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- 2nd Battalion, Irish Guards during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

2nd Battalion, Irish Guards



1st Nov 1939 Scare

14th Feb 1940 Colours

17th Mar 1940 Parade

23rd Mar 1940 Training

2nd Apr 1940 Lectures

21st May 1940 Orders

22nd May 1940 Defensive Positions

23rd May 1940 In Action

24th May 1940 In Defence

24th May 1940 Last Stand

25th May 1940 Last Stand

3rd Feb 1944 Exercise

4th Feb 1944 Exercise

9th Feb 1944 Address

14th Feb 1944 Orders

15th Feb 1944 Exercise

16th Feb 1944 Exercise

17th Feb 1944 Exercise

18th Feb 1944 Exercise

19th Feb 1944 Exercise

20th Feb 1944 Exercise

21st Feb 1944 Exercise

22nd Feb 1944 Exercise

23rd Feb 1944 Exercise

24th Feb 1944 Exercise

25th Feb 1944 At Rest

22nd Mar 1944 Visit

17th Jul 1944 Orders

18th Jul 1944 On the Move

19th Jul 1944 Counterattack

20th Jul 1944 In Action

24th Jul 1944 Orders

25th Jul 1944 Attack Made

26th Jul 1944 Digging in

31st Jul 1944 Attack Made

2nd Aug 1944 In Action

3rd Aug 1944 Opposition

4th Aug 1944 Trouble

5th Aug 1944 Wounded Evacuated

6th Aug 1944 Attack Made

6th Aug 1944 Attack Made

10th Aug 1944 On the Move

10th Aug 1944 Orders

11th Aug 1944 Attack Made

13th Aug 1944 Patrols

14th Aug 1944 Patrols

15th Aug 1944 Fighting Patrols

28th Aug 1944 Orders

30th Aug 1944 On the Move

31st Aug 1944 On the Move

1st Sep 1944 Advance

2nd Sep 1944 Orders

3rd Sep 1944 On the Move

5th Sep 1944 Rumours

6th Sep 1944 Advance

7th Sep 1944 In Defence

10th Sep 1944 Attack Made

12th Sep 1944 Patrols

17th Sep 1944 Happy Birthday

17th Sep 1944 Orders

17th Sep 1944 On the Move

18th Sep 1944 Advance

18th Sep 1944 Air Raid and Artillery

19th Sep 1944 Advance

19th Sep 1944 Recce

20th Sep 1944 Advance

20th Sep 1944 Bridge Inspected

21st Sep 1944 Advance

21st Sep 1944 On the Move

22nd Sep 1944 Moves

23rd Sep 1944 Attack Made

24th Sep 1944 Reliefs

25th Sep 1944 Defence

26th Sep 1944 Prisoners

27th Sep 1944 Patrols

28th Sep 1944 Reports


If you can provide any additional information, especially on actions and locations at specific dates, please add it here.



Those known to have served with

2nd Battalion, Irish Guards

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

  • Bolger Thomas Joseph. Gdsmn. (d.14th May 1940)
  • Charlton VC. Edward Colquhoun. Gdsmn. (d.21st April 1945)
  • Coogan Gregory. Pte.
  • Keegan William Francis. Grdsmn. (d.22nd January 1943)
  • Lynam James. L/Cpl. (d.24th May 1940)
  • Tucker David Henry. Cpl.

The names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of 2nd Battalion, Irish Guards from other sources.



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Want to know more about 2nd Battalion, Irish Guards?


There are:1394 items tagged 2nd Battalion, Irish Guards available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Second World War.


Grdsmn. William Francis Keegan 2nd Btn. Irish Guards (d.22nd January 1943)

Guardsman Keegan was the son of William Thomas and Emily Alice Keegan, of Kilmonogue.

He was 32 when he died and is buried in the Glenealy Church of Ireland Churchyard, Glenealy, Co. Wicklow, Ireland.

S Flynn



L/Cpl. James Lynam 2nd Btn. Irish Guards (d.24th May 1940)

Lance Corporal Lynam was the son of Elizabeth Lynam, of Ballytone.

He was 27 when he died and is buried in the Crookstown Catholic Churchyard, Co. Kildare, Ireland.

S Flynn



Cpl. David Henry Tucker 2nd Battalion Irish Guards

David Tucker was my granddad, sadly no longer with us. He, too, was a POW in Stalag 4B along with other survivors of the Anzio Landings in Italy. Like the other survivors, when he was captured by the Italian forces they handed them over to the Germans.

