First Battalion IG Info

Discussion in 'The Brigade of Guards' started by saintconor, Oct 10, 2008.

  1. saintconor

    saintconor Senior Member

    Anyone have the war diary of the 1st Battalion in North Africa?
     
  2. Gerard

    Gerard Seelow/Prora

    Hi conor

    I moved this post to its own thread - you might have better success if it stands out a bit!
     
  3. Tom Canning

    Tom Canning WW2 Veteran WW2 Veteran

    Conor -
    Don't have the diary of Irish Guards but they were in the 24th Guards Bde of the 1st Div in Nth Africa - then at Anzio where they took a very bad mauling losing nearly half of the battalion - came home and never fought again - the survivors being split into other battalions.
    Cheers
     
  4. saintconor

    saintconor Senior Member

    Thanks folks. I have the book 'A history of the Irish Guards in the Second World War' and the father of my uncle (by marriage) gets a mention. I was wondering if maybe he was mentioned in the war diary also.

    At 1 a.m. on 30th March No. 2 Company filed down the track
    past the Doll 's House and through No . 3 Company. It had not rained
    all day, and it was a clear, cold night lit only by the stars . A sharp
    wind blew across the valley from the ridge . No. 11 Platoon went by
    led by Lieutenant Colin Lesslie ; then came Major Bucknill with
    C.S .M. Ferguson ( "the Skipper "), Lance-Corporal Fildes, carrying
    the Company's wireless, and Captain Bethell, R .A., with his signallers
    ; after them came No . 10 and No. 12 Platoons. Lieutenant
    Tony Rochford, commanding No . 12 Platoon, brought up the rear ;
    he waved cheerfully as he disappeared into the dark . Half an hour
    later Captain Kennedy reported that No . 2 Company was all across
    the Beja road and that there was not a sound to be heard.
    About five o'clock Colonel Scott, with field-glasses the size of
    hock bottles, and the Brigadier went up to the observation post
    under the Hurricane . The Adjutant and the Signal Officer were there
    already with the control set . They could say that the Company was
    all right so far, because Corporal Fildes had been sending a regular
    tuning call—a faint whisper—"Paddy two, Paddy two ." At half-past
    five Corporal Fildes spoke at last, "Sunray for Sunray, " and Colonel
    Scott snatched the spare headphones from Lieutenant Synge am
    Bucknill's voice was conversational . "No trouble so far. We dodged
    wo patrols on the way over. We are more than half-way up the slope
    and have been for some time . It is much steeper from now on.
    Colin will start climbing again in a few minutes . Have the guns got
    one up the spout ? So long . Over." "All set here . Good luck,
    Sam. Off. " Fifteen minutes ticked slowly by on the watch propped
    up in front of the O .P. The irregular harassing fire continued monotonously
    like maroons as it had done for the past hour—bang bang !
    pause, bang ! pause, bang, bang, bang ! pause . A thin crackle
    drifted across the valley . "Listen . " It came again, louder and
    longer. "My God ! M.Gs." "And grenades. Listen." "And
    mortars. Look." Short flashes burst on the hillside and faint white
    pillars of smoke appeared against the dark background . Suddenly
    Major Bucknill came up on the air . " I want support on the eastern
    edge, now." The F.O.O . must also have been calling to his guns at
    the same time, for a troop behind the farm immediately shot a short
    concentration. The noise of the shell bursts rolled away, but the
    crackle of small arms continued . It was just beginning to get light,
    and then with a violent crash the barrage came down on Recce
    Ridge.
    After ten minutes there was a break in the gunfire while the
    barrage lifted to the rear of the ridge . Through their glasses the
    observers could see dots moving on the crest of the ridge ; there
    were very few of them, and they soon disappeared . The wirelesses
    were quite dead, and nobody could see the flicker of a lamp or a
    Very light . For an hour the guns fired their set tasks . The unnatural
    silence which followed was cut by the short tapping of Brens
    and the long, hysterical whir-r of Spandaus There was still no call
    for artillery support, no signal for smoke . In the O .P . the Brigadier
    was tugging his moustache while Colonel Scott never took his eyes
    from his glasses . "What can be happening, Andrew ?" As if in
    answer Colonel Scott shouted "Here they come . Oh, thank God !
    Well done !Small groups of men came over the top, joined each
    other and split apart again as mortar bursts puffed up between them.
    They trickled down the slope, halted and turned back . The firing
    increased, and now the Spandaus drowned the Brens . More groups
    came round the side of the hill and disappeared into the dark undergrowth.
    There was firing on the top and bottom of the ridge, but
    the middle was dead . Colonel Scott called for smoke and the guns
    started again, raining canisters on the ridge . The fall of smoke
    brought a wild outburst of firing, but it died away as the wind
    dispersed the cloud into wisps . All along the line of its position the
    Battalion watched and listened . The firing on the ridge became
    shots irregular . There was no sound of Brens now, only isolated rifle
    m".achinIe-pitstols'sanswered by the faint rattle of Schmeisser
    all over now, one way or the other," said Colonel Scott . "Keep up
    Rawlinson'sthe smoke as long as possible . " He ordered Captain
    little force back from M'Dakrene and sent Lieutenant McInerney
    and two detachments of mortars out on the left to help the men of
    No. 2 Company on their return journey . "They will be coming back
    by sections, if at all . " It was half-past eight.
    Five wounded men came back on the left—Sergeant Deazley,
    Sergeant Mears, Guardsman McCafferty and two gunners, and were
    picked up by Lieutenant McInerney . Two unwounded men came
    in later on that night, Guardsmen Mills and Cox . That was all out
    of 103 officers and men.

    Rifleman 7010709 John McCafferty - Royal Ulster Rifles
    Enlisted 15th February 1926 - Discharged 21st May 1928

    2nd December 1929 enlisted into the Irish Guards
     

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