Formation At the start of the Second World War, in September 1939, the British Army possessed two armoured divisions; one in Britain and a second in Egypt. On 15 December 1939, the
2nd Armoured Division was established in Britain. Despite being formed, it had no fighting sub-units until the following month, when an independent armoured brigade and elements of the 1st Armoured Division were transferred to it. The 3rd Armoured Division also began to form and several armoured regiments were earmarked to join it. Early war tank production went to formations in France or in Egypt resulting in little availability at home. With the British Army defeated in France and
evacuated from Dunkirk, these units were equipped with a motley of
armoured cars (improvised and factory built) and assigned to an armoured car brigade called a Motor Machine Gun brigade. Following the Allied defeat during the
Battle of France, in 1940, new tank production orders were placed. The Army recognised that German armoured success during the fighting had come about as a result of the concentration of tanks in divisions. The Army intended to raise another seven armoured divisions by mid 1941. This resulted in the
6th, the
8th, and the
9th Armoured Divisions being formed over the final months of 1940. This was followed in 1941 by the
11th and the
Guards Armoured Division. These new divisions were supplemented by the
42nd (East Lancashire) Infantry Division being converted into the
42nd Armoured Division. In Palestine, the
1st Cavalry Division was reorganised as an armoured formation and renamed the
10th Armoured Division. Another armoured division, beyond the initial request for seven more formations, was formed in 1942. The
79th Armoured Division was short-lived as a traditional armoured division, and in April 1943 was assigned to the development and use of
Hobart's Funnies (specialised tanks). In this capacity, it did not act en masse, it maintained command and administrative control of its sub-units, they were assigned to other formations to provide specialised support as and when.
Structure Between May 1939 and May 1945, there were nine changes in the organisation of the divisions. When first formed, the Mobile Division had six light tank regiments in two cavalry brigades and a tank brigade of three medium regiments. The division was supported by a Pivot Group of two motorised infantry battalions and two artillery regiments. Mobile Division (Egypt) consisted of a light armoured brigade, a cavalry brigade, a heavy armoured group of two
Royal Tank Regiments and a Pivot Group. In October, the Support Group's motorised infantry battalions were transferred to the armoured brigades, each receiving one, while the Support Group was given a lorried infantry battalion, increasing the infantry strength of the division to three battalions. The mixed anti-aircraft–anti tank regiment was replaced by two specialised regiments. More engineers were added to the division. In Britain, an armoured car regiment was placed under the command of the division but not in the
Middle East. While these theoretical changes were made, they did not reflect the armoured divisions' composition; in July, the 7th Armoured Division only had 65 cruiser tanks, lacking spare parts (some even lacking proper armament) while the division was operating two armoured regiments in each of its brigades. In January 1941, the 1st Armoured Division, the best equipped armoured division in Britain, was 30 per cent below its tank establishment and was equipped with many obsolescent light tanks. In 1942, the British Army decided that an infantry brigade was needed in each division and on 27 February 1942 the next change was made for divisions operating in the Middle East; an armoured brigade would be replaced by an infantry brigade. The Support Group would be disbanded and a armoured car regiment would be added to the division. For tactical reasons, the battle formation in the Middle East became the
Brigade Group, the division would now operate two brigade groups. The armoured brigade group would have three armoured regiments, a motor battalion, an artillery regiment (including an anti-tank battery of 16 guns; either
2-pounders or
6-pounders) as well as its three batteries of
25-pounder gun-
howitzers, a light anti-aircraft battery of 18 guns, a field squadron of
Royal Engineers and various other administration units. The infantry brigade group would consist of three motorised infantry battalions, an artillery regiment also with an integrated anti-tank battery, a light anti-aircraft battery, Royal Engineers and administration units. The divisional headquarters was given more staff and signal units and a headquarters was formed to control the artillery. Due to some armoured regiments being re-equipped with American tanks, the establishment of the division could vary between 130 and 150 tanks. In the United Kingdom, the brigade group was not adopted but the support group was abolished and an infantry brigade was added to the division to replace the second armoured brigade. The two artillery regiments, the anti-tank regiment and light anti-tank regiment were placed under the command of an artillery headquarters unit and additional administration units were attached to the division. Further changes were made to the armoured regiments and anti-aircraft tanks were incorporated into the division bringing the established strength to 227 tanks; 26 anti-aircraft tanks, 18 close support tanks and 183 cruiser tanks. Prior to the
