Lieutenant Colonel Alastair Edward Henry Worsley MBE (4th October 1960 – 24th January 2016) was a British explorer and British Army officer. He was part of the successful 2009 expedition that retraced Ernest Shackleton’s footsteps in the Antarctic.
He died in the January of 2016 while attempting to complete the first solo and unaided crossing of the Antarctic.
Early life
Henry Worsley was born on 4th October 1960 at the Garrett Anderson Maternity Home, 40 Belsize Grove, London, England. He was the only son of General Sir Richard Worsley GCB OBE (1923–2013) and his first wife, Sarah Anne “Sally”, eldest daughter of Brigadier J. A. H. Mitchell, of the British Embassy, Paris. He was distantly related to Frank Worsley, the captain of explorer Ernest Shackleton’s ship, the Endurance, and from childhood had a strong interest in the Antarctic explorers of the early twentieth century.
Education
Worsley was educated at Selwyn House, an independent prep school, and at Stowe School, then an all-boys independent senior school in Stowe, Buckinghamshire. A keen sportsman, he captained the school cricket team while at Stowe. He did not attend university, and entered the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst after completing school to train as an army officer.
Military career
Worsley was a soldier in the British Army for 36 years. He served with The Royal Green Jackets and later The Rifles. In 1988, he passed the Special Air Service (SAS) selection course and served in 22 SAS Regiment.
He was Commanding Officer of the 2nd Battalion Royal Green Jackets from 2000 to 2002, and commanded the 2001 British military operation in Afghanistan, known as “Operation Veritas”. He also served in Northern Ireland, Bosnia and Kosovo. His final tour before retirement was as a Special Operations Officer based in the The Pentagon, liaising on behalf of the British Army with United States special operations forces.
On 12th April 1980, Worsley was commissioned in The Royal Green Jackets, British Army, as a second lieutenant. He was granted the service number 509600. He was promoted to lieutenant on 12th April 1982, to captain on 12th October 1986, to major on 30th September 1992 (having attended Staff College), and to lieutenant colonel on 30th June 2000. He retired from the army on 4th October 2015.
On 12th October 1993, Worsley was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) “in recognition of distinguished service in Northern Ireland”. On 19th April 2002, he was awarded the Queen’s Commendation for Valuable Service “in recognition of gallant and distinguished services in the former Yugoslavia during the period 1st April 2001 to 30th September 2001”.
Antarctic expeditions
In 2008, he led an expedition to pioneer a route through the Transantarctic Mountains, reaching a point 97 miles (156 km) from the South Pole. The expedition commemorated the centenary of Shackleton’s Nimrod Expedition. He returned to the Antarctic in 2011, leading a team of six in retracing Roald Amundsen’s successful 900 miles (1,400 km) journey in 1912 to the South Pole, marking its centenary. In completing the route, he became the first person to have successfully undertaken all three of the routes taken by Shackleton, Amundsen, and Robert Falcon Scott.
Final expedition
Henry Worsley’s intention was to follow in the spirit of his hero, Shackleton, and before starting the trip raised over £100,000 for the Endeavour Fund, set up to assist injured servicemen and women. The patron of the expedition was Prince William, Duke of Cambridge.
In contrast to the 1997 solo crossing by Børge Ousland, Worsley travelled without a kite to help pull his 150 kilogram sledge.
Worsley arrived at his starting point, Berkner Island, on 13th November 2015 with the aim of completing his journey in 80 days. He covered 913 miles (1,469 km) in 69 days, and had only 30 miles (48 km) to go. However, he had to spend day 70 and 71 in his tent suffering from exhaustion and severe dehydration. Eventually he radioed for help and was airlifted to Punta Arenas, Chile. He was diagnosed with bacterial peritonitis. On 24th January 2016, he died of organ failure following surgery at the Clinica Magallanes in Punta Arenas. He was 55 years old.
Family
Worsley lived in Fulham, London. On 20th February 1993, he married Joanna, the daughter of Andrew Stainton, at St. Mary’s Church, Chilham, Canterbury, Kent. Together, they had two children; a son, Max, and daughter, Alicia.
Reception
Tina Jackson, meeting Worsley and other members of the 2009 expedition that went to the Antarctic “In Shackleton’s Footsteps”, notes in The Guardian that Worsley called the task of forming the team “gene-pool selection”, the other members also being descendants of members of the earlier expedition.
Sourced from Wikipedia
‘My journey is at an end. I’ve run out of time and endurance’: The last poignant diary entry and selfie of British explorer who died 30 miles short of becoming the first man to cross Antarctica alone.
Sourced from You-Tube
Posted on the RGJRA SITE
Taken from Facebook
Henry Worsley
Lt Col Henry Worsley has died after suffering exhaustion and dehydration during a solo attempt to cross Antarctica.
Henry, 55, was 71 days into his effort to become the first person to cross the Antarctic unaided.
He commanded 2 RGJ and completed several tours with 22 SAS. He left the Army in October 2015.
His wife Joanna announced the news, saying she felt “heartbroken sadness”. Henry died of “complete organ failure”, her statement added.
Henry was raising funds for the Endeavour Fund for wounded servicemen. A detailed statement is on their website.
Jamie Balfour, President of the RGJ Association, said
It is with huge sadness that I heard the news of the tragic death of Henry Worsley. A Green Jacket of many talented parts, an inspiring and thoughtful leader, an Antarctic legend and hero, a caring and compassionate soul, and a real friend.
His enduring story in this modern age is one of commitment to his dream, of unique physical and mental individual endeavour, of bravery and challenge against all the odds, and his intense love of his family.
We will remember him, and may his example be forever an inspiration to us all.
