Humber light reconnaissance car
The Humber light reconnaissance car, also known as Humberette or Ironside, was a British armoured car produced during the Second World War.
Design
Produced by the Rootes Group, the Humber light reconnaissance car was an armoured car based on the Humber Super Snipe chassis. It was equipped with a No. 19 radio set. From 1940 to 1943 over 3600 units were built.Operational history
The vehicle was used by infantry reconnaissance regiments and the RAF Regiment in Tunisia, Italy and Western Europe. After the war, some vehicles remained in service with the British units in India and in the Far East. The LRC was used widely by the Reconnaissance Corps and was also used by the Reconnaissance squadron of the 1st Czechoslovak Independent Armoured Brigade Group.Three Mk I vehicles were modified for use by the British royal family and the cabinet ministers and were known as "Special Ironside Saloons".
Variants
- Mk I
- Mk II
- Mk III
- Mk IIIA
- Ironside Special Saloon
In all 3,600 Humber light reconnaissance cars were built and the MkIII and MkIIIA were the cars most widely used by the Reconnaissance Corps in action, and many were also employed overseas by the RAF Regiment for airfield defence.
Surviving vehicles
A number of vehicles are preserved in museums:- Dutch Cavalry Museum
- Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and of Military History, Brussels, Belgium
- Royal Air Force Museum London has a Mk IIIA
- National War and Resistance Museum, Overloon has a restored Mk III.
- Military College of EME, Trimulgherry has an LRC as a gate guardian
- 43rd Reconnaissance Regiment Living History Group operate a replica vehicle based on an LRC MK IIIa chassis.
A replica built on a postal jeep chassis and with wooden armour exists in Florida, where it is primarily used for re-enacting.