War is essentially chaos, and the line between control and sickening confusion is paper-thin. If one takes care, the violence applied can be focused with precision, yet even when care is taken, it can easily degenerate into wild and formless mayhem.1
General Chuck Horner
A general’s foremost duty is to win his nation’s battles, no matter when or where they might take place. To this end, a general must prepare himself and his men as best he can in the periods that precede conflict. It has been a frequent criticism by historians that generals have performed the latter poorly. When it came time to fight, they found it was not the battle for which they had prepared and, as a result, many generals were deemed to have failed either to prepare their men or to win.2
Among this group of ‘failed’ generals was Major General George Kitching, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 4th Canadian Armoured Division (4 Cdn Armd Div) from 29 February to 21 August 1944. Kitching was relieved of his command by Lieutenant-General Guy Simonds, commander of 2nd Canadian Corps (2 Cdn Corps), on 21 August after twenty-one days of operations, fourteen days of which involved heavy fighting to break out of the Normandy bridgehead and trap the remnants of the German Army in an area of France known as the Falaise Gap. The story of Kitching and the 4 Cdn Armd Div in Normandy, as portrayed by current literature, is consistently negative.
Each commander is bound by a unique set of situational and organizational constraints that must be taken into consideration before any valid evaluation of a unit or its commander’s performance can be rendered. The current body of literature concerning the 4 Cdn Armd Div is missing three very important examinations relevant to any discussion of the performance of the division:
1. There is no clear description of the division command environment and how Kitching and his staff interacted to create the operational tempo required in operations.
2. There has been no comprehensive examination of the training of the division to ascertain whether the division was properly prepared for its role in Normandy, and if not, why not?
3. There has been no comprehensive examination of how the administrative/logistical processes within the division either facilitated or hindered the operational tempo of the division.
Simply discussing the operations of the division, as has been done to date, does not provide the fidelity of information needed to determine whether the division was capable, from a material perspective, of actually carrying out the operations ordered.
The division, its leadership cadre and the methods through which the division operated throughout the Normandy campaign must therefore be scrutinized.3 This book will establish that, despite entering battle for the first time during one of the most challenging phases of Allied operations in August 1944, the 4 Cdn Armd Div under Kitching’s leadership proved resilient and adaptive in overcoming the volatile and unpredictable nature of warfare in Normandy. The chaos and destruction of the August 1944 Normandy battles transformed the division into a battle-hardened combat formation that would distinguish itself through its sustained drive across France.
Armoured forces feature in this book and their origins and early development form a subject of immense historical importance. There has been considerable debate concerning the defeat of British armoured forces in May 1940 and the ‘poor’ performance of British and Canadian armour formations in Normandy. The historiography involved in this debate is substantial with the many factors involved given widely varying weight.
One view has emphasized the economic and strategic aspects of British (and Canadian) rearmament to explain operational and tactical factors that influenced the effectiveness of the armoured forces.4 Another view contends that the Allies won through the massive application of resources, artillery and air power and that this material superiority compensated for the ‘poor’ combat performance on the part of the Anglo-Canadians.5 Some authors, supported in part by the reflections of Canadian generals such as Major General Charles Foulkes and Major General Harry Foster, have developed the notion of a hierarchy of operational and tactical effectiveness, placing the Germans first, followed in order by the Americans, the British and finally the Canadians.6
Foulkes, the GOC of 2nd Canadian Infantry Division (Cdn Inf Div) stated that the Canadians were ‘no match’ for the battle-hardened German troops and Canadians would not have been successful ‘had it not been for our air and artillery support’.7 Foster’s assessment is even more compelling when he states that Canadians were ‘no match for the Germans once they were dug in’.
It could be argued that everything being equal, defenders always hold an advantage over attackers. But in Normandy everything wasn’t equal. We held the advantage in the air, at sea and on the ground. Yet every time our troops got beyond the range of supporting artillery or sour weather grounded our fighter-bomber cover, the Germans stopped us cold.8
The blame for this tactical ineffectiveness has usually been focused on how the forces were employed, referred to as operational technique.
