Gothic Line order of battle

Gothic Line order of battle is a listing of the significant formations that were involved in Operation Olive, the Allied offensive on the Gothic Line in northern Italy, August–September 1944, and in the subsequent fighting in the central Apennine mountains and on the plains of eastern Emilia–Romagna up to April 1945.

Allied Forces Headquarters Mediterranean

Supreme Allied Commander Mediterranean:

General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson (until 12 December 1944)
Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander (from 12 December 1944)

Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Mediterranean:

Lieutenant General Jacob L. Devers (until September 1944)
Lieutenant General Joseph T. McNarney (from September 1944)

Chief of Staff

Lieutenant-General Sir James Gammell (to 12 December 1944)
Lieutenant-General Sir John Harding (from 12 December 1944 to 6 March 1945[1])
Lieutenant-General William Morgan (from 6 March 1945)[1]

Allied Armies in Italy (until 12 December 1944)

Commander-in-Chief: General Sir Harold Alexander
Chief of Staff: Lieutenant-General Sir John Harding

Allied 15th Army Group (from 12 December 1944)

Commander: Lieutenant General Mark Wayne Clark (promoted to full general 10 March 1945)
Chief of Staff: Major General Alfred M. Gruenther

U.S. Fifth Army

Commander:

Lieutenant General Mark Wayne Clark (until 16 December 1944)
Lieutenant General Lucian K. Truscott (from 16 December 1944)
U.S. II Corps
Major General Geoffrey Keyes
U.S. IV Corps
Major General Willis D. Crittenberger

* Order of entry into battle

British XIII Corps (transferred to British 8th Army in January 1945)
Lieutenant-General Sidney Kirkman (until 25 January 1945)
Lieutenant-General Sir John Harding (from 25 January 1945)
Independent units under Army HQ

British 8th Army

Commander:

Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese (until 1 October 1944)
Lieutenant-General Sir Richard McCreery (from 1 October 1944)
British V Corps
Lieutenant-General Charles Keightley
  • 1st Army Group Royal Artillery
  • British 1st Armoured Division (Major-General Richard Hull) (until 25 September 1944)
  • British 4th Infantry Division (Major-General Dudley Ward) (from October to November 1944)
    • 10th Infantry Brigade
    • 12th Infantry Brigade
    • 28th Infantry Brigade
  • Indian 4th Infantry Division (Major-General Arthur Holworthy) (until October 1944)
    • 5th Indian Infantry Brigade
    • 7th Indian Infantry Brigade
    • 11th Indian Infantry Brigade
  • British 46th Infantry Division (Major-General John Hawkesworth until 6 November 1944, then Major-General C.E. Weir) (until December 1944)
  • British 56th Infantry Division (Major-General J. Y. Whitfield)
    • 167th Infantry Brigade
    • 168th Infantry Brigade
    • 139th Infantry Brigade
    • 7th Armoured Brigade
  • British 78th Infantry Division (Major-General D.C. Butterworth until 10 October 1944 and then Major-General Keith Arbuthnott) (from March 1945)
    • 11th Infantry Brigade
    • 36th Infantry Brigade
    • 38th Infantry Brigade
  • British 6th Armoured Division (Major-General H. Murray) (from 18–23 April 1945)
  • Indian 8th Infantry Division (Major-General Dudley Russell) (from March 1945)
  • Indian 10th Infantry Division (Major-General Denys Reid) (from October 1944 to February 1945)
  • New Zealand 2nd Division (Lieutenant-General Sir Bernard Freyberg) (November 1944 to 14 April 1945)
  • Jewish Brigade (from February to March 1945)
  • Italian Liberation Corps (Corpo Liberation Italiano) (1944)[2]
    • Nembo Division
    • Utili Division
  • Italian Cremona Combat Group (from 1945)
  • Italian 28th Garibaldi Brigade (from 1945)
British X Corps (until December 1944 and from February 1945)
Lieutenant-General Sir Richard McCreery (until 6 November 1944)
Lieutenant-General John Hawkesworth (from 6 November 1944)
  • 2nd Army Group Royal Artillery
  • Indian 10th Infantry Division (Major-General Denys Reid) (until October 1944)
    • 10th Indian Infantry Brigade
    • 20th Indian InfantryBrigade
    • 25th Indian Infantry Brigade
  • 9th Armoured Brigade
  • Jewish Brigade (from March 1945)
  • Italian Fruili Combat Group (from 1945)
British XIII Corps (transferred from U.S. 5th Army January 1945)

see listing above under U.S. 5th Army)

