81 Armoured Brigade (South Africa) Explained

Unit Name:81 Armoured Brigade
Dates:1974–1992
Country: South Africa
Allegiance: South Africa
Type:Armoured Brigade
Command Structure:South African Composite Brigade
Garrison:Merino and Poynton Buildings in Pretoria, Durban
Garrison Label:Garrison
Nickname:81 Brigade
Motto:Manu ferrea (an iron hand)
Equipment:
  • Saracen Armoured Car
  • Ratel
  • Eland Mk7 90mm and 60mm Armoured Cars
  • Oliphant Tank
  • G2
Battles:South African Border War
Identification Symbol 2 Label:81 Armoured Brigade Command Bar

81 Armoured Brigade was a Formation of 8th Armoured Division (South Africa), a combined arms force consisting of armour, mechanised infantry, and mechanised artillery.

History

Origin

16 Brigade

81 Armoured Brigade was activated on 1 August 1974 but can trace its origins back to an older structure in the late 1960s, called 16 Brigade, under the control of Northern Transvaal Command.On 1 August 1974, through a reorganization of the Army's conventional force, the name was changed to 81 Armoured Brigade.[1]

Initial Structure

Under this reorganisation, the following units were transferred to the new command:

Higher Command

81 Armoured Brigade resorted under the new 8 Division.

Units mechanised and armoured

The Brigade's philosophy was to be up-armoured and highly mobile. All units in the Brigade irrelevant of their Corps was either to be armoured or mechanised. In light of this the Saracen armoured car was used for the last time by Regiment Northern Transvaal and the new Ratel Infantry Fighting Vehicle was introduced. Mechanised elements were also introduced to 17 Field Artillery where the Sexton, a 25-pounder artillery gun mounted on Sherman chassis was introduced. Mechanised infantry was a new concept in 1975, the biggest change being the increase in tempo and close proximity to armour in battle. In 1976, 40 command group members of Regiment Northern Transvaal underwent mechanised conversion training at 1 SAI. Pretoria Regiment was also busy converting at the same time to a modernised version of the Centurion Tank, the Oliphant at the School of Armour. 2 Light Horse, the Brigades armoured car regiment, was attached following Operation Savannah to service in South West Africa and therefore was not involved in the mechanisation program at that stage.

Brigade Training and Exercises

81 Armoured Brigade conducted its first training exercise at the General de Wet Training Range, Tempe, near Bloemfontein in September 1975 with Exercise Mainstay. Three combat groups were activated. Over a period of three months, the area was allocated from one combat group to the next.

Because of the limitations of the General de Wet Range, a new Training Area was opened in the next year to accommodate large scale conventional war training, namely Army Battle School at Lohatla. The honour to use the new property for the first time rested with 81 Armoured Brigade, who conducted the following brigade exercises (Ex) over the next few years:[2]

Exercises! Name !! From Date !! To Date
Ex Maremane 1 11 Oct 1978 10 Nov 1978
Ex Blinkspies 126 Aug 197921 Sep 1979
Ex Applause 42 Nov 19803 Dec 1980
Ex Mamba 320 Aug 198118 Sep 1981
Ex Eland 1 and 2Apr 1983Jul 1983
Ex Octavo24 Sep 198622 Oct 1986
Ex Ferratus18 Aug 19879 Oct 1987
Ex Vlak Water1 Sep 198922 Sep 1989
Ex Linear13 Oct 198917 Oct 1989
Ex Manu Ferrea13 Aug 19907 Sep 1990
Ex Desert Fox2 Apr 199130 Apr 1991

Operational Deployment

By 1984 various combat groups of 81 Armoured Brigade conducted operational service largely in the counter insurgency role. The most important of these was probably Combat Group Foxtrot. After retraining, combat groups left Lohatla for Oshivello and Ongiva under the command of the Joint Monitoring Commission. Some of these operations included:

Presentation of National Colours

The climax of 81 Armoured Brigade was on 1 Aug 91 when the then Chief of the Army Lt Genl G.L. Meiring handed over National Colours to the following CF units of the Brigade (Unit Commanders and Regimental Sergeant Majors indicated):

RSM
Cmdt H.J. Bootha WO1 A.B. Brink
Cmdt J.J. Joubert WO1 R.L. Ohlsen
Cmdt T. Phillips WO1 C.J. Waldeck
Cmdt C.W.F Grobler WO1 C.F. Krugel
Maj W.F. Hume WO2 B.J. Brooks
Cmdt L. Maree WO2 W.A. Du Plessis
Maj L. van Dyk WO1 J.J.A. Coetzee
Cmdt A.D. Alberts WO2 J.C.H Vorster
Cmdt A. Botha WO1 J.J. Van Staden
Capt A.K. Möller Ssgt C.M. Vermaak
WO1 Sampie Claasen of Northern Transvaal Command trained members for the parade which he did excellently. The Brigade was congratulated by Chief of the Army for a spectacular parade.

This was the final official act by 81 Armoured Brigade and the climax on a 17-year illustrious history.

Restructuring

With the independence of Namibia, the conventional threat dissipated and the SA Army Command began a process of rationalisation. Brigade headquarters were now focussed on counter-insurgency support to regional commands. SA Army Implementing Instruction 3/91 gave orders for the disbandment of 81 Armoured Brigade, which happened on 29 Nov 1991. The CF Units under command were reorganised as follows:

Unit
under command Northern Cape Command
under command of 8 South African Division
under command of 8 SA Division
under command of 8 SA Division
amalgamate with Transvaal Staats Artillery
amalgamate with
amalgamate with Northern Cape Command Signal Unit
amalgamate with 15 Maintenance Unit of 8 SA Division
under command of Army Battle School

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Englebrecht. Leon. 9 February 2010. Fact file: The SA Armoured Corps. DefenceWeb. 8 October 2022.
  2. Book: 81 Pantser Brigade: Historiese Oorsig 19741991. Cmdt L.F. . Liebenberg. Cmdt C.T.. Phillips.
  3. Wikipedia Operation Prone