In Raising Churchill’s Army, David French argued that three years of setbacks finally taught the British how to fight and that from 1942 onwards the army discovered how to make its system work, emphasizing its strengths and masking its weaknesses. French highlights the British techniques by citing a report from Italy in 1943:
Our tactical methods are thorough and methodical but slow and cumbersome. In consequence our troops fight well in defence and our set-piece attacks are usually successful, but it is not unfair to say that through lack of enterprise in exploitation we seldom reap the full benefit of them. We are too flank-conscious, we over-insure administration, we are by nature too apprehensive of failure and our training makes us more so.9
Constrained by a finite supply of manpower, but supplied with an abundance of resources, the British, and in particular General B.L. Montgomery, developed an operational technique that avoided manoeuvre in favour of set-piece attrition battles conducted according to a ‘master plan’ designed to conserve manpower.10 French concluded that this system served the needs of the British Army ‘remarkably well’.11
In British Armour in the Normandy Campaign, 1944 John Buckley argued that any assessment of the employment and effectiveness of British armour, and by extension Canadian armour, during the Normandy campaign must be viewed in the light of 21st Army Group’s operational technique. He stated that
. . . early expectations placed on British armoured forces were quite at odds with the realities of warfare in 1944 and demonstrated an unrealistic view of the capabilities of armour. Moreover, the balancing of 21st Army Group’s operational techniques with the employment of armour did not always take place effectively. The consequences of firepower reliance, narrow front attacks, and close control and its impact on the use of armour were not fully appreciated by British planning and operations staff. The impact of this was that at times commanders and planning staff called upon armour to fight in a quite unsuitable manner in northwest Europe in 1944, and this has provided the yardstick by which British armour has come to be measured.12
While it remains unlikely that the discussion over the effectiveness of Anglo-Canadian armoured forces will ever be definitively settled, two deductions can be made from the debate: Canadian armoured divisions were never as potent as those of the German Army; yet through the efforts of the officers and men who made these divisions a fighting force, they would become good enough to do their part in winning the war.
Criticism of the Canadian Army efforts in Normandy has centred on the argument that the 2 Cdn Corps operations designed to trap the German forces in Normandy were not pressed forward with sufficient resolve, resulting in the escape of some 250,000 German soldiers.13 The expectation was that the Canadians should have been more successful in operations Totalize and Tractable and that 4 Cdn Armd Div, as the spearhead for the Canadian advance, should have closed the Falaise Gap sooner to prevent the escape of those German soldiers. C.P. Stacey, the official Canadian Army historian, expressed his thoughts as follows:
It is not difficult to put one’s finger upon occasions in the Normandy campaign when Canadian formations failed to make the most of their opportunities. In particular, the capture of Falaise was long delayed, and it was necessary to mount not one but two set-piece operations for the purpose at a time when an early closing of the Falaise gap would have inflicted grievous harm upon the enemy and might even, conceivably, have enabled us to end the war some months sooner than was actually the case. A German force far smaller than our own, taking advantage of strong ground and prepared positions, was able to slow our advance to the point where considerable German forces made their escape.14
Stacey concluded that ‘dissatisfaction with the division’s operations south of Caen was reflected, almost inevitably, in a change of command . . .’15 Consequently statements such as ‘Major General George Kitching was dismissed following what Simonds considered 4th Canadian Armoured Division’s poor performance in Totalize and Tractable,’ populate the current literature.16
Kitching receives some support in Reginald Roy’s book 1944: The Canadians in Normandy (1984) which provided a detailed re-examination of the Canadian actions highlighting many of Kitching’s troubles. Nonetheless, Roy leaves readers to decide whether or not Kitching was fairly treated. Key to this book however is that Dr Roy was involved in extensive correspondence with many of the surviving leaders of the 4 Cdn Armd Div. I was given access to these letters which provided the evidence to clarify many questions surrounding the actions and operations of the division in Normandy.
