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   | Operation HUSKY (Invasion of Sicily July 9/10 1943) updates are planned The Plan
 Execution of the Plan
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 [url=http://www.naval-history.net/xDKEscorts00Contents.htm] Naval-History.net
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 ACTION REPORT WESTERN NAVAL TASK FORCETHE SICILIAN CAMPAIGN; OPERATION "HUSKY"
 Aspects of the Allied Invasion of Sicily, 1943
 MilitaryHistoryOnline.com - Operation HUSKY - The Naval Experience (Part 1)
 MilitaryHistoryOnline.com
 USA Atlantic Fleet - December 1, 1943
 USA Destroyer Squadrons 7, 10-21
 USA Destroyer Squadrons 1-6,  8, 9, 15
 US Navy OoB Operation HUSKY Axis History Forum
 MtbRon 15
 USA Tugs
 Combined Drops OPERATION HUSKY
 FLEET TUG (ATF), RESCUE TUG (ATR), AUXILIARY TUG (ATA), OLD TUG (ATO), HARBOR TUG (YT), AND SALVAGE SHIP (ARS) HALL OF VALOR
 OPERATION HUSKY - USS Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. DD850
 Liberty Ship Nanes
 Troopships of World War II
 For the Purists
 Allied Ships Damaged or Sunk by Axis Aircraft, 14 May – 2 September 1943 (pdf)
 SUBMARINE COMMANDERS  by USNA Class Year
 British Tanker Company
 NavSource Naval History - Torpedo Boats and Destroyers
 Convoy naming conventions
 World Naval Ships Forum
 Seekrieg 43-07
 
 Operation Barclay - The Allied deception plan that created a fictional 12th Army including troop movements, radio traffic, recruitment of Greek interpreters, and acquisition of Greek maps to indicate an invasion through the Balkans.
 Operation Mincemeat - The Allied deception plan that the Allies planned to invade Greece and Sardinia in 1943 instead of Sicily. This was accomplished by persuading the Germans that they had, by accident, intercepted "top secret" documents giving details of Allied war plans. The documents were attached to a corpse deliberately left to wash up on a beach in Punta Umbría, Spain.
 
 Operation HUSKY Western Naval Task Force Timeline
 NCWTF = Naval Commander Western Task Force - Rear Admiral Alan Goodrich Kirk, USN
 CTF = Combined Task Force
 NC = North Africa (Oran/Algiers) to Sicily
 TD = Tunisia to Gela, Sicily (DIME Force)
 TC = Tunisia to Scoglitti, Sicily (CENT Force)
 TJ = Tunisia to Licata, Sicily (JOSS Force)
 TK = Tunisia to Gela, Sicily (KOOL Force (7th U.S. Army Reserve))
 Combat-loaded/Combat-loaders = Large transport ships.
 RNVR = Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
 HHelMS - Greek Navy
 
 Kpt.Mar. - Kapitan Marynarki - ORP Lt.
 Kmdr.Ppor. - Komandor Podporucznik -  ORP Lt.Cmdr.
 Kmdr.Por. - Komandor Porucznik - ORP Cmdr.
 
 Convoy speeds were to be 13 knots for combat loaders, 12 1/2 knots for LCIs, 8 knots for LSTs, and 6 1/2 for LCTs.
 
 Algeria
 Algiers was the staging port for the Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) (CTF-81 (Combined Task Force 81)) the combat-loaded U.S. 1st Infantry Division.
 Oran was the staging port for the Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) (CTF-85 (Combined Task Force 85)) the combat-loaded U.S. 45th Infaantry Division,
 
 Tunisia
 Bizerte was the staging port for the Licata Attack Force (JOSS Force) (CTF-86 (Combined Task Force 86)) the LST, LSI, and LCT loaded U.S. 3rd Infantry Division.
 Bizerta and Tunis were the mounting ports for LSTs, LCI(L)s, and LCTs because those ports were large enough to accomodate the landing craft and were the North African ports located closest to the assault areas assigned to the Western Task Force.
 Sousse became the staging port for the LCI(L)s because the movement cleared Tunis of some of the traffic load and because the assault voyage was shortened for the embarked infantry.
 Kariouan was the staging for the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division.
 
 
 06/08/43 - 06/22/43 Convoy UGF.9 (US 45th Infantry Division convoy) from Hampton Roads, USA to Oran, Algeria
 06/11/43 Detached
 Destroyer USS William Bradford Shubrick (DD-639) - Lt.Cdr. Louis Allen Bryan, USN (Bombed) - joined 06/08/43
 
 06/22/43 Detached
 CruDiv 8 (Cruiser Division 8)
 Light Cruiser USS Philadelphia (CL-41) (F) - Cdr. Gordon Josiah Crosby, USN - joined 06/08/43
 
 Crudiv 13 (Cruiiser Division 13)
 Light Cruiser USS Birmingham (CL-62) - Capt. John Wilkes, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Light Cruiser USS Boise (CL-47) - Capt. Leo Hewlett Thebaud, USN - joined 06/08/43
 
 DesRon 15 (Destroyer Squadrom 15)
 DesDiv 29 (Destroyer Division 29)
 Destroyer USS William Mervine ( DD-489) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Dale Roderick Frakes, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS John Henry Quick (DD-490) - Lt.Cdr. Philip Winslow Cann, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Gregory Caldwell Davison (DD-618) - Cdr. Walter Coulter Winn - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Frank Edmund Beatty (DD-640) - Lt.Cdr. William Outerson, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Benjamin Ryan Tillman (DD-641) - Lt.Cdr. Francis Douglas McCorkle, USN - joined 06/08/43
 DesDiv 30 (Destroyer Division 30)
 Destroyer USS Thomas Jefferson Cowie (DD-632) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Jonathan Whiting, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Austin Melvin Knight (DD-633) - Lt.Cdr. Joel Clarence Ford, Jr., USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS John James Doran (DD-634) - Lt.Cdr. Norman Ernest Smith, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Ralph Earle (DD-635) - Lt.Cdr. Hamilton Wilcox Howe, USN - joined 06/08/43
 
 DesRon 17 (Destroyer Squadron 17)
 DesDiv 33 (Destroyer Division 33)
 Destroyer USS John McLeod Murphy (DD-603) - Lt.Cdr. Leonard Scott Bailey, USNR - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS James Henry Glennon (DD-620) - Lt.Cdr. Floyd Charles Camp, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS William Nicholson Jeffers (DD-621) - Lt.Cdr. William Thomas McGarry, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS William Alfred Truman Maddox (DD 622) - Lt.Cdr. Eugene Sylvester Sarsfield, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Charles Preston Nelson (DD-623) - Lt.Cdr. Munro Marvin Riker, USN - joined 06/08/43
 DesDiv 34 (Destroyer Division 34) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN
 Destroyer USS Smedley Darlington Butler (DD-636) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Mitchell Dudley Matthews, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS Bancroft Gherardi (DD-637) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN - joined 06/08/43
 Destroyer USS William Lewis Herndon (DD-638) - Cdr. Granville Alexander Moore, USN - joined 06/08/43
 
