|
Vision
WE ensure mobility and survivability of own forces.
Mission
The South African Army Engineer Formation is to prepare and provide combat ready
engineer forces for Chief of the SA Army to be integrated into landward defence capability
to enhance mobility and survivability for own forces.
Mandate
The South African Army Engineer Formation is to prepare
and provide combat ready forces to be integrated
into the landward defence capability to enhance
mobility and survivability of own forces.
Values
The South African Army Engineer Formation
adheres strictly to the following values of the
Department of Defence:
- Military Professionalism. Those
qualities, virtues and behaviours reflecting
the uniqueness of the South African Army
Engineer Formation. The ability to correctly
perform duties through striving to
constantly excel and improve the
organisation and the individual's
achievements.
- Human Dignity. Treating others
the way you expect to be treated.
- Integrity. To be honourable and
to follow ethical principles. To be faithful
to one's convictions.
- Leadership. To make ordinary
people do extraordinary things.
- Loyalty. To be faithful to one's
mission / organisation.
- Accountability. To be responsible
for decisions and the resulting
consequences.
- Patriotism (Country). To be
devoted to one's country, its interests,
freedom and independence. This also refers
to individuals being proud of being
engineers.
Characteristics of the South African Army
Engineer Formation
The South African Army Engineer Formation
will be recognised by the following
characteristics:
- Possesses a Core-growth Capability
for Long-term Contingencies. The South
African Army Engineer Formation will possess
the minimum force level that can be
maintained as a growth core, in accordance
with the "Core Force Concept", without the
permanent loss of capabilities. The reserves
required for such expansion are treated as
"One Force" with the permanent force.
- Predominantly Conventionally Oriented.
The force design of the South African Army
Engineer Formation will revolve mainly
around the South African National Defence
Force's primary function of defence against
military aggression.
- Possesses a Flexible and Rapid
Response Capability. The South African
Army Engineer Formation will possess a
flexible and rapid response capability based
on the landward defence capability strategy.
Potential for rapid response and expansion
for this conventional capability is
contained in the Reserve component. The
South African Army Engineer Formation must
be able to use its collateral capability for
certain secondary functions, such as peace
support missions, humanitarian aid and
internal deployment in support of Chief
Joint Operations.
- Is Affordable and Sustainable.
The South African Army Engineer Formation
will represent the minimum force level that
can be maintained as an affordable growth
core, in accordance with the "Core Force
Approach". An appropriate balance is to be
maintained between operating expenditure and
spending on capital renewal or upgrading.
- Possesses an Excellent Training
Capacity. The South African Army
Engineer Formation will maintain the
capability to train its forces on a
continuous basis. The exercising of the
force for joint as well as combined
operations will enjoy high precedence. A
professional corps of trainers will serve as
nucleus and centre of excellence for an
excellent training capacity. Force
preparation and training will be the primary
core focuses of the South African Army
Engineer Formation.
- Excellent Leadership, Command and
Management Capabilities. Mission command
and transformational leadership is the
predominant style, whilst Total Quality
Management principles will guide the conduct
of the South African Army Engineer
Formation.
- Effectively Operates as One Force.
The South African Army Engineer Formation's
core defence capability includes both the
Regular Force and Reserves as an integral
and essential part of the organisation. The
"One Force Policy" provides for flexible
utilisation of human resources and reduces
the necessity to maintain a large and
unaffordable Regular Force. Fair and
equitable treatment is to be applied; all
components render the same high standard of
service, notwithstanding differences in
dynamics, functioning and requirements of
the two components. The role of the Public
Service Act Personnel must also be
recognised in line with the One Force
Component and their contribution and
development must be aligned with the
policies and the output required from them.
History
"Your record of engineering achievement in
war is unsurpassed, and the Corps of Royal
Engineers is proud to have been associated with
you in it. In technique and equipment you have
often given a lead which we have gladly and
confidently followed".
