Canadian Military Headquarters With the
Canadian declaration of war on Germany on 10 September 1939, Canada entered the
Second World War. Crerar expected a Canadian contribution to the war on land akin to that of the First World War, but the
Prime Minister,
William Lyon Mackenzie King, hoped an industrial effort and participation in the
British Commonwealth Air Training Plan would suffice. On 19 September, the government announced it would send one division, the 1st Canadian Division under McNaughton, to the UK. Crerar was appointed Brigadier, General Staff, (BGS) of what was initially called "Overseas Headquarters", but was soon renamed Canadian Military Headquarters (CMHQ), in London. He established CMHQ on the second floor of the Sun Life Building, not far from
Canada House on
Trafalgar Square. CMHQ expanded from 87 personnel in December 1939 to over 900 a year later. The legal basis of the Canadian presence in the UK had changed with the 1931
Statute of Westminster which made Canada a sovereign nation in its own right, and was now governed by the 1933
Visiting Forces Act, which provided the legal basis for Canadian forces serving under British command. Crerar was promoted to acting major general, "while holding his present appointment", on 15 January 1940. He hoped to be given command of the
2nd Canadian Division when it was formed, but that went instead to
Victor Odlum, a militia officer.
Chief of the General Staff The
Battle of France injected some urgency into the Canadian war effort, and on 17 May 1940 the government finally announced the decision to form a Canadian corps. In the meantime, the Canadian troops in the UK formed part of the
British VII Corps, which was placed under McNaughton's command. This was renamed the
Canadian Corps on 25 December after sufficient Canadian corps troops had arrived. The
Minister of National Defence,
Norman Rogers, was killed in a plane crash on 10 June 1940, and was replaced by
James Ralston. On McNaughton's advice, Ralston recalled Crerar to Ottawa to serve as the Vice Chief of the General Staff (VCGS). Crerar expected that he would soon be asked to take over as CGS. This occurred the following month, just two days after he arrived back in Canada. He brought Colonel
E. L. M. "Tommy" Burns from the 2nd Division staff as his DMO&I, and Brigadier
Kenneth Stuart, who had succeeded him as commandant of the Royal Military College, as his VCGS. , Prime Minister of Canada, is greeted by Crerar and Lieutenant-General
Kenneth Stuart, 28 April 1944. |alt=Refer to caption Having achieved his objective of creating a Canadian corps, Crerar set his sights on creating an army of two corps, each of which would have two infantry divisions and an armoured division. This would be a larger force than the country could sustain with volunteers alone, and would therefore involve sending conscripts overseas, something King opposed. In Crerar's view, that was the politicians' problem. Although the proposed army headquarters did not make it into Crerar's revised army program for 1942 that was submitted to the Cabinet War Committee in November 1941, Ralston expressed his support. It was ultimately scaled back to five divisions and two independent armoured brigades, due to shortages of manpower. More controversial was Crerar's role in the government's decision to provide
Canadian troops to reinforce the garrison of Hong Kong. This arose following a visit to Ottawa by the outgoing commander of the garrison, Major General
Arthur Grasett, in August 1941. Although a British Army officer, he was a Canadian and an RMC classmate of Crerar's. The British believed the chance of Japan going to war was remote, and a strong show of resolve would reassure China and help deter Japanese aggression. The Canadians were totally dependent on the British assessment of the situation, as there was no Canadian intelligence organization which could provide an independent evaluation. Crerar had studied the defence of Hong Kong while at the Imperial Defence College in 1934, but he believed that a war with the British Empire and the United States would be disastrous for Japan, embroiling it in a war it could not win. Rather than take troops from the UK or the
4th Canadian Division, which was forming in Canada, Crerar chose to send
the Winnipeg Grenadiers and
the Royal Rifles of Canada, which had been on garrison duty in Jamaica and Newfoundland. In December 1941, the Japanese did attack, and the two battalions were engulfed in the
Battle of Hong Kong. About 300 Canadians were killed in the fighting, and the rest became prisoners of the Japanese. A
Royal Commission was convened to inquire into the disaster, but by this time Crerar had moved on, and he escaped censure. Others at NDHQ were less fortunate and were sacked.
