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Thread: The Indian Army 1914-1947

  1. #1

    The Indian Army 1914-1947

    The Indian Army

    The Indian Army of 1914 was the largest volunteer army in the world at that time. It consisted of' 107 single-battalion and l l two­ battalion regiments of' infantry, 38 cavalry regiments, a joint infantry-cavalry unit, three regiments of sappers and miners and 12 batteries of mountain artillery. In addition to these units the armies of the Indian princes and regiments of' European volunteers could. if necessary, be called on to reinforce the order of' battle. This army can quite reasonably be said to be the creation of one man - Viscount Kitchener of Khartoum. He was appointed commander-in-chief in 1903 and over the next seven years instituted a wide range of reforms, which were fundamental in setting the army on the path towards becoming an efficient, well-prepared force.

    Kitchener's first act was to renumber the army's regiments. For most of the 19th century there had been not one Indian Army but three, each recruited by the individual Presidencies - Bengal, Bombay and Madras - which administered the country. These three armies had eventually been unified in 1891, but each regiment continued to retain both its old pre-1891 number and the name of the Presidency which had originally raised it. Kitchener abolished these numbers and titles and renumbered all the regiments in a single sequence.

    Kitchener then moved on to consider the case of the Indian Staff Corps. In the wake of the Mutiny many British officers were detached from their regiments to fill civilian posts. A ready source of men was required to fill the consequent gaps and the remedy was found in the creation of the Indian Staff Corps. Officers were no longer gazetted directly to a regiment; instead they joined the Staff Corps and were only attached to the regiments with which they served. By the final quarter of the century, however, the formation and growth of the Indian Civil Service had gradually permitted many officers to return to regimental duties. The Staff Corps was, therefore, no longer required; Kitchener abolished it and once again officers were fully part of the regiment in which they served.

    More importantly, Kitchener abandoned the policy of distributing the army around the country, largely for internal security purposes, and of rarely moving regiments outside their town Presidency area. Regiments were instead made liable for service anywhere in India and all were required to complete a tour of duty on the North West Frontier, on the grounds that the main danger to India lay in a Russian invasion via Afghanistan. Higher formations - brigades, divisions and armies - were established in peacetime, providing a command structure that was immediately available on the outbreak of war. Divisional commanders (there were nine divisions under Kitchener's scheme - and army commanders (there were two - Northern and Southern) were all, in theory, freed from administrative work to allow them to concentrate on training; even divisional administration was to be handled by army headquarters. This reflected Kitchener's own particular prejudice against paperwork; but his successors (he left India in 1909) were not of the same caliber and were unable to manage the multifarious tasks and responsibilities of the post. The result was that, during the First World War, the office of the commander-in-chief (March 1914-October 1916, Gen. Sir Beauchamp Duff) ground to a virtual halt under an intolerable burden of petty administrative detail, to the detriment of the army in the field. A further shortcoming of the Kitchener reforms was also revealed in 1914. Divisional HQs had a number of responsibilities within their particular geographical area - for their own units, British volunteer units (the Auxiliary Force) and internal security. Kitchener's reforms made no provision for a successor command to take over once the divisions had left for the front, which simply added to the administrative chaos.

    With the creation of these higher formations there was a sudden need for trained staff officers. It had been difficult and expensive for Indian officers to return to the UK to attend the staff College at Camberley: Kitchener therefore founded a new staff College at Quetta. When the British authorities expressed their concern that these two separate colleges might well produce two separate schools of thought, Kitchener countered by stating that he would be happy to see evidence of any kind of serious military thought at all. In the event, the syllabus at Quetta was very similar to that at Camberley and personnel qualified at both establishments were in fact interchangeable.

    Kitchener wrote on numerous occasions about the importance of putting aside memories of the Indian Mutiny. Nevertheless, one consequence of that traumatic event continued to withstand all his attempts at reform. Until the very end of the Second World War the government maintained at least one British battalion in every Indian infantry brigade.

    The First World War.

