. Here, one of the 7th Army lands at Red Beach 2 on July 10, 1943, during the
Allied invasion of Sicily Allocation During World War II, approximately 19,247 Shermans were issued to the U.S. Army and about 1,114 to the U.S. Marine Corps. The U.S. also supplied 17,184 to
United Kingdom (some of which in turn went to the Canadians and the Free Poles), while the
Soviet Union received 4,102 and an estimated 812 were transferred to
China. These numbers were distributed further to the respective countries' allied nations. The U.S. Marine Corps used the diesel M4A2 and gasoline powered M4A3 in the Pacific. However, the Chief of the Army's Armored Force, Lt. Gen.
Jacob L. Devers, ordered that no diesel-engined Shermans be used by the Army outside the Zone of Interior (the continental U.S.). The Army used all types for either training or testing within the United States but intended the M4A2 and M4A4 (with the A57 Multibank engine) to be the primary Lend-Lease exports.
First combat Shermans were being issued in small numbers for familiarization to U.S. armored divisions when there was a turn of events in the
Western Desert campaign. On 21 June 1942,
Axis forces captured Tobruk, threatening Egypt and Britain's supply line through the
Suez Canal. British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill was at the
Second Washington Conference when news of the defeat broke; President
Franklin D. Roosevelt asked what he could do to help and Churchill replied at once, "Give us as many Sherman tanks as you can spare and ship them to the Middle East as quickly as possible." The US considered collecting all Shermans together to be able to send the
2nd Armored Division under
Patton to reinforce Egypt, but delivering the Shermans directly to the British was quicker and over 300 – mostly M4A1s, but also including M4A2s – had arrived there by September 1942. The Shermans were modified for desert warfare with shields over the tracks and another stowage. The Sherman first saw combat at the
Second Battle of El Alamein in October 1942 with the
British 8th Army. At the start of the offensive, there were 252 tanks fit for action. These equipped the
British 9th Armoured Brigade (for the battle under the
New Zealand Division), 2nd Armoured Brigade (1st Armoured Division), and 8th and 20th Armoured Brigades (10th Armoured Division). Their first encounter with tanks was against German Panzer III and IV tanks with long 50 mm and 75 mm guns engaging them at . There were losses to both sides. The first U.S. Shermans in battle were M4s and M4A1s in
Operation Torch the following month. On 6 December, near
Tebourba, Tunisia, a platoon from the 2nd Battalion, 13th Armored Regiment was lost to enemy tanks and anti-tank guns. Additional M4s and M4A1s replaced M3s in U.S. tank battalions over the course of the North African campaign. The M4 and M4A1 were the main types in U.S. units until the fall of 1944 when the Army began replacing them with the preferred M4A3 with its more powerful engine. Some M4s and M4A1s continued in U.S. service for the rest of the war. The first Sherman to enter combat with the 76 mm gun in July 1944 was the M4A1, then the M4A2, closely followed by the M4A3. By the end of the war, roughly half the U.S. Army Shermans in Europe had the 76 mm gun. The first HVSS-equipped Sherman to see combat was the M4A3(76)W in December 1944.
Eastern Front at
Grabow in eastern Germany, May 1945. Under Lend-Lease, 3,664 M4A2 medium tanks were sent to the Soviet Union. The first 76 mm-armed M4A2 Shermans started to arrive in the Soviet Union in the late summer of 1944. The Soviet records reported the receiving of 3,664 tanks; the difference mainly due to deliveries being sunk on the way and discrepancies between the United States and Soviet Union archives The Red Army considered the M4A2 to be much less prone to catch fire due to ammunition detonation than the
T-34/76, but the M4A2 had a higher tendency to overturn in road accidents and collisions or because of rough terrain than the T-34 due to its higher center of gravity. By 1945, some Red Army armored units were equipped entirely with the Sherman. Such units included the
1st Guards Mechanized Corps, the
3rd Guards Mechanized Corps and the
9th Guards Mechanized Corps, amongst others. According to Soviet tanker Dmitriy Loza, the Sherman was held in good regard and viewed positively by many Soviet tank crews, with compliments given to its reliability, ease of maintenance, generally good firepower (referring especially to the 76 mm gun version) as well as an
auxiliary power unit (APU) to keep the tank's batteries charged without having to run the main engine, as was required on the T-34. However, according to Soviet tank crews, the Sherman also had disadvantages, the greatest being its high center of gravity and the ease of hitting it by enemy fire. The Sherman's relatively narrow-set tracks struggled to negotiate muddy terrain compared to the wider-set tracks of the T-34 or German
Panther tank.
David M. Glantz wrote:
"[The Sherman’s] narrow treads made it much less mobile on mud than its German and Soviet counterparts, and it consumed great quantities of fuel..." Glantz noted that Soviet tankers preferred the American tanks to the British ones, but preferred Soviet ones most of all.