Harsh Canadian criticism of Kitching comes from John English in The Canadian Army and the Normandy Campaign (1991) who argued that the ‘less than successful performance of Canadian formations’ can be explained by the inability of Canadian commanders to leverage the strengths of British/Canadian doctrine to achieve success on the battlefield.17 English argued that Simonds’ plans for Totalize and Tractable were ‘essentially sound’ and that the ‘lacklustre showing of Canadian arms in Normandy must be laid at the feet of division commanders.’18 English concluded that they were at best ‘mediocre performers’.19 In particular, English characterized Kitching as ‘youth without knowledge’ and implied that his actions ‘compromised’ the operations of the 4 Cdn Armd Div during these two operations.20
Terry Copp in Fields of Fire (2003) has conducted a detailed re-evaluation of the Canadian Army’s contribution to the Allied campaign in northwest Europe. Copp offers a new balance sheet for the Normandy campaign concluding that the Canadian Army that fought in Normandy ‘played a role all out of proportion to its relative strength among the Allied armies.’21 The conclusion that one takes away from Fields of Fire is that the combat environment was much more complex than the typical operations-focused narrative would have you believe and that the Canadian Army deserves greater credit than the current histories have been willing to offer.
Commenting on Canadian generalship in Normandy, Copp concluded that it was not possible ‘to argue that any of the three Canadian divisional commanders passed the test of battle [at Falaise],’ but at the same time stated that it was ‘not clear how much this failure of leadership at the divisional level mattered’22 since the command decisions of Montgomery and General Omar Bradley were more instrumental in the final outcome at Falaise. Commenting on Kitching, Copp stated that ‘assigning major responsibility for the events of 17–21 August to the senior commanders [Montgomery and Bradley] does not explain or excuse the command failures that marred the record of 4th Armoured Division during this crucial period.’23 He asserts that during Totalize and Tractable Kitching ‘functioned as little more than a spectator’ and remains critical of Kitching’s decision to advance ‘his entire division on a single axis to the Falaise–Trun road’ during the advance to close the gap on 17 August.24
The harshest critcism of Kitching comes from Antony Beevor in his book D-Day: The Battle for Normandy (2009). Beevor states, ‘The division [4 Cdn Armd Div] was also hampered by the lethargy and incompetence of its commander, Major General George Kitching . . .’25
These statements are representative of the assessments of Kitching’s performance while in command.
The official reason given by Simonds for Kitching’s dismissal was that he [Kitching] ‘while possessing many excellent military characteristics and a most attractive personality Major General KITCHING has not shown in operations that grip of a situation and that power of definite decision so requisite in a DIVISIONAL COMD.’26 Kitching fails to come to his own defence in his book Mud and Green Fields. Operations Totalize and Tractable are not discussed in any great detail although he does highlight many of the key issues that he had to deal with during these operations and during the closing of the Falaise Gap.27 Kitching concluded this portion of his book by stating that, given the circumstances within which he had to command, he doubted that anyone could have done any better.28
Since military organizations are built on strict hierarchical lines of rank and authority, it has been natural for many writers to focus their evaluations and conclusions of fault on the generals who were in charge. In Military Misfortunes: The Anatomy of Failure in War (1990), a detailed examination of failure on the battlefield, Eliot Cohen and John Gooch concluded that blaming defeat in battle on any one individual commander was typically inappropriate and that closer examination of the organization was needed.29 They concluded that any ‘view that ascribes all fault or praise to a commander is the equivalent of concentrating only on operator error when highly complicated machines malfunction’.30 Blaming the commander alone for the lack of success on the battlefield without an equivalent examination of the structures through which he worked and how these structures stood up to the stresses they encountered provides only a partial answer.
Since 21 Days is concerned with division command a fundamental understanding of the command environment within a division is necessary. Command has been defined as the ‘authority vested in an individual for the direction, coordination and control of military forces’.31 In its purest form, the role of the commander is to decide on a course of action, allocate specific tasks to subordinate commanders and the resources necessary to accomplish those tasks. In accepting a command position, the commander accepts the additional burden of accountability to his superiors for the outcome of his actions and those of his subordinates. This accountability can never be shared nor delegated.32
Military staffs evolved over time as a means of helping commanders manage the growing complexity of warfare. The function of the staff was to provide the commander and his subordinate commanders with the information, recommendations and coordination required to allow commanders to make informed and timely decisions.33 A Second World War Canadian division had two types of staffs: the general staff, which was concerned with the planning, coordinating and execution of operations; and the special staff, which provided the commander and general staff with advice and assistance in specific professional or technical areas.34
A consequence of the increased complexity of warfare during the Second World War was that the staff came under enormous stresses that could cause the division to fail, especially if the staff was not properly trained and led. This study will therefore focus on the two key leaders of the general staff, the General Staff Officer 1 (GSO1) and the Assistant Adjutant and Quarter Master General (AA&QMG) and evaluate how they functioned in leading their respective staffs in supporting the division commander.