Brigadier General B.C. Davey, Chief Engineer,
Eighth Army
"From small beginnings you have formed and
equipped a Corps of no mean size, and what is
more, of superlative quality. Nobody who has
ever been in contacts with their work has
anything but praise for the energetic and
skillful way in which South African Engineering
Units have surmounted difficulties and tackled
engineering jobs of all shapes and sizes".
Major General J.B.W. Hughes, Engineer-in-Chief,
Middle East
The Birth and
Background of the South African Army Engineer
Corps
Birth of the SA
Military Engineer
From the moment that man devised the means of
providing himself with artificial protection to
his person, and further, created engines for the
purpose of hurling destruction on his enemy, he
became to that extent an Engineer.
As time went on, he found that in addition to
these primary wants, there were others equally
necessary, but more difficult to attain, such as
the formation of roads, the bridging of rivers,
and the protection of the clusters of houses in
which he and his neighbors dwelt.
The provision of all these things demanded
the exercise of an inventive and construction
genius. Thus the science of the Engineer, rude
indeed and inchoate, but still quite distinct
from and superior to the mere fighting duties of
the soldier, forced its way as a necessity of
military life.
It was long, however, before there was any
attempt to sever the engineer training of the
soldier from the other more normal branches of
his occupation. In the armies of old, every man
was more or less an engineer. He constructed his
own roads and bridges, he fortified his own
camps and further, he prepared and worked his
offensive engines of war - catapults, battering
rams and the like.
Ample evidence of this is found all over
Britain and Europe in the form of roads,
blockhouses and walls combined with forts such
as Hadrian's Wall across the north of England to
keep out the marauding Scots. Even in China, the
Great Wall of China was built to keep out the
ravaging tribes.
The engineer carried out all these tasks in
addition to the actual fighting which in later
times was looked upon as the sole legitimate
function of the infantry or cavalry soldier.
Corps of the Royal
Engineers
As the SA Army Engineer Corps developed out
of the Corps of Royal Engineers, it is necessary
to give a little background of the growth of the
Royal Engineers up to the time when the South
African Army Engineer Corps was formed.
When in 1066 William the Conqueror invaded
Britain, he brought with him his own engineers
headed by an officer known as "Ingeniator".
Engineer stems from the Latin word "ingenarius"
and originally meant "a person skilled in the
art of constructing defenses, a gifted person or
perhaps a genius", or "Genie" by the French and
the Afrikaans interpretation. At that stage, the
term was only applicable to officers and there
were no regular soldier engineers until much
later. From early in the 16th century we find
the Engineer identified with the field
operations of any army. His title itself
changing in accordance with the division of
duties. The original term "Engineer" seems to
have been considered hardly sufficiently martial
to represent their military duties. The new term
"Pioneers" was used to name the new Corps which
was formed expressly for work in camp or field.
The Pioneers fulfilled much the same duties in
the field as now fall to the lot of the men of
the Engineers, but to a humbler degree.
With the development of the technique of war
and particularly the necessity for the
employment of artisans such as carpenters,
bricklayers and masons, etc who were urgently
required particularly for fortifications, a new
body of men was engaged, known as the Corps of
Military Artificers. After years of valuable
service supporting the armed forces in the
field, this Corps of Military Artificers was
eventually absorbed into the Corps of Sappers
and Miners.
The Corps of Sappers and Miners had been
formed when the nature of warfare had changed,
requiring an art to be developed. With the
development of the bastioned fortress in the
latter part of the 17th century, it became clear
that the role of the military engineer was to
plan and build such defences, but it was also
his responsibility to assist the attacking force
in gaining entry into the fortress and thus
conquering the defenders. This entailed an
elaborate system of earthworks comprising
trenches giving cover to the attacking force.
Specially trained men called "sappers" dug
slowly ahead shielded by gabions. In many cases,
it was necessary to tunnel the final approach to
the external wall and, if necessary the wall had
to be mined . The term "sapper" is derived from
the word "sap" or "to sap" which means to work
in the open face of a trench in order to
lengthen it or to form a tunnel.