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Memorial at Peninsula think we should name the new polar ship after the polar explorer who died in his solo attempt to cross Antarctica. His hero was Ernest Shackleton (the name of one of our ships). Also rather interestingly, he was a distant relative of Frank Worsley who was the captain of the ship Endurance which was used on the failed mission just over a century ago. It was also Frank Worsley who successfully helped steer the modified lifeboat James Caird to South Georgia to get help and rescue the others left behind on Elephant Island. Henry Worsley was trying to raise funds for the Endeavour Fund which helps wounded, injured or sick ex-service men achieve their ambitions in the field of sport or adventurous challenges. In my mind, Henry Worsley showed British pioneering spirit, grit and determination.
19th April 2017
His Royal Highness The Duke of Cambridge, awarded the Polar Medal to Joanna Worsley – the wife of the late Antarctica explorer Lieutenant Colonel Henry Worsley.
Henry raised over £100,000 for the Endeavour Fund but died on a solo Antarctic crossing in 2016.
The Endeavour Fund was founded in 2012, as part of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry’s Royal Foundation. The fund supports recovery of wounded, injured and sick Servicemen and women.
Joanna Worsley…..
“When Henry died, he was raising money for The Endeavour Fund. His ‘fund’ now stands at about £600,000. After his death, the Endeavour Fund said they wanted to have an Award evening annually giving away 3 awards for bravery in the face of both mental and / or physical injuries. The 3rd of those awards is called the Henry Worsley award and is given to ‘the individual who has best inspired others through the demonstration of determination in the face of adversity whilst endeavouring to support others with their recovery through success in sport or adventurous challenge’.
Last year it was won by Neil Heritage, a bomb disposal expert. This year by Sean Gane, ex RGJ / Rifles. It is an inspirational charity.
Mark Wood Explorer….. REMEMBERING 16
It’s been a year for talented and inspirational people passing away. I have been shocked just as much as the next person – but in my own world it was the loss of a friend and extremely influential explorer Henry Worsley who lost his life in South America after crossing Antarctica solo and unsupported.
I met Henry at the South Pole in 2012 – I didn’t have a bond like his colleagues did in the military or from past expeditions but we connected quickly and he has influenced me in many ways since.
A professional who understood how to survive on long range polar expeditions – an incredible strategist – a formidable leader – a man of humour and in balance a man who understood the importance of family.
In the polar world we lost one of the modern greats – as I write this his good friend Lou Rudd is leading a team across the South Pole and has already cross the pole heading towards the final 400 Miles.
Lou and the SPEAR 17 are doing the expedition in the name of Henry Worsley – please take time to look at their blog and my thoughts are with any body who feels that sense of of loss this year.
ALICE WORSLEYWITH SEAN GANE RGJ / RIFLES THE WINNER OF
THE HENRY WORSLEY AWARD
AT THE ENDEAVOUR FUND ATTENDED BY HRH PRINCE HARRY.
Memorial At Peninsula have purchased one of Henry `s limited prints and in doing so has helped the endeavour fund.
ArticlesComments Off on The Light Infantry to The Rifles
Jan032016
The Light Infantry
The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert’s) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army, which served under various titles from ( 1685 to 1959 ).
32nd (Cornwall) Regiment of Foot (1702-1881 ).
The 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, created in 1741 and amalgamated into the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry in (1881 ).
The Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry (DCLI) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from ( 1881 to 1959 ).
The Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry (SCLI) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army. (1959 – 1968 ).
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The 105th Regiment of Foot (Madras Light Infantry) was an infantry regiment of the British Army from ( 1862 to 1881 ).
The 51st (2nd Yorkshire West Riding) Regiment of Foot, The 51st was formed in 1755 for service during the Seven Years’ War. Originally numbered the 53rd, Napiers, Regiment of Foot, and bearing the name of its colonel, Robert Napier, it was re-numbered in 1757, with the name of its new colonel, as 51st Brudenells Regiment. In 1759 they saw action at the battle of Minden, which later became their first battle honour. Following the war, the 51st had garrison duty in Ireland and Minorca, acquiring their county association in 1783 as the 51st (2nd Yorkshire West Riding) Regiment.
The King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry (KOYLI) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army. It officially existed from 1881 to 1968, but its predecessors go back to 1755. In 1968 the regiment was amalgamated with the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry, the King’s Shropshire Light Infantry and the Durham Light Infantry.
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The 53rd (Shropshire) Regiment of Foot was a British Army regiment founded in 1755. In 1881, as part of the Childers Reforms, it became The King’s Shropshire Light Infantry Regiment.
The 85th (Bucks Volunteers) Regiment of Foot was a British Army line infantry regiment. During the Childers Reforms it was united with the 53rd (Shropshire) Regiment of Foot to form the King’s Shropshire Light Infantry.
The King’s Shropshire Light Infantry (KSLI) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army, formed in 1881, but with antecedents dating back to 1755. In 1968 the KSLI was merged with the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry, the King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry and the Durham Light Infantry.
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The 68th (Durham) Regiment of Foot (Light Infantry) was an infantry regiment of the British Army, formed in 1758 and amalgamated into The Durham Light Infantry in 1881.
The 106th Regiment of Foot (Bombay Light Infantry) was an infantry regiment of the British Army from 1862 to 1881, the third to bear the number after the Black Musqueteers (1761–1763) and a regiment raised briefly in 1794.
It was formed by renaming the 2nd Bombay European Regiment, formed by the Honourable East India Company in 1839. In 1881 the 106th Regiment was joined with the 68th (Durham) Regiment of Foot (Light Infantry) to form the Durham Light Infantry, as its second regular battalion.
The Durham Light Infantry (D.L.I.) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from 1881 to 1968. It was formed in 1881 under the Childers Reforms by the amalgamation of the 68th (Durham) Regiment of Foot (Light Infantry) and the 106th Regiment of Foot (Bombay Light Infantry) along with the Militia and Volunteers of County Durham.
