19th Infantry Division (India)

Indian 19th Division
Active 1941– postwar
Branch British Indian Army
Nickname Dagger Division
Engagements Burma Campaign
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Major General Jackie Smyth VC
Major General Thomas Wynford Rees

The Indian 19th Infantry Division was an infantry division of the Indian Army during World War II, and played a prominent part in the final part of the Burma Campaign.

It was raised in Secunderabad in India in 1941. It originally consisted of the 62nd, 63rd and 64th Indian Infantry Brigades. Its first commander was Major-General Jackie Smyth VC , who was subsequently transferred to command the Indian 17th Infantry Division, then fighting in Burma. (63rd Indian Infantry Brigade was also transferred from the division to Burma in March 1942, to be replaced by 98th Indian Infantry Brigade).

The division remained under temporary commanders until late 1942 when Major General Thomas Wynford Rees was appointed to command. It spent an extended period on internal security duties and in training before being committed to the Burma front in November 1944. As part of Indian XXXIII Corps, it played the major role in the capture of Mandalay. Transferred to IV Corps, it guarded the British Fourteenth Army's line of communication and mounted an offensive towards Mawchi, in the Shan States.

Its successes were due to its fitness and high morale. Not having been stationed in the unhealthy mountains on the Indian / Burmese border in 1943, nor fought during the battles in 1944, it had a high proportion of pre-war regulars among its officers and senior NCO's.

The division was occasionally referred to as the "Dagger Division", from its divisional sign, which was a hand thrusting a dagger overhand, in yellow on a red background.

During World War II, a large number of brigades were assigned or attached to the division. The included at various points the 9th Indian Infantry Brigade, 47th Indian Infantry Brigade, 48th Indian Infantry Brigade, 49th Indian Infantry Brigade, 62nd Indian Infantry Brigade, 64th Indian Infantry Brigade, 98th Indian Infantry Brigade, 99th Indian Infantry Brigade as well as the 22nd (East Africa) Infantry Brigade.[1]

Contents

Order of Battle March 1, 1945

General Officer commanding: Major General Thomas Wynford Rees
Commander, Royal Artillery: Brigadier John Alexander MacDonald
Chief of Staff (GSO1): Lieutenant Colonel John Masters

62nd Indian Infantry Brigade (Brigadier James Ronald Morris)
2nd Bn Welch Regiment
3rd Bn 6th Rajputana Rifles
4th Bn 9th Gurkha Rifles
64th Indian Infantry Brigade (Brigadier John Godfrey Flewett)
2nd Bn Worcestershire Regiment
5th Bn 10th Baluch Regiment
1st Bn 6th Gurkha Rifles
98th Indian Infantry Brigade (Brigadier Charles Ian Jerrard)
2nd Bn Royal Berkshire Regiment
8th Bn 12th Frontier Force Regiment
4th Bn 4th Gurkha Rifles
Divisional Units
7th Light Cavalry (attached) Stuart Tanks
1st Bn Assam Regiment (attached)
1st Bn 15th Punjab Regiment (Divisional reconnaissance regiment)
MG Bn 11th Sikh Regiment (Divisional Machine gun unit)
134 Medium Regiment RA
4 Field Regiment IA
5 Field Regiment IA
115 Field Regiment RA
29 Mountain Regiment IA
33 Anti-tank Regiment RA (mixed anti-tank and light anti-aircraft batteries)
Queen Victoria's Own Madras Sappers & Miners, Indian Engineers
  • 64 Field Company IE
  • 65 Field Company IE
  • 327 Field Park Company IE
Royal Bombay Sappers and Miners, Indian Engineers
  • 29 Field Company IE

Postwar

Just before the Indian/Pakistani war of 1965 began, 19th Infantry Division was at Baramula under XV Corps (India). Its brigades were the 104th Brigade, Tithwal, the 161st Brigade, Uri and the 268th Brigade, Baramula.

References

External links

Further reading