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Inter-War
Years
Having amalgamated
at Tidworth, the Regiment quickly established their reputation not
only in military proficiency but also on the sporting field. In
1927, after being in use for more than a century, the lance was
finally abolished as a weapon of war in the British Army. The 17th/21st
Lancers were posted to Meerut, India, in 1930, but it was not until
1938 eleven years after the loss of the lance that the Regiment
were first mechanised. The outbreak of war saw the Regiment immediately
posted back to England. After initially being employed as counter
invasion forces, they became part of the newly formed 6th Armoured
Division, training with Valentine and Matilda tanks. The Regiment
remained with the new division in England until 1942 when they were
warned off for active service in North Africa.
The Second
World War: North Africa 1942-3
The Regiment
eventually deployed to North Africa in November 1942. They were
not however initially deployed with the Division but as part of
'Blade Force' under Lieutenant Colonel Hull, a 17th/21st Lancer.
The plan was that Blade Force would act as a spearhead invasion
force into Tunisia. The Force was to move from Algiers, in concert
with the 8th Army who were moving west from Egypt, having advanced
from El Alamein. The role of the 17th/21st Lancers within Blade
Force was to provide a flank guard for the 78th Division, which
was to occupy the city. Blade Force made a rapid advance of 300
miles before being held up at the T-roads between Sidi Nasir station
and Mateur by strong German resistance. This delay allowed the Germans
to reinforce and thus foil the bid to capture Tunis. As a result
Blade Force was broken up and the 17th/21st Lancers were returned
to 26th Armoured Brigade.
On the 19th
of February 1943, the Germans launched a counter attack into the
Kasserine Pass towards Thala. The Brigade was tasked with stopping
the German advance. By dawn on the 21st, the Regiment was in a position
blocking the road from Thala to Kasserine. All that day it fought
a difficult delaying action in which fourteen tanks were lost. At
dusk the Regiment retired into a leaguer. After a short time the
sound of tanks moving on the road was heard; the enemy had resumed
his advance in the dark and led the attack with a Valentine tank
which had been abandoned by the Regiment at Tebourba in December.
This ruse completely deceived the infantry in front of the regimental
leaguer. It was not until the Germans opened fired that anyone realised
what had happened. The first person to react was the Adjutant, Captain
Ponsonby, who firing the gun of his own tank, destroyed four German
tanks in quick succession. Soon the other tanks joined in and three
more tanks were destroyed. The German attack dissolved; although
the Regiment remained in the area for the next three days, the Germans
did not renew it, but retired eastwards.
Protected only
by the inferior armour of the Valentine and out gunned by the German
tanks, the cost was high. Although the pass was held, the 17th/21st
Lancers was reduced to only twelve tanks. It was after this encounter
that the Regiment was withdrawn from the line and re-equipped with
the American Sherman tank mounting a 75mm gun. This represented
a great improvement on the old 'Tommy Cookers' (Valentines), both
in terms of firepower and armoured protection.
The stage was
now set for the Battle of Fondouk, on the 8th and 9th April, in
which the Regiment was to play a leading role. The Fondouk Pass
was a flat, open plain, 1000 yards wide, dominated on both sides
by steep rocky heights. The plan was for the Regiment to break through
the pass and cut off the retreating German forces. During a reconnaissance
on the evening of the 8th, the Regiment lost four tanks. At 9.00
a.m. on the 9th the 17th/21st was ordered to force the Pass at any
cost. The area was mined, and covered by both artillery and anti-tank
guns positioned both in the pass and on the high ground. For two
hours the Regiment tried to break through the Pass, sustaining such
heavy losses that only a handful of tanks were left in action. Information
that the dry riverbed to the left might prove to be a way through
was passed to Brigade Headquarters. At 11.30, 6th Armoured Brigade
ordered the 16th/5th Lancers to try that route, which despite a
number of losses to men and tanks, proved successful.
Although the
subsequent break-through was achieved, the delay allowed the German
forces to retreat unmolested towards Tunis. Regimental losses were
eleven killed and thirty-two wounded, with thirty-two tanks put
out of action, twenty-seven beyond further use.
May saw the final action of the North Africa campaign with the capture
of the Cap Bon Peninsula. The Germans were trying to delay its capture
long enough to allow evacuation of their Army by sea. The Regiment
conducted a 'charge' along the beach totally out manoeuvring the
German defensive positions. Enemy resistance crumbled, thousands
of prisoners were taken, and thus ended the campaign.