He was transported to Stalag 4B (a long long way from Anzio) where he spent the remainder of the war. I don’t remember any stories from the journey, but I remember lots of his stories about the hunger, but despite the hunger still unable to eat a tomato that was smuggled in to his hut from the commandant’s garden. (I have never successfully eaten a tomato without being ill). I also remember his stories of the camp’s liberation by the Cossacks (as he referred to them) and for the vodka they left with the starving POWs.

After he returned to the UK he vowed never to leave the UK again, nor to be hungry again. And, he was true to his word. If anyone remembers him, I would love to hear from you.

Diana Tucker



Pte. Gregory Coogan 2nd Battalion Irish Guards

My father, Pte Gregory Coogan of the 2nd Batt Irish Guards in Stalag V111 B. He is on the right of the photo. The man on the extreme left is a soldier from the Warwickshire regiment and is a survivor of the SS barn massacre; I believe his name is Charlie Daly. I understand that all three men lost a leg. My father was captured and lost a leg trying to evacuate the Dutch Royal Family from Holland in 1939. I think he was repatriated in 1944. This is his story:

I was captured in Boulogne on 23/5/1940. A mine took out my leg at the knee. Two chaps put on a tourniquet and put me on a stretcher, carried me along the road. A section of the Irish guards appeared and offered to escort me to the RAP. As we passed a graveyard, a lot of German troops popped up over the wall and demanded that the boys drop their weapons. They did-and dropped me too! I lay there by the road side and nearly got flattened by a passing Panzer tank. Eventually, two young Germans came along who spoke English. They said 'Ha ha Englisher blue blood!' I protested that I was Irish, from Ireland. They said 'Mr de Valera? We don't want to fight him!' Eventually I ended up in an open shed with other wounded Welsh and Irish. A German doctor offered to inform our next of kin of our status. Then he said 'Who is the worst wounded here?' Apparently it was me. He put me in a German ambulance with some German wounded and took me to Le Toquet, where the French amputated my leg a few days later. 2 weeks later I was moved back to the former British hospital at Camier. I was there for a while, and was due to have my stitches out, as I was told by Major Kimble, a Kiwi who operated on me, when we were told we were moving up to Lille. We were moved at night time, but my stitches had to come out. So, in the pitch black, by the side of the road, after midnight, I reminded Capt Carter of the Welsh guards to remind Kimble that the stitches had to come out. And he took them out there and then in the darkness. We were then detained in Eilghiel in Belgium for some weeks. Then we moved to Obermassfeld, part Stalag 9c, where we were registered. Then we moved to Badsulza. Eventually all the seriously injured were sent to work at a tobacco factory in Nordhausen for a considerable time.

Upon being recalled to Stalag 9c, we were told we were to be repatriated. We were dispatched to an old quarry, then put on a train, arriving finally at Rouen, France, after three days the SBO came to us on parade and said 'Men, I have bad news, repatriation has fallen through.' so we were sent back to the racecourse, previously a British camp. After some time, the Germans sent us to Stalag 8b, Landsdorf. I was there until November ‘43, when they started repatriation again. We embarked on a train to Sasslitz on the Baltic, then a boat to Malmo Sweden, then by train to Gothamburg, then a ship back to Leith in Scotland. Then a train Netley in Hampshire. Eventually everyone went home apart from me and a lad from Leeds, Rennison. The nurse in charge was the Queen Mother's cousin, Lady Margaret Bowes-Lyon. She escorted us to Rowhampton, where eventually I got fitted up with a limb in January 44.

I have many group photos from 8c and 8B, as well as photos of sports days and theatre shows. We would love to hear from anyone who remembers our father.

Back row from right, C Philips, C Clarke, D Ryan, H Chivers, W Mc Niell, W Anders.

Front row from right, D Cain, S Cooke, L Forrest, W Hamilton, D Mc Garry. 3 Aussies, 3 Irish, 2 N Zlds, 2 Eng and 2 Scotts.

4th left centre row Jackie Cooke

Back row,7th from left Jackie Cooke. Back row, 9 from left Robbie Anderson.

Front row, 7 from left Sean Kenny.

From right back row, Brady 2nd, Welsby 3rd

Back row from left 2nd Welsby, 3rd Brady, 2nd Btn.Irish Guards

Wesley & Brady 2nd Battn Irish Guards

All Kiwis

3 Cockneys

Fellows, Warwicks, on the right

From TelAviv, captured in Crete, then V111B

Medics 17/21 Hospital

All Cockneys

Work Party

Two Kiwis (Acropolis)

Chaplin on left

Dermot Coogan









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