XI Corps | |
---|---|
Active |
World War I World War II |
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | British Army |
Type | Field corps |
Engagements |
|
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Sir Richard Haking |
XI Corps was an army corps of the British Army in World War I that served on the Western Front and in Italy. It was recreated as part of Home Forces defending the United Kingdom during World War II.
World War I[]
Western Front[]
XI Corps was formed in France on 29 August 1915 under Lt-Gen Richard Haking.[2] Its first serious engagement (as part of Sir Charles Monro's First Army) was the Battle of Fromelles (19 July 1916), a diversion to the Somme offensive in which two untried divisions were launched into an ill-planned subsidiary attack in Flanders. It achieved nothing but cost thousands of casualties, and caused great resentment in Australia.[3]
Order of Battle at Fromelles[4]
General Officer Commanding Lt-Gen R. Haking
Italian Front[]
XI Corps was one of two corps HQs moved to the Italian Front in November 1917.[2]
Order of Battle in Italy 1 December 1917[5]
GOC Lt-Gen Sir Richard Haking
Corps Troops:
- 1/1st King Edward's Horse
- HQ Corps Heavy Artillery Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA)
- 11th Cyclist Battalion Army Cyclist Corps
- Corps Topographical Section Royal Engineers (RE)
- Signal Troops RE (L Corps Signal Company; 27 (Motor) Airline Section; R and LC Cable Sections, *Corps Heavy Artillery Signal Section RGA)
- Corps Siege Park Army Service Corps (ASC)
- Corps Ammunition Park (345 (MT) Company (25 Ammunition Sub-Park) ASC)
- 491 (MT) Company ASC, attached Corps Heavy Artillery
- 5th (Light) Mobile Workshop Army Ordnance Corps (AOC)
- Area Employment Company
- Corps School
Return to the Western Front[]
XI Corps returned to the Western Front in March 1918 in time to take part in the defence against the German Spring Offensive (the Battle of the Lys) and the final battles of the war as part of Sir William Birdwood's Fifth Army.
Order of Battle 27 September 1918[6]
GOC Lt-Gen Sir Richard Haking
Brigadier-General, General Staff: Brig-Gen J.E.S. Brind
Deputy Adjutant & Quartermaster-General: Brig.-Gen A.F.U. Green
Commander, Royal Artillery: Brig-Gen S.F. Metcalfe
Commander, Heavy Artillery: Brig-Gen F.A. Twiss
Commander, Engineers: Brig-Gen H.J.M. Marshall
- 19th (Western) Division (to Third Army 4 October)
- 47th (1/2nd London) Division (to III Corps 13 October)
- 57th (2nd West Lancashire) Division (from Third Army 11 October)
- 59th (2nd North Midland) Division
- 61st (2nd South Midland) Division (to Third Army 5 October)
- 74th (Yeomanry) Division (from Fourth Army 2 October; to III Corps 8 October)
World War II[]
XI Corps was reformed in the United Kingdom early in World War II.
Order of Battle Autumn 1940[7]
- 15th (Scottish) Division
- 55th (West Lancashire) Division
- Royal Artillery
- 147th (Essex Yeomanry) Army Field Regiment[8]
- 72nd Medium Regiment[9]
General Officers Commanding[]
Commanders included:[10]
- 1915-1918 Lieutenant-General Richard Haking
- Jul 1940-Nov 1941 Lieutenant-General Hugh Massy
- Nov 1941-Mar 1942 Lieutenant-General Noel Irwin
- Mar 1942-Sep 1942 Lieutenant-General John Crocker
- Sep 1942-Apr 1943 Lieutenant-General Gerard Bucknall
- Apr 1943-Jul 1943 Lieutenant-General Gerald Templer
Notes[]
- ↑ The long, long trail
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 The British Corps of 1914-1918
- ↑ Article: was the Australian Official History more truthful than the British? An essay by Chris Baker
- ↑ The Battles of the Somme 1916
- ↑ Italy
- ↑ Official History 1918 Volume V, p 125 and Appendix I.
- ↑ 11 Corps
- ↑ 147 (Essex Yeomanry) Field Regiment RA (TA)
- ↑ 72 Medium Regiment RA (TA)
- ↑ Army Commands
References[]
- Official History 1918: Brigadier-General Sir James E. Edmonds, Military Operations France and Belgium, 1918 Volume V: 26 September–11 November: The Advance to Victory 1947 (reprint Imperial War Museum, 1992) (ISBN 1-87023-06-2).
External sources[]
The original article can be found at XI Corps (United Kingdom) and the edit history here.