Kitching inherited a staff team that for the most part had been together since 1943 but there has been no clear assessment of their effectiveness prior to Kitching taking command. The staff teams in the GSO and AA&QMG branches would, for the most part, remain intact throughout August and would become, as Kitching described, ‘a powerhouse of talent’35 that would provide exceptional service to the division in Normandy and beyond. As a testament to their talent and abilities, many would become senior leaders in Canadian industry and in the Canadian military after the war.36
In The Art of War Sun Tzu identified doctrine as one of the five ‘fundamental factors’ of war.37 Doctrine attempts to bring order to the chaos of battle by advocating standard ways of operating among the people, units and organizations of a military force. Doctrine articulates ‘what shall be employed’ and ‘how it shall be employed’.38 The challenge in the formulation of doctrine was the development of standard operating procedures that balanced the requirement for uniform and predictable action with the need to maintain flexibility and freedom of action on the battlefield.39 The challenge for commanders was finding a delicate balance between these two imperatives.
The Canadian Army initially lacked any comprehensive training or experience on how to command, lead or operate armoured forces in battle before the start of the Second World War. What did exist was almost exclusively based on the knowledge, efforts and ability of Major General Frank Worthington, the recognized founder of the Canadian Armoured Corps.40 With the outbreak of war, the Canadian Army had a considerable task ahead in deciding how its armoured formations would be trained, equipped and led. As a member of the Commonwealth, the Canadian Army turned to the British Army, resulting in the Canadian adoption of British doctrine and practices.
In the British and Canadian armies, doctrine was established through a series of publications and pamphlets. These pamphlets provided the detailed information on the composition, training and tactics to be used by the British and Canadian armies and they also provided the information on how armoured formations were supposed to operate.41 Military Training Pamphlet No. 41: The tactical handling of the Armoured Division and its Components was the key document.42 The main pamphlet, The tactical handling of Armoured Divisions (Part 1), detailed the characteristics, structure and roles of an armoured division across the spectrum of tactical operations. This pamphlet was supported by two other pamphlets, which detailed the characteristics and tactics for an armoured regiment (Part 2) and the motor battalion (Part 3) in greater detail.
Timothy Harrison Place has argued that British armour doctrine was issued ‘too casually’, and ‘too late’ and was ‘too vague and imprecise to resolve the problems generated’ by three years of confusion over the proper structure and employment of armoured forces.43 Part of the problem resulted from the British War Office practice of giving local commanders considerable latitude to use and operate armoured forces differently from the official doctrine.44 How an armoured division operated therefore became a reflection of the personality of the commander and his leadership style.
No two commanders would command or run the same division in the same way. Each commander would establish a unique command environment. Consequently, understanding the working relationship between the GOC, his subordinate commanders and the key division staff members is vital to understanding how and why an armoured division operated as it did.
Since the 4 Cdn Armd Div was a subordinate unit of three higher formations, 2 Cdn Corps, First Canadian Army (First Cdn Army) and 21st Army Group, the operational policies of the three commanders, Simonds, General (Gen) Harry Crerar and Montgomery, respectively, must be examined to see if their operational policies on the employment of armoured forces differed, and if so, how, from the official doctrine. Of particular interest are a series of pamphlets issued by Montgomery during his appointments as commander Eighth Army and as Commander 21st Army Group. The pamphlets, Eighth Army: Some Brief Notes for Senior Officers on the Conduct of Battle (1942)45 and Notes on the Employment of Tanks in Support of Infantry in Battle (1944) outlined his thoughts on a wide range of topics, including command and leadership.46 While Montgomery’s writings extolled the need for initiative on the battlefield events would show that his leadership and command style rarely allowed his subordinates much room for either innovation or initiative on the battlefield.47
Simonds’ approach to operations and training has been described as ‘pragmatic’ and ‘analytical’.48 His ‘Operational Policy’ for 2 Cdn Corps, 17 February 1944 and his thoughts on ‘Command Efficiency’ were issued to all formation commanders of 2 Cdn Corps on 19 February 1944. In his operational policy, Simonds outlined how he expected to fight the battles in Normandy. Two points were stressed: when the Germans decided to stand and fight a defensive battle, success could only be achieved with proper reconnaissance and preparation. The second point was that success of the offensive battle hinged ‘on the defeat of the German counter-attacks. . .’49 These two principles would guide the conduct of Simonds’ planning and operations in Normandy.
