20th Battalion (New Zealand)

20th Battalion
(20th Armoured Regiment)
several men in desert uniform marching with rifles on their shoulders
Infantry of the 20th Battalion in Baggush, Egypt, September 1941
Active1939–1945
Disbanded2 December 1945
Country New Zealand
Branch New Zealand Military Forces
TypeInfantry (1939–1942)
Armoured (1943–1945)
Sizec. 800 personnel[1]
Part of4th Brigade, 2nd New Zealand Division
EngagementsSecond World War
Battle of Greece
Battle of Crete
North African campaign
Italian campaign
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Howard Kippenberger
Jim Burrows

The 20th Battalion was a formation of the New Zealand Military Forces which served, initially as an infantry battalion and then as an armoured regiment, during the Second World War as part of the 2nd New Zealand Division.

The 20th Battalion was formed in New Zealand in 1939 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Howard Kippenberger. After a period of training it embarked for the Middle East and then onto Greece in 1941 as part of the 2nd New Zealand Division. It participated in the Battles of Greece and later in Crete. Evacuated from Crete, it then fought in the North African campaign with the British Eighth Army. It suffered heavy losses during Operation Crusader, when it was effectively destroyed by the 15th Panzer Division. Brought back up to strength, the battalion played a key role in the breakout of the 2nd New Zealand Division from Minqar Qaim in June 1942, where it had been encircled by the 21st Panzer Division. The following month, the battalion suffered heavy casualties during the First Battle of El Alamein.

In October 1942 the battalion was converted to an armoured unit and designated 20th Armoured Regiment. To replace men lost at El Alamein, personnel were drawn from a tank brigade being formed in New Zealand. The regiment spent a year in Egypt training with Sherman tanks, before embarking for Italy in October 1943 to re-join the Eighth Army. It participated in the Italian campaign, fighting in actions at Orsogna and later at Monte Cassino. The regiment finished the war in Trieste and remained there for several weeks until the large numbers of Yugoslav partisans also present in the city withdrew. Not required for service in the Pacific theatre of operations, the regiment was disestablished in late 1945.