 24th Guards Brigade was placed under command, an association which lasted to the spring of 1945. The division advanced with the
Tiber River to the east and
Lake Bolsena to the west at a rate of per day, outstripping their flanking units. On 10 June the Armoured Brigade which was leading the advance, came up against the anti-tank screen of the newly arrived German 365th Infantry Division south of
Celleno. For the first (and only) time Brigadier Furstenburg was able to deploy all three of his armoured regiments and his motorised infantry battalion in battle to gain an important victory. Lieutenant-Colonel Papa Brits (Special Service Battalion [SSB]) and Lieutenant-Colonel Bob Reeves-Moore (Imperial Light Horse / Kimberley Regiment [ILH/KR]) received
DSOs for their leadership in the defeat of elements of the 365th Division.
JC Smuts (
Prime Minister), Major-General Poole (GOC) and
Lieutenant-General Sir
Pierre van Ryneveld (SA Chief of Staff), in
Chiusi, Italy, 24 June 1944. The visit was to discuss the implications of the surrender of A Coy,
First City/
Cape Town Highlanders.|alt=Three officers facing to the left looking at a document / map By 17 June, the
Imperial Light Horse of the 11th Armd Bde had been stopped by the parachutists of the
Hermann Göring Division on their first attempt to enter
Chiusi but by 23 June, the town had been taken by the
Cape Town Highlanders. During this attack on Chiusi, "A" Company of
First City/
Cape Town Highlanders was leading the attack up the terraces around the town. During the night of 21–22 June, the company was surrounded by strong German infantry elements closely supported by tanks and its surviving members were forced to surrender by noon on 22 June. Since the disaster of the surrender of the
2nd Infantry Division at
Tobruk two years previously, the surrender of South African troops in the field had become a sensitive matter. This prompted
Prime Minister Smuts, who had been meeting the
British Chiefs of Staff on 21 June, to divert his aircraft to
Orvieto airfield on his way back to South Africa to discuss the political and military consequences of this event with the division command. The Eighth Army's XIII Corps advance on
Florence was led by the
British 6th Armoured Division on the right,
British 4th Infantry Division in the centre and the South African 6th Armoured Division on the left. The division advanced in two columns through
Rapolano and
Palazzuolo until they encountered the
LXXVI Panzer Corps on the Georg Line, a delaying position on the north side of Route 73. The strength of the Panzer Corps was not known initially and the leading elements of XIII Corps continued to probe forward expecting the German line to crumble under pressure without the need to launch a full-scale attack. The Corps fed in more battalions in an attempt to secure the Monte Lignano high ground and fighting for the hill continued on 6 and 7 July, but the
15th Panzer Grenadier Division continued to hold the heights. The division made good progress, advancing with two brigades leading the advance: the 12th Mot Bde astride the road defining the division's axis of advance and the Guards Bde on the right flank, on the slopes of the Chianti highlands. Radda was secured on the night of 17 July and orders were then received for the division to secure the heights of the Chianti Highlands. The Guards Bde took Mt. Maione by a night attack on the night of 18/19 July supported by the tanks of the
Pretoria Regiment while 12th Mot Bde attacked to take Mt. St. Michele (Pt 892) on 20 July. The division now held the heights of the Chianti range, dominating the
Arno Valley and the advances to
Florence. on 24 July. The division had, however, outflanked the German Parachute Division, who then withdrew during the night of 24/25 July, allowing the South African, New Zealand and Indian Divisions to advance to the Paula Line which was reached on 28 July. Kirkman again placed the South African and New Zealand Divisions as the spearhead of his Corps advance, this time to break the Paula Line and to take Florence. The New Zealand Division would carry out the main assault and the South African Division would neutralise the enemy on the high ground west of
Impruneta and then clear Route 2 into Florence. The attack was scheduled for 30 July 1944.
General Harold Alexander, commander of
Allied Armies in Italy, had indicated that he had no intention of fighting in Florence and so Kirkman gave orders for the by-passing of the city. On 31 July the heavy artillery support for the attack had resulted in an ammunition shortage and Kirkman ordered a 24-hour pause for fresh supplies to arrive. An
Imperial Light Horse /
Kimberley Regiment patrol however found the smaller
Ponte Vecchio bridge intact and crossed it under heavy shelling, entering into the centre of the city at 4 am, to be the first allied troops to enter Florence. After reaching Florence, General Pool recorded in a Special Order of the Day, that the division had "... covered since leaving its concentration area at Taranto, its artillery had fired 201,500 rounds, the Divisional Engineers had built sixty five bridges (one a day!) and had made 196 major deviations necessitated by 'blows' and demolitions. The signallers had laid of telephone cable." The division was then withdrawn into Eighth Army reserve for rest and maintenance in the
Siena /
Castelnuovo area until 17 August, when orders were issued for the division to be transferred from British XIII Corps to
U.S. IV Corps to partially replace divisions withdrawn to the
U.S. Seventh Army for the
assault of southern France. ==Italy: Fifth Army==