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The Light Infantry
The regiment was formed on 10th July 1968 as a large regiment by the amalgamation of the four remaining light infantry regiments of the Light Infantry Brigade:
Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry
King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry
King’s Shropshire Light Infantry
Durham Light Infantry
Amalgamation
On 24th November 2005 it was announced by the Ministry of Defence that, after discussions between the Light Infantry, the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment, the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment and the Royal Green Jackets, the four regiments would amalgamate to form a single, large regiment to be named The Rifles.
The new regiment was formed on 1st February 2007 with The 1st Battalion, The Light Infantry becoming 5th Battalion, The Rifles and The 2nd Battalion, The Light Infantry becoming 3rd Battalion, The Rifles.
ArticlesComments Off on Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry to The Rifles
Jan022016
The Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry
28th Regiment of Foot ( 1751 )
The 28th (North Gloucestershire) Regiment of Foot was a British infantry regiment from 1782 to 1881.
From 1751 to 1782 they were the 28th Regiment of Foot, and in 1881 they merged with the 61st (South Gloucestershire) Regiment of Foot to form the Gloucestershire Regiment.
The 61st (South Gloucestershire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, created in 1758 and amalgamated into The Gloucestershire Regiment in 1881.
the 49th (Princess Charlotte of Wales’s) (Hertfordshire) Regiment of Foot was a line infantry regiment of the British Army. During the Childers Reforms it was united with the 66th (Berkshire) Regiment of Foot to form Princess Charlotte of Wales’s Berkshire Regiment.
The 66th (Berkshire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, formed in 1758 and amalgamated with the 49th (Princess Charlotte of Wales’s) (Hertfordshire) Regiment of Foot into Princess Charlotte of Wales’s (Berkshire Regiment) in 1881.
The regiment was raised by the redesignation of the 2nd Battalion, 19th Regiment of Foot in April 1758, ranked as the 66th Regiment of Foot. In 1782 they took a county title as the 66th (Berkshire) Regiment of Foot.
The 62nd (Wiltshire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, which was raised as a line regiment in 1756 and saw service through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. As part of the Haldane Reforms, it was amalgamated with the 99th Duke of Edinburgh’s (Lanarkshire) Regiment of Foot in 1881, to form the Wiltshire Regiment.
The 99th (Lanarkshire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, formed in 1824 and amalgamated into The Duke of Edinburgh’s (Wiltshire Regiment) in 1881.
The regiment was raised in 1824 as the 99th Regiment of Foot, taking a county title in 1836 as the 99th (Lanarkshire) Regiment of Foot. In 1874 it was renamed to the 99th Duke of Edinburgh’s (Lanarkshire) Regiment of Foot, taking its title from Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh.
The Royal Berkshire Regiment (Princess Charlotte of Wales’s) was a line infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from 1881 until 1959.
The Wiltshire Regiment was a line infantry regiment of the British Army, formed in 1881 under the Childers Reforms by the amalgamation of the 62nd (Wiltshire) Regiment of Foot and the 99th Duke of Edinburgh’s (Lanarkshire) Regiment of Foot.
The regiment was originally formed as the Duke of Edinburgh’s (Wiltshire Regiment), taking the county affiliation from the 62nd Foot (which became the 1st Battalion) and the honorific from the 99th Foot (which became the 2nd Battalion). In 1921, the titles switched to become the Wiltshire Regiment (Duke of Edinburgh’s).
The Gloucestershire Regiment was a line infantry regiment of the British Army. Nicknamed “The Glorious Glosters”, the regiment carried more battle honours on their regimental colours than any other British Army line regiment. The Gloucestershire Regiment existed from 1881 until 1994 when it was amalgamated with the Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire) to form the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment.
The Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire) was an infantry regiment of the British Army.
The regiment was formed on 9th June 1959 after defence cuts implemented in the late 1950s saw the amalgamation of the Royal Berkshire Regiment (Princess Charlotte of Wales’s) and Wiltshire Regiment (Duke of Edinburgh’s), forming the Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire).
The Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment was a short-lived infantry regiment of the British Army
The regiment was formed in 1994 by the amalgamation of the Gloucestershire Regiment and the Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire).
ArticlesComments Off on The Devon and Dorset Regiment to The Rifles
Jan022016
The Devon and Dorset Regiment to The Rifles
11th Regiment of Foot ( 1751 )
11th (North Devonshire) Regiment of Foot in ( 1782 )
Devonshire Regiment ( 1881 )
The 39th (Dorsetshire) Regiment of Foot ( 1719 )
The 54th (West Norfolk) Regiment of Foot ( Originally formed in 1755 at Salisbury as the 56th Regiment of Foot and renumbered as the 54th Regiment of Foot.
It was renumbered when the 50th Regiment and 51st Regiment were disbanded )
The Dorset Regiment was a line infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from 1881 to 1958
The Devonshire and Dorset Regiment, usually just known as the Devon and Dorsets, formed in 1958 by the amalgamation of two county regiments, the Devonshire Regiment and the Dorset Regiment.
ArticlesComments Off on A day in a Riot and What was tour of duty in NI
Nov272015
A day in a Riot
C Company 2 RGJ during a 2 year tour of Londonderry early 70s. Rioting was more frightening than being involved in a shooting in some ways. CRACK CRACK CRACK and it may be as quick as that for a shooting incident (contact) with hopefully no casualties (in the early days we called shooters cowboys they were lousy shots and seldom hit what they fired at) but a riot was another thing all together. Some cities suffered here in England with the summer riots as they were called in 2011 or was it 2012? These riots were short lived minor scuffles with police here in England. A riot in early 71/72 in Londonderry was like a scene from a holocaust movie!! I don’t say that lightly either! We lived in a small car park known as the waterloo car park, at the end of the strand road and bottom of William St. We were only a short jogging distance from what was known as AGGRO CORNER!.
This was the starting point for almost all of the riots which turned into running battles, snatch squad attempts, shootings, petrol bombings, and nail and blast bombings! If my company was at the waterloo car park base on rotation of either city or enclave duties then you could rest assured that we were on AGGRO CORNER every evening and into early morning every single day/night!! The numbers of rioters involved ALWAYS scared me there were always thousands of them in every side street every alley every junction every street corner.
They had no shortage of ammunition to throw at us. AGGRO CORNER was the beginning of the area where BLOODY SUNDAY took place just in front of the Rossville flats! We would have our small macralon shields (after the metal police ones proved to be so useless) also the larger 6 foot macralon shields. We carried small fire extinguishers in our ammo pouches I think the ratio was 1 between every 2 or 3 men. We carried our respirators on our arm for speedier use, and we fired gas and rubber (as far as I recall) with no restrictions whatsoever! We stood in these streets for day after dreadful day, tired hurting and often hungry too.
The CQMS would leave the base with a small protection party and try to feed us and give us some tea (hay boxes in the early days) no tea bombs were around yet. Casualties would be taken to the rear of the macralon shields and were either treated on the spot (IF SERIOUS) or removed to base (IF VERY SERIOUS) by the medics! The riots would often have a short lull in fighting when Top of the Pops was about to start.
You could almost set your watch by this strange phenomenon! Cars would be burning and petrol bombs lit trails through the night sky blinding your night vision when they hit the floor/vehicles or the macralon wall between us and them! The noise of the human multitudes and the almost incessant steady bang of the baton guns and gas rounds and gas grenades fired from gas cups fitted to some rifles, was intense. It was madness in the extreme! When and if you were relieved and were allowed to get your weary body back to the car park you would sleep the sleep of the dead until it was again your turn in the line!! That’s what I recall as a day in a RIOT!
What was tour of duty in NI
A tour was not far off a year when you added all of the pre tour training, Special range work, terrorist recognition training, Vehicle driver training, Riot training, Int training, photography training, patrolling techniques, hearts and minds, lectures, and death by videos and slides of army restricted internal security films.
It would take longer to complete the training for a tour that the actual time spent on the ground in the province! Search courses, sniper courses, lectures from EOD officers, countless hours in ripe village, in forts, in muff ranges. “Civ pop” having a pop! Practice cordons, ICP locations, Incident commanders role, casualty evacuation training, New radio equipment to learn, Secure comms, scramblers, Vcp’s, Thropping, rummaging, lurking, Yellow cards, blue cards, pink cards, contact reports, patrol reports. Routes to hospitals, the ground in detail, Streets, short cuts, zap numbers, ammo checks.
Camp routine, patrol routine, actions on, sanger duties, rotation routines. Advance party, rear party, rear party, advance party! Boat or plane. Then the hand over take over upon arrival. Now you can start your tour! “THE TOUR IT’S SELF” with whatever it may bring casualties, deaths. Or not much ado about it! Four months down the line and you get to give your own handover take over on departure! Advance party, rear party, rear party, advance party! Boat or plane home.
Then start all over again! Ahhhh the memories! PpFfTtttttt!
The Chindits were a British India ‘Special Force‘ that served in Burma and India in 1943 and 1944 during the Burma Campaign in WWII. They were formed to put into effect Orde Wingate`s newly developed guerrilla warfare tactic of long-rang penetration. The Chindits were trained to operate deep behind Japanese lines. Their operations were marked by prolonged marches through extremely difficult terrain by underfed troops weakened by diseases such as malaria and dysentery. There is controversy over the extremely high casualty rate and the debatable military value of the achievements of the Chindits.
Beginnings The Chindits were the creation of the British Army Brigadier Orde Charles Wingate, then serving under General Archibald Wavell, the Commander-in- Chief of India Command. The name was suggested by Captain Aung Thin (DSO) of the Burma Army. Chindit is a corrupted form of the Burmese mythical beast Chinthé or Chinthay, statues of which guarded Buddhist temples.
In the East African Campaign of 1940–41, Wingate had begun to explore the ideas that he later used with the Chindits, when he created and commanded a mixed group of regular Sudanese and Ethiopian units together with Abyssinian partisans. Known as Gideon Force, they disrupted Italian supply lines and provided intelligence to British forces. As Commander-in-Chief of the Middle East Command in 1940, Wavell had given permission for Gideon Force for political reasons, because he had thought Wingate’s idea to be militarily too unorthodox.
After the disbandment of Gideon Force, Wavell requested Wingate for service in Burma in 1942, where it was intended that he raise irregular forces to operate behind the Japanese lines, in a manner similar to Gideon Force. Wingate arrived in Burma in March 1942, barely two months before the final Allied collapse and the Japanese conquest of Burma. Rather than organise irregular forces, Wingate spent his time touring the country and developing his theory of long-range penetration on paper. During the final stages of the British retreat from Burma, Wingate had himself specially flown back to India while the rest of the army walked out. Once in Delhi, he presented his proposals to Wavell.
Organisation and training
The 77th Indian Infantry Brigade, otherwise known as the Chindits, was gradually formed in the area around Jhansi in the summer of 1942. Wingate took charge of the training of the troops in the jungles of central India during the rainy season. Half of the Chindits were British: the 13th Battalion, the King’s Liverpool Regiment (nominally a second-line battalion, which contained a large number of older men) and men from the former Bush Warfare School in Burma, who were formed into 142 Commando Company. The other portion of the force consisted of the 3rd Battalion, the 2nd Gurkha Rifles (a battalion that had only just been raised) and the 2nd Battalion, the Burma Rifles (a composite unit formed from several depleted battalions of Burmese troops that had retreated into India in 1942).
Wingate trained this force as long-range penetration units that were to be supplied by stores parachuted or dropped from transport aircraft, and were to use close air support as a substitute for heavy artillery. They would penetrate the jungle on foot, essentially relying on surprise through mobility to target enemy lines of communication (a tactic that the Japanese had previously used in 1942 to great effect against British forces in Singapore and Burma).
The standard brigade and battalion structures were abandoned. The force was instead formed into eight columns, each of which was organised as: an infantry rifle company (with nine Bren light machine guns and three 2-inch mortars); a support group with the heavy weapons (four Boys anti-tank rifles, two medium Vickers machine guns and two light anti-aircraft guns); a reconnaissance platoon from the Burma Rifles; and a sabotage group from 142 Commando Company. Small detachments from the Royal Air Force (equipped with radios to call in air support), Royal Corps of Signals and Royal Army Medical Corps were attached to the column headquarters. The heavy weapons, radios, reserve ammunition and rations and other stores were carried on mules, which would also provide an emergency source of food once their loads had been depleted. With 57 mule handlers, each British column numbered 306 men (the Gurkha columns were slightly stronger, with 369 men).
Each man carried more than 72 pounds (33 kg) of equipment, which was proportionally more than the mules carrying the support weapons and other stores. This included a personal weapon, such as the SMLE rifle or Sten Gun, ammunition, grenades, a machete or Gurkha kukri knife, seven days’ rations, groundsheet, change of uniform and other assorted items. Much of this load was carried in an Everest carrier, which was essentially a metal rucksack frame without a pack.
Shortly before the first operation, one column was broken up to bring the remaining seven up to full strength. Two or more columns were commanded by a group headquarters, which in turn was commanded by the brigade headquarters.
The 77th Indian Infantry Brigade was an infantry formation of the Indian Army during World War II. It was formed in India June 1942. The brigade was assigned to the Chindits and organised into eight columns for operations behind enemy lines in Burma. In the March of 1945, it was converted into the 77th Indian Parachute Brigade and assigned to the 44th Airborne Division.
The original intent had been to use the Chindits as a part of a larger offensive. When this offensive was cancelled, Wingate convinced General Wavell to send the Chindits into Burma anyway. Accordingly, on the 8th February 1943, Operation Longcloth commenced and 3,000 Chindits, Wingate with them, began their march into Burma.
The Chindits crossed the Chindwin River on the 13th February and faced the first Japanese troops two days later. Two columns marched to the south and received their air supply drops in broad daylight to create an impression that they were the main attack. They even had a man impersonating a British general along with them. The RAF mounted air attacks on Japanese targets to support the deception. These columns were to swing east at the beginning of March and attack the main north-south in areas south of the main force. One column successfully carried out demolitions along the railway, but the other column was ambushed. Half of the ambushed column returned to India.
Five other columns proceeded eastward. Two, those of Michael Calvert and Bernard Fergusson, proceeded towards the main north-south railway in Burma. On the 4th March, Calvert’s column reached the valley and demolished the railway in 70 places. Fergusson arrived two days later to do the same. Despite these successes, however, the railway was only temporarily disabled, and resumed operation shortly afterwards.
On many occasions, the Chindits could not take their wounded with them; some were left behind in villages. Wingate had, in fact, issued specific orders to leave behind all wounded, but these orders were not strictly followed. Since there were often no established paths in the jungle along their routes, many times they had to clear their own with machetes and kukris (and on one occasion, a commandeered elephant). A single RAF squadron of six planes supplied them by air.
Once in Burma, Wingate repeatedly changed his plans, sometimes without informing all the column commanders. The majority of two of the columns marched back to India after being ambushed by the Japanese in separate actions. After the railway attacks, Wingate decided to cross his force over the Irrawaddy River. However, the area on the other side of the river turned out to be inhospitable to operations. Water was difficult to obtain and the combination of rivers with a good system of roads in the area allowed the Japanese to force the Chindits into a progressively smaller “box”.
In late March, Wingate made the decision to withdraw the majority of the force, but sent orders to one of the columns to continue eastward. The operations had reached the range limit of air supply and prospects for new successful operations were low, given the Japanese pressure. The columns were generally left to make their own way back to India. On the journey back, the most difficult actions involved crossing back over the Irrawaddy River. The Japanese had observers and patrols all along the river bank and could quickly concentrate once an attempt at a crossing was detected. Gradually, all the columns broke up into small groups. Wingate’s headquarters returned to India on its own ahead of most of the columns. Through the spring and even into the autumn of 1943, individual groups of men from the Chindits made their way back to India. The army did what they could for the men. In one case, an aeroplane was landed in an open area and wounded men were evacuated by air. Part of one column made it to China. Another body of men escaped into the far north of Burma. Others were captured or died.
By the end of April, after a three-month mission, the majority of the surviving Chindits had crossed the Chindwin river, having marched between 750–1,000 miles. Of the 3,000 men that had begun the operation, a third (818 men) had been killed, taken prisoner or died of disease, and of the 2,182 men who returned, about 600 were too debilitated from their wounds or disease to return to active service. Of the remaining men, Wingate practically hand picked those few he would retain, while the rest were put back under the normal army command structure as part of their original battalions.
Interlude
Although British Army officers in India criticised the effectiveness of the Chindits (Japanese railway communications had been out of commission for less than a week), their effect on the morale of the Allied troops in India was refreshing, and they were given plenty of publicity.
