23rd Field Regiment, RCA

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The 23rd Field Regiment (SP), RCA, was part of the 4th Canadian Armoured Division of the 2nd Canadian Corps, of the 1st Canadian Army in World War II.

Contents

[edit] Formation and disbandment

The Regiment was part of the Royal Canadian Artillery (RCA) and was authorized on March 18, 1942, per General Order GO 147/42. It consisted of the HQ Battery and 3 separate gun batteries and from May to July 1942, the three batteries of the regiment formed up at the Canadian Artillery Training Centre A2 (CATC A2) in Petawawa, Ontario. The (SP) in their name denotes that the regiment was a self-propelled artillery regiment. The regiment trained in Canada from May 1942 to July 1943 and in England from July 1943 to July 1944, then went into action in France on July 26, 1944, seven weeks after D-Day, (June 6, 1944.) They participated in the "breakout" campaign, on the "green up" or "Maple Leaf Up" route from Normandy, France, into Belgium and Holland, and ended action in Germany. The regiment was disbanded on December 18, 1945, per General Order GO 71/46.

[edit] The regiment's three batteries

  1. The 31st, which had formed part of the 7th (Toronto) Field Regiment (Reserve) mostly from Toronto. Its company name was "Peter" and the troops' initials were A (Abel) and B (Baker)
  2. The 36th, which was from the areas of Cobourg, Port Hope, and Peterborough, Ontario. Its company name was "Queen" and the troops' initials were C (Charlie) and D (Dog)
  3. The 83rd, from the 8th Field Brigade (Reserve) from the areas of Hamilton, Brantford, and St. Catharines, Ontario. Its company name was "Roger" and the troops' initials were E (Easy) and F (Fox).

[edit] Regiment's activities in the Second World War

[edit] Training in Canada

  • May 9–July 31, 1942 — Canadian Artillery Training Centre A2, Petawawa, Ontario
  • August 1942 — Sussex Military Camp, Sussex, New Brunswick
  • August, September 1942 — Tracadie Camp, Tracadie, New Brunswick
  • September 1942–June 1943 — Sussex Military Camp, Sussex, New Brunswick
  • June, July 1943 — Tracadie Camp, Tracadie, New Brunswick
  • July 1943 — Sussex Military Camp, Sussex, New Brunswick

[edit] Training in the United Kingdom

  • July 23, 1943 — to UK aboard Queen Elizabeth I
  • July 27, 1943 — arrive Gourock Harbour, Scotland
  • July, August 1943 — Chobham Common Reception Camp for 10 days
  • August–November 1943 — Eastbourne Camp in Mead's Village, Eastbourne. 31st billeted on Dalton, Derwent and Milnthorpe Roads with officers' mess on ridge in Bolsover Road, the 36th at Edensor Road, with Battery HQ on Upper Dukes Drive and officers' and sergeants' mess at Tudor Croft in Baslow Road, and the 83rd on Edensor Road with Battery HQ at Holywell Priory and sergeants' mess at Meads End.
  • November 1943 — Larkhill Gunnery Camp (British School of Artillery)
  • December 1943 — Eastbourne Camp
  • December 1943 — Redesdale Camp
  • December 1943–February 1944 — Eastbourne Camp
  • February 1944 — Larkhill Gunnery Camp, Salisbury Plains
  • Februrary–March 1944 — Eastbourne Camp
  • March–June 1944 — Pippingford Park
  • July 1944 — Camped in field about 1 mile from Pippingford Park
  • July 1944 — Wanstead Common Marshalling Camp
  • July 24, 1944 — convoy through Straits of Dover toward France

[edit] Action in France

  • July 26, 1944 — Disembarked at Arromanches and moved inland to Banville area, near Caen
  • July to September 1944 — activity in areas of Meavaines, south of Caen near Ifs, Mondeville, Four, Soliers, Grentheville, LaHogue, Tilly, Operation Totalize (the breakout from Caen perimeter and push down Route Nationale 158 to Falaise), Hill 180, 195 and 206 — south of Bretteville-le-Rabet, St. Andre-sur-Orne and south of Ifs, Verrieres, Gausmesnil, Roquancourt, Caillouet, River Laize, Bretteville-le-Rabet, Hautmesnil, St. Aignon de Cramesnil, Renemesnil, Operation Tallulah — then changed to Operation Tractable (intention of smashing through the anti-tank screen between Quesnay Woods and Potigny along the River Laison, crossing the river and striking on to Falaise, at the same time seizing crossing of the Rivers Ante and Dives), River Laison at Rouvres, Olendon, Perrieres, Le Moutiers-en-Auge, Le Menil Girard (north-east of Trun), 31st battery — River La Vie and River Touques, Coudehard, Monnai, Bernay, (liberated) Bout de la Ville, St. Pierre les Elbeuf, River Seine, Criqueboeuf-sur-Seine just north-west of Pont de L'Arche, Ymaro, Le Hamel aux Batiers, Grainville-sur-Ry, 36th Battery to Crenon River, Boissay, 83rd Battery to Forges-les-Eaux, Orival, Airaines, Wanel, Sorel just west of the Somme, high ground overlooking Abbeville, Wisquesm just this side of St. Omer, Soex and crossing the border into Belgium on September 7, 1944.