In his ‘Efficiency in Command’ directive Simonds articulated his thoughts on commanding Canadian soldiers, promotions, and on the removal of officers. In an annex to his directive, Simonds addressed what he considered the essential qualities of a leader under the headings of ‘moral’, ‘mental’ and ‘physical’ qualities. Of particular importance to this discussion are Simonds’ thoughts on ‘youth’. Simonds stated that a man was never too young for a job, but he may well be too old, for ‘age reduces speed of mental and physical reaction.’50 Experience was only useful insofar as it represented knowledge acquired or knowledge confirmed by practical application.51 This emphasis on youth over experience is the most common explanation listed in the current literature to explain Simonds’ decision to replace Worthington with Kitching as the commander of the 4 Cdn Armd Div in February 1944.
In trying to understand the context within which Canadian and British commanders developed their ideas about ‘generalship’,52 two publications stand out. The first, Generals and Generalship, the Lees Knowles Lectures delivered at Trinity College, Cambridge in 1939 by Gen Sir Archibald Wavell, and the second, Generalship: Its Diseases and their Cure: A Study of the Personal Factor in Command (1936) by Major General J.F.C. Fuller, a noted proponent of armoured warfare during the interwar period. In the three lectures of the Lee Knowles Lectures series, ‘The Good General’, ‘The General and His Troops’ and ‘The Soldier and the Statesman,’ Wavell viewed the true crux of ‘generalship’ as administration, understanding what he called the ‘true mechanisms of war’ as most important, with tactics and the handling of troops second. He viewed robustness and the ability to stand the shock of war as the key character trait of a general since all decisions in war involved men’s lives. Wavell provided two simple rules for a general when commenting on command: never try to do your own staff work and never let the staff get between you and your troops.53
Fuller viewed ‘generalship’ as having three pillars: courage, described as being up front, being seen by your men and experiencing the same hardships; creative intelligence, described as originality of thought, doing the unexpected and always thinking ahead; and physical fitness, since good health and a robust constitution were invaluable to a general.54 Almost all the texts on command and leadership reviewed, including those by Montgomery and Simonds, mirrored Fuller’s three pillars in one form or another. The recurring characteristics were courage, mental agility and physical fitness.
The issue of primary sources proved problematic. James Jay Carafano in his book After D-Day: Operation Cobra and the Normandy Breakout (2000) stated: ‘We do not write the history of what happened but the history of the records that remain.’55 This statement holds true for the history of the 4 Cdn Armd Div and is responsible in part for its current reputation.
No two war diaries within the division contained the same level or type of information or supporting documentation in the appendices. Most of the war diaries of the units and regiments of 4 Cdn Armd Div during the month of August 1944 are incomplete when compared to the war diaries of other divisions and brigades. The level of detail varies greatly among units and between months, ranging from single sentences to complete paragraphs for entries on the same day by units that were fighting in close proximity to, or in support of, each other. Typically, documents listed as appendices in the war diaries were missing altogether and copies of exercise and training reports, which one would expect to be filed in the months in which they occurred, were found as appendices in the war diaries months later!
Of specific concern is the state of the war diary for Headquarters (HQ) G Branch 4 Cdn Armd Div. The evidence would suggest that the existing documents for July and August were rebuilt after the fact. This suspicion comes from the incompleteness of the July and August 1944 war diaries when compared to the diaries before and after those months and by the fact that Major General Harry Foster, Kitching’s successor, signed off the diary for July 1944 even though he did not take command of the division until 21 August. Kitching had signed the 4 Cdn Armd Div war diary entries from February 1944, when he took command, to June 1944 and his signature should, therefore, have appeared on the July 1944 entry.