 Amphibious Force Command Ship USS Ancon (AGC-4) 10,021 tons (Flagship of Cent Attack Force) - Capt. Paul Luker Mather, USN
 Attack Transport USS Anne Arundel (ex Mormacyork) (AP-76) 7,796 tons - Cdr. Lunsford Yandell Mason Jr., USN
 Attack Transport USS Arcturus (ex Mormachawk) (AKA-1) 6,200 tons
 Attack Transport USS Bellatrix (ex Raven) (AKA-3) 8,113 rons
 Attack Transport USS Calvert (ex Del Orleans) (APA-32) 8,429 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Chemung (ex Esso Annapolis) (AO-30) 11,335 tons
 Attack Transport USS Dorothea Lynde Dix (AP-67) 6,736 tons
 Attack Transport USS Florence Nightingale (AP-70) 7,773 tons - Capt. Joseph William McColl Jr., USN
 Attack Transport USS Frederick N. Funston (AP-89) 12,093 tons - Cdr. John Edward Murphy
 Attack Transport USS Harry Lee (APA-10) 9,989 tons - Cdr. J. G. Pomeroy, USN
 Attack Transport USS James O'Hara (APA-90) 10,067 tons - Lt.Cdr. Charles Vern Allen, USN
 Attack Transport USS Leonard Wood (APA-12) 13,712 tons - Capt Merlin O'Neill, USCG
 Fleet Tug Moreno (ATF-87) - Lt. (jg) V. H. Kyllberg, USN
 Ammunition Ship USS Mount Baker (ex USS Kilauea) (AE-4) 6,350 tons
 Attack Transport USS Neville (APA-9) 7,475 tons - Cdr. Oral Raymond Swigart, USN
 Fleet Oiler USS Salamonie (ex Esso Columbia) (AO-26) 11,316 tons
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Susan Brownell Anthony (AP-72) 8,193 tons - Capt. Henry Hartley, USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Alcyone (AKA -7) 14,225 tons - Capt. Daniel Michael McGurl, USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Andromeda (AKA-15) 6,556 tons - Cdr. William Anthony Fly, USN
 Attack Transport USS Charles Carroll (APA-28) - Cdr. Harold Biesemeier, USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Procyon (AKA-2) 7,480 tons - Cdr. Beverly Armistead Hartt, USN
 Stores Ship USS Tarazed (ex Chiriqui) (AF-13) 6,983 tons
 Attack Transport USS Thomas Jefferson (AP-60) 7,176 tons - Capt. Philip Pindell Welch, USN
 Repair Ship USS Vulcan (AR-5) 9,140 tons
 Attack Transport USS William Phillips Biddle (APA-8) 7,884 tons - Capt. Paul Rolland Glutting
 
 
 06/10/43 - 06/21/43 Convoy UGF.9A from Hampton Roads, USA to Oran, Algeria
 06/21/43 Detached
 Light Cruiser USS Brooklyn (CL-40) - Capt. Humbert William Ziroli, USN - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS Thomas Boyle (DD-600) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Benjamin Prince Field ,Jr., USN - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS James Buck (DD-420) (F) - Lt. George Solon Lambert, USN (from DesRon 13) - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS Thomas Alva Edison (DD-439) - Lt.Cdr. Hepburn Alcott Pearce, USN - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS Nicholson (named for the Nicholson family) (DD-442) - Cdr. Lewis Merrill Markham Jr., USN - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS Francis Asbury Roe (DD-418) - Lt.Cdr. Rathel Linwood Nolan Jr., USN - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS Claude Augustus Swanson (DD-443) - Cdr. Edward Livingston Robertson Jr., USN - joined 06/10/43
 Destroyer USS Charles Wilkes (DD-441) (F) - Cdr. Frederick Wolsieffer, USN - joined 06/10/43
 
 Troop Transport USS Borinquen (USAT) 7,114 tons
 Attack Transport USS Chateau Thierry (AP-31) 9,050 tons
 Troop Transport USS Evangeline (USAT) 5,043 tons
 Troopship USS Explorer 6,736 tons
 Fleet Tug USS Hopi (ATF-71) 1,235 tons - (F) - Lt. Oscar W. Huff
 Troopship USS Mexico (ex Colombia) 5,236 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Niobrara (AO-72) 10,180 tons
 Troopship USS Ocean Mail 7,842 tons
 Attack Transport USS Orizaba (AP-24) 11,293 tons
 Troopship USS Santa Paula 9,135 tons
 Troopship USS Shawnee 6,209 tons
 
 
 06/13/43 - 07/10/43 UGS.10 from Hampton Roads, USA  to Port Said, Egypt
 07/02/43 Detached
 Destroyer USS Livermore (DD 429) - Cmdr. Harry Edward Siedel, Jr., USN - joined 06/14/43
 Destroyer USS Eberle (DD 430) - Cdr. Clare Brown Smiley, USN - joined 06/14/43
 Destroyer USS Endicott (DD 495) - Cdr. Wilton Stewart Heald, USN - joined 06/14/43
 Destroyer USS Ericsson (DD 440) - Lt.Cdr. Bernard Henree Meyer, USN - joined 06/14/43
 Destroyer USS Kearny (DD-432) - Cdr. Lindsey Williamson - joined 06/14/43
 Minelayer Keokuk (AKN 4) - Lcdr. L. Brennan, USNR - joined 06/13/43
 Destroyer Alexander Agnew McCormick (DD-223) - LCdr. Seymour Dunlop Owens - joined 06/14/43
 Destroyer USS George Fountain Parrott (DD-218) - LCdr. John Nelson Hughes - joined 06/14/43
 Minesweeper USS Pilot (AM 104) - LCdr. Sherman Bruce Wetmore, USNR - joined 06/14/43
 Minelayer USS Salem (CM-11) - Cdr. Henry Goodman Williams, USN - joined 06/13/43
 Minelayer Weehawken (CM-12) (ex SS Estrada Polma) -  LCdr. Robert Edwin Mills, USNR - joined 06/13/43
 
 07/06/43 Detached
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blankney (L 30) - Lt.Cdr. Douglas Henry Reid Bromley, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blencathra (L 24) - Lt. Edgar George Warren, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brecon (L 76) - Lt.Cdr. Terence Desmond Herrick, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brissenden (L 79) - Lt. David Creagh Beatty, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Hambledon (L 37) - Lt.Cdr. Gordon Wylie McKendrick, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Destroyer HMS Mendip (L 60) (F) - Capt. Cecil Ramsden Langworthy Parry, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Destroyer HMS Wallace (L 64) - Lt. Duncan Carson, RN - joined 07/02/43
 Destroyer HMS Woolston (L 49) - Lt. Frederick William Hawkins, RN - joined 07/02/43
 