[edit] Action in Belgium

September, Octover 1944 — activity in areas of Leysele, St. Riquiers, southwest of Bruges/Brugge just west of Den Daelo, Holding of the Leopold, Canal de Ghent, Boerbrugge, Oedelem, Syssele, over Leopold Canal, Cliet, Balgerhoek, Eecloo, Caprycke, Bouchante, Assenede, Sas van Gent, Philipine, north-west of Maldegem,near Balgerhoek, Eecloo, via Ghent to Antwerp, north of Schildt, Operation Suitcase, Putte, Pont Heuvel, Wildert near Roosendaal Canal and Wousche Plantage.

[edit] Action in Netherlands

October 1944 to Feb 1945 — activity in areas of Spillebeek, Heimolen, Bergen-op-Zoom, Halsteren, Steenbergen, Dinteloord, Willemstad, Halsteren, end of Operation Suitcase, Roosendaal, Breda, Tilburg, Vught, east of s'Hertogenbosch, (31st at Nulands, 83rd at Rosmalen and 36th in between), Boxtel, 36th in Gemonde, Hedikuizen, Breda area, 36th to St. Philipsland Peninsula, Operation Trojan,(simulate crossing of the Maas), Operation Schultz (intention of getting prisoners from other side of the river), Sprang north-east of Tilburg, s'Hertogenbosch, Vught and then off to Germany on February 22, 1945.

[edit] Action in Germany

February, March 1945 — activity in areas of Hau (south of Cleve), Operation Blockbuster, Louisendorf, east of Keppeln, The Hochwald Gap, Udermerbruch just west of the Hochwald Gap, east of Sonsbeck, Veen, Winnethal and headed back to Netherlands on March 12, 1945.

[edit] Rest in the Netherlands

March 12 to 22 March 1945 — In Tilburg for rest period

[edit] Action in Germany

March 1945 — activity in areas of Huibsberden (practically on banks of the Rhine), Operation Plunder, Emmerich and Rees near Milligen (across Rhine)

[edit] Action in Netherlands

April 2–4 April 1945 — activity in areas between Gelselaar and Diepenheim, Twente Canal, Wegdam and north of Delden

[edit] Action in Germany

  • April, May 1945 — activity in areas of near Wilsum, Emmlicheim, Coevorden, Ruhle, Dortmund-Ems Canal, Meppen, north along canal to Lathen, Sogel, Werlte, east of Lorup, Neuvrees, Friesoythe, south of Kusten Canal, Edewecht, Bad Zwischenahn, Rorbeck, Rastede, and on May 3, 1945, to its last gun position of the war, midway between Nutte and Rastede
  • May 4, 1945 — During evening it was heard on the regiment's radio that all German forces in northwest Germany, Denmark and Holland had surrendered to 21st Army Group.
  • May 5, 1945 — Cease fire was officially proclaimed at 8:00 a.m.
  • May 14, 1945 — Major General Christopher Vokes, GOC, 4th Canadian Armoured Division, addressed the regiment at Ocholt, Germany.

[edit] Netherlands after cease fire

June 29, 1945 — Armoured guns turned in at Nijmegen, in a "Farewell to the Guns" Parade

[edit] Casualties in action

  • 25 killed
  • 64 wounded
  • 6 prisoners of War

[edit] Honours and awards

  • 1 — Distinguished Service Order
  • 3 — Military Cross
  • 1 — Croix de Guerre avec Palme (French)
  • 1 — Croix de Guerre avec Bronze Star (French)
  • 1 — American Bronze Star
  • 1 — Member of the British Empire
  • 8 — Mention-in-Despatches
  • 9 — Commander-in-Chief's Certificate

[edit] Commanding Officers

  • Lieutenant-Colonel J.A. Robertson (Montreal) from April 1942 to January 1943
  • Lieutenant-Colonel G.W. Wishart (Toronto) from January to March 1943
  • Lieutenant-Colonel K.N. Lander (Toronto) from March 1943 to August 1944
  • Lieutenant-Colonel R.E. Hogarth (Timmins) from August 1944 to cease fire in May 1945

[edit] References

After the Second World War, each regiment had to submit a war diary of their activities and the foregoing is sourced from the 23rd Field Regiment's 81-page war diary, entitled The History of the 23rd Field Regiment (SP) R.C.A., April 1942 to May 1945, by Lieutenant Lawrence N. Smith, which was subsequently published by the St. Catherines Standard in 1945 in St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada.