31st Indian Armoured Division


The 31st Indian Armoured Division was an armoured division of the Indian Army during World War II, formed in 1940, originally as the 1st Indian Armoured Division; it consisted of units of the British Army and the British Indian Army. When it was raised, it consisted of two Armoured Brigades and one Motor Brigade.

History

At the end of 1941, by which time the 1st Indian Support Group had joined the division, it had been renamed as the 31st Indian Armoured Division and its brigades redesignated as the 251st and 252nd Indian Armoured Brigades and the 31st Indian Support Group.
In mid-1942, by which time the support group had been disbanded, the 251st brigade was detached and the rest of the division was shipped to join the British Tenth Army and served in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. The division never saw combat, although the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade was detached to Egypt and saw heavy action in the Western Desert Campaign during 1941 & 1942 and again in 1944 and 1945 when, reformed as the 43rd Indian Infantry Brigade, it was sent to the Italian Campaign as an independent brigade. The closest the rest of the division came to combat was in April 1944 when it was rushed to Egypt to crush a mutiny among the Greek 1st Infantry Brigade.
The Tank Regiments received M4 Shermans in November 1943, thought to be in preparation for a transfer to Italy, which never came about, and only drove them in Iraq, Syria and Egypt.
The Division is now active as part of the present-day Indian Army, headquartered at Jhansi as part of XXI Corps as the 31st Armored "White Tiger" Division.

Formation 1942

Commander: Major General Robert Wordsworth
Commander Royal Artillery: Brigadier C.P.B. Wilson

[252nd Indian Armoured Brigade]