 07/09/43 Detached
 Sloop HMS Banff (Y 43) - Lt. Peter Brett, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Corvette HMS Bergamot (K 189) - Lt. Reginald Thomas HOran, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Corvette HMS Bryony (K 192) - T/Lt. Thomas Hand, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Sloop HMS Erne (U 03) - Lt.Cdr. Evelyn David John Abbot, RN - joined 07/07/43
 Corvette HMS Honeysuckle (K 27) - Lt. Henry Herbert Dietrich MacKillican, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Corvette HMS Hyderabad (K 212) - T/Lt. Thomas Cooper, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Corvette HMS Oxlip (K 123) - Lt. Charles William Leadbetter, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Frigate HMS Teviot (K 222) - Lt.Cdr. Thomas Taylor, RN - joined 07/07/43
 
 Liberty Ship USS Alexander Lillington (WSAT (550) USAT)  7,177 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Alexander Martin (USAT) 7,177 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Andrew Moore (0131 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Bougie via Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS Benjamin Huntington  (0107 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Gibraltar
 Liberty Ship USS David G. Farragut (0317 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,191 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS David Caldwell (0909 USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg (0081 WSAT AP) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Francis Marion (0487 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,177 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS George Bancroft (0091 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Gibraltar
 
 Fuel Oil Barge USS Anticline (YO-62) 2,670 tons
 Tanker SS Athelduchess (Br) 8,940 tons - Gibraltar
 Tanker SS Atlantic (Nor) 7,342 tons - Gibraltar
 Tanker USS Beacon tons 10,398 - BERMUDA
 Tanker SS British Courage (Br) 6,952 tons - Oran
 Tanker SS British Glory (Br) 6,992 tons - CALLED Algiers 07/07/43
 Transport USS Carrillo 4,593 tons - Casablanca
 Tanker USS Chester O. Swain (ex Albertolite) 8,146 tons - Oran. NOTIONAL SAILING DATE
 Transport USS Delnorte 4,982 tons - Casablanca
 Transport SS Dornoch (Br) 5,186 tons - Gibraltar TO Algiers
 Tanker SS Eclipse (Br) 9,767 tons - Algiers
 Tanker SS Empire Gold (Br) 8,028 tons - Algiers
 Tanker SS Empire Jet (Br) 8,134 - Oran
 Transport SS Empire Prospero (Br) 6,766 tons
 Transport SS Empire Rosalind (Br) 7,290 tons
 Transport SS Empire Salvage (Br) 10,594 tons - Algiers
 Transport SS Empire Viscount (Br) 8,882 tons - Oran
 Transport SS Fort Kootenay (Br) 8,882 tons - Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS George Davis (0876 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,177 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS George Matthews (0285 USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Gideon Welles (0563 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Tanker USS Gulf Coast 7,140 tons - Bizerta
 Liberty Ship USS Haym Salomon (0987 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Casablanca
 Transport SS Henry Dundas (Br) 10,448 tons - Bizerta
 Tanker USS Herbert L. Pratt 7,118 tons - Bizerta VIA Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS Houston Volunteers - (0110 USAT) 7,176 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS James Jackson (0343 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS James Whitcomb Riley ( 0193 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS James Woodrow (0929 USAT) 7,200 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Joel Chandler Harris (0010 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS John E. Schmeltzer (0984 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS John H. Eaton (0832) 7,176 tons - Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS  John Howard Payne (0490) 7,181 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS  John P. Poe (0054) 7,191 tons - Bizerta
 Liberty Ship USS  John Trumbull (0337 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS  Jonathan Worth (0897 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,177 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Joseph Hewes (0217 WSAT AP USAT) 7,177 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS King S. Woolsey (0681 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Gibraltar
 Liberty Ship USS Leland Stanford (0298 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Gibraltar
 Liberty Ship USS Lincoln Steffens (0668 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Fleet Oiler SS Lot (French) 4,220 tons - 06/22/1943 SUNK BY U-572
 Laanding Ship Tank LST-165
 Liberty Ship USS Mark Twain (0196) 7,176 tons - Bizerta
 Fleet Oiler USS Merrimack (AO-37)10,221 tons - 06/22/1943 Picks up survivors of Fleet Oiler SS Lot (French), Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS Pearl Harbor (0927 USAT) 7,200 tons - Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS Richard Jordan Gatling (0419 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,181 tons - Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS Samuel Ashe (0164 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,177 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS Samuel Huntington (0248 WSAT (504) USAT) 7,181 tons - Oran
 Transport SS Stanridge (Br) 5,975 tons - BONE VIA Algiers 7.7 - 08/04/43 sunk by Italian frogmen at Algeciras; Spain
 Liberty Ship USS Stephen C. Foster (0276) 7,196 tons - Algiers
 Liberty Ship USS Thaddeus Kosciuszko (0926 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,200 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Thomas B. Robertson (0122 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Gibraltar
 Liberty Ship USS Thomas Sumter (0154 WSAT AP USAT) 7,177 tons - Gibraltar
 Liberty Ship USS Thomas W. Bickett (0905 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Fuel Oil Barge USS Pumper (YO-56)  944 tons
 Escort Carrier USS Santee (CVE-29) (ex Esso Seakay)
 Liberty Ship USS William D. Moseley (0895 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,177 tons
 Liberty Ship USS William H. Webb (0980) 7,176 tons - RETURNED AFTER EXPLOSION ONBOARD
 Liberty Ship USS William M. Stewart (0087) 7,176 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS William Mulholland (0677 WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Transport USS William Penn 8,447 tons - Casablanca
 Liberty Ship USS William W. Gerhard (0977 USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Winfield Scott (0098 USAT) 7,176 tons - Oran
 Liberty Ship USS Zachary Taylor (0244) 7,181 tons - Oran
 
 
 06/17/43 Thursday 14:00 - 06/23/43  Force H  from Scapa Flow to Gibraltar  Flag Officer Vice Admiral Algernon Usborne Willis, RN (aboard Nelson)
 Battleship HMS Nelson (28) (Flag, Force H) - Capt. the Hon. Guy Herbrand Edward Russell, RN
 Battleship HMS Rodney (29) - Capt. James William Rivett-Carnac, RN
 Battleship HMS Valiant (02) - Capt. Leslie Haliburton Ashmore, RN
 Battleship HMS Warspite (03) - Capt. Herbert Annesley Packer, RN
 Aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable (92) - Capt. Guy Grantham, RN
 8th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Faulknor (H 62) (F) - Capt. Alan Kenneth Scott-Moncrieff, RN
 Destroyer HMS Fury (H 76) - Lt.Cdr. Colin Henry Campbell, RN
 Destroyer HMS Echo (H 23) - Lt. Richard Herbert Calcraft Wyld, RN
 Destroyer HMS Intrepid (D 10) - Cdr. Charles Arthur de Winton Kitcat, RN
 Destroyer HMS Inglefield (D 02) - A/Cdr. Charles Fraser Harrington Churchill, RN
 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Offa (G29) - Lt.Cdr. Rowland Francis Leonard, RN
 Destroyer HMS Panther (G41) - Lt.Cdr. Robert William Jocelyn, RN
 Destroyer HMS Pathfinder (G10) - Cdr. Edward Albert Gibbs, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quail (G45) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Fergus Jenks, RN
 Destroyer HMAS Queenborough (G70) - Cdr. Eric Percival Hinton, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quilliam (G09) (F) - Capt. Stephen Hope Carlill, RN
 Destroyer ORP Piorun (Lightning) (G 85) - Kmdr.Por. Stanislaw Tytus Dzienisiewicz, ORP
 