Wingate wrote an operations report on returning to India, which was controversial for many reasons, including attacks on officers under his command. The report had a tendency to excuse any mistakes made by its author (Wingate), while making vicious attacks on other officers, often based on limited information. Eventually, through his political allies in London, a copy of the report was given to Winston Churchill, who was impressed and took Wingate with him to the Quebec Conference. His concepts for long-range penetration operations behind Japanese lines received official backing at high level, and he obtained substantial US support for his force. The US Army also began its own plans for the group that later became Merrill’s Marauders.
As the members of the first expedition were making their way back to India, a second Long Range Penetration brigade, 111th Indian Infantry Brigade was being formed. Popularly known as The Leopards, the brigade was raised by General Wavell without the knowledge of Wingate, who was still in Burma and who was known to have a strong dislike for the Indian Army, its diverse troop formations, and its British officers in particular. Wavell personally selected the commander of 111th Brigade, Brigadier Joe Lentaigne.
Wavell intended to use two Chindit brigades alternately during 1944. While one brigade was operating behind Japanese lines for two to three months at a time, the other would be resting in India, while training for and planning the next operation. However, Wingate returned from Quebec with authority to implement far more ambitious plans for the second expedition, which required that the force be greatly expanded to a strength of six brigades. Wingate refused to use Indian Army formations in this force, because he maintained that their training in long-range penetration techniques would take longer and their maintenance by air would be difficult due to the varied dietary requirements of different Gurkha and Indian castes and religions, although he had little choice but to accept 111th Brigade, and two Gurkha battalions in 77th brigade. Since large numbers of trained British infantry were required, three brigades (the 14th, 16th and 23rd) were added to the Chindits by breaking up the experienced British 70th Infantry Division, much against the wishes of Lieutenant General William Slim and other commanders, who wished to use the division in a conventional role. A sixth brigade was added to the force by taking a brigade from the British 81st (West Africa) Division.
At Quebec, Wingate had also succeeded in obtaining a “private” air force for the Chindits, the 1st Air Commando Group, mainly consisting of USAAF aircraft. The Chindits were greatly encouraged by having aircraft on which they could call immediately for supply drops, casualty evacuation and air support. Other welcome American aid was the “K” Ration pack which, although it provided insufficient calories for prolonged active operations, was far better than the equivalent British ration pack.
The forces for the second Chindit operation were called Special Force, officially 3rd Indian Infantry Division, or Long Range Penetration Groups, but the nickname, the Chindits, had already stuck.
The new Chindit force commenced training in Gwalior. Men were trained in crossing rivers, demolitions and bivouacking. Calvert and Fergusson, both newly promoted to Brigadier, took command of two of the brigades, and were responsible for much of the training program and the development of tactical planning. Wingate himself was absent for much of the training period, first being out of the country to attend the Quebec Conference and then struck ill with typhoid from drinking bad water in North Africa on his return.
Plans The plans for the second Chindit operation went through many revisions.
The methods of the new Long Range Penetration force in 1944 differed from those of 1943. Wingate had decided on a strategy of creating fortified bases behind the Japanese lines, which would then send out raiding columns over short distances. This change was in part forced on him by strengthened Japanese patrols along the Burmese frontier, making a repeat of the successful infiltration in 1943 unlikely. In an imaginative move prompted by Colonel Philip Cochran’s assurance that he could transport both troops and supplies by glider, Wingate arranged for the bulk of the force to enter Burma by air, greatly accelerating the force’s ability to reach its target objectives. Advance units would land in gliders in preselected open fields in Burma, and prepare them for large-scale landings by transport aircraft. The lavish air support provided by Colonels Cochran and Alison of the 1st Air Commando Group proved critical to the success of the operation.
Wingate also had plans for a general uprising of the Kachin population of Northern Burma. He fought over these plans with the leadership of Force 136 (an organisation set up to liaise with resistance forces in Japanese-occupied countries), which was concerned that a premature uprising of the Kachins without a permanent British military presence would lead to their slaughter by the Japanese at the end of operations. Force 136 also had their own plans for a rising to be coordinated with the arrival of the regular army in Burma. Wingate was eventually convinced to scale back his original plans. Further complicating relations between the organisations were orders issued by Wingate to the commander of Dah Force (a British-led force of Kachin irregulars attached to the Chindits) not to coordinate operations with Force 136 for security reasons.
During the last months of 1943, planning was conducted to carry out the strategy for India as originally determined at the Quebec Conference. In November, the overall plan for the dry season campaign of 1944 determined by South East Asia Command focused on the use of the Chindits in the reconquest of northern Burma. These plans were approved by the Combined Chiefs of Staff at the Cairo Conference and although other offensives in Burma were scaled back or cancelled, Stilwell’s Northern Front offensive with the Chindits’ participation survived the cuts. The uncertainty of the plans nevertheless meant that the plans and contingency plans for the use of the Chindits repeatedly changed up to the very start of operations.
The Chindits were assigned the task of helping the forces of Joseph Stilwell push the Ledo Road through northern Burma to link up with the Burma Road and re-establish an overland supply route to China, by mounting a long range penetration operation behind the Japanese opposing his forces on the Northern Front. It had originally been intended that the IV Corps would attack on the Central Front and cross the Chindwin to tie up Japanese forces which could otherwise be used to aid the Northern Front. As the Japanese launched their own attack on the Central Front, this advance did not meet its objectives, but it still meant that most Japanese forces were engaged on the Central Front and were not available to reinforce the Japanese 18th Division on the Northern Front. The Japanese offensive on the Central Front resulted in further proposals and refinements of the plans for the Chindits.