Battle of Alam el Halfa, in August–September 1942, the armoured divisions in North Africa were again authorised to change; the armoured division became the basic battle formation again and the brigade groups were reorganised as they had previously. The artillery, anti-tank and anti-aircraft regiments would be put under the control of the Royal Artillery divisional headquarters and would be reinforced with additional batteries, the Royal Engineers would be reinforced and returned to the divisional engineer headquarters. The divisional tank establishment was increased to 186 and anti-aircraft tanks were also allocated to the division. In April 1943, the armoured car regiment was removed from the division and replaced with an armoured reconnaissance regiment. Additional troops were allocated to the infantry brigade. The artillery regiments were also reorganised, one would now be equipped with
self-propelled guns while the other would keep towed guns. The tank establishment was increased to 278 tanks; 214 cruisers, 34 anti-aircraft tanks and 30 close support tanks. In Britain, the 7th Armoured Division was re-equipped with
Cromwell tanks, the only division to use them as their main battle tank, the others used
M4 Sherman tanks. The Cromwell was used also by the armoured reconnaissance regiments of the 7th, 11th and Guards Armoured Divisions. During March 1944, further amendments were made; the additional troops allocated to the infantry brigade the year before were removed while, for the divisions allocated to the
21st Army Group, an independent machine gun company was allocated to the division. Various changes were made to the armoured and armoured reconnaissance regiments, increasing the tank establishment of the division to 343 tanks; 223 cruisers, 25 anti-aircraft tanks, 24 close support tanks, 63 light tanks, and 8
Observation tanks. The self-propelled artillery regiment consisted of twenty-four
25-pounder self-propelled guns, the anti-tank regiment consisted of forty-eight 6-pounder or
17-pounder guns, and the light anti-aircraft regiment consisted of 54
Bofors 40 mm guns. During the
Battle of Normandy, the 7th Armoured Division instituted a flexible structure prior to the
Battle of Villers-Bocage in early June 1944. Similar structures were adopted by the other armoured divisions until after
Operation Goodwood, when
Lieutenant-General Richard O’Connor ordered the Guards and 11th Armoured Divisions to organise themselves similarly. The divisions operated from then on as two brigade groups; each of two
combined arms teams, both made up of one tank regiment and one infantry battalion, the armoured reconnaissance regiment was matched with the armoured brigade's motor battalion to provide the fourth group. The armoured divisions (including the
6th South African Armoured Division) serving in Italy, where the terrain was less favourable for tanks, usually had extra infantry assigned or attached. During the
Spring 1945 offensive in Italy for example, in the
6th Armoured Division the armoured regiments of the
26th Armoured Brigade formed combined arms teams with the motor infantry battalions of the
61st Infantry Brigade in the manner of armoured divisions in north west Europe and the division was also assigned the lorried
1st Guards Brigade. The final change came in February 1945 but was not implemented until May 1945, after the war in Europe; armoured divisions would retain the organisation approved in March 1944 but the armoured reconnaissance regiment would be converted into a fourth armoured regiment not in either brigade. The tank establishment was also lowered to 338 tanks; 234 cruisers, 44 light tanks, 28 anti-aircraft tanks and 9 observation tanks. In 1939, the armoured division comprised 9,442 men all ranks, this increased to 14,964 men all ranks by 1944; of this latter figure, the division had a combat strength of around 7,000 men with only 3,400 of these men being in the division's nine rifle companies compared to a combat strength of around 5,000 men in the American armoured division, of which 3,000 were in the rifle companies. This resulted in a numerical inferiority to the number of infantry available in
Waffen-SS panzer divisions; the 1st and 12th SS Panzer Divisions, at the beginning of June 1944, were around 20,000 men strong, with a combat strength of around 12,000 men, of which about 7,000 men were based within the 24 infantry companies. In 1944, the British armoured division could field more medium tanks than the 186 tanks of the German panzer division or the 168 medium tanks of an American armoured division (251 tanks in total).
Role and tactics The doctrine of the British Army in 1938 was for Army Tank Brigades, attached as Corps troops, to work with the Infantry divisions and
break into the enemy defensive positions. The Mobile Division, supported
Territorial Army Motor divisions each of two motorised infantry brigades supported by two artillery regiments but no tanks, was to then to create a
breakthrough. Initially, the mechanised cavalry regiments of the division, were reconnaissance, not fighting formations. The motorised infantry, according to
John Burnett-Stuart on 8 September 1937, was not meant to fight side by side with the tanks; they were to protect them during resting and replenishing periods.
Analysis The historian David French wrote that the Army's intention had been to create balanced all-arms formations but following the formation of their first armoured divisions, they had instead created tank-heavy divisions with too few infantry or supporting arms. He wrote that the reforms that took place in 1940 forfeited an opportunity to transform the tank-heavy armoured divisions into a balanced all-arms force. ==Armoured Brigade and regiment structure==