Early in the 19th century the School of
Military Engineering was established at Chatham,
England, to give instructions to officers and
men in the duties of sapping and mining and
other military field works.
In 1856, the Corps of Royal Sappers and
Miners was renamed the Corps of Royal Engineers.
Previously, only officers were members of the
Corps of Engineers and the separation of the
officers and men into two distinct corps under
separate titles was an anomaly which was
prejudicial to the discipline and harmony of the
service. As a result of the change, the rank and
file were no longer termed privates but sappers.
SA Army Engineer Corps
The SA Army Engineer Corps is directly
descended from the Corps of Royal Engineers.
Military Engineers first made their
appearance in South Africa during the Colonial
Regime when in 1859 the Governor of the Cape
Colony authorised the establishment of the Cape
Engineers (Volunteers), which was comprised of
South Africans and which in 1861 became simply
the Cape Engineers . In 1865, the title was
changed to the Cape Volunteer Engineer Corps,
but in 1869, the Corps literally faded away. Ten
years later in 1879, the Corps was resuscitated
under the name Cape Town Volunteer Engineers.
These sappers supported the ground forces during
the Frontier Wars and even as far afield as
Basutoland. The tasks they had to carry out were
the normal duties carried out by sappers but by
1895, the sappers again disappeared from the
scene.
It might be of interest to note that in 1879,
the British defeated the Zulus, fresh from their
triumph at Isanalwana, at Rorke's Drift, and
that the young lieutenant in charge, who was
awarded the Victoria Cross, was an Engineer
Officer by the name of John Chard. The SA
Defence Force has honoured his memory by
creating the awards of the John Chard Medal and
John Chard Decoration, both awarded for long and
efficient service.
In 1910, the Natal Engineer Corps was formed
but ceased to exist in 1913, a year after the
passing of the Defence Act in 1912. Just before
the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the Cape
Fortress Engineers were formed to relieve
Imperial Troops occupied on sapper tasks in the
fixed defences of the Cape Peninsula.
Although basically under the control of the
Royal Engineers both in employment and training,
the Engineer Units were composed of South
Africans who were gaining valuable experience
both in South West Africa and East Africa as
also during World War I (1914 - 1919), and it
was amongst these men that the seed was sown
which has since flowered in the SA Army Engineer
Corps with its superb achievements.
After World War I, all SA Army Engineer Units
with the exception of the permanent Cape
Fortress Engineers were disbanded. The SA
Defence Act Amendment of 1922 made provision for
a SA Army Engineer Corps among South Africa's
new regular full-time forces, and in 1923 the
Permanent Force element was established. By
1926, authority was granted in the GC and ACF
Regulations for the Citizen Force Engineers. In
1933, due to the economic depression, the
Permanent Force Engineers were disbanded leaving
only the four original SA Army Engineer Corps
Field Units in the ACF and in 1935, this number
was increased to six. In 1938, the post of Staff
Officer (Engineers) was created on the staff of
the SA Army Training Section. At the same time,
the number of SA Army Engineer Companies was
increased to nine to serve the nine Infantry
Brigades. In 1939, the post of Staff Officer
(Engineers) was upgraded to Assistant Director
of Training (Engineers) and in 1940 to Director
of Engineers at Defence Headquarters. Also in
1939, the Engineer Training Centre was
established at Zonderwater which was part of the
military base established at Premier Mine. In
1949, the additional Directorates of Works,
Fortifications and Coastal Works had been formed
and also in 1949 the Railway & Harbours Brigade,
which had been disbanded after World War I, was
resuscitated.
During the period 1940 - 1945, the SA Army
Engineer Corps which had started the war with a
strength of 54 officers and 585 sappers, rose to
the strength of approximately 16 000 men
belonging to over 70 different companies or
units. In the development of the Corps, three
aspects of military engineering had to be
considered and the obvious sapper groups were
the Base, Lines of Communication and Field or
Fighting Groups, each with its own particular
tasks but motivated by the basic requirements of
maintaining the mobility and comfort of the
ground forces. Hence, the 70 different units
covered the whole spectrum of military
engineering, such as close support Field
Companies and their Field Park Companies, Road
Construction Companies, Railways, Harbours and
Tunneling Companies, Survey Companies, Water
Supply and Treatment Companies, Workshop and
Engineer Stores Units and Chemical Warfare, Bomb
Disposal and Camouflage Units, in all, 31
different functions and disciplines.