On the 4th February 1944, Lieutenant General Slim, commander of the British Fourteenth Army, and USAAF General George E. Stratemeyer, commander of Eastern Air Command, issued a joint directive to General Wingate and Cols. Cochran and Alison of the 1st Air Commando Group, to march and fly into Indaw and from there under the command of the Fourteenth Army carry out the objectives of:
(i) Helping the advance of Stiwell’s Ledo force on Myitkyina by cutting the communications of the Japanese 18th Division, harassing its rear, and preventing its reinforcement.
(ii) Creating a favourable situation for the Yunnan Chinese forces to cross the Salween and enter Burma.
(iii) Inflicting the greatest possible damage and confusion on the enemy in North Burma.
Operation Thursday
On the 5th February 1944, Fergusson’s 16th Brigade left Ledo for Burma. They avoided Japanese forces by traversing exceptionally difficult terrain. The rest of the Brigades were brought in by air to create fortified bases with airstrips.
Three landing zones, codenamed Piccadilly, Broadway and Chowringhee, were selected. Calvert’s 77th Brigade prepared to fly by Hadrian glider into Piccadilly on the night of 5th of March. A last-minute aerial reconnaissance revealed Piccadilly to be covered with logs, making landing impossible. In some accounts of the incident, Wingate insisted that the operation had been betrayed and that the other landing zones would be ambushed. To proceed would be “murder”. Slim accepted the responsibility of ordering a willing Calvert to proceed with the operation, using Broadway instead. While Piccadilly had already been used to evacuate casualties during the first Chindit operation in 1943, Broadway had to be selected from the results of aerial reconnaissance. It turned out to be a poor landing ground and there were many casualties in crash landings, but Calvert’s men were just able to make the strip fit to take transport aircraft the next day. Chindit gliders also landed on Chowringhee the next day, without opposition.
It was later revealed that the logs on Piccadilly had been placed there to dry by Burmese teak loggers. The real problem was the failure to maintain continuous observation of the landing zones (e.g. by high-flying Spitfire photo-reconnaissance aircraft) before the forces were deployed.
Over the next week, 600 sorties by Dakota transport aircraft transferred 9,000 men to the landing zones. Chowringhee was abandoned once the fly-in was completed, but Broadway was held with a garrison which included field artillery, anti-aircraft guns and even Spitfire fighters for a brief period. Fergusson’s brigade set up another base named Aberdeen north of Indaw, into which 14th Brigade was flown. Calvert’s brigade established yet another, named White City at Mawlu, astride the main railway and road leading to the Japanese northern front. 111 Brigade set up ambushes and roadblocks south of Indaw (although part of the brigade which landed at Chowringhee was delayed in crossing the Irrawaddy River), before moving west to Pinlebu.
Ferocious jungle fighting ensued around Broadway and White City. At times, British and Japanese troops were in close combat, bayonets and kukris against katanas. On the 27th March, after days of aircraft attack, the Japanese attacked Broadway for several nights before the attack was repulsed with flown-in artillery and the aid of locally recruited Kachin irregulars.
However, a setback occurred when Fergusson’s brigade tried to capture Indaw on the 24th March. The original intention had been to seize the town and its airfields on the 15th March but Fergusson had to report that this was impossible. Wingate appeared ready to change the brigade’s mission but on the 20th March, he reinstated Indaw as the target. The brigade was already exhausted from its long march, and there was no time to properly reconnoitre the objective. The units were dismayed to find that the Japanese controlled the only water sources. Fergusson expected that 14th Brigade would cooperate in the attack, but they moved west instead. Japanese reinforcements had also moved into Indaw, which was a major road and rail centre. Fergusson’s battalions, attacking separately, were each repulsed. After this, most of the tired 16th Brigade were flown out.
Change of command
On the 24th March, Wingate flew to Imphal to confer with air force commanders. On the return journey, the USAAF B-25 bomber in which he was flying is believed to have flown into a thunderstorm and crashed in the jungle-covered mountains. All aboard were killed.
Slim, the commander of the British Fourteenth Army, which had loose operational control over Special Force, selected Brigadier Lentaigne to be Wingate’s replacement after conferring with Brigadier Derek Tulloch, Wingate’s Chief of Staff. The choice was made on the grounds that Lentaigne was the most balanced and experienced commander in the force; he had been an instructor at the Staff College at Quetta, had led a Gurkha battalion with distinction during the gruelling retreat from Burma in 1942 and had commanded a Chindit Brigade in the field (albeit for only a few weeks, but none of the other Brigade commanders had more experience). As an officer of Gurkha troops, he had a similar outlook and background to Slim. The other Brigade commanders were unknown quantities, mostly without staff qualifications – some had never even commanded a battalion-sized unit in combat before 1944 – and Wingate’s staff officers lacked the necessary combat experience
It is probably fair to say that nobody could have completely filled Wingate’s shoes. Wingate had sustained his force outside normal army command through political connections that no successor would have available. The other dilemma of any successor was that they would constantly be second-guessed by those who thought they knew exactly what Wingate would have done in a particular situation. The same officers who would go to extraordinary lengths to justify even the most flawed decisions by Wingate, would attack any successor, whenever the opportunity presented itself.
The move north
Several major changes were made at the highest level. Much of the air support was diverted to the critical battles of Imphal and Kohima, where troops were cut off and could only be resupplied by air. 23rd Brigade, yet to fly in, was also despatched to Kohima. Those Chindits already operating in Burma were formally subordinated to General Joseph Stilwell, who ordered the Chindits to abandon their dispersed operations around Indaw, and concentrate on interdicting the supply lines to the Japanese forces opposing his Northern Combat Area Command.
In April, Lentaigne ordered the main body of 111 Brigade west of the Irrawaddy, now commanded by John Masters, to move north and build a new stronghold, codenamed Blackpool, which would block the railway and main road at Hopin, 30 miles (48 km) south of Mogaung. Calvert was ordered to abandon White City and Broadway and move north to support Masters. Calvert was opposed to this, as his brigade had successfully held these two strongholds for months. Stilwell also feared that abandoning White City would allow Japanese reinforcements to move north. However, Lentaigne insisted that the Chindit brigades were too far apart to support each other, and that it would be difficult to use aircraft at White City and Broadway during the monsoon.