 
 06/18/43 from Londonderry to join Force H at approximately position 54-30N, 15W
 21st Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Arrow (H 42) - Lt.Cdr. William Wentworth Fitzroy, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blankney (L 30) - Lt.Cdr. Douglas Henry Reid Bromley, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blencathra (L 24) - Lt. Edgar George Warren, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brecon (L 76) - Lt.Cdr. Terence Desmond Herrick, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brissenden (L 79) - Lt. David Creagh Beatty, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Hambledon (L 37) - Lt.Cdr. Gordon Wylie McKendrick, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Ledbury (L 90) - Lt. Denis Roy Newton Murdoch, RN
 Destroyer HMS Mendip (L 60) (F) - Capt. Cecil Ramsden Langworthy Parry, RN
 Destroyer HMS Penn (G 77) - Lt.Cdr. James Hamilton Swain, RN
 Destroyer HMS Viceroy (D 91) - Lt. Thomas Frederick Hallifax, RN
 Destroyer Flotilla Leader HMS Wallace (L 64) - Lt. Duncan Carson, RN
 Destroyer HMS Woolston (L 49) - Lt. Frederick William Hawkins, RN
 
 
 06/20/43 (Sunday) - 06/29/43 (Tuesday) Convoy KMS.18A from the Clyde to Gibraltar
 Frigate HMS Exe (K 92) - A/Cdr. Michael Anthony Ormus Biddulph, RN - joined 06/20/43
 Sloop HMS Gorleston (Y 92) (ex USCGC Itasca) - Cdr. Ronald William Keymer, RN - joined 06/20/43
 Sloop HMS Lowestoft (L 59 /U 59) - A/Cdr. Lawrence Henry Phillips, RN - joined 06/20/43
 Frigate HMS Ness (K 219) - Lt.Cdr. Trevor George Payne Crick, RN - joined 06/25/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Pytchley (L 92) - Lt. Robert Hugh Hodgkinson, RN - joined 06/24/43
 Sloop HMS Wellington (L 65 /U 65) - Lt.Cdr. John Treasure Jones, RD, RNR - joined 06/24/43
 
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-301
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-305
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-319
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-321
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-365
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-366
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-406 ARRIVED LONDONDERRY IN TOW
 Landing Ship Tank HM LST-424
 
 
 06/24/43 (Thursday) - 07/10/43 (Saturday) Convoy KMS.18B from the Clyde to Operation HUSKY: Bark West
 06/24/43 Detached
 Corvette HMS Rhododendron (K 78) - Lt. Louis Alan Sayers, RNR - joined 06/26/43
 
 07/03/43 Detached
 Escort Aircraft Carrier HMS Archer (D 78) - Capt. Horace Temple Taylor Bayliss, RN - joined 06/26/43
 Destroyer HMS Vanquisher (D 54) - Lt.Cdr. Gerald Anthony Gore Ormsby, RN - joined 06/27/43
 Destroyer HMS Volunteer (D 71) - Lt.Cdr. Gordon John Luther, RN - joined 06/27/43
 Destroyer HMS Havelock (H 88) - Cdr. Richard Courtenay Boyle, RN - joined 06/27/43
 Corvette HMS Godetia (ii) (K 226) - T/Lt. Maurice Albert Francois Larose, RNR - joined 06/26/43
 
 07/06/43 Detached
 Corvette HMS Bergamot (K 189) -Lt. Reginald Thomas HOran, RNR - joined 06/24/43
 Corvette HMS Bryony (K 192) - T/Lt. Thomas Hand, RNR - joined 06/24/43
 Corvette HMS Honeysuckle (K 27) - Lt. Henry Herbert Dietrich MacKillican, RNR - joined 06/24/43
 Corvette HMS Hyderabad (K 212) - T/Lt. Thomas Cooper, RNR - joined 06/24/43
 Sloop HMS Banff (Y 43) (ex Coastguard Cutter USCGC Saranac) - Lt. Peter Brett, RNR - joined 06/26/43
 Sloop HMS Erne (U 03) - Lt.Cdr. Evelyn David John Abbot, RN - joined 06/26/43
 
 07/09/43 Detached
 Light Cruiser HMS Aurora (12) (F) - Capt. Sir William Gladstone Agnew, RN - joined 07/06/43
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Penelope (97) - Capt. George Devereux Belben, RN - joined 07/06/43
 
 07/10/43 Detached
 Destroyer HMS Viceroy (D 91) - Lt. Thomas Frederick Hallifax, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/05/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Calpe (L 71) - Lt.Cdr. Henry Kirkwood, RN - joined 07/05/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Haydon (L 75) - Lt. Roland Chisnell Watkin, RN - joined 07/05/43
 Escort Destroyer ORP Krakowiak (L 115) - Kmdr ppor. Wszechwlad Maracewicz, ORP - joined 07/05/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Tynedale (L 96) - Lt. James John Simon Yorke, RN - joined 07/05/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Cleveland (L 46) - Lt. James Kenneth Hamilton, RN - joined 07/09/43
 Corvette HMS Pimpernel (K 71) - Lt. Hugh Dudley Hayes, RNR - joined 27/06 - 07/03/43
 Corvette HMS Oxlip (K 123) - Lt. Charles William Leadbetter, RNR - joined 06/24/43 - 07/06/43
 Frigate HMS Teviot (K 222) - Lt.Cdr. Thomas Taylor, RN - joined 06/24/43 - 07/06/43
 
 07/10/43 (Saturday) Arrived
 Minesweeper HMS Cadmus (J 230) - Lt.Cdr. John Spencer Landers, RNR - joined 07/07/43
 Minesweeper HMS Circe (J 214) - Lt.Cdr. James Hugh McIan Malcolm, RN - joined 07/07/43
 Minesweeper HMS Espiegle (J 216) - Lt. Ronald Gresham, RNVR - joined 07/07/43
 Minesweeper HMS Fly (J 306) - Capt. John Wilfrid Boutwood, RN - joined 07/07/43
 
