Infantry
Batallion |
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The battalion is "the smallest infantry organization
that can arrange for a concentration of support weapons of different
kinds" (War Office training manual, 15 January 1944), and is
usually grouped with other units such as armoured regiments or other
infantry battalions into higher formations: brigades, divisions,
corps, armies and army groups. The battalion itself was composed
of various sub-units: companies, platoons, and sections. Three sections
composed of 10 men made up a platoon, commanded by a lieutenant
or subaltern (second-lieutenant), and three platoons in turn comprised
a rifle company, under a major or captain. Infantry battalions typically
counted four rifle companies as well as a headquarters company and
a support company including carrier, mortar, anti-tank, and pioneer
platoons. The carrier platoon used Universal carriers, also called
Bren gun carriers, while the pioneer platoon members were explosives
and mine-clearing specialists. Commanded by a Lieutenant-Colonel,
total strength of such a battalion was established at 36 officers
and 809 other ranks, including various headquarters personnel. Battle
casualties meant that battalions often had to fight seriously under
strength, however, so the established numerical strength should
not be considered an absolute.
As noted above, three battalions were grouped into a brigade, commanded
by a Brigadier, and three brigades into a division, commanded by
a Major-General and complete with its own field artillery and divisional
troops-reconnaissance, signals, engineers, anti-tank, medium machine-gun,
and light anti-aircraft units. Armoured divisions were similarly
organized, but by 1944 comprised one armoured brigade featuring
three armoured regiments and one motorized infantry battalion as
well as one standard infantry brigade plus divisional troops. Two
or more divisions made up a corps (Lieutenant-General), two or more
corps formed an army (Lieutenant-General or General), and two or
more armies an army group (commanded by a General, or in the case
of 21st Army Group from September 1944, by Field-Marshal B.L. Montgomery).
Order
of battle of the First Canadian Army in 1945.
The numerical strength of a division's combat personnel
varied widely during operations but on average, a full-strength
division counted between 14,000 and 18,000 men. Many non-combat
and service troops were needed to support them, however, and it
was estimated before Operation Overlord that every division ashore
in Northwest Europe would require an additional 25,000 personnel.
The total was called the "divisional slice", sometimes
referred to as the "tail-to-teeth" ratio. The divisional
slice within 21st Army Group, therefore, totalled about 41,000 men
and 8000 vehicles. By the end of the European war the Canadian divisional
slice had grown to over 93,000, far higher than any of the other
major combatants. |