
Army
Supply vehicles on their way to
the front, packed along a track
the Engineers ran through the
Rapido River flats at the junction
of the Rapido and Liri Rivers,
near Cassino, Italy, 21 May 1944.
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| Photo
by W.H. Agnew. Department of National
Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA- 151180. |
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Transporting supplies from RCOC depots,
field parks, or other establishments was
the job of the Royal Canadian Army Service
Corps. The RCASC was responsible for holding,
moving, and issuing to the fighting troops
all food, ammunition, POL (Petrol-or gasoline-Oil,
and Lubricants), and any other necessary
equipment. To move supplies from rear areas
to the battle zone, the Corps was equipped
with a variety of vehicles including 3-ton
to 10-ton lorries and 40-ton tank transporters.
The RCASC also transported troops.
The army's Directorate of Supplies and
Transport, under the Quartermaster-General,
was responsible for administration of the
RCASC. The Corps in the field was reorganized
in January 1943 to allow for greater flexibility
in meeting the needs of the fighting troops.
In infantry divisions, the RCASC Divisional
Column included a headquarters and four
Transport Companies, each serving one of
the three brigades or the divisional troops.
For armoured divisions, the Divisional Column
comprised an Armoured Brigade Company, an
Infantry Brigade Company, a Divisional Transport
Company, and a Divisional Troops Company.
Each of these companies provided all the
Supplies and Transport (S and T) required
by the units it supported, and was typically
made up of a headquarters, three Transport
Platoons each with 30 task vehicles plus
spares, two Relief Driver Increments (RDIs)
each with 30 drivers, a Composite Platoon
responsible for accounting, holding and
issuing food, ammunition, POL, and other
supplies, and a Workshop Platoon to maintain
vehicles. The designation of these companies
mirrored that of the formation to which
they were attached: for example, the 1st
Canadian Infantry Brigade Company, RCASC.
The Divisional Column was commanded by a
CRASC (Commander, Royal [Canadian] Army
Service Corps), who controlled all the S
and T services for the division and could
allocate units as required. The CRASC, meanwhile,
was under command of the Deputy Director
of Supplies and Transport (DDST) at corps
headquarters, who was in turn under command
of the field army's DDST. The RCASC units
in each formation were treated as a pool
of resources upon which the commanding officer
could draw. As noted, the key to the reorganization
was flexibility. It allowed a fighting brigade
to be detached from its division for specific
operations and retain the ability to supply
itself. Sub-units such as Transport Platoons
or RDIs could be detached or combined to
provide the scale of support necessary for
a variety of situations, but units could
be concentrated easily for larger operations.
The division is the largest formation with
a fixed composition, and during the Second
World War its make-up included infantry
or armoured brigades plus various divisional
troops: organic artillery, engineers, signals,
medical, and service units (see First
Canadian Army order of battle). Two
or more divisions could be combined under
command of a corps headquarters, but divisions
were interchangeable and could frequently
be withdrawn to serve under another corps
for particular operations. Likewise, two
or more corps were combined under a field
army, or armies under an army group. Because
the tasks allotted to a formation varied,
support might be required from additional
engineers or medium or heavy artillery,
for example, not contained within divisional
establishments. A higher formation thus
included, besides its subordinate formations,
units of corps or army troops. Such units
would be committed in various proportions
according to operational requirements, and
the DDST commanded additional RCASC units
to maintain them. For example, First Canadian
Army Troops included Nos. 1 and 2 Motor
Ambulance Convoys, which evacuated casualties
from Field Dressing Stations to Casualty
Clearing Stations and General Hospitals.

Private
R.B. Schulz (New Westminster,
B.C.) of the RCASC, a member of
the Régiment de la Chaudière,
cooks roast at the front lines,
first meat outside of compo rations
since entering battle. Bretteville,
Normandy, 24 June 1944.
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| Photo
by Frank L. Dubervill. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-132806. |
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First Canadian Army also supplied similar
units controlled at army group level, called
GHQ Lines of Communication Troops. As part
of the General Transport Column for Montgomery's
21 Army Group, an RCASC Tank Transporter
Company moved tanks to and from the battle
zone, and also carried ammunition or road
and airfield construction equipment. Two
Bridge Companies worked with infantry and
engineers, providing all of the boats, rafts,
and Bailey Bridges necessary whenever the
infantry made an assault crossing of a water
obstacle, usually under enemy shell and
mortar fire. An RCASC Tipper [dump-truck]
Platoon also worked with engineers to construct
and repair roads for the army's advance,
as well as filling-in shell craters or anti-tank
ditches, which put it very much at the "sharp
end" of the battlefield.
One final but very important specialization
of the Corps was food. In August 1942 the
RCASC Catering Wing was established at No.
1 Reinforcement Unit in Britain to train
cooks for the army. "Until that time
every cook in the Canadian Army had been
a member of the unit he was serving, and
he was not necessarily a good cook. Too
often he was merely a poor soldier, and
this was most unfortunate for the men he
was called upon to feed." All cooks
were subsequently transferred to the RCASC,
which posted them to the various units they
were to serve. This change apparently effected
a rapid improvement in cooking standards.
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