1st East Riding Yeomanry Battle of France On 30 March 1940, after training at
Tidworth, the 1st Regiment joined the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in
France as part of the
1st Armoured Reconnaissance Brigade, initially the Corps Cavalry to
III Corps. However, in May, the regiment passed under the command of
48th (South Midland) Division,
44th (Home Counties) Division,
Macforce, and finally back to 48th (South Midland) Division. The regiment was first involved in fighting near Ath, south of Brussels, and then over the next fortnight fought seven rearguard actions before being finally surrounded at
Cassel on the night of 29/30 May while acting as rearguard to
145th Infantry Brigade. , May 1944.
Training The remnants of 1ERY (7 officers and 230 men) returned to Tidworth, where the regiment was brought up to strength by drafts from the 2nd Regiment, before moving on to
Bovington to rejoin 1st Armoured Reconnaissance Brigade. The regiment next deployed to Essex for anti-invasion duties, where it was equipped with
Beaverettes. When new material became available in spring 1942, the regiment reequipped with
Covenanter tanks and
Honeys, and together with the
4th/7th Royal Dragoon Guards (replaced by the
Staffordshire Yeomanry in January 1944) and the
13th/18th Royal Hussars, it formed
27th Armoured Brigade in
79th Armoured Division ('Hobart's Funnies'), experimenting with specialist assault armour. In April 1943, the regiment again re-equipped, this time with
Sherman Duplex Drive tanks. , 1 June 1944.
North West Europe The training all came to fruition on 6 June 1944, when the Regiment landed on
Sword Beach on
D Day supporting
9th Infantry Brigade in
3rd British Infantry Division, After the failure to seize
Caen on D-Day, 3rd Division's task was to capture the high ground north of the town. Next day, 1ERY supported an unsuccessful attack by the 2nd Bn
Royal Ulster Rifles on
Cambes-en-Plaine, one of the enemy's strongest positions in this part of the front. Two days later, the two units had to advance over of flat, open land under artillery, mortar and machine gun fire. They were supported by four
AVREs of 79th Assault Squadron,
Royal Engineers, and
Sherman Crab flail tanks of A Squadron of the
Westminster Dragoons from 79th Armoured Division. The infantry suffered over 200 casualties and 1ERY lost four tanks, while all the AVREs (forced to act as infantry tanks) were knocked out, but after hard fighting the battle group gained their objective. For 50 days after the landings, 1ERY took part in the bridgehead battles. During this period, it also supported
59th (Staffordshire) Infantry Division. Because of casualties, 27th Armoured Brigade was broken up on 29 July, taking over the petrol Mk1 & II Shermans of
148 Regt RAC. The regiment was now attached to
51st (Highland) Infantry Division, for the final
Falaise Pocket Battles, the advance to the River Seine, its crossing and the taking of St Valery-en-Caux; after which the regiment transferred to 49th (West Riding) Division for the
Battle of Le Havre. Captain Peter Clemence of 1ERY was responsible for lighting the routes to the Buffaloes were to take to the water. This involved daylight reconnaissance of the riverbank under enemy fire as well as placing the lights under fire on the night of the operation. Clemence was awarded the
Military Cross (MC). 1ERY's role in the operation was to carry the assault troops of
227th (Highland) Brigade,
15th (Scottish) Infantry Division, with one troop of six Buffaloes allocated to each assaulting infantry company and two troops to each battalion for essential equipment such as
6-pounder anti-tank guns, wireless carriers and medical jeeps. The operation was practised behind the lines on the
Meuse (), during which one of the ERY Buffaloes overturned and its driver and co-driver were drowned. One participant commented that 'The yeomanry responsible for the actual crossing were delightful lot to work with, with a fine cavalry dash and a persistently horsey outlook, even in the water, when the squadron commanders were heard urging their drivers to "get their whips out".' 15th (S) Division's assault (Operation Torchlight) began at 02.00 on 24 March, and at first things went well for 1ERY and 227 Bde: two companies of 10th Bn
Highland Light Infantry and three of 2nd Bn
Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders crossed the river without difficulty. Unfortunately, the Buffaloes carrying A and C Companies of the HLI had got off course in the darkness, and both were landed upstream of their allotted landing zones. A section of riverbank manned by a German parachute battalion remained uncleared, and B and C Companies, following up, were also landed in the wrong place. By dint of hard fighting and heavy artillery support, the HLI cleared up the confusion by 09.00, allowing the transport to begin landing. On the Argylls' front, five out of six Buffaloes assigned to D Company were unable to climb the riverbank, and had to land their passengers some way away. D Company had to fight their way for a mile round before they could join in the fight for their objective. However, the Argylls were reinforced and got the job done. Acting
Lance-Corporal Adams of 1EYR was the driver of his Troop Commander's Buffalo; having returned from the far bank with a group of wounded and prisoners, they came under shellfire while unloading. Adams shielded one of the stretcher cases from
shrapnel with his own body, while the Buffalo was badly holed and some of the German prisoners were killed. Adams was awarded the
Military Medal (MM). Despite operating under fire for four days, the regiment only suffered one man wounded during Operation Plunder. For the last weeks of the war, the regiment reconverted to Shermans, The 'marching' elements of the division were ferried across the Rhine by 1st East Riding Yeomanry and
11th Royal Tank Regiment. ==Postwar==