Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps

Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps
Active1 January 1942— present
Country New Zealand
BranchNew Zealand Army
ColorsBrown, Red and Green
AnniversariesCambrai Day 20 November
EngagementsBattle Honours are awarded to individual RNZAC units
Commanders
Colonel CommandantColonel (Rtd.) T.J. McComish
Military unit
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Equipment
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The Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps (RNZAC) is the overall umbrella grouping of Regular Force and Territorial Force units equipped with armoured vehicles in the New Zealand Army. The corps was formed in 1942 as the New Zealand Armoured Corps, before being given the Royal prefix in 1947. The RNZAC is second in seniority of corps within the New Zealand Army.

The Divisional Cavalry Regiment and the 4th Armoured Brigade[1] were among the foremost NZ armoured units during World War II, though at home the 1st Army Tank Brigade was also established.

Although the RNZAC did not deploy one of its own units to the Vietnam War, from 1965-1971 RNZAC personnel served within other New Zealand and Australian units including artillery, infantry, command and support, and logistics. Several members served as tank crew with the 3rd Cavalry Regiment of the Royal Australian Armoured Corps,[2] and 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment (U.S Army.)[3] Two RNZAC pilots served with the Australian 161st (Independent) Reconnaissance Flight.[4]

During the 1990s, corps personnel contributed to the deployment of a mechanized infantry company group to Bosnia-Hercegovina for UNPROFOR as part of the NZDF Operation Radian.

Among the surviving Territorial Force units at the end of the 20th Century was the Wai/WEC Squadron, later the Waikato Mounted Rifles in Hamilton, and the fast-diminishing New Zealand Scottish Regiment, also at squadron size technically but actually dwindling into single figures, in the South Island. The New Zealand Scots were finally disbanded in 2016.[5]

Current units

RNZAC personnel serve in:

Regular Force

Territorial Force

Equipment

A NZLAV

The RNZAC is primarily equipped with two types of vehicle:

  • NZLAV - the NZLAV armoured fighting vehicle (AFV) is a variant of the General Dynamics LAV III.
  • Pinzgauer - the Army's Light Operational Vehicle (LOV) with command and control, general service, and armoured variants.

Alliances

See also

Lineage of units

The units of the Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps have a complicated and intermingled heritage. The following table shows the relationship between units since 1944. Titles in bold denote regiments, while non-bold titles are individual squadrons.[6][7][8]

Lineage chart
1944New Zealand Scottish Regiment
(Infantry Corps)
Waikato Regiment
(Infantry Corps)
1st Armoured Regiment2nd Armoured Regiment3rd Armoured Regiment
19481st Divisional Regiment (New Zealand Scottish)
19501st Armoured Car Regiment (New Zealand Scottish)
19511st Armoured Regiment (Waikato)
1953Divisional Regiment
1956Suspended animation4th Armoured RegimentSuspended animation
19582nd Armoured Regiment
1958Queen Alexandra's Armoured Regiment
1959Waikato RegimentQueen Alexandra's RegimentWellington East Coast Regiment (City of Hasting's Own)
19601st Armoured Regiment
Waikato Squadron
1st Armoured Regiment
Queen Alexandra's Squadron
1st Armoured Regiment
Wellington East Coast Squadron
19631st Reconnaissance Squadron (New Zealand Scottish)2nd Reconnaissance Squadron (New Zealand Scottish)2nd Armoured Squadron (Waikato)1st Armoured Squadron (Queen Alexandra's)
1965Disbanded
19701st Squadron (New Zealand Scottish)2nd Squadron (New Zealand Scottish)Queen Alexandra's (Waikato/Wellington East Coast) Squadron
1982Waikato/Wellington East Coast SquadronQueen Alexandra's Squadron
1990Disbanded1st Armoured Group
New Zealand Scottish Squadron
1st Armoured Group
Waikato/Wellington East Coast Squadron
1st Armoured Group
A Squadron
1st Armoured Group
B Squadron
1993Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
New Zealand Scottish Squadron
Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
Waikato/Wellington East Coast Squadron
Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
A Squadron
Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
B Squadron
19994th Otago and Southland Battalion Group
New Zealand Scottish Squadron
6th Hauraki Battalion Group
Waikato/Wellington East Coast Squadron
Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
A Squadron
Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
B Squadron
20036th Hauraki Battalion Group
Waikato Mounted Rifles Squadron
2004Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
2011Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
New Zealand Scottish Squadron
Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
Wellington East Coast Squadron
2012Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles
Waikato Mounted Rifles Squadron
2013Disbanded
2024

Order of precedence

Preceded by New Zealand Army Order of Precedence Succeeded by

Further reading

  • Cooke, Peter; Crawford, John (2011). The Territorials: The History of the Territorial and Volunteer Forces of New Zealand. Auckland: Random House. ISBN 9781869794460.
  • Major G.J. Clayton, The New Zealand Army, A History from the 1840s to the 1990s, New Zealand Army, Wellington, 1990
  • Damien Marc Fenton, A False Sense of Security?, Centre for Strategic Studies New Zealand

References

  1. ^ Plowman, Jeffrey & Thomas, Michael. (2000). 4th New Zealand Armoured Brigade in Italy. Kiwi Armour. ISBN 978-0-473-06534-8
  2. ^ "3 Cav Veterans". VietnamWar.govt.nz, New Zealand and the Vietnam War. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  3. ^ "United States Bronze Star with V Device Brian David Chippindale 822606. Captain Royal NZ Armoured Corps Attached 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry, US Army" (PDF). The Vietnam List – NZ in Vietnam 1964–75. New Zealand Government. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  4. ^ "Capt Edwin Allerton Donald Brooker | VietnamWar.govt.nz, New Zealand and the Vietnam War". Archived from the original on 2 February 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  5. ^ Scottish Ties Still Strong, Otago Daily Times.
  6. ^ Plowman, Jeffrey; Thomas, Malcolm (2004). Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps. Vol. 6. Jeffrey Plowman. pp. 4–44. ISBN 095823504X. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Stowers, Richard (2008). Waikato Troopers, History of the Waikato Mounted Rifles. Hamilton: Richard Stowers. pp. 308–310. ISBN 9780473131463.
  8. ^ Pierce, Brett (2016). "End of an Era – Laying up of the New Zealand Scottish Regiment Colours" (PDF). The Red Hackle. 162. p. 30.