    On the outbreak of war, the Indian Army consisted of a trained and experienced body of men, approximately 150,000 strong, and the Government of India immediately offered two infantry and two cavalry­ divisions for service anywhere This force, designated Expeditionary Force A, was destined originally for Egypt to relieve British troops there, but at the last minute was diverted to France where the divisions were thrown into the battle of La Bassee (October-November 1914). In the following March the Meerut Division formed the assault division at the battle of Neuve Chapelle. (Note that whilst Indian divisions and brigades were numbered, they were generally known by the name of their peacetime headquarters to prevent confusion with similarly numbered British formations. Under the circumstances the troops showed considerable courage in what was to them a new style of warfare and one for which they had not been trained. All the Indian regiments suffered from the cold, from homesickness, from the loss of their British officers, and from having to use unfamiliar equipment (some regiments had only just received their Lee-Enfield rifles). They were also hampered by the failure of the reserve system, which meant that reinforcements drafted to replace casualties were drawn indiscriminately from any number of regiments.

    The infantry divisions were withdrawn to Egypt in October 1915, but the cavalry stayed on in France until the spring of 1918, when they too sailed for Egypt to form part of the Desert Mounted Corps. Already in that theatre was Expeditionary Force E, which consisted originally of only the Lucknow Brigade, but eventually became responsible for all Indian forces in the Near East.

    Indian forces were also committed to East Africa. One infantry brigade (the Bangalore Brigade belonging to the Secunderabad Division) was sent to Tanganyika, whilst the five battalions of Expeditionary Force B were given the task of defending the Uganda Railway. By far the largest Indian force to serve outside the sub-continent was Expeditionary Force D, which consisted originally of only the Poona Division and was sent to the mouth of the Euphrates in November 1914 to guard British oil installations around Basra. Once the Imperial forces had established themselves there they were drawn further and further into the interior in the hope of gaining an easy victory over the Turks, and even of capturing Baghdad. The campaign, undertaken largely for reasons of prestige, quickly turned into a disaster.

    Logistical constraints demanded that the axis of the advance was obliged to remain close to the River Tigris, and the campaign consisted of a series of head-on clashes with the Turks. The advancing troops, the Turks. The advancing troops, however, far outstripped the ability of the rear echelon to keep them supplied or to provide adequate medical arrangements. The Poona Division was trapped at Kut and forced to surrender in April 1916 despite the best efforts of two relieving divisions. An investigation into conditions at the front found an appalling state of affairs, with only rudimentary care for the wounded and poor supply arrangements for both food and clothing. The campaign against Baghdad was brought to a halt as the War Office took over the direction of the campaign from tile Indian Army. The officer commanding the Expeditionary Force, General Sir John Nixon, was sacked and new, efficient administrative arrangements were made under a new GOC, Lieutenant General Sir Stanley Maude. In an even more far-reaching move, a new viceroy and a new commander-in­-chief of the Indian Army (Gen. Sir Charles Monro) were also appointed.

    With a change of commander the army, both in Mesopotamia and back home in India, was revitalized. Maude, having built up his for­ces to a position of overwhelming strength, set in train a series of limited objective attacks and the advance along the Tigris was a complete success. Faced with the collapse of Russia the new priority in the theatre was no longer to capture Baghdad, but to carry the war into Turkey itself, to the oil wells in the south of the country and along the shores of the Caspian Sea. Baghdad fell on 17 March 1917, but the advance continued, reach­ing the city of Mosul just before the Armistice. Indian Army ­­during the period of 1915-18 was rendered particularly difficult because the principal enemy, except in East Africa, was Turkey. Fighting fellow believers led by the Caliph, a man regarded as the successor to the Prophet, provoked a real crisis of conscience amongst Muslim soldiers and led to several small-scale mutinies, notably at Rangoon in December 1914 and at Singapore the following February. As a result, some units recruited from particularly strong Muslim areas, such as the 40th Pathans, had to be deliberately withdrawn from the Middle East. However, the majority of the troops, even those captured by the Turks (as at Kut for example) did not change sides.

