General
Sir Kenneth Arthur Noel Anderson,
KCB,
MC
(December 25, 1891 – April 29, 1959) was a
British Army officer in both the
First and
Second World
Wars.
He is mainly remembered as the commander of
the First Army during Operation Torch
, the Allied invasion
of Tunisia
. He
had an outwardly reserved character and did not court popularity
either with his superiors or with the public.
Eisenhower wrote that he was "blunt, at
times to the point of rudeness". In consequence he is less well
known than many of his contemporaries. He handled a difficult
campaign more competently than his critics suggest, but competence
without flair was not good enough for a top commander in
1944.
Early life and World War I
Anderson
was born in India, the son of a Scottish railway engineer, and was
educated at Charterhouse
School
and the Royal Military Academy
Sandhurst
before being commissioned in the Seaforth Highlanders in September 1911
as a second lieutenant. His First World
War service was in France
, where he
served with distinction. He was awarded the
Military Cross for bravery in action and was
wounded at the
Battle of the
Somme on the opening day, 1 July 1916. The citation read:
For conspicuous gallantry. Captain Anderson was severely wounded in front of an enemy first line trench. He endeavoured to struggle on, but progress was impossible as one of his legs was broken. Nevertheless, although exposed to heavy fire, he continued to direct and encourage his men.
He took eighteen months to recover from the wounds he received, before rejoining his regiment in Palestine in time to celebrate victory. He was appointed an acting major in May 1918 and reverted to captain in July 1919.
In 1918 Anderson married Kathleen Gamble. She was the only daughter
of
Sir Reginald Arthur
Gamble and his wife Jennie. Her brother was (Acting) Captain
Ralph Dominic Gamble MC,
Coldstream Guards.
Inter-war career
His inter-war career was active, he served as
adjutant to the
Scottish
Horse from 1920-24 and was promoted to major during this
posting.
He attended the Command and Staff College course
at Quetta
, where he
apparently did not do that well. His superior, Major-General
Sir
Percy Hobart, thought it
"questionable whether he had the capacity to develop much." Other
staff council also had reservations, but "hoped that he might
suffice." Anderson graduated from the
Staff College, Camberley, in 1928
following which he took a staff posting (GSO2) in the
50th Division.
In 1930 Anderson was
promoted lieutenant-colonel and at the age of 38 he commanded the
second battalion of the Seaforths in the
North West Frontier
, for which he was mentioned in dispatches and as a
full colonel went on to command the 152nd (Seaforth and Cameron)
Infantry Brigade in August 1934. Still as a full colonel in
March 1936 he was appointed to a staff job (GSO1) in India and in
January 1938 was appointed acting brigadier to command
11th Brigade which he trained
hard, despite inadequate equipment.
World War II
It was as commander of 11th Brigade that Anderson saw service with
the
British
Expeditionary Force. When Montgomery was promoted to command
II Corps during the
evacuation from France, the departing II
Corps commander
Alan Brooke chose
Anderson to take command of Montgomery's
3rd Infantry
Division.
On returning to the United Kingdom after the withdrawal from
Dunkirk Anderson was promoted to
major-general, and made a
Companion of the Order of the Bath
.
He was
given commanded of 1st
Division which was tasked with defending the coast of Lincolnshire
before being promoted to lieutenant-general in
1941 and given VIII Corps, then
II Corps to command before becoming
GOC-in-C Eastern
Command in 1942.
In spite
of his lack of experience in commanding larger formations in battle
Anderson was given the First Army
command during Operation
Torch
in November 1942 because the first two choices,
Harold
Alexander and Edmond Schreiber,
were unavailable. Alexander had been appointed
Commander-in-Chief
Middle East and
Schreiber suffered from poor health.
Anderson's force
advancing into Tunisia from Algeria was initially barely a division
strong and was engaged in late 1942 in a race to capture Tunis
before the
Axis were able to build up their forces and launch a
counterattack. This was unsuccessful although elements of
his force got to within 10 miles of Tunis before being pushed
back.
As further Allied forces arrived at the front they suffered from a
lack of co-ordination. Eventually in late January 1943 Eisenhower
persuaded the French to place their newly-formed
XIX Corps under Anderson's First Army and
also gave him responsibility for the overall "employment of
American troops" specifically the
US II Corps, commanded by General
Lloyd Fredendall. However, control
still proved problematical with forces spread over 200 miles
(320 km) of front and poor means of communication (Anderson
reported that he motored over 1,000 miles (1,600 km) in four
days in order to speak to his corps commanders). Anderson and
Fredendall also failed properly to coordinate and integrate forces
under their command. Subordinates would later recall their utter
confusion at being handed conflicting orders, not knowing which
general to obey - Anderson, or Fredendall. While Anderson was
privately aghast at Fredendall's shortcomings, he seemed frozen by
the need to preserve a united Allied front, and never risked his
career by strongly protesting (or threatening to resign) over what
many of his own American subordinates viewed as an untenable
command structure.