Masters’s force established Blackpool on 8 May and were almost immediately engaged in fierce fighting. Whereas White City had been deep in the Japanese rear, its defenders had had plenty of time to prepare their defences and its attackers had been a mixed bag of detachments from several formations, Blackpool was close to the Japanese northern front, and was immediately attacked by Japanese troops with heavy artillery support. As Calvert and Stilwell had feared, abandoning White City had allowed the Japanese 53rd Division to move north from Indaw. A heavy attack against Blackpool was repulsed on the 17th May, but a second attack on the 24th May captured vital positions inside the defences.
Because the monsoon had broken and heavy rain made movement in the jungle very difficult, neither Calvert nor Brodie’s 14th Brigade could help Masters. Finally, Masters had to abandon Blackpool on the 25th May, because the men were exhausted after 17 days of continual combat. Nineteen Allied soldiers, who were so badly injured as to be beyond hope of recovery and could not be moved, were shot by the medical orderlies and hidden in heavy stands of bamboo.
Final operations
On the 17th May, Slim had formally handed control of the Chindits to Stilwell. Stilwell insisted that the Chindits capture several well-defended Japanese positions. The Chindits had no support from tanks or artillery and this led to heavier casualties than before. Some have considered these operations to be abuse, but others have pointed out that, if the Chindits cannot carry out such operations, their usefulness in practice is open to question. And given Wingate’s lack of concern over casualties in the first Chindit operation, it’s difficult to suggest that the losses in these battles were inconsistent with his methods.
Over the period from 6th of June to 27th of June, Calvert’s 77th Brigade took Mogaung and suffered 800 casualties – 50% of the brigade’s men involved in the operation. Fearing that they would then be ordered to join the siege of Myitkyina, Calvert handed Mogaung over to Force X, shut down his radios and retreated to Kamaing, where Stilwell had his headquarters. A court-martial was likely until Stilwell and Calvert met in person, and Stilwell finally appreciated the conditions under which the Chindits had been operating.
111 Brigade, after resting, was ordered to capture a hill known as Point 2171. It did so, but was now utterly exhausted. Most of the men were suffering from malaria, dysentery and malnutrition. On 8 July, at the insistence of the Supreme Commander, Admiral Louis Mountbatten, doctors examined the brigade. Of the 2,200 men present from four and a half battalions, only 119 were declared fit. The Brigade was evacuated, although Masters sarcastically kept the fit men, “111 Company”, in the field until the 1st of August.
The portion of 111 Brigade east of the Irrawaddy were known as Morris Force, after its commander, Lieutenant-Colonel “Jumbo” Morris. They had spent several months harassing Japanese traffic from Bhamo to Myitkyina. They had then attempted to complete the encirclement of Myitkyina. Stilwell was angered that they were unable to do so, but Slim pointed out that Stilwell’s Chinese troops (numbering 5,500) had also failed in that task. By the 14th July, Morris Force was down to three platoons. A week later, they only had 25 men fit for duty. Morris Force was evacuated about the same time as 77th Brigade.
14th Brigade and 3rd West African Brigade remained in action, assisting the newly arrived British 36th Infantry Division in its advance down the “Railway Valley” south of Mogaung. Finally, they were relieved and withdrawn, starting on the 17th of August.
The last Chindit left Burma on the 27th of August 1944.
Battle of Kohima
23rd Brigade, which had been diverted from the main Chindit campaign, nevertheless acted as a long range penetration unit behind the Japanese fighting at Kohima. From April to June 1944, they marched long distances through the Naga hills, mostly in monsoon weather which made movement very difficult. They contributed in large measure to the starvation of the Japanese at Kohima, the decisive factor in that battle. Although not engaged in major battles, they accounted for large numbers of Japanese stragglers and foragers, suffering 158 battle casualties themselves.
The end
The Chindits had suffered heavy casualties: 1,396 killed and 2,434 wounded. Over half had to be confined to hospital and prescribed a special nutritional diet whilst hospitalised. As bad as the casualty figures may seem, those suffered by the force in 1943 were proportionally much higher.
The healthy men were sent to training camps to await new operations. However, when the army command evaluated the men and equipment required to return the Chindits to operational status, it was decided to transform the force into an Airborne Division in India. Beyond direct replacements, it was known that the British element of the Chindits would be decimated in 1945 by the need to repatriate personnel who had served more than four years overseas.
During the early months of 1945, several of the brigade headquarters and many of the veterans of the Chindit operations were reformed into the 14th and 77th Infantry Brigades and merged into the 44th Airborne Division (India), while the force headquarters and signals units formed the core of the Indian XXXIV Corps. The Chindits were finally disbanded in February 1945.
The London Memorial
There is a memorial to Orde Wingate and the Chindits on the north side of the Victoria Embankment next to the Ministry of Defence headquarters in London. The memorial was unveiled on the 16th of October 1990 by HRH The Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh. The front of the monument is in memory of the Chindits and also mentions the four men of the Chindits awarded the Victoria Cross: Major Frank Gerald Blaker, Captain Michael Allmand and Lieutenant George Albert Cairns and Rifleman Tulbahadur Pun. The battalions that took part are listed on the sides of the monument. Non-infantry units are mentioned by their parent formations only. No distinction is made between those units that took part in 1943 versus those of 1944. The rear of the monument is exclusively dedicated to Orde Wingate and also mentions his contributions to the state of Israel.
Sourced from Wikipedia and You Tube (BRITISH PATHE)