 Transport SS Alcinous (Netherlands) 6,189 tons
 Transport SS Benedict (Commonwealth) 4,949 tons MT
 Transport SS City of Venice (Commonwealth) 8,762 tons MT 302 Troops. 06/04/43 20.47 hours sunk by U-409
 Landing Ship Gantry RFA Dewdale (A151) 8,390 tons
 Landing Ship Gantry RFA Derwentdale (A114) 4,934 tons MT
 Transport SS Devis (Commonwealth) 6,054 tons MT 289 Troops. 06/05/43 15.43 hours sunk by U-593
 Transport SS Empire Cato (Commonwealth) (ex Clan Mackenzie) 7,039 tons MT
 Transport SS Empire Confidence (Commonwealth) (ex Dusseldorf) 5,023 tons
 Transport SS Empire Elaine (Commonwealth) 7,512 tons
 Transport SS Fort Buckingham (Commonwealth) 7,122 tons MT
 Transport SS Fort Lajoie (Commonwealth) 7,134 tons MT
 Transport SS Fort Meductic (Commonwealth) 7,134 tons MT
 Transport SS Transport SS Fort Nashwaak (Commonwealth) 7,134 tons MT
 Transport SS Fort Stager (Commonwealth) 7,132 tons MT
 Transport SS Gudrun Maersk (Commonwealth) 2,294 tons
 Laanding Ship Tank USS LST 406 SAILED LATE TO OVERTAKE
 Transport SS Norman Monarch II (Commonwealth) 7,005 tons MT
 Transport SS Orestes (Commonwealth) 7,748 tons
 Transport SS Prometheus (Commonwealth) 6,095 tons
 Rescue Ship SS Rathlin (Commonwealth) 1,600 tons
 Transport SS St. Essylt (Commonwealth) 5,634 tons 322 Troops. 07/04/43 21.40 hours sunk by U-375
 Transport SS Stanhill (Commonwealth) 5,969 tons MT
 
 06/28/43 (Monday) (D-12) 16:30 hours - 06/30/43 Force H (Division 2) from Gibraltar to Algiers, Algeria Rear Admiral Arthur William La Touche Bisset, RN (2nd in Command Force H aboard Warspite)
 Battleship HMS Valiant (02) - Capt. Leslie Haliburton Ashmore, RN
 Battleship HMS Warspite (03) (F) - Capt. Herbert Annesley Packer, RN
 Aircraft carrier HMS Formidable (67) - Capt. Arthur George Talbot, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Aurora (12) (F) - Capt. Sir William Gladstone Agnew, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Penelope (97) - Capt. George Devereux Belben, RN
 8th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Faulknor (H 62) (F) - Capt. Alan Kenneth Scott-Moncrieff, RN
 Destroyer HMS Fury (H 76) - Lt.Cdr. Colin Henry Campbell, RN
 Destroyer HMS Echo (H 23) - Lt. Richard Herbert Calcraft Wyld, RN
 Destroyer HMS Eclipse (H 08) - Lt.Cdr. Edward Mack, RN
 Destroyer HMS Intrepid (D 10) - Cdr. Charles Arthur de Winton Kitcat, RN
 Destroyer HMS Inglefield (D 02) - A/Cdr. Charles Fraser Harrington Churchill, RN
 Destroyer HMS Ilex (D 61) - Lt.Cdr. Vere Alison Wight-Boycott, OBE, RN
 Destroyer HMS Raider (H 15) - Lt.Cdr. Kenneth Walter Michell, RN
 Destroyer RHS Vasilissa Olga (Queen Olga) (D 15) - Lt.Cdr. Georgios Blessas, RHN
 06/28/43 (Monday) (D-12) - 07/10/43 (Saturday) Convoy KMF.18 from the Clyde to Operation HUSKY
 Destroyer HMS Anthony (H40) - Lt.Cdr. John Henry Wallace, RN - joined 07/07/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Ledbury (L 90) - Lt. Denis Roy Newton Murdoch, RN - joined 07/07/43
 Destroyer HMS Qiantock (L 58)- Lt. Richard George Lovell Pennell, RN  - joined 07/07/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brocklesby (L 42) (from Escort Group V)  - Lt. Kenneth Rupert Simpson Leadlay, RN - joined 07/07/43
 Anti-aircraft Vessel HMS Ulster Queen (F118) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Keith Adam, RN - joined 07/07/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Wilton (L 128) - Lt. Adrian Paul Northey, RN - joined 07/07/43
 
 07/07/43 Detached
 Sloop HMS Chanticleer (U 05) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Henry Bristowe, RN - joined 06/26/43
 Sloop HMS Crane (U 23) - Lt.Cdr. Ralph Grosvenor Jenkins, RN - joined 06/26/43
 Sloop HMS Cygnet II (U 38) - Lt.Cdr. Francis Babington Proudfoot, RN - joined 06/28/43
 Sloop HMS Pheasant (U 49) - Cdr. Leonard Francis Durnford-Slater, RN - joined 06/28/43
 Frigate HMS Test (K 239) -Lt.Cdr. Frank Bentley Collinson, RD, RNR - joined 06/28/43
 Frigate HMS Trent (K 243) - T/A/Lt.Cdr. James Gavin Rankin, RNR - joined 06/28/43
 Sloop HMS Whimbrel (U 29) - Lt.Cdr. William Josselyn Moore, RNR - joined 06/28/43
 
 07/10/43 Detached
 Destroyer HMS Hambledon (L 37) - Lt.Cdr. Gordon Wylie McKendrick, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 Destroyer HMS Mendip (L 60) - Capt. Cecil Ramsden Langworthy Parry, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 Destroyer Flotilla Leader HMS Wallace (L 64) - Lt. Duncan Carson, RN 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 Destroyer HMS Woolston (L 49) - Lt. Frederick William Hawkins, RN 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 Escort Group V
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blankney (L 30) - Lt.Cdr. Douglas Henry Reid Bromley, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blencathra (L 24) - Lt. Edgar George Warren, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brissenden (L 79) - Lt. David Creagh Beatty, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - joined 07/07/43
 