II Corps
later suffered a serious reverse at the Kasserine
Pass
, where Field Marshal Rommel launched a successful
offensive against Allied forces, first shattering French forces
defending the central portion of the front, then routing the
American II Corps in the south. While the lion's share of
the blame fell on Fredendall, Anderson's generalship abilities were
also seriously questioned by both British and Allied commanders.
When Fredendall disclaimed all responsibility for the
poorly-equipped French XIX Corps covering the vulnerable central
section of the Tunisian front, denying their request for support,
Anderson allowed the request to go unfulfilled. Anderson was also
criticised for refusing Fredendall's request to retire to a
defensible line after the initial assault in order to regroup his
forces, allowing German panzer forces to overrun many of the
American positions in the south. Furthermore, the commander of
US 1st Armored
Division vehemently objected to the dispersal of his division's
three combat commands on individual assignments requested by
Anderson which he believed diluted the division's effectiveness and
resulted in its heavy losses.
In particular, the American generals
Ernest N. Harmon and
George S. Patton thought little of Anderson's ability
to control large forces in battle. Major-General Harmon had been in
Thala on
the Algerian border, witnessing the stubborn resistance of the
British
Nickforce, which held the vital road leading into
the Kasserine Pass against the heavy pressure of the German
10th Panzer Division, which was
under Rommel's direct command. Commanding the British
Nickforce was Brigadier
Cameron Nicholson, an effective combat
leader who kept his remaining forces steady under relentless German
hammering. When the U.S.
9th Infantry
Division's attached artillery arrived in Thala after a
four-day, journey, it seemed like a godsend to Harmon.
Inexplicably, the 9th
was ordered by Anderson to abandon Thala to the enemy and head for
the village of Le
Kef
, away, to defend against an expected German
attack. Nicholson pleaded with the American artillery
commander, Brigadier General S. Leroy Irwin, to ignore Anderson’s
order and stay. Harmon agreed with Nicholson and commanded,
“Irwin, you stay right here!". The 9th's artillery did
stay, and with its 48 guns raining a whole year's worth of a
(peacetime) allotment of shells, stopped the advancing Germans in
their tracks. Unable to retreat under the withering fire, the
Afrika Corps finally withdrew after dark. With the defeat at Thala,
Rommel decided to end his offensive.
As Allied and Axis forces built up in Tunisia,
18th Army Group HQ was formed in February
1943 under
Harold Alexander to
control all Allied forces in Tunisia. Alexander wanted to replace
Anderson with
Leese, one of the
Eighth Army corps commanders,
but Montgomery had been unwilling to release him. Anderson managed
to hold on to his position and performed well during the closing
stages of the operation, in May 1943 when Allied forces won victory
and the unconditional surrender of the Axis forces, 125,000 of whom
were German. His rank of lieutenant-general was made substantive in
July 1943 and he was advanced to
KCB in August. Eisenhower, his superior
officer, had stated after observing Anderson in action that he
"studied the written word until he practically burns through the
paper", but later wrote of him that he was
Anderson was the first recipient of the US
Legion of Merit in the grade of Chief
Commander, for his service as First Army commander in North Africa;
he received his award on 18 June, 1943.
On his return to Britain from Tunis he was initially given command
of
Second Army during the
preparations for
D-Day but the
criticisms of Alexander and Montgomery (who in March 1943 had
written to Alexander saying "...it is obvious that Anderson is
completely unfit to command any army." and later described him as
"a good plain cook") had gained currency, and in January 1944 he
was replaced by
Miles Dempsey.
Anderson was given
Eastern Command, widely
viewed as a demotion. His career as a field commander was over and
his last purely military appointment was as G.O.C.-in-C. East
Africa Command.
Post World War II
After the war he was military commander-in-chief and
Governor of Gibraltar, where his most
notable achievements were to build new houses to relieve the poor
housing conditions, and the constitutional changes which
established a Legistative Council. He was promoted full general in
July 1949 and retired in June 1952 when he was made a knight of the
Venerable Order of Saint
John and lived mainly in the south of France. His last years
were filled with tragedy: his only son died in action in
Malaya and his daughter also died after a
long illness.
Anderson died of pneumonia in Gibraltar
in 1959.
References
- Anderson, Lt.-General Kenneth (1946). Official despatch by
Kenneth Anderson, GOC-in-C First Army covering events in NW
Africa, 8 November 1942–13 May 1943 published in
- The Times obituary (30 April
1959).
Notes
- Lippman, David H., World War II Plus 55", Article
- Mead (2007), p. 49
- Anderson (1946), p. 8
- Atkinson (2003), p. 324
- Calhoun (2003), pp. 73-75
- Atkinson (2003), p. 173
- Blumenson (1966), p. 177
- Murray, Brian J. Facing The Fox, America in World War
II, (April 2006)
- Blumenson & Patton (1972), : Patton thought Anderson was
"earnest, but dumb" a sentiment not dissimilar to that expressed by
Anderson's superior, Major General Sir Percy Hobart, when Anderson attended
Quetta Staff college in the 1920s.
- Mead (2007), p. 51
- Lippman, David H., World War II Plus 55", Article
- http://www.foxfall.com/fmd-common-lom.htm Foxfall medals:
Legion of Merit
- Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives
External links