Throughout the Second World War, LCM(1)s were used for landing Allied forces in many
Commando operations, major and minor, in the European theatre. They also saw service in North Africa and the Indian Ocean. Major references do not record any service in the Pacific. The
Royal,
Royal Canadian and
Royal Indian Navies operated the craft, but soldiers of many Commonwealth and Allied nations were transported into battle aboard them. United States Army formations were dependent on these craft in the North African, Sicilian, and Italian mainland landing operations. Below are operations involving LCM(1)s, and descriptions of how the attributes of the craft, good or ill, suited operational circumstances.
1940 The Norwegian campaign The first LCM used in an opposed landing disembarked a French light tank, a 13-ton
Hotchkiss H39 supporting the
13th Demi-Brigade (13e DBLE) on the beach at
Bjerkvik, above Narvik, on 13 May during the
Norwegian Campaign. The army commander, General
Antoine Béthouart, responsible for capturing the area north of Rombaks, realized that a landing behind German lines in the Herjangsfjord was required to force the enemy to retire. The plan agreed involved LCAs making the approach journey under their own power, a pre-landing bombardment by ships, followed by the landing of three tanks – one from the LCM 1, and two from the older Motor Landing Craft (MLC), then the landing of an initial wave of infantry from LCAs, and then a follow on force carried in barges towed by motor torpedo boats. On 12 May, at about 23:40, Royal Navy destroyers commenced a bombardment of the town intended to destroy all buildings on the foreshore. The LCAs landed soon after 01:00, when the LCM had delivered its tank to the beach (the other tanks in MLCs were delayed). Though touchdown was in the early hours of the new day the
midnight sun illuminated the battle. Once ashore, the 13e DBLE's companies deployed and was seen, from a distance, by
Admiral L. E. H. Maund, who had done much work in the LCM's development: The LCM, along with towed ship's boats and other landing craft types, then turned to landing the rest of 13e DBLE and its supporting elements. The small flotilla of the LCM, MLCs, and LCAs had added greatly to the Allies' tactical latitude. The LCM was lost to enemy action during the succeeding operations in Norway. It was not possible to hoist it onto available ships, so an attempt was made to tow it home behind a trawler, but the sea became too rough and the LCM had to be cut adrift and sunk.
Dunkirk One LCM was used in the evacuation of the BEF from
Dunkirk (
Operation Dynamo). It safely came away from the beaches toward the close of the operation, but its army passengers and crew were transferred to a larger vessel in the Channel. The master of that ship chose not to take it under tow, but to sink it.
Post-war After the Second World War the
Royal Netherlands Navy acquired 35 LCM(1)s that were built between 1940 and 1944. ==See also==