- Air Landing Regiment
An Air Landing was the term used for
British Army , glider-borne troops. Air Landing units included infantry battalions and light armoured regiments together with combat support and combat service support units and sub-units. TheGlider Pilot Regiment provided the aircrew to fly the gliders into battle (who were trained to fight alongside them on the ground thereafter). Although combat support and combat service support units had the term 'Air Landing' as part of their unit title, for example "53 Air-Landing Regiment, Royal Artillery" infantry battalions names remained unchanged. All units wore themaroon beret of airborne forces with their own capbadge.The Air Landing
Brigades formed an integral part of the 1st and 6th Airborne Divisions. Paratroopers tended to become scattered over a wide area on landing. This meant they took some time to compose a useful force, once on the ground. Although gliders needed a certain amount of ground to land the soldiers aboard arrived in larger groups (the Horsa glider carride a completeplatoon ready for combat.The British Army had been inspired in creating both glider-borne units and parachute units by the example of the German
Luftwaffe 's Glider Troops which had played a major role in Germany's invasions of the Low Countries, and Crete.Probably the most famous action involving a glider-borne unit was that at
Pegasus Bridge , the first landing of troops onD Day , as part ofOperation Tonga . On the night of 5/6 June 1944, D Company, the Second Battalion,Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (2nd Ox & Bucks), together withRoyal Engineers and men of the Glider Pilot Regiment (totalling 181 men), were carried in 6 Horsa gliders to capture the vital bridge (later renamed "Pegasus Bridge ") over the Caen Canal, and the bridge over theOrne River (since known as Horsa Bridge, and which is east of Pegasus Bridge). This was intended to secure the eastern flank to prevent German armour from reaching the area behindSword Beach and interfering with the beach landings there.Five of the Ox and Bucks's gliders landed very close to their objectives at 16 minutes past midnight and poured out of their battered gliders, completely surprising the German defenders, and taking the bridges within 10 minutes. They lost two men, Lieutenant Den Brotheridge and Lance-Corporal Greenhalgh, in the process. One Glider, assigned to the capture of Horsa Bridge, was landed at the bridge over the Rives Dives, some 7 miles from where they were meant to land. Most of the soldiers in this glider and moved through German lines towards the village of Ranville where they eventually rejoined the British forces. The Ox & Bucks were reinforced half-an-hour after the landings by 7th Battalion, The Parachute Regiment and linked up with the beach landing forces with the arrival of the Commandos under the command of
Lord Lovat .External links
* http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/stories/19/a7216319.shtml
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