Marmon-Herrington Military Vehicles |
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• Introduction |
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All-Wheel Drive Conversion kits:
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Tracked vehicles:
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In service:
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Links |
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Marmon-Herrington
military
vehicles in service:
the
Netherlands
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Around 1936,
the Koninklijk Nederlandsch-Indisch Leger (KNIL; Royal Netherlands
East-Indies Army) started to modernize its Java Army. It was planned to
form five or six motorized, partly mechanized brigades each with one battalion
of light and medium AFVs. Companies of 24 platoons of seven vehicles each
were envisaged, which were to be manned by personnel from the Infantry.
The Cavalry had to form one squadron of motorized Cavalry with one platoon
of Armoured Cars and one platoon of Armoured Fighting Vehicles (tanks)
for each brigade. Because of severe cut-backs and anti-military politics,
orders were postponed until war loomed. By that time hardly any material
was obtainable, because all producing countries tried to equip their own
neglected armed forces. In the end the KNIL ordered material from the United
Kingdom and the USA. These included trucks, tractors and 628 tanks from
Marmon-Herrington, as well as a number of the South African Reconnaissance
Car Mark III.
The KNIL
had bought 70 Commercial Light Tanks Model 1936 at Vickers-Carden-Loyd,
but after 20 were delivered the rest was retained in Great Britain when
the British Army was left with hardly any AFVs after the BEF retreated
from France. Therefore, a number of South African Reconnaissance
Car Mark III were delivered directly from South Africa instead. |
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Marmon-Herrington
tanks: The Dutch Connection
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