 Transport SS Alcinous (Netherlands) 6,189 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry HMS Ascania (F68) 14,013 tons
 Transport SS Batory (Polish) 14,287 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Large) HMS Circassia (F 91) 11,136 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Large) HMS Derbyshire (F 78) 11,660 tons
 Landing Ship Gantry RFA Derwentdale (A114) 8,390 tons Carrying 15 LCMs and 150 Troops Barkl West beach
 Transport HMS Durban Castle (Commonwealth) 17,388 tons
 Transport SS Empire Confidence (Commonwealth) (ex Dusseldorf) 5,023 tons
 Transport SS Empire Elaine (Commonwealth) 7,512 tons
 Transport SS Gudrun Maersk (Commonwealth) 2,294 tons CASED PETROL
 Landing Ship Tank HMS Boxer (F 121) 3,616 tons
 Landing Ship Tank HMS Bruiser (F 127) 3,616 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Large) HMS Glengyle (4.196) 9,919 tons
 Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Hilary (F.22) 7,403 tons
 Tank landing ship HMS Thruster (F 131) 3,616 tons
 Anti Aircraft Ship HMS Ulster Queen (F118) 3,791 tons
 Llangibby Castle (Commonwealth) 11,951 tons
 Landing Ship Infantery Marnix van Sint Aldegonde (LSI (L)) (Netherlands) 19,355 tons - 20 landing craft Assault (LCA)
 Transport SS Orestes (Commonwealth)  7,748 tons
 Transport SS Prometheus (Commonwealth) 6,095 tons
 06/18/43 - 06/27/43 Convoy KMF.17 from the Clyde to Algiers, Algeria
 Destroyer HMS Amazon (D 39) - Lt.Cdr. Denis Harold Palmer Gardiner, RN - Joined 06/26/43
 Destroyer HMS Arrow (H 42) - Lt.Cdr. William Wentworth Fitzroy, RN - Joined 06/26/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blencathra (L 24) - Lt. Edgar George Warren, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - Joined 06/26/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brecon (L 76) - Lt.Cdr. Terence Desmond Herrick, RN - Joined 06/26/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brissenden (L 79) - Lt. David Creagh Beatty, RN - 21st Destroyer Flotilla - Joined 06/26/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Hambledon (L 37) - Lt.Cdr. Gordon Wylie McKendrick, RN - Joined 06/26/43
 Escort Destroyer HMS Ledbury (L 90) - Lt. Denis Roy Newton Murdoch, RN - Joined 06/26/43
 Destroyer HMS Witherington (D 76) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Basil Stewart Tennant, RN - Joined 06/26/43
 
 Net Laying Ship HMS Guardian (Br) 2,860 tons
 
 Transport SS Britannic (Commonwealth) 26,943 tons
 Transport USS Cristobal 10,021 tons
 Transport USS James William McAndrew (AP-47) (USAT) (ex Delargentino) 7,997 tons
 Transport SS Largs Bay (Commonwealth) 14,182 tons
 Transport SS Samaria (Commonwealth) 19,597 tons
 Transport USS Santa Rosa 9,135 tons
 Transport SS Silverteak (Commonwealth) 6,770  tons
 Transport SS Tamaroa (Commonwealth) 12,405 tons - SD AVONMOUTH
 
 
 06/29/43 (Tuesday) (D-11)
 TG-86.1 (Task Group 86.1) Light Cruiser USS Birmingham (CL-62), Light Cruiser USS Brooklyn (CL-40), Destroyer USS James Buck (DD-420) (F),  and Destroyer USS Augustus C. Ludlow (DD-438) sail from Mers el Kebir, Algeria.
 06/29/43 - 06/30/43 Force H (Division 1) from Gibraltar to Mers el Kebir, Algeria Flag Officer Force H Vice Admiral Algernon Usborne Willis, RN (aboard Nelson)
 Battleship HMS Nelson (28) (Flag, Force H) - Capt. the Hon. Guy Herbrand Edward Russell, RN
 Battleship HMS Rodney (29) - Capt. James William Rivett-Carnac, RN
 Aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable (92) - Capt. Guy Grantham, RN
 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Offa (G29) - Lt.Cdr. Rowland Francis Leonard, RN
 Destroyer HMS Panther (G41) - Lt.Cdr. Robert William Jocelyn, RN
 Destroyer HMS Pathfinder (G10) - Cdr. Edward Albert Gibbs, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quail (G45) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Fergus Jenks, RN
 Destroyer HMAS Queenborough (G70) - Cdr. Eric Percival Hinton, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quilliam (G09) - Capt. Stephen Hope Carlill, RN (from 8th Destroyer Flotilla)
 Destroyer ORP Piorun (Lightning) (G 85) - Kmdr por. Stanislaw Tytus Dzienisiewicz, ORP
 
 06/30/43 (Wednesday) (D-10) - 07/05/43 06:30 Force H (Division 2) (less HMS Aurora (12) and HMS Penelope (97)) Sails from Algiers,Algeria to Ras-el-Tin Lighthouse, Alexandria Bay, Eqypt.
 
 07/03/43 (Saturday) (D-3) - 07/11/43 (Sunday) Convoy MWS.36 from Alexandria, Egypt  to Operation HUSKY
 Transport SS Baarn (Netherlands) 5,621 tons MT,137 T PETROL,428 Troops 06/11/43 Bombed by German aircrqaft sunk by Allied naval gunfire
 LibertyShip USS Benjamin Goodhue (0282) (WSAT AP USAT) 7,196 tons - MT,205 T PETROL,464 T
 LibertyShip USS Big Foot Wallace (0116) (WSAT 550) (ex Fitzhugh Lee I) 7,176 tons - MT, 43 T PETROL, 85 T
 Liberty Ship USS Colin P. Kelly Jr. (0744) (WSAT (504) USAT) 7,176 tons - MT,174 T PETROL, 399, 144 Troops
 Transport SS Empire Charmian (63) (Commonwealth) 7,519 tons
 Coastal Tanker SS Empire Lass (Commonwealth) 813 tons - Water Carrier
 Landing Ship Gantry RFA Ennerdale (A173) (8,280 tons) 15x LCMs
 Transport SS Fort Lawrence (Commonwealth) 7,134 tons - MT,215 T PETROL,439
 Liberty Ship USS Frank B. Kellogg (0601) 7,176 tons - MT,42 T PETROL,123 140 Troops
 Liberty Ship USS George H. Dern (0511) (WSAT (550) USAT) 7,181 tons - MT,175 T PETROL,475
 Liberty Ship USS George Rogers Clark (0448) 7,181 tons - MT,41 T PETROL,93 T
 Transport SS Glaucus (Commonwealth) 7,596 tons
 Transport SS Harpagus II (Commonwealth) 7,271 tons - MT,37 T PETROL,128 144 Troops
 Transport SS Highland Prince (Commonwealth) 7,043 tons - MT,234 T PETROL,519 119 Troops
 Liberty Ship USS Jonathan Grout (0128) (WSAT (550) USAT) 7,176 tons - MT, 262 T PETROL,43
 Liberty Ship USS Joseph Alston (0864) (WSAT (550) USAT) 7,177 tons - MT,269 T PETROL,562
 Liberty Ship USS Joseph G. Cannon (0447) 7,181 tons - MT,46 T PETROL,91 T - 07/11/43 BOMBED OFF BEACHEAD
 Transport SS Kheti (Commonwealth) 2,734 tons
 Liberty Ship USS Leslie M. Shaw (0444) 7,181 tons - MT,43 T PETROL,153
 Liberty Ship USS Mayo Brothers (0318) (WSAT (550) USAT) 7,191 tons - MT,174 T PETROL,381
 Coaster SS Moray Coast (Commonwealth) 687 tons - CASED PETROL
 Tanker RFA Nasprite (A252) 965 tons - PETROL
 Liberty Ship USS O. Henry (0486) 7,181 tons - MT,173 T PETROL,417
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Glory (Commonwealth) 7,178 tons - MT,22 T PETROL,150
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Hunter (Commonwealth) 7,178 tons - MT,114 T PETROL,110
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Peace (Commonwealth) 7,173 tons - MT,253 T PETROL,432 - 01/12/43 Bombed thrn sunk by gumfire from Escort Destroyer HMS Tetcott (L 99)
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Pride (Commonwealth) 7,173 tons - MT,45 T PETROL,106
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Strength (Commonwealth) 7,173 tons - MT,44 T PETROL,108
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Valley (Commonwealth) 7,174 tons - MT,183 T PETROL,441
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Vision (Commonwealth) 7,174 tons - MT,129 T PETROL,123
 Liberty Ship SS Ocean Vulcan (Commonwealth) 7,174 tons - MT,45 T PETROL,110
 Transport SS Ozarda (Commonwealth) 6,985 tons - MT,40 T PETROL,120 144 Troops
 Liberty Ship USS Pio Pico (0696) 7,176 tons - MT,232 T PETROL,542 129 Troops
 Liberty Ship USS Pocahontas (0871) 7,177 tons - MT,243 T PETROL,543
 Transport SS Shahjehan (Commonwealth) 5,454 tons - MT,23 T PETROL,121 230 Troops - 07/06/43 10.05 hours torpedoed and damaged by U-453 northeast of Benghazi. Taken in tow but sank the next day
 Transport SS Tarantia (Commonwealth) 7,268 tons - MT,38 T PETROL,128 155 Troops
 Transport SS Thistlemuir (Commonwealth) 7,237 tons - MT,148 T PETROL,421
 