Generally, the existing August war diary is complete with respect to daily situation reports, operation orders for Totalize and Tractable and intelligence reports, but vital evidence such as map traces and the operations log (ops log) were missing completely from the material reviewed. The war diaries of units that fought with or adjacent to 4 Cdn Armd Div proved invaluable copies of orders given by Kitching that were not recorded in the rebuilt 4 Cdn Armd Div War Diary. These orders provided crucial information on a series of operations that had been planned, briefed and had battle procedures conducted by the division units but were cancelled at the last minute.
The crucial documents that could have provided insight into the actions and thoughts of the division commander are the armoured command vehicle logs, operation orders and Summary of GOC’s O[rders] Groups. Unlike the daily entry in the war diary, which may have been written at any point after the fact, the armoured command vehicle logs are essentially transcripts of the dialogue between the division commander and his subordinate commanders. These logs reported real-time information and facts that can be assumed to be the most accurate information available at the time of transmission.56 Without these logs, it is difficult to track the actions, response and thoughts of the different commanders within the division. Unfortunately the armoured command vehicle logs for the division are missing for the month of August 1944.57
The surviving command vehicle logs from the two brigades of the division, the available ‘Summary of GOC O Grp’ and formal operation orders do provide insight into the character of the commander. These documents allow the researcher to develop an understanding of the subject’s problem-solving abilities and the way he used his staff. Formal orders, for example, represent the commander’s solution to his assigned military problem. They are framed around a number of different criteria but involve an assessment of intelligence information, forces available, geography, weather and a host of other important factors. An assessment of the plan, therefore, can answer such questions as: Is there innovation and resourcefulness in the formulation of the plan or was there stringent adherence to doctrine? Did the commander clearly understand the mission he was assigned? Was he given the proper resources to carry out his assigned mission? The ops logs, on the other hand, can provide insight into the cognitive flexibility, fortitude and emotional character of the commander as they unveil how he reacted to the chaos, uncertainty and volatility of the events of the battle once joined.
Two other pieces of vital primary source material seem to have been largely ignored by previous histories. The first is the Administration & Quartermaster Branch (A&Q) war diary from the division. These records proved invaluable in providing information on the preparation of the division for Normandy. Once in theatre, the available daily administrative reports (ADREPs) provided a daily snapshot of the state of the division from a material perspective, and hence a useful tool for measuring whether the operational tempo was being influenced by the resources or lack thereof in the supply system. As with the other major pieces of evidence the ADREPs are missing from 17–30 August.
The second piece of vital information is the summary of the commander’s intentions. At the corps level, Simonds’ intent for operations were issued as a daily memorandum typically titled ‘Intentions’ or ‘Intent’ personally signed by Simonds. This document outlined the proposed operations and the assigned tasks for each unit under command of 2 Cdn Corps for the next day. There was a significant gap in the ‘Intent’ documents from 16–21 August making it difficult to determine exactly what Simonds wanted accomplished over those days. This information gap may be explained in part by the fact that after 16 August, Simonds apparently stopped issuing written orders, instead preferring to tell his divisional commanders what he wanted done. His intent during this timeframe, therefore, must be extracted from other sources such as message logs.
Simonds’ intent and tasks formed the basis for the division commander’s orders for the same time period. The GOC’s intentions were usually briefed at the commander’s orders group and then formally recorded and issued by the GSO1 to subordinate formations as ‘Summary of the GOC O Group’. These documents are vital in understanding what was supposed to happen as opposed to what actually happened. Much of the current narrative on operations in Normandy has been written on what actually happened. Division summaries are unfortunately missing from 14–21 August. Within the war diary of the 18 Canadian Armoured Car Regiment (18 Cdn Armd C Regt), however, were found hand written notes summarizing Kitching’s intent for operations on 11–13 August, bringing new light to the proposed conduct of operations after Totalize stalled on 10 August.
To augment the war diaries, the ‘Canadian Military Headquarters (CMHQ) Reports’ 1940–48 and ‘Army Headquarters Reports (AHQ)’ provide detailed, extensively referenced information from writers who had generally open access to the primary sources, key figures and commanders involved in the training and execution of operations in northwest Europe. These reports were authored by the personnel, including Field Historical Officers, who gathered material at the corps and divisional headquarters during the campaign.
