This is an apolitical forum for discussions on the Axis nations, as well as the First and Second World Wars in general hosted by Marcus Wendel's Axis History Factbook in cooperation with Michael Miller's Axis Biographical Research, Christoph Awender's WW2 day by day, Dan Reinbold's Das Reich and Christian Ankerstjerne's Panzerworld.

Markus Becker wrote:Lets ignore logistics for a moment. I know logistical shortcomings alone would have doomed this undertaking, but what could the British Army have done, if the Germans had somehow managed to land?
How many Divisions did Britain have, what was their combat readyness(weapons+training), where were they stationed and so on. And before I forget it, did Britain know where the Germans intended to land?
Links to websites are especially appreciated.
Markus

Andreas wrote:Also see this thread, it may contain some info:
viewtopic.php?t=38244&start=0
All the best
Andreas






Markus Becker wrote:Thanks, I already found that one with goolge. The invasion can´t happen before September, because first France has to be defeated and second the RAF must be finished off. So it´s Dunkirk->Battle for France->BoB->Invasion. I already got some inormation from another forum. In September the Brits had 17 fully and 8 partially equipped Divisions. IMO enough to deal with a first wave of 5 Divisions.


taylorjohn wrote:I never ceased to be amazed by the way people invent numbers in order to support their own arguments.
[snips]
The first wave for the German invasion consisted of elements of 9 divisions.

JonS wrote:NZ had a Bde Gp in England during this period. Their exploits - and some peripheral information - can be found here: http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-corpus-WH2.html
You will need to trawl through to find which 3 inf bns were involved, but also included were some Arty, MGers, Engineers, and other div troops. There is also covereage in the campaign volume 'To Greece' here: http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Gree-c2.html (which, BTW, gives the bns as 21, 22, and 23). Also, check the 'Problems' and 'Documents' volumes for addl material.

[5 September] The order from GHQ Home Forces ran as follows: ‘Emergency Move. NZ Force and 8 R Tanks under command General Freyberg will move to area EAST of TUNBRIDGE WELLS to be selected by Commander 12 Corps. On arrival this area FORCE will come under command of 12 Corps and will be held in reserve for counter offensive role.’ For further information the General went to GHQ Home Forces, where he learnt what the commander had not been willing to say over the telephone—that after the heavy bombardment of Dover from Gris Nez, Mr Churchill had ordered that if an invasion took place and Dover was captured it must be retaken at all costs. To take part in this all-important counter-attack the New Zealand brigades were being transferred to the outskirts of the Dover-Folkestone area. The signals strength for this role was increased by 100 British signallers ...
The brigades left Aldershot late on 5 September, stopping and starting all through the night, listening to the drone of aircraft on their way to bomb London and eventually settling down under cover in the woods before first light. East of Maidstone there was 5 Brigade, north of the Maidstone-Charing road was 7 Brigade, now commanded by Brigadier Falconer, and at Charing there was Milforce, an armoured group, commanded by Brigadier Miles and formally constituted the following morning.
Their instructions were specific and detailed. Seventh Brigade would deal with airborne landings in the Chatham-Maidstone area; Milforce and 5 Brigade would prepare to counter-attack in the direction of Dover and Folkestone. ...


Return to WW2 in Western Europe & the Atlantic
Users browsing this forum: CommonCrawl [Bot], Google Adsense [Bot], Tom from Cornwall and 1 guest