 07/05/43 (Monday) (D-5)
 Convoy NCF-1 Section Section the Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) (CTF-85 (Combined Task Force 85)) forms off Oran, Algeria heads for rendezvous with  Convoy NCF-1 First Section the Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) (CTF-81 (Combined Task Force 81)) off Algiers, Algeria.
 07/05/43 15:00 - 07/06/43 06:00 Force H (Division 1) sails from Mers el Kebir, Algeria to Algiers, Algeria Flag Officer Force H Vice Admiral Algernon Usborne Willis, RN (aboard Nelson)
 Battleship HMS Nelson (28) (Flag, Force H) - Capt. the Hon. Guy Herbrand Edward Russell, RN
 Battleship HMS Rodney (29) - Capt. James William Rivett-Carnac, RN
 Aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable (92) - Capt. Guy Grantham, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Cleopatra (33) - Capt. John Felgate Stevens, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Euryalus (42) - Capt. Richard Oliver-Bellasis, RN
 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Offa (G29) - Lt.Cdr. Rowland Francis Leonard, RN
 Destroyer HMS Panther (G41) - Lt.Cdr. Robert William Jocelyn, RN
 Destroyer HMS Pathfinder (G10) - Cdr. Edward Albert Gibbs, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quail (G45) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Fergus Jenks, RN
 Destroyer HMAS Queenborough (G70) - Cdr. Eric Percival Hinton, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quilliam (G09) - Capt. Stephen Hope Carlill, RN (from 8th Destroyer Flotilla)
 Destroyer ORP Piorun (Lightning) (G 85) - Kmdr por. Stanislaw Tytus Dzienisiewicz, ORP
 07/05/43 (D-5) 05:00 - 07/08/43 Force H (Division 3 (Force Z)) sails from Gibraltar for Algiers, Algeria Vice Admiral Arthur John Power (aboard HMS King George V)
 Battleship HMS King George V (41) (F) Capt. Thomas Edgar Halsey, RN
 Battleship HMS Howe (32) - Capt. Charles Henry Lawrence Woodhouse, RN
 Destroyer HMS Arrow (H 42) - Lt.Cdr. William Wentworth Fitzroy, RN
 Destroyer HMS Jervis (F.00) - Capt. Anthony Follett Pugsley, RN
 Destroyer HMS Panther  (G41) - Lt.Cdr. Robert William Jocelyn, RN - 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Pathfinder (G10) - Cdr. Edward Albert Gibbs, RN - 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Penn (G 77) - Lt.Cdr. James Hamilton Swain, RN
 Destroyer HMS Paladin (G 69) - Lt.Cdr. Lawrence St George Rich, RN
 Destroyer HMS Petard (G 56) - Lt.Cdr. Rupert Cyril Egan, RN
 Destroyer HMS Tyrian (R 67) - Cdr. Charles Woollven Greening, RN
 07/05/43 (Monday) (D-5) - 07/10/43 (Saturday) Convoy MWF.36 - from Port Said, Egypt to Operation HUSKY
 Transport SS Bergensfjord (Nor) 11,015 tons 871 Troops
 Transport SS Christiaan Huygens (Netherlands) 16,287 tons
 Transport SS Devonshire (Commonwealth) 11,275 tons
 Transport HMT Dilwara (Commonwealth) 11,080 tons 462 Troops
 Transport Duchess of Bedford (Commonwealth) 20,123 tons 2,837 Troops
 Transport HMT Dunera (Commonwealth) 11,162 tons 1,629 Troops
 Transport HMS Brittany (Commonwealth) 1,445 tons
 Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Bulolo (Commonwealth) 6,267 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Large) HMS Keren (F 132) 9,890 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Small) HMS Prins Albert (4.35) 2,938 tons 272 Troops
 Landing Ship Infantry (Hand-hoisting) HMS Ulster Monarch (F 69) (Commonwealth) 3,791 tons 300 Troops
 Transport SS Monarch of Bermuda (Commonwealth) 22,424 tons 2,766 Troops
 Transport SS Orontes (Commonwealth) 20,097 tons
 Transport SS Otranto (Commonwealth) 20,026 tons 3,200 Troops
 Transport SS Reina del Pacifico (Commonwealth) 17,702 tons
 Transport SS Ruys (Netherlands) 14,155 tons
 Transport SS Sobieski (Pol) 11,030 tons 1,369 Troops
 Transport SS Strathnaver (Commonwealth) 22,283 tons 3,275 Troops
 Transport SS Tegelberg (Netherlands) 14,150 tons
 Transport SS Winchester Castle (Commonwealth) 20,012 tons
 
 07/06/43 (Tuesday) (D-4)
 11:00 Force H (Division 1) sails from Algiers, Algeria for the Gulf of Sirte to join Force H (Division 2).
 17:00 USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) weighs anchor at Algiers, Algeria
 17:39 Convoy NCF-1 First Section USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) and the Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) (CTF-81 (Combined Task Force 81)) form up off Algiers, Algeria.
 Covering Group TG-80.7 (Task Group 80.7) 3 Light Cruisers and 7 destroyers forms off Algiers, Algeria. Then steams Eastward, ahead of the convoys NCF-1 and KMF.18, maintaing a suitable covering position with relation to the transports.
 11:30 hours Force H (Division 1) arrives Algiers, Algeria  The primary purpose of the Royal Navy ships is to prevent the Italian navy from intervening in the operation. Their secondary purpose was on D-1 to move into the Ionian Sea so as to appear to threaten the west coast of Greece on D Day, thus serving as a means to divert the enemy's attention at the critical moment, and it was to maintain this position until D + 2. Their third purpose was to provide bombardment support if required by the army. To carry out their functions they were divided into three divisions:-
 