Corps commander It came as a surprise to many, even some that knew him well, that Crerar still yearned for a field command. A vacancy occurred at the 2nd Infantry Division through Odlum's forced retirement, and Ralston was happy to replace Crerar with Stuart, whom he found much easier to work with. Crerar's appointment was announced on 19 November 1941. That day, Ralston had the position of CGS upgraded to
lieutenant-general, something Crerar had long advocated. Division command would mean dropping down to major-general once more, but his seniority would remain. In the event, Crerar never assumed command of the 2nd Infantry Division. On arrival in the UK he replaced Major-General
George Pearkes as acting commander of the Canadian Corps in the absence of McNaughton, who was on extended medical leave, and so remained a lieutenant-general. , General Harry Crerar, Field Marshal Sir
Bernard Montgomery, Lieutenant-General
Brian Horrocks (both British Army), Lieutenant-General
Guy Simonds, Major-General
Daniel Spry and Major-General
Bruce Mathews, all pictured here during
Operation Veritable in February 1945 |alt=Refer to caption The
First Canadian Army was formed on 6 April 1942 under McNaughton's command, and Crerar therefore remained in command of the corps, which now became the
I Canadian Corps, although the
II Canadian Corps was not formed until 14 January 1943. For a BGS, Crerar had Guy Simonds, although not for long, as Simonds was appointed to command the 2nd Canadian Division, before transferring to command the 1st Canadian Division on 29 April 1943, after its commander, Major-General
H. L. N. Salmon, was killed in a plane crash. He was replaced as BGS of I Canadian Corps by Brigadier C. Churchill Mann. In January 1943, Crerar was created a
Companion of the Order of the Bath, the highest level of award permitted by Canadian government policy. The corps formed part of
South-Eastern Command, under Lieutenant-General
Bernard Montgomery. Crerar and Montgomery instituted a vigorous training program. Exercise Spartan in March 1943, was a major training exercise that involved over 250,000 troops and over 72,000 vehicles. Crerar's handling of the I Canadian Corps during the exercise drew praise from McNaughton, General Sir
Bernard Paget, the
Commander-in-Chief, Home Forces, and Brooke, who was now a knight, a
general and the
Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS). Paget and Brooke, however, were unimpressed with McNaughton's performance in the exercise, and Brooke in particular became an advocate for McNaughton's removal. Without operational experience to draw on, Canadian officers were judged on technical and staff education. This tended to favour Royal Military College-educated engineers and gunners. Crerar showed tact and restraint in the relief of officers who did not meet his standards, and often suggested alternative postings where they could perform good service in a Canadian Army that was still desperately short of trained officers. Crerar suggested that Canadian troops participate in raids on the French coast to gain combat experience. A
small raid was conducted on the French coastal village of
Hardelot in April 1942, but the fifty Canadian troops involved did not step ashore. A
much larger raid on
Dieppe on 19 August involving over 6,000 Allied troops, of whom 4,963 were Canadian. Crerar's role was restricted to the training of the 2nd Canadian Division, which ended when it went to the
Isle of Wight for combined operations training. He had the right of appeal to the Canadian government if he felt the operation was unduly hazardous, but did not do so. The Canadians took heavy losses. Crerar pressed for his troops to be committed to the
North African campaign under Montgomery's command. This was opposed by McNaughton, who wanted the Canadian troops kept together under the command of a Canadian for the upcoming campaign in North West Europe, but by March 1943 it was clear that this would not occur before 1944. On 23 April 1943, Brooke met with McNaughton and presented an alternative proposal to send the 1st Canadian Division to the Mediterranean to take part in Operation Husky, the codename for the
Allied invasion of Sicily. This was quickly approved by the Canadian government.