    Despite all these problems, just over one million Indian troops served outside their country, of whom 62,000 were killed and 67,000 wounded. In this, the first campaign in which they were eligible for the award, Indian soldiers won 11 VCs.

    more to come......
    Last edited by SyedA; 03-21-2004 at 12:19 PM.
    __________________________________________________ _____________________

    Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan. Lord Pethick Lawrence

  2. #2

    Re: The Indian Army 1914-1947

    Formations created by Kitchener's reform, 1904

    Northern Army
    1st (Peshawar) Div.
    2nd (Rawalpindi) Div.
    3rd (Lahore) Div.
    7th (Meerut) Div.
    8th (Lucknow) Div.
    Kohat Bde.
    Bannu Bde.
    Derajat Bde.

    Southern Army
    4th (Quetta) Div.
    5th (Mhow) Div.
    6th (Poona) Div.
    9th (Secundarabad) Div.
    Burma Div.
    Aden Bde.
    Last edited by SyedA; 03-21-2004 at 05:55 PM.
    __________________________________________________ _____________________

    Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan. Lord Pethick Lawrence

  3. #3

    Re: The Indian Army 1914-1947

    Indian Expeditionary Forces 1914-18
    Force A:
    The Indian Corps & Indian Cavalry Corps in France
    Cavalry Corps: 1st Division, 2nd Division
    Indian Corps: 3rd (Lahore) Division, 7th (Meerut) Division

    Force B:
    The 27th (Banglore) Brigade and the Imperial Service Brigade in East Africa
    Force B was broken up in December 1914 and its units used for the defence of East Africa.

    Force C:
    Battalions in Uganada
    29th Punjabis, half battalions of Jind, Bharatpur, Kapurthala and Rampur Infantry Regiments (ISF), a volunteer 15-pdr. battery, a mountain 10-pdr. battery, a volunteer maxim battery and a Field Ambulance. Force C was broken up on arrival at Mombasa and its units subsequently served separately.

    Force D:
    Forces in Mesopotamia
    Cavalry Division (created from independent brigades December 1916) 6th (Pooma) Division, 7th (Meerut) Divisions, 12th Division, 15th Division, 15 th Division, 17th Division, 18th Division.

    Force E:
    Forces in Egypt:
    1st Mounted Division (later 4th Cavalry Division), 2nd Mounted Division (later 5th Cavalry Division), 11th Division.

    Force F:
    28th, 29th and 30th Brigades in Egypt
    i.e., 10th Division. The division was broken up in March 1915.

    Force G:
    29th Brigade in Gallipoli
    The brigade served away from its parent division
    __________________________________________________ _____________________

    Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan. Lord Pethick Lawrence

  4. #4

    Re: The Indian Army 1914-1947

    Service of Indian Formations 1914-19

    1st (Peshawar) Division: Formed pre-war; NW Frontier, Afghanistan 1919.
    2nd (Rawalpindi) Division: Fotmed pre-war; NW Frontier, Afghanistan 1919.
    3rd (Lahore) Division: Formed pre-war; France, Mesopotamia, Palestine, Palestine Occupation Force; broken up by 1923.
    4th (Quetta) Division: Formed pre-war; India, NW Frontier, Afghanistan 1919.
    5th (Mhow) Division: Formed pre-war; Internal security and training in India.
    6th (Poona) Division: Formed pre-war; Mesopotamia, captured at kut-el-Amara April 1916.
    7th (Meerut) Division: Formed pre-war; France, Mesopotamia, Palestine, Palestine Occupation Force, broken up in 1920.
    8th (Lucknow) Division: Formed pre-war; Internal security in India.
    9th (Secunderabad) Division: Formed pre-war; internal security in India, One Brigade to East Africa, Cavalry Brigade to France.
    10th Division: Formed 1914 in Egypt, broken up 1916.
    11th Division: Formed 1914 in Egypt, broken up 1915.
    12th Division: Formed 1915 in Mesopotamia, disbanded 1916.
    14th Division: Formed 1916 in Mesopotamia, broken up 1916.
    15th Division: Formed 1916 in Mesopotamia, disbanded 1919.
    16Th Division: Formed 1916 N.W. Frontier, Afghanistan 1919.
    17th Division: Formed 1917 in Mesopotamia; Mesopotamia, Iraq Occupation Force, broken up in 1928.
    18th Division: Formed 1917-18 in Mesopotamia, Mesopotamia, Iraq Occupation Force, broken up in 1920.
    Burma Division: Formed pre-war; internal security in Burma.
    1st Indian Cavalry Division: Formed 1914 in India, France, renumbered as 4th Cavalry, December 1916, Indian elements replaced March 1918 and sent to Egypt.
    2nd Indian Cavalry Division: Formed 1914 in India; France renumbered as 5th Cavalry, December 1916, Indian elements replaced march 1918 and sent to Egypt.
    1st Mounted Division: Formed Egypt 1918 from Yeomanry Mounted Division incorporating Indian elements from 4th Cavalry Division in France, but then renumbered as 4th; Palestine, Palestine Occupation Force, broken up 1921
    2nd Mounted Division: Formed Egypt 1918 from Indian elements of 5th Cavalry Division in France, but then renumbered as 5th, Palestine, Palestine Occupation Force; broken up 1920.
    Cavalry Division: Formed 1916 in Mesopotamia, Mesopotamia; broken up 1918, its brigades then serving independently.
    Aden Brigade: Formed pre-war; Aden.
    Bannu Brigade: Formed pre-war; N.W. Frontier.
    Derajat Brigade: Formed pre-war; N.W. Frontier.
    Kohat Brigade: Formed pre-war; N.W. Frontier.
    South Persia Brigade: Formed 1915; South Persia and Gulf; broken up by 1921.
    __________________________________________________ _____________________

    Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan. Lord Pethick Lawrence

  5. #5

    Re: The Indian Army 1914-1947

    Interesting info about Trans-Jordan Frontier Force which also mentions about working with Indian army in Palestine region.

    The Trans-Jordan Frontier Force

    http://homepages.force9.net/rothwell/images/tjffman.gifThe Trans-Jordan Frontier Force was created on 1 April 1926, to replace the disbanded Palestine Gendarmerie. It was a creation of the British High Commissioner for Palestine whose intention was that the Force should defend Trans-Jordan's northern and southern borders. The High Commissioner had been impressed with work done by The Arab Legion but local commanders thought it unnecessary to create an additional force when expansion of The Arab Legion might have been a better course of action. The Arab Legion immediately incurred a loss of more than half of its forces when they were transferred as cadre for the Frontier Force. In addition to the drop in personnel, The Arab Legion was also stripped of its machine guns, artillery, and communications troops. Unlike the Arab Legion, the TJFF was responsible to the British High Commissioner in Jerusalem rather than to Amir Abdullah of Trans-Jordan. The Force officially came under British Imperial Troops and appeared in British orders of battle.

    On creation at Sarafand on 1st April, 1926, with Lieutenant-Colonel FW Bewsher, DSO, OBE, MC, in command, the TJFF was organised into three cavalry squadrons (of 120 men each) and one camel company, together with six reserve troops (around 190 men). The first recruits to the TJFF were largely from the disbanded Palestine Gendarmerie. Arab peasants (fellahin) from Palestinian villages made up around 70 percent of the other ranks. There were some Sudanese in the camel company before 1930 when the company was replaced by a mechanised company. Jews and town Arabs, being better educated, served in the technical and administrative posts and by 1935 just under 25 percent of the Force were Circassians - a small ethnic, Muslim minority living in Trans-Jordan. The senior commanders were all British however junior officers were Palestinian Arabs, Circassians, Syrian Arabs, Sudanese and a few Jews. The Amir Abdullah was an Honorary Colonel of the Trans-Jordan Frontier Force from its inception.

