Western Province Command

Western Province Command
Active 1959
Country  South Africa
Type Command
Part of
Garrison/HQ Cape Town, South Africa
Motto Fidelitas et Honor
(Fidelity and Honour)
Disbanded 1999
Commanders
Notable
commanders
General Magnus Malan

Western Province Command was a command of the South African Army.

History

Originally it was a numbered military district, and then in the 1930s became Cape Command. In 1939, the army at home in South Africa was divided between a number of regional commands.[2] Cape Command, (with its headquarters at the Castle of Good Hope, Cape Town, included 3rd Infantry Brigade, 8th Infantry Brigade (Oudtshoorn), the Coast Artillery Brigade (two heavy batteries, two medium batteries, and the Cape Field Artillery), and a battery of the 1st Anti-Aircraft Regiment.[1]

Western Province Command itself appears to have formed in 1959. Brig Magnus Malan, later Chief of the SADF, took command in 1971.

From 1 August 1974, units transferred from Western Province Command to the new 71 Motorised Brigade included the Cape Field Artillery, the Cape Town Highlanders, Regiment Westelike Provinsie, Regiment Boland, Regiment Oranjerivier, a South African Engineer Corps field squadron, 74 Signal Squadron SACS, 4 Maintenance Unit, 30 Field Workshop SAOSC, and 3 Field Ambulance.[3]:16 12 Supply and Transport Company, originally established on 22 August 1961, became 4 Maintenance Unit on 1 September 1971.

By the early 1980s Western Province Command included the Cape Garrison Artillery, 101 Signal Squadron, 6 Base Ordnance Depot, Command Workshops (all at Cape Town) the South African Cape Corps Battalion (Eerste River, Western Cape), 2 Military Hospital, 3 Field Ambulance, and three Commandos (all at Wynberg) and 10 Anti-Aircraft Regiment SAA and 4 Electronics Workshops (both at Youngsfield Military Base at Ottery, Cape Town).

It was disbanded c.1999 after the South African Defence Review 1998.

Commanders

Officers Commanding
From Cape Command (c.1930–1959) To
December 1933 Colonel George Brink CB CBE DSO[4] 31 January 1937
From Western Province Command (1959–1999) To
n.d. Brig Jan Fourie 1971
1971 Brig Magnus Malan SM 1972
1972 Brig Helm Roos n.d.

See also

South African Army Order of Battle 1940

Notes

  1. South African Permanent Force and University of Cape Town Active Citizen Force
  2. 1 2 3 4 Composite Battery of Cape Garrison Artillery and South African Permanent Garrison Artillery
  3. An Active Citizen Force unit with Permanent Force nucleus
  4. An Active Citizen Force unit with Permanent Force nucleus

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "South African Army 1939 - 1940" (pdf). Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  2. Ryan, David A. "Union Defence Forces 6 September 1939". World War II Armed Forces — Orders of Battle and Organizations. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  3. Crook, Lionel, Col (Rtd) (1994). Greenbank, Michele, ed. 71 Motorised Brigade: a history of the headquarters 71 Motorised Brigade and of the citizen force units under its command. Brackenfell, South Africa: L. Crook in conjunction with the South African Legion. ISBN 9780620165242. OCLC 35814757.
  4. Ploeger, Jan (1989). "SUID-AFRIKAANSE STAATS- en STAATSONDERSTEUNDE MILITÊRE GESKIEDSKRYWING (1924-1987)". Scientaria Militaria South African Journal of Military Studies (in Afrikaans) 19 (4): 27.


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