Service in Italy The Canadian government intended that the 1st Canadian Division would return to the UK afterwards, but in the event it remained in the Mediterranean and participated throughout most of the
Italian campaign. The prime minister, King, pressed for a second Canadian division to be sent to Italy, along with a corps headquarters. Brooke and McNaughton agreed that this should be the
5th Canadian (Armoured) Division, as sending a second infantry division would leave an unbalanced force of two armoured and one infantry division in the UK. In vain, Montgomery protested that he did not need another corps headquarters, nor an armoured division; the terrain in Italy was not suitable for the employment of armour. He suggested Crerar gain experience commanding the 1st Canadian Division, a development Crerar would have welcomed, but was not to be. Simonds fell ill with
jaundice in September 1943, and was replaced by
Christopher Vokes. When he recovered, McNaughton gave him command of the 5th Canadian (Armoured) Division. Simonds mistakenly blamed Crerar for this transfer, but it was because McNaughton and Montgomery thought this would be good preparation for elevation to command of a corps. Crerar and Simonds came into conflict over Simonds's sacking of his divisional artillery commander, Brigadier R. O. G. Morton. Crerar was concerned the strain of the fighting in Sicily and Italy was telling on Simonds, and he sought a psychiatric assessment. Crerar cautioned Simonds he was approaching a level of command where balance was as important as brilliance, and that the firing of brigadiers was a matter of concern for the Canadian government. Simonds offered to resign if Crerar had lost confidence in him, but he had not; on 6 January 1944 Crerar recommended Simonds for command of II Canadian Corps in the UK. Crerar's I Canadian Corps became operational in Italy, replacing the
British V Corps in the line on 1 February 1944, but no major operations were conducted before Crerar was recalled to the UK on 3 March. On Crerar's recommendation, he was succeeded by "Tommy" Burns as GOC of I Canadian Corps.
Army commander Preparation for Operation Overlord Ralston and Stuart had long held doubts about McNaughton's capacity to command an army in combat operations, which they conveyed to King at the
First Quebec Conference in September 1943, where the future employment of the First Canadian Army was settled. King also spoke to Brooke, who confirmed British reservations about McNaughton. Ralston and Stuart were determined that the First Canadian Army should be led by a Canadian officer, which considerably narrowed the list of suitable candidates. Agreement was reached in November whereby Crerar would ultimately be appointed, but he would be kept in Italy for a while to gain experience. In the interim, Stuart was in command. MacNaughton returned to Canada, where he was promoted to full general on the eve of his retirement from the Army in September 1944, and went on to become the Minister of National Defence. Crerar assumed command of the First Canadian Army on 20 March 1944. Mann was appointed its chief of staff on 28 January 1944; Brigadier
Alfred Ernest Walford was the Deputy Adjutant and Quartermaster General (DA&QMG), the chief administrative officer; and Colonel George Edwin (Ted) Beament, like Simonds a Kingston graduate who had served with Crerar in B Battery, was the colonel (general staff). Lieutenant-Colonel Peter Wright was GSO1 (Intelligence) and Lieutenant-Colonel C. Archibald the GSO1 (Operations). Brigadier A. T. MacLean was chief engineer, but was replaced by Brigadier
Geoffrey Walsh in September. There were also several British officers, as the First Canadian Army would include a large British component. Since the First Canadian Army would not be immediately committed to
Operation Overlord, the Allied landing in
Normandy, its staff became responsible for planning the exploitation phase of the campaign. This included an assault crossing of the
Seine, for which Canadian engineer units were specially trained. Detailed plans were drawn up for the capture of
Rouen and the port of
Le Havre. Crerar's appreciation of the likely course of the campaign was that Germans would concentrate against the British sector with the aim of mounting a major counterattack. This proved to be correct.