    The TJFF commander was a British lieutenant colonel, with Headquarters at Zerqa. Second-in-command was a British major, responsible for administration, workshops, quartermaster's stores and pay. The adjutant, also a British major, was responsible for training and personnel and was aided by an assistant adjutant who was a local Arab officer.

    http://homepages.force9.net/rothwell...3-TJFF-sml.gifThree young TJFF troopers pose following the passing out parade which marked the end of their cavalry training. Zarqa, Trans-Jordan, 1939. (photo: Maj Tawfiq Mousa Ahmed) (Click the image to see original, full size)


    The squadrons and companies were all commanded by British majors, with another British officer as second-in-command. The cavalry squadrons were organised into three rifle troops (36 men) and one machine gun troop (36 rifles and 4 MGs). The normal tactical and reconnaissance unit however, was the half-squadron or half-company and these were commanded by local captains. Each half-squadron or company consisted of two troops, led by local lieutenants and captains. By the end of 1927 there were 39 officers (17 British), 12 warrant officers (all British), three staff sergeants and 676 other ranks. In 1930 there were 17 British officers, two in each of the four squadrons and companies with the remainder at Force HQ. In 1935 there were 24 British officers - the CO, seven majors and sixteen captains. Lieut-Col Bewsher relinquished command of the TJFF in 1928 and rejoined his Regiment in the Regular Army. Command of the Force passed to Major (local Lt-Col) CA Shute, CBE, Indian Army, previously second-in-command.

    The TJFF spent its first six months training in Palestine, first at Sarafand then, from October 1926, at Shunet Nimrin in the Jordan Valley. Shortly after the HQ moved to Zerqa, Trans-Jordan, east of the Jordan River. The cavalry squadrons were based at Zerqa and the camel company at Ma'an. In 1929, the TJFF was called upon to help deal with Arab unrest in Palestine. The camel company moved to Jericho and a cavalry squadron went to Jisr el Majamie. In early 1930 a second cavalry squadron was despatched from Trans-Jordan as reinforcement.
    In 1930, a mechanised company was formed and later that year the camel company disbanded. The addition of motorised troops extended the range of TJFF troops for it had been discovered that the horsed cavalry was unable to travel far into the desert. The new mechanised company was based at Ma'an. During the year the strength of the TJFF was 980 men, including 28 Jews.

    The TJFF, while more smartly turned out and drilled than the more pragmatic Arab Legion, was not regarded as an elite force and it must be remembered that it primary role was that of police or gendarmerie. The Force had encountered great difficulties pacifying the desert tribes and in February 1931, Glubb, second-in-command of the Arab Legion reached an agreement with the TJFF that saw the withdrawal of outlying TJFF detachments from the desert to Zerqa and Ma'an, leaving the desert to be patrolled by Glubb's newly formed Desert Patrol.

    TJFF Stations - 1933

    Zerqa (Trans-Jordan)
    HQ Wing

    one cavalry squadron

    one mechanised company
    Ma'an (Trans-Jordan)
    one mechanised company
    Jisr el Majamie (Trans-Jordan)
    squadron HQ and a half-squadron of cavalry
    Beison (Palestine)
    a half-squadron of cavalry
    Samakh (Palestine)
    squadron HQ and a half-squadron of cavalry
    Rosh-Pinah (Palestine)
    a half-squadron of cavalry

    In 1933 a second mechanised company was formed and further expansion occurred after the outbreak of the Second World War, in late 1940. In 1933 also, Lt-Col Shute completed his period of command of the Trans-Jordan Frontier Force, and was succeeded by Major (local Lieutenant-Colonel) CH Miller, 13/18th Hussars. Throughout this pre-war period, the TJFF was called upon to help quell Arab unrest (in protest at rising Jewish immigration) and, later, to help control Jewish immigration. At the same time, The Jewish Agency continually called for additional recruitment from the Jewish community. During November 1937, military forces together with the Police and the Trans-Jordan Frontier Force undertook an extensive operation near the Syrian frontier as a result of which a large gang was located and dispersed with casualties. The Force frequently participated in this kind of action and there was a steady trickle of casualties. The cost of operating the Force may be indicated by the British grant for the TJFF for 1938 which was a sum of 200,000 Lebanese pounds.

    On 1 January 1941, the cavalry squadrons were formed into 1st Cavalry (Horsed) Regiment at Jisr el Majamie followed in February by the formation of the 1st Mechanised Regiment (from the two mechanised companies) at Irbid. A Line of Communication Squadron was raised to protect the Baghdad-Haifa road.