Canadian I Corps (until February 1945)
Lieutenant-General E. L. M. Burns (until 10 November 1944)
Lieutenant-General C. Foulkes (from 10 November 1944)
  • 1st Canadian Army Group Royal Canadian Artillery
  • Canadian 1st Infantry Division (Major-General Chris Vokes until 1 December 1944 then Major-General H. W. Foster)
    • 1st Canadian Infantry Brigade
    • 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade
    • 3rd Canadian Infantry Brigade
  • Canadian 5th Armoured Division (Major-General Bert Hoffmeister)
    • 5th Canadian Armoured Brigade
    • 11th Canadian Infantry Brigade
    • 12th Canadian Infantry Brigade
  • 21st Army Tank Brigade
  • British 4th Infantry Division (Major-General Dudley Ward) (from September to October 1944)
  • New Zealand 2nd Division (Lieutenant-General Sir Bernard Freyberg. Major-General C. E. Weir acting commander 3 September to 17 October 1944) (September to October 1944)
  • 3rd Greek Mountain Brigade (Colonel Thrasyvoulos Tsakalotos) (from September to October 1944)
Polish II Corps
Lieutenant-General Władysław Anders
  • Army Group Polish Artillery
  • Polish 3rd Carpathian Rifle Division (Major-General Bolesław Bronisław Duch)
    • 1st Carpathian Rifle Brigade
    • 2nd Carpathian Rifle Brigade
  • Polish 5th Kresowa Infantry Division (Major-General Nikodem Sulik)
    • 5th Wilenska Infantry Brigade
    • 6th Lwowska Infantry Brigade
  • Polish 2nd Armoured Brigade (Brigadier-General Bronislaw Rakowski)
Other Units

German Army Group C

Commander:

Field Marshal Albert Kesselring (until 25 October 1944, from January 1945 until 9 March 1945)
General Heinrich von Vietinghoff (from 25 October 1944 until January 1945 and from 9 March 1945)

German Tenth Army

Commander:

General Heinrich von Vietinghoff (until 25 October 1944)
Lieutenant-General Joachim Lemelsen (from 25 October 1944 to 15 February 1945)
Lieutenant-General Traugott Herr (from 15 February 1945)

German LXXVI Panzer Corps

Lieutenant-General Traugott Herr (until 26 December 1944)
Lieutenant-General Graff Gerhard von Schwerin (from 26 December 1944 to 25 April 1945)
Major-General Karl von Graffen (from 25 April 1945)

German LI Mountain Corps

Lieutenant-General Valentin Feurstein until March 1945 and then Lieutenant-General Friedrich-Wilhelm Hauck

German Fourteenth Army

Commander:
Lieutenant-General Joachim Lemelsen (to 24 October 1944 and from 17 February 1945)
Lieutenant-General Frido von Senger und Etterlin (October 1944)
Lieutenant-General Heinz Ziegler (24 October to 22 November 1944)
Lieutenant-General Traugott Herr (22 November to 12 December 1944)
Lieutenant-General Kurt von Tippelskirch (from 12 December 1944 to 16 February 1945)

German I Parachute Corps

Lieutenant-General Alfred Schlemm (to 30 September 1944)
Lieutenant-General Richard Heidrich (from 1 November 1944 to 23 January 1945)
Major-General Hellmuth Böhlke (from 23 January 1945 to 7 February 1945)
Lieutenant-General Richard Heidrich (from 7 February 1945)
  • German 4th Parachute Division (Major-General Heinrich Trettner)
  • German 356th Infantry Division (Major-General Karl Faulenbach to October 1944)
  • German 362nd Infantry Division (Major-General Heinz Greiner)

German XIV Panzer Corps

Lieutenant-General Frido von Senger und Etterlin

Army Group Liguria

Commander: General Alfredo Guzzoni

Army Reserve

Independent Units

German LXXV Corps (Italian-French border)

Lieutenant-General Hans Schlemmer

Adriatic Coast Command

  • 94th Infantry Division (Major-General Bernhard Steinmetz)
  • German 188th Mountain Division (Major-General Hans von Hößlin)

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Jackson (1988), p. 196.
  2. Jackson (1987), p. 225.

References