Pacific theater While combat in the
European theater often consisted of high-profile armored warfare, the mainly naval nature of the
Pacific theater relegated it to secondary status for both the Allies and the Japanese. While the U.S. Army fielded 16 armored divisions and 70 separate tank battalions during the war, only a third of the battalions and none of the divisions were deployed to the Pacific theater. The
Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) deployed only their
1st Tank Division and
2nd Tank Division to the
Pacific during the war with the
3rd Tank Division being deployed in
Burma,
China and
Manchukuo's border with the
Soviet Union and the
4th Tank Division remaining on the
Japanese home islands in preparation for an
allied invasion that never came. Armor from both sides mostly operated in jungle terrain that was poorly suited to armored warfare. For this type of terrain, the Japanese and the
Allies found
light tanks easier to transport and deploy. During the early stages of combat in the Pacific, specifically, the
Guadalcanal campaign, the U.S. Marine Corps'
M2A4 light tank fought against the equally matched
Type 95 Ha-Go light tank; both were armed with a 37 mm main gun. However, the M2 (produced in 1940) was newer by five years. By 1943, the IJA still used the Type 95 and
Type 97 Chi-Ha medium tanks, while Allied forces were quickly replacing their light tanks with 75 mm-armed M4s. The Chinese in India received 100 M4 Shermans and used them to great effect in the subsequent 1944 and 1945 offensives in the
China Burma India theater. , an M4A1 (75 mm) advances through a tropical rain forest on
New Britain, in the South-West Pacific To counter the Sherman, the Japanese developed the
Type 3 Chi-Nu and the heavier
Type 4 Chi-To; both tanks were armed with 75 mm guns, albeit of different type. Only 166 Type 3s and two Type 4s were built, and none saw combat; they were saved for the defense of the
Japanese home islands, leaving 1930s era light and medium armor to do battle against 1940s-built Allied light and medium armor. During the later years of the war, general purpose high explosive ammunition was preferred for fighting Japanese tanks because armor-piercing rounds, which had been designed for penetrating thicker steel, often went through the thin armor of the Type 95 Ha-Go (the most commonly encountered Japanese tank) and
out the other side without stopping. Although the armor-piercing rounds were useful for penetrating fortifications, M4 direct fire seldom destroyed Japanese fortifications. Instead, M4s armed with flamethrowers proved more useful.
Korean War During the
Korean War, the M4A3E8
Easy Eight was the main tank force of the U.S. military until the signing of the armistice agreement. At the outbreak of the war, the U.S. military tried to deploy the M4A3E8, a medium-sized tank of the same class, to respond to North Korean T-34-85, but there were few tanks available for rapid deployment from the Far East due to disarmament after World War II. The U.S. Far East Command collected 58 M4A3E8 scattered throughout Japan, created the 8072nd Temporary Tank Battalion (later renamed to the 89th Tank Battalion) on 17 July and landed them in Busan on 1 August. The 8072nd Temporary Tank Battalion was immediately deployed for
Battle of Masan to support the 25th U.S. Infantry Division.
Other uses After World War II, the U.S. kept the M4A3E8
Easy Eight in service, with either the 76 mm gun or a 105 mm M4 howitzer. The U.S. Army replaced the M4 in 1957, in favor of the
M47 Patton,
M48 Patton and,
M60 Patton. The U.S. continued to transfer Shermans to its allies, which contributed to widespread foreign use. The Israeli Defense Force used Shermans from its creation in 1948 until the 1980s, having first acquired a single M4A2 lacking the main armament from British forces as they withdrew from Israel. The popularity of the tank (having now been re-armed) compared to the outdated, 1934-origin French
Renault R35 interwar light tanks with their 37 mm short-barreled guns, which made up the bulk of the IDF's tank force, led to the purchase of 30 unarmed M4(105 mm)s from Italian scrapyards. Three of these, plus the original M4A2, saw extensive service in the 1948-9 war of independence. The remainder were then serviced and rearmed with 75 mm guns and components whenever these became available, composing a large part of Israeli tank forces for the next eight years. The 75 mm-armed Shermans were replaced by M4A1 (76 mm) Shermans imported from France before the 1956
Suez Crisis after it was realized that their armor penetration was insufficient for combat against newer tanks such as the IDF Centurions as well as the T-34-85s being delivered to Egyptian forces. During further upgrades, the French military helped develop a conversion kit to upgrade about 300 Shermans to the long high-velocity 75 mm gun CN 75-50 used in the
AMX-13. These were designated
Sherman M-50 by the Israelis. Before the
Six-Day War in 1967, the Israeli Army upgraded about 180 M4A1(76)W HVSS Shermans with the French
105 mm Modèle F1 gun, re-engined them with Cummins diesel engines, and designated the upgraded tank
Sherman M-51. The Sherman tanks, fighting alongside the 105 mm Centurion
Shot Kal and M48 Patton tanks, were able to defeat the T-34-85, T-54/55/62 series, and IS-3 tanks used by the Egyptian and Syrian forces in the 1967 Six-Day War. M4A3s were also used by British forces in Indonesia during the
Indonesian National Revolution until 1946 when they were passed on to the
KNIL, which used them until 1949 before they were passed on to the
Indonesian National Armed Forces. ==Armament==