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- No.4 Commando during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

No.4 Commando



   No. 4 Special Service Battalion was formed from Nos. 3 and 8 Independent Companies in November 1940. They saw action in Guernsey in the following weeks. At the end of February 1941 they became No. 3 Commando. In March they saw action in the Lofoten Islands and in December they were in Norway. In August 1942 they took part in raids on Dieppe and in February 1942 they were in Gibralta before moving to North Africa. In July they took part in the landings on Sicily and advanced through Italy before returning to the UK. No 3 Commando were in Normandy as part of the D-Day plans and remained in Europe until September when they returned to Britain. They saw action again in Holland and Germany from January 1940 to the end of hostilities.

 

28th Mar 1942 In Action

1st May 1944 Planning  location map

1st Jun 1944 Preparations

5th Jun 1944 On the Move

5th Jun 1944 On the Move

6th Jun 1944 In Action  location map

6th Jun 1944 Advance  location map

6th June 1944 Pathfinders

6th June 1944 Landings

6th Jun 1944 Landings  location map

6th Jun 1944 In Action  location map

6th Jun 1944 In Action  location map

6th June 1944 Battery Taken

6th June 1944 Assault

6th Jun 1944 Landing

6th Jun 1944 Landings  location map

6th June 1944 In Action

7th Jun 1944 Attack Made  location map

7th Jun 1944 Enemy Active  location map

7th Jun 1944 Digging in  location map

8th June 1944 Under Attack  location map

8th Jun 1944 Counter Attack  location map

8th Jun 1944 Enemy Attacks  location map

8th Jun 1944 Counter Attacks  location map

9th Jun 1944 Orders  location map

10th Jun 1944 Under Attack  location map

11th Jun 1944 Patrols  location map

12th Jun 1944 Attack Made  location map

18th Jun 1944 In Action

19th Jun 1944 In Action

20th Jun 1944 Shelling

24th Jun 1944 Instructions  location map

25th Jun 1944 Raid  location map

7th Jul 1944 Air Raid

12th Jul 1944 Inspection

14th Jul 1944 Memorial

17th Jul 1944 Reorganisation

9th Aug 1944 Visit

19th Aug 1944 Advance

21st Aug 1944 Advance

27th Oct 1944 Conferences  location map

28th Oct 1944 Conferences  location map

29th Oct 1944 Preparations  location map

30th Oct 1944 Orders

30th Oct 1944 Preparations  location map

31st Oct 1944 Orders  location map

1st Nov 1944 Assault

12th January 1945  On the Move

16th January 1945  On the Move

20th January 1945  Relief

21st January 1945  Snow

22nd January 1945  On the Move

23rd January 1945  In Action

24th January 1945  Advance

25th January 1945  Advance

26th January 1945  Patrols

27th January 1945  Patrols

28th January 1945  Patrol

29th January 1945  Shelling

30th January 1945  Patrol

31st January 1945  Patrol


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

No.4 Commando

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

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 No.4 Commando from other sources.



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Want to know more about No.4 Commando?


There are:1379 items tagged No.4 Commando 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.


Pte. Lesley Frank Tett No.6 Commando

Les Tett

Les Tett was born on 25h of March 1925. He enlisted on the 3rd of May 1943 and joined the Dorsetshire Regiment at the Infantry Training Centre in Wrexham then was sent to Achnacarry. He meet Elaine Kelly whilst in the Wrexham transit camp, they got married in 1946 and were sweethearts for 50 years In 1944 he was with No.1 Troop 6 Commando, and with No.4 Commando nominal for Normandy. He was wounded in action on D Day in Normandy. Les was promoted to Corporal in 1947 and served with the R.A.S.C. from 1947 to 1949.

Linda E Gray



Gnr. John Braithwaite 18th Field Regiment Royal Artillery

John Braithwaite, No.4 Commando (circled), 1941

In 1939, John Braithwaite went to France with the British Expeditionary Force, serving in the Royal Artillery. In June 1940 s the Germans pushed the BEF back to the coast, he was one who offered to hold the beachhead during the Dunkirk evacuation. When the last troops had been withdrawn, he dived into the surf and being a strong swimmer, struck out towards England. He was rescued by one of the small boats several miles off the French coast, and landed in Margate in the early hours of his 21st birthday.

In July 1940 John was then accepted for 'hazardous duties' and was posted to 23rd Heavy Training Battalion (later renamed No.3 Special Service Battalion). After 6 months tough training, these men became some of the first Commando. John was posted to No.7 Commando in January 1941 (which merged with 4th Special Service Battalion en route to the Lofoten Islands for the Operation Claymore raid in March 1941, to become No.4 Commando). No.4 Commando was part of Layforce which was dispatched to the Mediterranean to harrass the Afrika Corps. John recalled being offloaded from a submarine for the disastrous raid on Bardia in April 1941. Soon after, the Commandos were sent to defend Crete. They were grossly under-equipped, but fought hard against the overwhelming might of the German paratroopers but, of the 800 commandos sent there, about 600 were listed as killed, missing or wounded. Only 23 officers and 156 ORs escaped. On the 29th of May 1941 John was evacuated aboard HMS Orion, the cruiser was struck by Stuka bombs, with 260 deaths and 280 wounded. After reaching Alexandria, his Commando unit was broken up, and he returned to the guns.

On the 21st of January 1942, he was injured and captured in Tobruk. In late 1942, after recovering in a POW hospital in southern Italy, POW No.258058 John Braithwaite was transferred to the Italian-run Campo 52 near Genoa. Conditions were bad and, as supplies grew shorter, the men caught rats and cats to supplement their food. John and several others made an escape from Campo 52 but were recaptured and sent to Campo 70 Monturano (near Parma) and later to Stalag 339 Trieste in northern Italy. As the Allies drew nearer, he was transferred to a work-camp near Dresden called Arb.Komm.855. Later he was moved to Stalag IVB, 30 miles north of Dresden. From here, he escaped with a New Zealander called Arnold Franklin but was caught near the Czech border. Upon recapture in April 1944, he was put in Stalag IVA at Hohnstein, where he worked in jobs associated with a nearby lignite coalmine. John stayed in this camp until liberation.

He later emigrated to New Zealand, and served for two years with the RNZ Artillery in Korea, but that's another story. I would happy to hear from anyone with more details about any of the above. Feel free to contact me.

Phil Braithwaite



William Bidmead King's Royal Rifle Corps

My father, Bill Bidmead, served in the King's Royal Rifle Corps, stationed at Winchester. On disbandenment he went on to serve in a tank regiment, the Highland Light Infantry where he volunteered for the Commandos. He then served with No. 4 Commando on D-day and throughout the Normandy campaign. He was also at Walcharen and later joined No. 6. Commando preparing for the attack on the Japanese mainland.

Howard Bidmead









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