A comprehensive history of the 4 Cdn Armd Div as a division has yet to be written. All of the regiments/battalions have published official histories that deal with their respective actions during August 1944 but they varied greatly in quality and utility. An interesting find not in general circulation was a book called Some Reminiscences of the Lanark and Renfrew Scottish Regiment and the Governor General’s Foot Guards (December 1984) by Lieutenant Colonel A.B. French. French was the Quartermaster of the Governor General’s Foot Guards during the timeframe in question and he maintained extensive notes including map references of the echelon forces and tanks for each day from the time the regiment landed in Normandy to the end of the war. This book provided detailed information on the workings of the regimental supply system and how the processes were modified within the regiment to meet the demands of the pursuit across France.58
Canadian generals of the Second World War published few memoirs. Kitching wrote Mud and Green Fields (1993) which is his account of his career to the end of the war, and Tony Foster (Harry Foster’s son) wrote Meeting of Generals (1986), a biographical work on his father’s military career. Both Kitching and Foster had extensive notes and personal records that survived. Kitching had an extensive private collection of correspondence that was correlated by historian Dr R. Roy and returned to the family. Attempts to gain access to these documents proved unsuccessful.
A full biography on General H.D. Crerar, Commander of the First Canadian Army, who has been called Canadian military history’s ‘most famous nobody’, is now available.59 Paul Dickson’s 1993 doctoral dissertation60 on Crerar was published as A Thoroughly Canadian General: A Biography of General H.D.G. Crerar (2007). Crerar is one of the few Canadian generals to have his ‘papers’ and wartime correspondence deposited in the Library and Archives Canada and they contain detailed information of immense importance to any evaluation of the Canadian Army.
Simonds’ biography The Price of Command: A Biography of General Guy Simonds (1993) by Dominik Graham was of limited use in this examination because of the lack of a detailed examination of Simonds’ actions and decisions particularly during the closing of the Falaise Gap. Of greater utility and importance was Terry Copp’s Guy Simonds and the Art of Command (2007) which is a compilation of directives, letters and orders issued by Simonds on the topics of command and leadership. Jack Granatstein’s valuable study The Generals (1993) provides important background on eight Canadian generals but does not address training or operational history in any detail.61 Douglas Delaney’s study of Major General Bert Hoffmeister, The Soldier’s General (2005),62 is the only biography of Canada’s other armoured division commander. This book includes a discussion of Hoffmeister’s command style at the divisional level which is helpful for comparative purposes, but the circumstances under which 5th Canadian Armoured Division trained and fought in Italy were significantly different from those experienced by Kitching and 4 Cdn Armd Div in Normandy.
Despite the considerable volume of literature on the Normandy campaign and the Canadian Army this book will focus on an area that has received little dedicated effort – the organization, people and structures that comprised the division command environment of the 4 Cdn Armd Div. More specifically, this book will analyze the effectiveness of the command and control of the 4 Cdn Armd Div during the breakout battles of Totalize, Tractable and the operations designed to close the Falaise Gap. The investigation will centre on the effectiveness of the interaction between the GOC, the 4 Cdn Armd Div unit commanders, and the two key division staff members, the GSO1, and the AA&QMG. The goal is to determine how well they facilitated the operational tempo of the division during those twenty-one days in Normandy and how well they withstood the stresses of combat.
The current body of literature concerning the 4 Cdn Armd Div has concentrated on the outcome of operations and has drawn conclusions on division and leadership effectiveness without a true understanding of the human effort required to facilitate, execute and sustain the operations. This book will challenge the current reputation of Kitching as an ineffective division commander. The evidence will place, in proper context, the key issues of severe loss of tanks, crews and senior commanders and the issue of ever-changing orders. Kitching’s contribution to the legacy of the 4 Cdn Armd Div was significant and lasting. It was he who effectively trained the divisional staff and commanders who, after five months of training in England and three weeks of continuous combat under his guidance and direction, had figured out how to operate and sustain the division effectively in combat operations. When placed in proper context and in light of the new evidence, the only valid conclusion is that, notwithstanding some initial challenges and setbacks, the 4 Cdn Armd Div was a well-led and well-managed division that was responsive, adaptive and resilient to the internal and external forces inherent in war that could have rendered the division ineffective.