    The first call to action was something of a disaster. The Mechanised Regiment was earmarked to join Kingcol, part of Habforce, in the relief of Habbaniya in Iraq in April 1941. ' D' Company of the Regiment was at the H4 pumping station on the Iraq Petroleum Company pipeline but when ordered to advance against Rutbah, the men refused to cross the border into Iraq. As a result, the Mechanised Regiment was excluded from the subsequent campaign and ' D' Company was disbanded. It was replaced by ' L' Company, formed from the Line of Communication Squadron. A new squadron, the Mobile Guard Squadron, was formed to take over the line of communication duties.

    http://homepages.force9.net/rothwell...cate-2-sml.jpgTJFF Certificate of Discharge, 26th September 1942 (photo: Maj Tawfiq Mousa Ahmed) (Click the image to see original, full size)


    During this period, the cavalry squadrons were sent to Irbid-Jordan to ensure the security of the region. A watch was also maintained on the Syrian border in case of infiltration by pro-Axis troops.

    A better performance was achieved when in June 1941, both the Cavalry and the Mechanised Regiments joined British and Commonwealth forces in the Syrian campaign. The TJFF regiments supported the 5th Indian Infantry Brigade advance on Damascus, via Deraa, Sheikh Meskine and Kuneitra. The TJFF acted as advance guard, scouts and flank protection. They were given the special task of protecting the railway line, with the horsed and mechanised regiments being given their own sectors to patrol. Following the conclusion of the campaign, the TJFF left Syria in the Autumn of 1941, leaving behind cadres to instruct the newly formed Syrian and Lebanese armies.

    In 1942, the Force was on the Turkish frontier on 'watch and ward' duties. In November 1943, the Mechanised Regiment left Zerqa for Bandar Abbas on the Persian Gulf to help with the Middle East Anti-Locust campaign. The regiment spent six months in Persia. The TJFF was at Jezireh, Syria, in 1944 helping to keep the Syrians and the French apart. At war's end in 1945, the Mechanised Regiment was in Syria and the Cavalry Regiment in northern Palestine.

    After the end of the Second World War, there were attempts at a return to pre-war normality, such as the holding of the "TJFF Open Horse Show and Display" at Sarafand, on the 27th and 28th June 1947, in aid of the The Jerusalem Babies Home (Anna Spafford’s) and the TJFF Benevolent Fund. However, the Force now became involved in helping with British attempts to control the growing violence between the Arabs and the Jews in Palestine. It was a role destined to make the Force extremely unpopular and the last CO, Colonel Hackett (later General Sir John Hackett, former CO of 4th Parachute Brigade which fought at Sicily, Taranto and Arnhem), was informed in January 1948 of the intention to disband the Force. On 9 February, 1948 the Trans-Jordan Frontier Force was disbanded. Many members of the unit were absorbed into The Arab Legion.

    __________________________________________________ _____________________

    Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan. Lord Pethick Lawrence

  6. #6

    Re: The Indian Army 1914-1947

    4 Indian Infantry Division

    Armoured Cars
    Central India Horse

    Artillery
    Field Regiments
    1st Field Regiment, RA detached to 5 Indian Inf Bde 15-May-41
    25th Field Regiment, RA
    31st Field Regiment, RA detached 14/17-May-41 to 22 Guards Bde

    Medium Regiments
    68th Medium Regiment, RA attached from HQ BTE. 212 Med Bty only until end Jun-41

    Brigades

    11 Indian Infantry Brigade
    1st Battalion (Wellesley's), 6th Rajputana Rifles
    2nd Battalion, 5th Mahratta Light Infantry
    2nd Battalion, The Queen's Own Cameron
    Highlanders

    5 Indian Infantry Brigade departs for Palestine 15/16-May-41
    1st Battalion, The Royal Fusiliers
    3rd Battalion, 1st Punjab Regiment (3/1 Punjab)
    4th Battalion (Outram's), 6th Rajputana Rifles

    7 Indian Infantry Brigade
    1st Battalion, The Royal Sussex Regiment
    4th Battalion, 11th Sikh Regiment
    4th Battalion, 16th Punjab Regiment
    __________________________________________________ _____________________

    Gandhi died by the hands of an assassin; Jinnah died by his devotion to Pakistan. Lord Pethick Lawrence

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