Devonshire Regiment
Devonshire Regiment (Airborne) Battledress – 1943
Extremely hard to find original badged Battledress to a Major to the 12th Battalion – The Devonshire Regiment, 6th Airborne Division. The P40 battledress is in good used condition. The jacket has printed Devonshire Regiment shouldertitles and Airborne Division patches. Embroidered Major ranking, wing and Glider patch on red coloured backing which is something typically Devonshire Regiment. Ribbons not present, sewing thread of the ribbons are still visible.
Fitted with a makers label, size 9. War-Department stamped with letter ‘N’ what is indicates the date 1943, this stamp is visible underneath the tailored collar (some loose stitching what makes it visible).
History:
The 50th Battalion, the Devonshire Regiment was renamed the 12th Battalion, the Devonshire Regiment in 1943, as a glider borne infantry unit within 6th Airlanding Brigade of 6th Airborne Division, and renamed again as 12th (Airborne) Battalion, The Devonshire Regiment. The battalion relocated to Bulford to retrain and re-equip for the pending invasion of North West Europe.
A Company was inserted by glider as part of the spearhead force for the Normandy landings, initially as part of the Armoured Reconnaissance Group under the command of Colonel ‘Reggie’ Parker. However, the wide dispersal of paratroops meant there was a shortage of infantry and A Coy was temporarily placed under command of 13th Para Bn. It was tasked with clearing the enemy from Herouvillette before returning to Ranville and rejoining the rest of the Battalion, which had travelled by sea because of insufficient aircraft.
On its first full night in Normandy the battalion suffered 3 killed and 16 wounded from enemy mortar and aircraft attacks.
On 9 June 1944 the 12th Battalion area was attacked by German tanks and infantry but held its positions. Later on 13 June, D Coy with the remnants of the 12th Para Bn attacked and secured Breville, after two attacks by a battalion of the Black Watch had failed.
Thereafter it helped to secure and hold the bridgehead until the launch of Operation Paddle on 21 August and the advance to the River Seine.
The battalion returned to Bulford in early September but was soon back into action in the Ardennes around the villages of Tellin and Bure.Later it held front line positions at Blerick in the Netherlands and returned to the UK in February 1945 in preparation for the airborne bridgehead operation over the Rhine – Operation Varsity.
The battalion deployed by glider on 24 March and succeeded in its task of capturing Hamminkeln with the loss of 140 men killed, wounded or missing.
The following day the battalion pushed out of the Rhine bridgehead with a troop of Churchill tanks and a troop of self-propelled anti-tank guns in support . The group encountered enemy forces after two miles and took 60 prisoners. Later that day they successfully secured the high ground overlooking Brunen but in doing so sustained a further 6 killed and 11 wounded.
On 2 April the battalion was involved in heavy fighting securing Lengerich and suffered a further twelve killed and four wounded. However, in two days it captured over 100 Germans.
The battalion suffered a rare set back when D and B Coys crossed the River Weser on 6 April with no anti-tank guns or mortar support and encountered Panther tanks. In the resulting engagement 51 men of D Coy were captured by the enemy. Generally, the boot remained on the other foot as the 6th Airborne continued its advance, and from 16 to 18 April the battalion captured over 150 enemy, as well as liberating Allied POWs and foreign farm labourers.
The battalion continued its advance to the Baltic coast, and the war diary notes that in the 41 days to 4 May, just under half of the 369 mile advance was travelled by the battalion on foot. It finished up at Hohen Viecheln on the Schweriner See about 10 miles south of Wismar.
The situation by this stage was chaotic, with German troops and civilians fleeing from the Russians who were advancing from the opposite direction. After initial contact with the Russians, the official brigade link up was made at a Russian Regimental HQ at Ventschow where the Commanding Officer and other members of the battalion were entertained to dinner.
The unit returned to the UK in May 1945.
Out of stock
Description
Extremely hard to find original badged Battledress to a Major to the 12th Battalion – The Devonshire Regiment, 6th Airborne Division. The P40 battledress is in good used condition. The jacket has printed Devonshire Regiment shouldertitles and Airborne Division patches. Embroidered Major ranking, wing and Glider patch on red coloured backing which is something typically Devonshire Regiment. Ribbons not present, sewing thread of the ribbons are still visible.
Fitted with a makers label, size 9. War-Department stamped with letter ‘N’ what is indicates the date 1943, this stamp is visible underneath the tailored collar (some loose stitching what makes it visible).
History:
The 50th Battalion, the Devonshire Regiment was renamed the 12th Battalion, the Devonshire Regiment in 1943, as a glider borne infantry unit within 6th Airlanding Brigade of 6th Airborne Division, and renamed again as 12th (Airborne) Battalion, The Devonshire Regiment. The battalion relocated to Bulford to retrain and re-equip for the pending invasion of North West Europe.
A Company was inserted by glider as part of the spearhead force for the Normandy landings, initially as part of the Armoured Reconnaissance Group under the command of Colonel ‘Reggie’ Parker. However, the wide dispersal of paratroops meant there was a shortage of infantry and A Coy was temporarily placed under command of 13th Para Bn. It was tasked with clearing the enemy from Herouvillette before returning to Ranville and rejoining the rest of the Battalion, which had travelled by sea because of insufficient aircraft.
On its first full night in Normandy the battalion suffered 3 killed and 16 wounded from enemy mortar and aircraft attacks.
On 9 June 1944 the 12th Battalion area was attacked by German tanks and infantry but held its positions. Later on 13 June, D Coy with the remnants of the 12th Para Bn attacked and secured Breville, after two attacks by a battalion of the Black Watch had failed.
Thereafter it helped to secure and hold the bridgehead until the launch of Operation Paddle on 21 August and the advance to the River Seine.
The battalion returned to Bulford in early September but was soon back into action in the Ardennes around the villages of Tellin and Bure.Later it held front line positions at Blerick in the Netherlands and returned to the UK in February 1945 in preparation for the airborne bridgehead operation over the Rhine – Operation Varsity.
The battalion deployed by glider on 24 March and succeeded in its task of capturing Hamminkeln with the loss of 140 men killed, wounded or missing.
The following day the battalion pushed out of the Rhine bridgehead with a troop of Churchill tanks and a troop of self-propelled anti-tank guns in support . The group encountered enemy forces after two miles and took 60 prisoners. Later that day they successfully secured the high ground overlooking Brunen but in doing so sustained a further 6 killed and 11 wounded.
On 2 April the battalion was involved in heavy fighting securing Lengerich and suffered a further twelve killed and four wounded. However, in two days it captured over 100 Germans.
The battalion suffered a rare set back when D and B Coys crossed the River Weser on 6 April with no anti-tank guns or mortar support and encountered Panther tanks. In the resulting engagement 51 men of D Coy were captured by the enemy. Generally, the boot remained on the other foot as the 6th Airborne continued its advance, and from 16 to 18 April the battalion captured over 150 enemy, as well as liberating Allied POWs and foreign farm labourers.
The battalion continued its advance to the Baltic coast, and the war diary notes that in the 41 days to 4 May, just under half of the 369 mile advance was travelled by the battalion on foot. It finished up at Hohen Viecheln on the Schweriner See about 10 miles south of Wismar.
The situation by this stage was chaotic, with German troops and civilians fleeing from the Russians who were advancing from the opposite direction. After initial contact with the Russians, the official brigade link up was made at a Russian Regimental HQ at Ventschow where the Commanding Officer and other members of the battalion were entertained to dinner.
The unit returned to the UK in May 1945.
Additional information
Weight | 3000 g |
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