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160th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps


FieldValue
unit_name160th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps
imageRoyal20Armd20Corps.gif
image_size150
captionBadge of the Royal Armoured Corps
dates1942–1943
countryUnited Kingdom
branch[[Image:Flag of the British Army.svg23px]] British Army
typeArmoured
sizeRegiment
command_structureRoyal Armoured Corps
disbanded1 April 1943

160th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps (160 RAC) was a short-lived armoured regiment of the British Army's Royal Armoured Corps serving in India during World War II.

Origin

160 RAC was formed on 15 July 1942 by the conversion to the armoured role of the 9th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment, a hostilities-only battalion created two years before in July 1940 and which had been assigned to the 212th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home), serving alongside the 6th South Wales Borderers, 10th Gloucestershire Regiment and the 18th Welch Regiment (which had left by May 1941), all of which had also been raised in July 1940. In common with other infantry battalions transferred to the Royal Armoured Corps, the personnel of 160 RAC, those not weeded out by psychiatrists, would have continued to wear their Royal Sussex cap badge on the black beret of the RAC.

Service

160 RAC embarked for passage from the United Kingdom to India on 29 October 1942, arriving on 22 December and moving to Secunderabad. There it came under command of 267th Indian Armoured Brigade. Later it moved to Poona. However, there was a change of policy, and on 1 April 1943 the regiment was re-converted to infantry, reverting to its previous title of 9th Royal Sussex and coming under command of 72nd Indian Infantry Brigade and, again, serving alongside the 6th SWB and 10th Glosters (both had also been converted, into 158 RAC and 159 RAC, respectively and later re-converted).

Notes

References

  • George Forty, "British Army Handbook 1939-1945", Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 1998, .

References

  1. Joslen p. 497.
  2. Forty pp. 50–51.
  3. Joslen pp. 497, 542.
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