On 29 December 1944, in recognition of
outstanding achievements by the SA Army Engineer
Corps during World War II, His Majesty King
George VI approved the design of our Corps
emblem, a bursting grenade, to be a device of 9
flames instead of the original seven, and
authorised the use of the motto "Ubique",
meaning "Everywhere". This is the same as that
of the Corps of Royal Engineers and has been
incorporated in the cap badge.
With the end of the war in 1945, the SA Army
Engineer Corps disappeared from the military
scene, and only a Junior SA Army Engineer Corps
Regular Force Officer was appointed on the staff
of the Director of Military Training. However,
with demobilisation, 16 Field Squadron was
resuscitated to accommodate sappers wishing to
remain in the Regular Force. In 1946, a GSO2
Engineers was appointed with two other Regular
Force Officers and an Engineer Training Wing was
established at what was then the Military
College, now the SA Army College. The two posts
were both held by one officer, a most
inconvenient situation, and it was not until
1964 that the post of GSO2 Engineers was filled
full-time by a Regular Force Officer. In 1948,
the Wing was moved to Potchefstroom, where it
became the Engineer Wing of the SA Army
Artillery and SA Army Armour School. In 1968, it
was transferred to Kroonstad as the Engineer
Training Centre and finally in 1969 became the
School of Engineers.
Meanwhile in 1957, the Mobile Battalion was
established, which later in 1959 became the
Mobile Watch, and after going through various
changes in 1964 eventually became 1 Composite
Construction Regiment and in 1967, 1
Construction Regiment, which was also disbanded
in 1968.
In 1969, the Directorate of Engineers was
established at Kroonstad, but in 1972 it was
moved to SA Army Headquarters, Pretoria where it
was developed to what it is today.
In 1968, the 35 Field Park Squadron was
established as a Regular Force Unit and in 1974
was renamed 35 Engineer Support Unit and
stationed at Kroonstad. In 1975, the South West
Africa Engineer Support Unit was formed and
stationed at Grootfontein. Also in 1975, arising
out of all the Survey and Printing activities of
the Survey and Printing Units of World War II,
the 47 Survey Squadron, a Regular Force Unit,
was formed. This Unit trained all the National
Servicemen posted to it and in turn fed the two
DF Survey Units which had been established - the
46 Survey Squadron at Cape Town in 1959 and the
45 Survey Squadron at Pietermaritzburg in 1969.
Meanwhile in 1946, the ACF Engineers were
resuscitated and 1 Field Engineer Regiment was
formed to be followed by 2 Field Engineer
Regiment. In 1958, 2 Field Engineer Regiment was
disbanded but to meet the demands of the South
African Defence Force, further squadrons were
formed. In 1973, 1 Field Engineer Regiment was
disbanded and the Squadrons attached to various
formations. With the development of the SA
Defence Force to meet both the internal and
external threat, Field Engineer Units were
created to support the new organisations.
In 1962, the Regular Force was formed and 17
Field Squadron was created to support this
force, stationed in Potchefstroom. However, in
1967 it was moved to Bethlehem and became a
purely training unit. In 1974, it became the two
new squadrons 24 and 25 Field Squadrons as
support squadrons in the operational area of
South West Africa.
1 Construction Regiment was re-established at
the end of 1976 at Marievale near Springs,
Gauteng and towards the end of 1977 was tasked
with the construction of the Military Base at
Dukuduku on the Natal North Coast. Subsequently,
due to policy changes, its activities were
confined to the operational area, in support of
the SA Army, with great success.