Normandy Crerar's First Canadian Army became operational in Normandy at noon on 23 July 1944, almost seven weeks after the initial
Normandy landings, when it assumed responsibility for the eastern part of Montgomery's
21st Army Group's line, which was held by the British
I Corps (Lieutenant-General
John Crocker). In a letter to Brooke, Montgomery noted that Crerar "made his first mistake at 1205 hrs, and his second after lunch". Crerar immediately clashed with Crocker, a highly experienced and competent commander, requiring Montgomery's intervention. Crerar suggested he be given
XXX Corps (Lieutenant-General
Gerard Bucknall) or
XII Corps (Lieutenant-General
Neil Ritchie) instead; "Gerry" Bucknall had been his GSO2 at Kingston, and Ritchie was a colleague when Crerar had worked at the War Office in the 1920s, and he was confident he could work with both or either of them. Montgomery was unwilling to reorganize his forces just to accommodate this. I Corps would remain part of the First Canadian Army until March 1945, and, despite the rocky start, Crerar and Crocker would build a good working relationship. The II Canadian Corps came under Crerar's command at noon on 31 July, and the
Polish 1st Armoured Division (Major-General
Stanisław Maczek) was assigned to II Canadian Corps on 5 August, making the First Canadian Army a multinational force. The First Canadian Army HQ consisted of Main HQ and Rear HQ. The former contained the operational staff while the latter was primarily administrative. Tac HQ was a part of Main HQ that could be temporarily split off when Crerar was required to be closer to the action, but he preferred to command from Main HQ, and rarely established Tac HQ more than from Main HQ. When possible, Main HQ was co-located with that of
No. 84 Group RAF (
Air Vice-Marshal Leslie "Bingo" Brown) and Beament worked closely with his opposite number on Brown's staff,
Group Captain Frederick Rosier. Brown was replaced by Air Vice-Marshal
Edmund Hudleston on 10 November 1944. Crerar's day normally commenced with being awakened by his
batman, who served him a cup of tea. His
aide-de-camp, Lieutenant Finlay Morrison, would brief him at 06:30, and he would meet with his senior staff officers, Mann, Beament, Walford and the GSO1s for intelligence, air and operations. Crerar would do his paperwork in the morning, then would then visit his corps commanders, accompanied by his other aide, Lieutenant Giles Perodeau. He did not use Mann as his representative like Montgomery used his chief of staff, Major-General Sir
Francis de Guingand. Operations conducted by First Canadian Army in the Battle of Normandy were
Operation Totalize on 7 August 1944 and
Operation Tractable a week later. In the earlier fighting in Normandy, Crocker and the commander of the
British Second Army, Lieutenant-General
Miles Dempsey had expressed doubts about the physical and mental fitness of the commander of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division, Major-General
Rod Keller. Crerar was disappointed, as he was considering Keller as a replacement for Burns in Italy. Montgomery responded by moving the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division to the II Canadian Corps, so Canadian officers could deal with the situation if they thought that relief was called for. Simonds spoke to Keller, and agreed with Dempsey's assessment, but took no action. Keller was seriously wounded by American bombers on 8 August, and was succeeded by Major-General
Daniel Spry ten days later. The performance of the
4th Canadian (Armoured) Division in Operation Totalize led to Simonds's relief of its commander, Major-General
George Kitching. "If it's any comfort to you," Crerar told Kitching, "it may not be long before Montgomery tries to remove me!"
Clearing the Channel Coast After the Allied break-out from Normandy, the First Canadian Army conducted the
clearing the Channel Coast. The fighting in Normandy had left the First Canadian Army short of men. In the confined terrain, the infantry accounted for 76 per cent of all casualties instead of 48 per cent as forecast by the War Office. The 2nd Canadian Infantry Division alone was 1,900 infantry short by 26 August. Particularly acute was a shortage of French-speaking reinforcements for
Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal and
Le Régiment de Maisonneuve. CMHQ retrained reinforcements for other branches as infantry, and wounded men were returned from hospital as quickly as possible. Despite expedients, by 31 August, the First Canadian Army was 4,318 men short. Crerar resisted suggestions that training time for reinforcements be cut. Nor was the problem confined to Canadian troops; on 17 August Crerar received a reminder from the Polish Commander-in-Chief, General
Kazimierz Sosnkowski that the Polish forces were having difficulty in obtaining reinforcements. light observation aircraft in 1945.|alt=Refer to caption A row erupted between Montgomery and Crerar after Crerar chose to attend a commemoration at Dieppe on 3 September instead of a briefing on
Operation Market Garden that was attended by senior British and American commanders. When Montgomery threatened to have Crerar replaced, Crerar replied that as the national commander he would take the matter up with the Canadian government. Montgomery immediately backed off; while he might have been successful in removing Crerar, he might also have been removed himself, and his claim to be Allied ground forces commander would have been discredited. Crerar was featured on the cover of 18 September 1944 issue of
Time magazine. By this time, he was suffering from severe abdominal pain. An attack of
dysentery on 19 September compelled him to seek medical advice. The doctors diagnosed
anemia, and on 25 September ordered him to undergo further diagnosis and treatment in the UK. Crerar conferred with Montgomery, who accepted his recommendation that Simonds became acting commander of the First Canadian Army. Montgomery may have hoped Crerar would not recover, but when he did, Montgomery persuaded Brooke to delay his return to 7 November, so there would not be a change of army leadership in the midst of the
Battle of the Scheldt. Crerar had to deal with the problem of Burns's command of the I Canadian Corps. While he was prepared to discount the opinions of British officers like
Field Marshal Sir
Harold Alexander, the commander of the
15th Army Group, and Lieutenant-General Sir
Richard McCreery of the
Eighth Army, Brigadier
Ernest Weeks reported that neither Chris Vokes of the 1st Canadian Infantry Division nor
Bert Hoffmeister of the 5th Canadian (Armoured) Division had confidence in Burns. On 16 November Burns was replaced by Major-General
Charles Foulkes, who had been acting commander of the II Canadian Corps while Simonds commanded the First Canadian Army, and before that had commanded the 2nd Canadian Infantry Division. Since Vokes disliked Foulkes, he swapped places with
Harry Foster of the 4th Canadian (Armoured) Division. Over Montgomery's objections, Crerar was promoted to
full general on 16 November 1944, becoming the first Canadian officer to hold that rank in the field.
