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THE HOUSEHOLD CAVALRY -

BRIEF REGIMENTAL HISTORY

DURING WORLD WAR 2

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The Second World War

1st and 2nd Household Cavalry Regiments

 

The Second World War marked the first time in history
in which the Regiments of Household Cavalry were really
composite.

Hitherto, in Composite Regiments, squadrons had been
made up entirely of one particular Regiment.

In the Second World War, no single squadron was entirely
composed of members of one Regiment.

1st Household Cavalry Regiment

1940

The 1st HCR went to Palestine with horses in January 1940.

1941 - 1942
Shortly after becoming 'motorised' in Spring 1941, 1st HCR
became part of the small British force which entered Iraq to
effect the relief of the R.A.F. garrison at Habbanya.

The Iraqi government was pro-Axis, and the force continued
from Habbanya to Baghdad, which was invested 31st May, 1941.

Early in June, with a small British Force, the 1st HCR entered
Syria, the Vichy-French government of which threatened to
allow the country to be taken over by Germany and Italy.
Palmyra fell in July.

1st HCR were then sent to Persia, which was invaded by
Russia from the east. 1st HCR met up with the Russion Army
in Tehran in August. This was the first contact of any Allied
troops with the Russians.

The Regiment returned to Palestine, and then to Cyprus,
where it began the process of conversion to an Armoured Car
Regiment. The process was completed in Egypt just before the
great battle of El Alamein in late October 1942.
1942 - 1945 At Alamein, the 1st HCR were on the extreme left flank of
the 8th Army, deep in the desert.

The Regiment did not take part in the subsequent advance
from Alamein across the Western Desert but was sent to Syria
to patrol the Turko-Syrian border, it being feared that Turkey
would join the Axis powers.

In April 1944, 1st HCR was shipped to Italy. The Italian
campaign was at that time well under way.

During the summer of 1944, 1st HCR were in action near Arezzo
and in the Advance to Florence. The Regiment finally took a part
in dismounted actions in the Gothic Line - the German defensive
system in Northern Italy.

After four years and ten months in the Mediterranean theatre
of war, 1st HCR embarked for the U.K. in October 1944, and after
a brief spell in U.K. went out to N.W. Europe, remaining in Holland
from 13th March 1945, to 19th April 1945 - when the Regiment
entered Germany - and ended the war with the Guards Armoured
Division in N.W. Germany at Stade on the Elbe Estuary.

2nd Household Cavalry Regiment

1940 - 1944

After the departure of the 1st HCR for Palestine in 1940,
the remnant of Household Cavalry in England was formed
into a Reserve Regiment in London and a Training Regiment
at Windsor.

At the end of 1940 the Training Regiment was converted to
a Motor Battalion. Early in 1941 the Motor Battalion was
converted to an armoured car Regiment in the newly formed
Guards Armoured Division: it was then renamed
'2nd Household Cavalry Regiment'.

1944
The 2nd HCR landed at Graye-Sur-Mer in Normandy on
12th and 13th July 1944, and on 30th July 1944 an attempt
to breach the German line succeeded near Mont Pincon.
From then on, 2nd HCR were in the van of the British advance
until September.

The Regiment were first across the Souleuvre river, taking
a vital bridge which led to the collapse of the Germans in
Normandy. On 15th August, troops of the 2nd HCR were first
in the Crossing of the Noireau, while on 31st August, near
Amiens, three troops captured three bridges over the Somme,
well ahead of the rest of the whole Army, and held them until
the Guards Armoured Division crossed.

Thereafter, 2nd HCR, leading the Guards Armoured Division
(which spearheaded the 31st Army Group into Northern France),
made rapid headway, and by the 3rd September became the
first British troops to re-enter Belgium.

On the same day, 'A' Squadron 2nd HCR entered Brussels
at approximately 1730 hrs, and continued the advance the
following day as far as Louvain. On 10th September, 1944,
a troop of 2nd HCR succeeded in reconnoitring the important
bridge over the Escaut Canal, near Neerpelt, by means of
which the whole British Army were to enter Holland.

During the great airborne operation to take the large
bridges at Grave, Nijmegen and Arnhem, 2nd HCR were
constantly on forward patrols. Two troops managed to get
through heavy German defences on the Neder Rijn and made
contact with the Polish airborne near Driel, Arnhem.

These troops joined the airborne in their gallant but
unsuccessful fight, and eventually got back to their own
Squadron.
1945
In February 1945, the Regiment was employed in the
Nijmegen sector at a time when the Germans were
desperately fighting the British advance to the Rhine.
2nd HCR crossed the Rhine at Rhees with the Guards
Armoured Division, and began advancing to the North
and West.

Near Lingen (3rd April, 1945) a troop of 2nd HCR found
a bridge over the River Ems, unblown but strongly held.
The bridge was subsequently stormed by men of the
Guards Armoured Division.

The last battle honour of the 2nd HCR was in the fighting
around - and capture of - Bentheim, on the German/Dutch
frontier in April 1945. After this it continued the advance
between Hamburg and Bremen and ended the war by
entering the German naval base of Cuxhaven on 'VE' Day.

It is worth noting that the Second Household Cavalry
Regiment was described by General Sir Brian Horrocks as
the ". . . finest armoured car regiment he had ever seen".
 
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