In 1982, the SA Army Engineer Formation was
created with the Directorate of Engineers as its
Headquarters and commanded by the Director of
Engineers which gave the Directorate operational
control over most of its Engineer Units. During
this time, control of the School of Engineers
passed to the Director of Training, so did all
Corps Schools.
In 1983, ministerial authority was obtained
for the conversion of all Field Squadrons,
normally attached to the conventional forces, to
Field Engineer Regiments, each comprising a
headquarters, 2 field squadrons and a support
squadron. Each squadron has 3 troops. This did
not affect Engineer Squadrons attached to the
territorial commands for counter-insurgency
operations.
The Post War SA Army
Engineer Corps - Operational
The main functions of the Sapper are to
ensure the mobility of the fighting men both in
the advance and retreat, to make life as secure
and comfortable as possible for them, in order
to maintain their morale and hence their
fighting ability, and whose duties often go far
beyond that which is expected from the normal
field engineer. In addition, he must possess
enough initiative, experience and imagination to
deny these necessities of modern warfare to the
enemy. It is therefore obvious why we are proud
of our famous motto, "First In and Last Out".
First in to enable the ground forces to move
forward and last out to delay or prevent the
enemy from moving and harassing our retreating
forces.
To do this, the Sapper must know all the arts
and functions of the Corps which have been
included in the Training Manual of the SA Army
Engineer Corps.
Prior to the institution of what is now known
as "border duties" in the 1970's the combined
engineer capabilities represented by the School
of Engineers, Mobile Watch, Construction
Regiment, Engineer Units and 17 Field Squadron,
the Squadron attached to the Regular Force,
carried out numerous sapper tasks as set out
below:
- The building of a 180 m double
story/single story floating bridge across
the Vaal River to relieve the traffic
crossing the Barrage Bridge while
alterations and repair work was done.
- The building of a reinforced concrete
access bridge from the town of Middelburg to
the Military Base, and also one giving
access to the training area.
- The building of a double/single bailey
bridge across the Ngebele River in the
Northern Transvaal.
- The building of a triple/double bailey
bridge over the Umzinto River on the Natal
South Coast after the original bridge had
been washed away.
- The construction of airfields at
Pietermartizburg, Nkuze, Jan Kempdorp and
Pietermaritzburg.
- The building of classification ranges at
Messina, Walvis Bay and Bellville.
- The building of miniature ranges at
Potchefstroom, Ladysmith and Lenz.
- The temporary repair to the Nahoon
Bridge at East London pending repairs, by
the erection of a 50 m double/single bailey
bridge.
- The demolition of a 200 m reinforced
concrete road bridge across the Pongola
River.
- During Exercise Kwiksilver, the erection
of a 110m triple/single bailey bridge on
unifloat piers across the Vaal River.
- The demolition, as a training exercise,
of a 370 m Bethulie railway bridge over the
Orange River.
- Operation CHETTO, which was the building
of a gravel road of approximately 160 km
running east-west through the Caprivi.
- The building of a Military Base at
Dukuduku on the Natal North Coast.
- The erection of military security fences
throughout the Republic of South Africa.
- The dismantling and re-erection of six
Bellman Hangars throughout the Republic of
South Africa and South West Africa for use
by the SA Defence Force.
In the fulfillment of their border duties,
their tasks comprised mainly mine warfare, with
all its various forms and challenges, the
erection of undercover accommodation to make the
life of the soldier serving in the operational
area more comfortable and hygienic, and as
always, the compilation of various maps, and the
siting of beacons by the survey companies, to
assist the ground forces in their task.
As far as mine warfare is concerned, it is
recorded that during 1980/81 the
Sappers cleared an average road distance of 19
600 km per month, which represents a distance of
ten times that between Beit Bridge and Cape
Town, thus ensuring the mobility of the ground
forces. A total of 330 mines were detected and
removed during this period, which is equal to
1848 kg of explosives, which is sufficient, with
efficient planning, to destroy Beit Bridge.