After nine months
out of action, March 1944 saw the 17th/21st Lancers, still as part
of 6th Armoured Division, deployed to Italy. The North African campaign
marked the height of allied armoured warfare. Ahead lay a new country,
with difficult terrain that would require new tactics. Even though
the dominant role of the tank would no longer be so pronounced,
the regiment still played its part to the full in the Italian campaign
Italy
1942
The
Regiment arrived in Italy during the preparation phase for the assault
on the Gustav Line, a defensive line running the entire length of
Italy and hinged on Monte Cassino. The assault began on 11th May 1944
with the crossing of the River Gari. The 17th/21st moved to their
bridge-crossing site 'Amazon' during the night only to find that the
bridges had not been laid, due to all the engineer bulldozers having
been knocked out. As a result the Regiment were forced to improvise,
using their tanks to shunt a Bailey Bridge into position and thus
effect a crossing. By the 14th the Corps had achieved nineteen crossings
and by the 16th the pressure on the Germans proved so great that they
were forced to abandon the Gustav Line. It took the Canadians a further
five days to breech the Adolf Hitler Line after which the road to
Rome was effectively clear.
The advance
north of Rome proved itself even harder than in the south. There
were only three routes capable of supporting armoured formations
with the Germans covering all of them with direct and indirect fire.
The delaying action the Germans fought was so effective it took
the Allies four months to reach the Gothic Line. The winter of 1944/1945
saw the 17th/21st taking their turn as infantry on the Gothic Line
in The Apennine Mountains, not only manning trenches but machine
guns and mortars. For the Regiment the battle of The Po Valley proved
to be the final action of the war. By VE Day the 17th/21st Lancers
had lost 21 officers and 135 other ranks killed.
Above: Sherman advancing
on German positions
Greece, Egypt, Palestine 1945-48
As the Regiment had not deployed from England until 1942
they were not due an immediate return to Britain. As a result, after
completing their occupation duties in Austria, they were posted
to Greece in October 1946 where they conducted internal security
duties and famine relief. In October 1947 the Regiment was sent
to the Suez Canal Zone where it was redesignated as an Armoured
Car Regiment. From the calm of Suez the 17th/21st were posted to
Palestine. At the time Palestine was in a state of civil war, with
both Jews and Arabs fighting for independence both from each other
and British rule. The Regiment was involved in the operation of
armoured rail cars, frontier patrols and escort duties. In the one
year that they served in Palestine (1948) the Regiment lost two
officers and fourteen other ranks killed.
The
Cold War 1953-89
The
main role of the 17th/21st Lancers service after the war was as
part of the British Army of the Rhine serving as part of NATO's
conventional deterrent against the Warsaw Pact Armies of Eastern
Europe. It also served throughout the world with both squadron and
troop deployments to Hong Kong, Borneo, Aden, Libya, Belize, Kuwait
and Cyprus.
The main operational
commitment post war for the Regiment was in Northern Ireland. Since
1969 and the beginning of the 'troubles', the 17th/21st were regularly
deployed to the province in both mounted and dismounted roles. The
Regiment was employed in Saladin, Saracen and Ferret armoured cars
during the first two and bloodiest years of the troubles. The Regiment
also conducted dismounted four-month emergency tours.
Above: Patrolling the streets
of Northern Ireland.
The
Gulf War 1991
With the Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and the deployment of 1st (UK) Armoured
Division to the Gulf came the only opportunity for desert warfare
since the North Africa campaign of 1943. Although the 17th/21st
did not deploy as a Regiment; it did however furnish more than two
Squadrons of men and most of its equipment to reinforce the Royal
Scots Dragoons Guards and the Queen's Royal Irish Hussars. The 17th/21st
Lancers Band were deployed in their wartime role as medics.
Victory in the
Gulf War did not however save the Army from the consequences of
the end of the Cold War. Reductions and amalgamations were still
implemented in the summer of 1991. The Royal Armoured Corps was
reduced from nineteen to eleven regiments. The fate of the 17th/21st
was to amalgamate with the 16th/5th Lancers; this was completed
by June 1993 when they formed a new Regiment, called The Queen's
Royal Lancers.
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