Rhineland with his two army commanders, Crerar (left) and Lieutenant-General Sir
Miles Dempsey (right), at
21st Army Group headquarters on 10 May 1945|alt=Headquarters is in large tents and trailers For the Battle of the Reichswald Forest in early 1945, codenamed
Operation Veritable, the First Canadian Army was reinforced with the six divisions of XXX Corps (Lieutenant-General
Brian Horrocks). The First Canadian Army now had nine British divisions, and had a strength of over 400,000 personnel, which made it larger than that of the Eighth Army at the
Second Battle of El Alamein. Despite casualties in the Battle of the Scheldt, the infantry battalions were up to full strength, thanks to the quiet period from November through January, the success of the retraining program, and the arrival of
National Resources Mobilization Act (NRMA) conscripts, derogatorily known as "zombies". Veritable was fought in difficult conditions and the Germans, as ever, fought with determination and breached the
Roer River dams, turning the battlefield into a quagmire, reminiscent to some of the worst battlefields of the First World War. The historian, Bill McAndrew, described it as "the epitome of the Canadian way of war: large scale orderly preparation, accumulation of massive resources, and meticulous planning. It was another Vimy Ridge." Horrocks wrote that, Although it meant putting himself in danger, Crerar, "knowing he was sending men to their deaths, did not hesitate to expose himself to enemy fire".
Jack Granatstein described Operation Veritable as "Crerar's finest hour". The operation was successful but at the cost of over 15,000 casualties to Crerar's First Army; German casualties were estimated at 75,000. General
Dwight D. Eisenhower, the
Supreme Allied Commander on the Western Front, wrote in a letter to Crerar, stating, "Probably no assault in this war has been conducted in more appalling conditions of terrain than was that one".
Final campaign In the last two months of the war in Europe, Crerar's First Canadian Army became more Canadian than ever with
Operation Goldflake, the redeployment of I Canadian Corps from Italy, and played a key role in the liberation of the western Netherlands in April 1945. On
Victory in Europe Day (VE Day) Crerar wrote to the troops under his command, stating, "The business we Canadians came over here to do is virtually finished." In recognition of Crerar's services in North West Europe, Montgomery recommended that Crerar be made a
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire, but
Canadian government policy forbade the acceptance of knighthoods. The British government responded by appointing him a
Companion of Honour on 3 July 1945. He was invested with the award by King
George VI. The United States made him a commander in the
Legion of Merit, which was presented by
General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower, and awarded him the
Army Distinguished Service Medal, which was presented by the
President of the United States,
Harry S. Truman. The Netherlands gave him the Grand Cross of the
Order of Orange Nassau with Swords, which was presented by
Prince Bernhard. Poland awarded him the
Order of Virtuti Militari;
Czechoslovakia awarded him the
Order of the White Lion and the
Czechoslovak War Cross 1939–1945; Belgium made him a Grand Officer of the
Order of Leopold and awarded him the
Croix de Guerre 1940 with Palm; and France made him a member of the
Legion of Honour and awarded him the
Croix de Guerre 1939–1945 with palm. He also received the
Canadian Forces' Decoration, and was mentioned in despatches four more times. ==Post-war==