In the field of construction, undercover
accommodation, including living quarters, stores
messes, ablution and toilet blocks and defensive
positions, were erected during 1982 to a total
area of 101 104 m˛, which is equal to the total
area of 17 rugby fields. It is interesting to
note that on one rugby field 250 x 4,9m x 4,9m
tents can be erected, which gives a total
tentage on 17 rugby fields of 4 250.
In the field of survey and mapping 46 Survey
Squadron has since 1980 extended the primary and
secondary trigonometrical beacon system of the
Northern and Eastern Transvaal and at the same
time updated ± 90 x 1:50 000 scale maps – the
area covered being approximately ±65 000km˛
(four times that of the area of Swaziland). At
the same time, 45 Survey Squadron completed ±460
x 1:10 000 orthophoto maps of Northern Natal
from Josini to Pongola, covering a surface area
±17 000 km˛, approximately the size of
Swaziland. The number of maps which 47 Survey
Squadron completed or reviewed in 1981, covers a
surface area of 40 000km˛, approximately the
size of Lesotho.
It is fitting to record at this stage, that
during Operation Savannah, the mobility of the
advancing forces was so impeded by a fairly fast
flowing river, that the sappers had to erect an
improvised bridge under enemy fire, and which is
now known as the famous Bridge 14.
In 1982 the Chief of the Army decided to
establish the SA Amy Engineer Formation, with
the Director of Engineers as the Officer
Commanding, and which would give him increased
functional and operational control over the
whole of the SA Army Engineer Corps.
Accordingly, on 26 November 1982, the Chief of
the Army, Lieutenant General J.J. Geldenhuys SSA,
SD, SM presented the written authority to the
Director of Engineers which reads as
under-mentioned:
SA Army Engineer
Formation
"In the light of the above, this Command
Directive is issued to you, in the knowledge
that you have an important contribution to make
in the creation of a more dynamic SA Army”.
The efforts of the modern sapper, after years
of hard and rigorous training, and a
wealth of practical experience, was awarded to
the SA Engineer Corps on 15 December 1982, again
by the Chief of the Army, Lieutenant General J.J.
Geldenhuys SSA, SD, SM, whose commendation reads
as follows:
Commendations for
Members of the SA Army Engineer Corps Involved
in Mine Warfare
"The SA Army Engineer Corps has delivered
service of a high order during operations, and
particularly in the sphere of mine warfare.
Their contribution to the maintenance of
mobility of our own forces is exceptional and
praiseworthy. Mines have been located and
rendered safe by continuous action conducted on
foot under trying conditions and often under
enemy fire. In the process of locating mines and
the rendering safe thereof, Field Engineers are
continuously exposed to perilous conditions
under which they display a high degree of
bravery, perseverance, teamwork, spirit and
dogged refusal to accept that trying conditions
and fear of mortal danger cannot be overcome.
For this particular quality of the will to win
on behalf of the leader element and on their own
terrain I commend the SA Army Engineer Corps.”
In modern warfare, the Sapper has to adapt
himself to the manner in which the campaigns are
fought and to the demands which are made on the
Corps by the ground fighting troops. Hence the
SA Army Engineer Corps in World War II grew from
small beginnings comprising 9 field companies to
a total of approximately 70 units exercising a
total of 31 different functions and disciplines
with a total manpower of 16 000 men. Apart from
the fighting elements, there were units dealing
with all aspects of water supply and treatment,
road construction and maintenance of railways
and harbours, tunnelling, survey, engineer
stores units, chemical warfare, bomb disposal,
camouflage, forestry and geological survey to
mention the main elements. Many of these were
provided from various provincial and government
departments, from the Mining Industry and from
private enterprise.
In the process of adaptation you will see
that the Sapper not only has to make use of the
natural human resources, he often has to possess
the expertise to improve on existing equipment,
such as bailey bridge equipment, and he also has
to improvise in the many strange circumstances
he finds himself. So a good Sapper must be
skilled, well-trained and flexible in his
solution to a problem, always bearing in mind
the mobility of the fighting man and his comfort
and security.
