Malta Command
Malta Command was an independent command of the British Army. It commanded all army units involved in the defence of Malta. Once mobilised the Command deployed its headquarters to underground hardened shelters and its combat units were deployed to fixed points in the Maltese countryside, from where they operated. This mobilised, but largely static, army garrison would be tested by aerial bombardment and naval blockade during the Second World War. Whilst Malta Command was already a functioning command structure before 1939, the Second World War would see the Command operate as a genuine war-fighting headquarters, albeit in a static defensive role.
On 15 April 1942 the Island of Malta was awarded the George Cross by King George VI in recognition of the stalwart defence and fortitude of service personnel and civilians against a much more powerful Axis foe. Malta, an island of only 117 square miles, had been more heavily bombed than London had been during their blitz.
File:The Campaign in Sicily 1943 NA4088.jpg|thumbnail|Malta Command hosted the combined British command staff as they planned the Allied assault on Sicily in 1943.
File:The British Army on Malta 1942 GM946.jpg|thumbnail|A 40mm Bofors anti-aircraft gun position overlooking Grand Harbour, located at Upper Barrakka Gardens looking across the harbour to Senglea.
World War I and the Interwar years
Malta Command existed in 1916, 1917 and in 1929.Between 1935 and 1936 the following infantry battalions were on the Island and part of Malta Command:
- 2nd Battalion The Lincolnshire Regiment
- 2nd Battalion The Rifle Brigade
- 1st Battalion The King's Own Scottish Borderers.
1939 - the peacetime garrison transitions to war
The Reinforced Army Garrison
On 11 March 1942 Malta Command became subordinate to General Headquarters Middle East.Infantry
In late 1939 the pre-war garrison was reinforced up to an infantry division. The original infantry garrison, plus the three brigades that reinforced the island's British forces, were titled 1, 2, 3, and 4 Brigades; but were subsequently renumbered in 1943 as follows:- 231 Infantry Brigade – assigned to the Southern Sector under Brig L H Cox. HQ Southern Infantry Brigade at Luqa. Its infantry battalions were:
- * 2nd Battalion The Devonshire Regiment
- * 1st Battalion The Hampshire Regiment
- * 1st Battalion The Dorsetshire Regiment
- * 2nd Battalion The King’s Own Malta Regiment
- * 3rd Battalion The King’s Own Malta Regiment
- 232 Infantry Brigade – assigned to the Northern Sector under Brig W H Oxley. HQ Northern Infantry Brigade at Melita Hotel Attard next to San Anton Gardens. Its infantry battalions were:
- * 2nd Battalion, Royal Irish Fusiliers
- * 8th Battalion, King's Own Royal Regiment
- * 8th Battalion, Manchester Regiment
- 233 Infantry Brigade – formed on 30 July 1941; assigned to the Central Sector under Brig I De La Bere. Its infantry battalions were:
- * 11th Battalion The Lancashire Fusiliers
- * 2nd Battalion The Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment
- * 10th Battalion The King’s Own Malta Regiment
- 234 Infantry Brigade – assigned to the Western sector under Brig F Brittorous. Its infantry battalions were:
- * 4th Battalion The Royal East Kent Regiment
- * 1st Battalion The Durham Light Infantry
- * 1st Battalion The Cheshire Regiment
Light support weapons
Personal weapons such as the.303-in SMLE, 9mm Sten or.38 service revolver are not included in this study.Artillery
The Island's regular Royal Artillery force component was - like its Maltese counterpart - performing a mainly fixed defence role, even wheeled artillery tended to occupy fixed positions to defend against a hostile landing at beaches:- 4th Coast Regiment, RA made up of
- 12th Field Regiment RA - initially equipped with 18 Pounder Field Guns, but later equipped with 25 Pounder Field Guns.
- 26th Defence Regiment, RA made up of.
- The Royal Malta Artillery
- * Headquarters, RMA
- * 1st Coast Regiment, RMA composed of
- 7th Anti-Aircraft Brigade
- * 32nd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment RA
- * 65th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment RA
- * 74th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment RA
- * 3rd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment RMA
- * 4th Searchlight Regiment RA/RMA
- 10th Anti-Aircraft Brigade
- * 4th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment RA
- * 7th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment RA
- * 10th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment RA
- * 2nd Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment RMA
- * 11th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Battery RMA.
Heavy support weapons
| Name | Type | Photo | Notes |
| .303 Vickers machine gun | Battalion fire support weapon | Each infantry battalion had four guns normally in a single Machine Gun Platoon | |
| 3 Inch Mortar | Infantry mortar - battalion indirect fire support | Each infantry battalion had 6 mortar tubes | |
| QF 2-pounder gun | Infantry anti-tank weapon | Each infantry battalion had two carried portee or dismounted in a 15cwt truck | |
| QF 18-pounder gun Field gun/Howitzer | Multi-role mobile field artillery | One RA coastal defence regiment of 24 guns | |
| QF 25-pounder gun field gun/howitzer | Multi-role mobile field artillery | One RA field regiment of 24 guns |
For details of fixed artillery see Royal Malta Artillery's equipment list.
Royal Armoured Corps
Less than a full battalion of various reconnaissance and infantry support tanks was present on Malta.By 1942 Malta Command Tanks had a small mixed force of tanks known as "Malta Tanks, Royal Tank Regiment" during its time on the island. The only other armoured vehicles were the Universal Carriers of the infantry units.
| Name | Type | Notes |
| Light Tank Mk VI | Reconnaissance tank | Turret with 0.303 Vickers machine gun and 0.5 inch Vickers machine gun or turret with 15 mm and 7.92 mm Besa machine guns. Three Deployed |
| Matilda II | Infantry tank | 40mm QF-2 pdr gun and 7.92 mm Besa coaxial machine gun. Four deployed |
| Cruiser Mk III | Cruiser tank | 40mm QF-2 pdr gun and 7.92 mm Besa coaxial machine gun. Eight deployed |
| Valentine | Infantry tank | 40mm QF-2 pdr gun and 7.92 mm Besa coaxial machine gun. Four deployed |
| Universal Carrier | Lightly armoured tracked carrier | .55 Boys anti-tank rifle and/or.303 Bren light machine gun. Ten deployed with each infantry battalion |
Combat and service support units
Source:- Royal Engineers
- * 16th Fortress Company
- * 24th Fortress Company
- * 173rd Tunnel Company
- * 2 Works Company
- * 127th Bomb Disposal Section
- * 128th Bomb Disposal Section
- Malta Command Signals, Royal Signals
- * 8 Special Wireless Squadron
- Royal Army Medical Corps
- * 39 General Hospital RAMC
- * 45 General Hospital RAMC
- * 90 General Hospital RAMC
- * 15 Field Ambulance RAMC
- * 161 Field Ambulance RAMC
- 69 Field Security Section Intelligence Corps
- 226 Provost Company Royal Military Police
- Royal Army Service Corps
- * 32 Company RASC
- * Malta Supply Depot RASC
- * Water Transport Company RASC
- Royal Army Ordnance Corps
- A static Royal Electrical Mechanical Engineers Workshops at Pembroke Garrison
- 72 Detachment Royal Army Pay Corps
- Royal Army Chaplains' Department.
Local Maltese units (Regular and Territorial)
- The Royal Malta Artillery
- The King's Own Malta Regiment
- The Malta Fortress Squadron, Royal Engineers.
End of the war and the post war period
General Officers Commanding from 1951-62 were:
- Major-General William E.G. Hemming: October 1951-November 1953
- Major-General Brian Daunt: November 1953-November 1956
- Major-General Cyril Colquhoun: November 1956-December 1959
- Major-General Adam J.C. Block: December 1959-October 1962
Forces in Malta would be reduced from 1964 and this led to acrimony between the Maltese and British Governments, and the post independence period was a period of bitterness, British forces on the Island in the front line of Maltese antipathy. Major-General Lord Thurlow commanded in 1962-63. In 1965, 4th Battalion, the Royal Anglian Regiment arrived to join Malta Garrison at St. Patrick's Barracks on the north coast of Malta. Under Brigadier Lord Grimthorpe OBE, Malta Garrison consisted of 4 R Anglian; 1 Battalion The Loyal Regiment; 1st Regiment Royal Malta Artillery ; and 1st Battalion King's Own Malta Regiment.
Malta Garrison was in turn responsible to HQ Malta and Libya, under Major-General John Frost, with the other components being HQ Cyrenaica Area and HQ Tripolitania Area in Libya. Later, Major General Rea Leakey commanded HQ Malta and Libya in 1967-68.
1 Regiment Royal Malta Artillery served in Germany within the British Army of the Rhine from 1962 to 1970. In 1968 the then Prime Minister of Malta George Borg Olivier visited the Regiment in its barracks in Mulheim, and announced that the 1st Regiment RMA would cease to be part of the British Army of the Rhine in 1970 and could return to Malta to form the core of its land forces. Five hundred officers and men from the Royal Malta Artillery took their oath of allegiance and were enlisted in the Malta Land Force on 1 October 1970. Maltese Engineer and Signals personnel were also absorbed into the force that day.
Malta Command was largely wound up by 1977 with all major units repatriated to the UK. Salerno Company of 41 Commando Royal Marines finally left the island aboard the Royal Fleet Auxiliary Landing Ship Logistic Sir Lancelot on 31 March 1979.