This adaptation is not only concerned with
the strategy of war but must also contend with
the weather and natural conditions wherever a
campaign is launched. For instance, during World
War II, there were four theatres of war. In East
Africa, the sapper had to contend with arid,
lava covered areas in the South which made
communications difficult and in the North with
rain and monsoons which meant flooded areas and
swollen rivers. In North Africa, it was the
desert with its hot, dry Khamsin winds with the
subsequent dust storms which made visibility nil
and of course the problems of water supply. In
Italy, it was the mountainous nature of the
country with its innumerable rivers and extreme
winters and summers. Fighting along the length
of the country made it easy for the enemy, by
means of demolitions and minefields, to hinder
our advance. In the Levant, it was somewhat
similar to the desert, but the main task was
clearing blocked tunnels to restore rail
communications and in Madagascar, a very
undeveloped country, a Field Company together
with elements of a Field Park Company, supported
the SA Brigade and its main task was
construction of road communications and the
replacement of bridges destroyed by the enemy.
In conclusion, I would say that to fulfill
his responsibilities to his fellow fighting men,
the Sapper has not only to possess the necessary
expertise, but a sense of adaptability, an
ability to improvise and a dogged determination
to overcome his problems and so satisfy his will
to win.
Why Sappers
The name “Sapper” was derived from the “Sap”
a zig-zag trench developed in the late 17th and
early 18th centuries in Europe designed to give
continuous cover to troops advancing on enemy
fortifications.
"Sappers” were selected from the ranks for
their physical and mental attributes and skill
in the construction of these earthworks.
Briefly, a “Sap” started from a trench
running parallel to the area of the proposed
break-through, but out of musketry range of the
opposing stronghold. The zig-zag design gave
protection to the successively exposed flanks of
the “Sap” as it advanced towards the objective.
The diagram is considerably simplified for
clarity and is not to scale. In practice, the
layout of the “Saps” was far more complicated,
depending on the terrain and the plan of the
defences under attack.
Each Sap was developed by a team of four
Sappers. No 1 pushed ahead a “Sap Roller” or
“Stuffed Gabion” (a cylindrical structure made
of wooden stakes and wickerwork, filled with
faggots and branches, about four feet in
diameter and three feet high) on the flank
facing the enemy. Thus protected, he dug a
shallow trench toward, filling the vertical
“gabions” with excavated soil. Gaps between
filled “Gambions” were plugged with small
sandbags.
Gabions were constructed by setting up stakes
vertically in a circle in the ground and binding
them into hollow cylinders with wickerwork.
Instead of the “Sap Roller”, a wheeled timer
screen, called a “Mantlet”, was sometimes used
by Sapper No 1.
Sappers 2, 3 and 4 followed, each in turn
deepening and widening the trench, and laid
“Fascines” – bundles of branches and sticks nine
inches thick and up to twelve or more feet long
– on top of the line of vertical gabions to
raise the height of the protective wall. The
rubble from these subsequent excavations was
thrown over the top of the wall to provide extra
strength in the form of an earthen parapet or
rampart.
Later, the trench was deepened and widened
still further to allow artillery, etc to be
brought forward. This procedure was continued
until a sheltered approach was advanced close
enough to the objective to enable mining and
other means of assault to effect a breach into
the fortified area.
Since those days, Sappers have undertaken an
impressive number of varied and vital jobs, from
water supply to mine-lifting plus scores of
other essential activities as indicated above.
Milestones in the
History of C Squadron
- 1 August 1975 - 10 Engineer Squadron was
established.
- 2 July 1978 - Unit emblem was approved.
- 8 December 1988 - Changed name to 10
Engineer Regiment.
- 31 May 1990 - Received National Colours.
- 10 May 1991 - Unit flag was approved.
- 30 November 1990 - Amalgamated with 15
Engineer Regiment (as part of Project 2000).
- 1 December 2002 - Became C Squadron of 1
Construction Regt.
- December 2004 - To be finally closed
down and relocated to Military Base
Dunnottar.
|