 
 07/07/43 (Wednesday) (D-3)
 07:00 HMS Aurora (12) and HMS Penelope (97) rejoin Force H (Division 2).
 10:45 Force H (Division 2) sails from Alexandria Bay, Eqypt for the Gulf of Sirte to join Force H (Division 1) in the Gulf of Sirte.
 12:00 Convoy NCF-1 First Section at  position Lat. 37° 10' 02" N., Long. 06° 23' 00"E
 13:30 Convoy NCF-1 First Section and Convoy NCF-1 Section Section rendezvous off Algiers, Algeria. The First Section is to maintain its position 6 miles ahead of the Second Section.
 18:00 Convoy KMF.18 (British) sighted to northward proceeding on converging course at slightly greater speed. The convoy drew ahead and entered Tunisian War Channel.
 20:00 USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) position Lat. 37° 15' 40" N., Long. 07° 48' 45" E
 
 
 07/08/43 (Thursday) (D-2)
 07/08/43 The captain of HMS Rodney, appointed Rear Admiral.
 07/08/43 Force H under air attacks
 Shortly after dawn Licata Attack Force (JOSS Force) (CTF-86 (Combined Task Force 86)) sorties. LSTs and LCTs sortied from Bizerta and Tunis, Tunisia.
 06:00 Convoy KMF.18 was scheduled to pass outside Bizerta
 06:30 Convoy NCF-1 was scheduled to pass outside Bizerta.
 08:00 Convoy KMF.18 (British) and Convoy NCF-1 were approximately twenty miles East of Bizerta.
 08:00 USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) position Lat. 37° 11' 02" N., Long. 10° 42' 00" E.
 09:40 USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) passed Cape Bon, Tunisia.
 12:00 USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) position Lat. 36° 39' 05" N., Long. 11° 05' 07" E., course 210°, speed 12.7 knots. (Average speed for 264 miles - 11 knots.) Zig-zag Plan No. 10.
 21:55 Destroyer USS John McLeod Murphy (DD-603) makes submarine contact and attacks.
 22:08 Explosion suggests probability of successful attaack on U-boat.
 07/08/43 (Thursday) (D-2)-  07/10/43 (Saturday) Convoy SBF.1 from Sfax, Tunisia to Bark South
 Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Largs 4,504 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Medium) HMS Prinses Beatrix (4.44) 4,136 tons - A/Cdr. Thomas Bennett Brunton, RN - capacity 2 LCM's, 6 LCA's or LCS(M)'s and 372 Troops - Argyll and Sutherland
 Landing Ship Infantry (Medium) HMS Queen Emma (4.180) 4,136 tons - Capt. George Louis Downall Gibbs DSO, RN - capacity 2 LCM's, 6 LCA's or LCS(M)'s and 372 Troops - Argyll and Sutherland
 Landing Ship Infantry (H - Hand-operated davits) HMS Royal Scotsman (F 115) 3,244 tons - Lt.Cdr, James Davison Armstrong DSC, RD, RNR - capacity 6 LCA's and 830 Troops
 Landing Ship Infantry (H - Hand-operated davits) HMS Royal Ulsterman (F 63) 3,244 tons - A/Lt.Cdr. William Roland Kemp Clark DSC, RD, RNR - capacity 6 LCA's and 830 Troops
 
 Force HX
 07/09/43 (Friday) (D-1)
 06:00 hours Force H approximate position 33N, 18E (240 miles south east of Malta) Division 1 rendezvous with Division 2 from Alexandria, Egypt. Force H then provided distant cover for the combined convoys, MWF.36 (Ex Port Said 07/05/43) and MWS.36 (Ex Alexandria 07/03/43), SBS.1 (slow), SBM.1, SBF.1 (fast) (Ex Sfax 07/08/43) and MWS.36X (Ex Tripoli 07/08/43) consisting of MT freighters, tankers, landing ships and landing craft for the invasion of Sicily, Operation HUSKY.
 Force A (RADM Troubridge.) - Lead ship Bulolo with the convoys and MWS.36 MWF.36 (see 19.6.-9.7.) - Lands the British XIII.. Corps (LtGen. Dempsey) with the 3rd Royal Maine Commandos, the 5th Infantry Div. and 50th Infantry Div.südlich the Maddalena peninsula in the sector "Acid North" and south of Avola in the sector "Acid South". As a control post the brit. Submarine unruffled is used.
 Force N (Capt Lord Ashburn.) - Lead ship Keren with parts of convoys MWS.36 and MWF.36 - lands the brit 231. Independent Brigade (Brig Urquhart.) On the east coast of the Pachino peninsula in the sector "Bark East.". Control posts: submarine Unseen.
 Force B Rear Admaral. McGregor) - lead ship Largs with the convoys SBS.1, SBM.1 and SBF.1 - lands the British 51st Inf Div... (Maj.-Gen. Wimberley) near Cap Passero. Control posts: submarine Unison.
 Force V (RADM Vian.) - Lead ship Hilary with the convoys and KMF.18 KMS.18 - lands the Canadian 1. Div. (Maj.-Gen. Simmonds) on the west coast of the Pachino peninsula. Control point: submarine Unrivalled.
 The troops of the Forces N, B and V are the XXX. Corps (LtGen. Leese). The 1st Airborne Division landed south-west of Syracuse.
 
 Support Force East - Rear-Admiral Cecil Halliday Jepson Harcourt, RN
 Monitor HMS Roberts (F 40) - A/Capt. Ronald Ernest Cotton Dunbar, RN
 Monitor HMS Erebus (I 02) -Cdr. Hardress Waller D'Arcy-Evans, RN
 
 Light Cruiser HMS Newfoundland (59) - Capt. William Rudolph Slayter, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Uganda (66) - Capt. Sir William Gerrard Andrewes, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Mauritius (80) - Capt. William Wellclose Davis, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Orion (85) - Capt. George Cunningham Paton Menzies, RN
 
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Carlisle (D 67) - A/Cdr. Dudley Alfred Parker, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Colombo (D 89) - Capt. Derrick Henry Hall-Thompson, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Delhi (D 74) - Capt. Allan Thomas George Cumberland Peachey, RN
 
 Anti-aircraft Ship HMS Palomares - A/Capt. John Henry Jauncey, RN
 
 Destroyer HMS Witherington (D 76) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Basil Stewart Tennant, RN
 Destroyer HMS Eskimo (F 75) - Capt. John William Musgrave Eaton, RN - escourt MWF.36 - Acid Beach
 Destroyer HMS Venomous (D 75) - Lt. Henry Dumaresq Durell, RN
 Destroyer HMS Wishart (D 67) - Cdr. Alan FitzRoy Campbell, RN
 Destroyer HMS Wrestler (D 35) - Lt. Reginald William Beecroft Lacon, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Hursley (L 84) - Lt. William John Patrick Church, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Lauderdale (L 95) - Lt. George Dudley Pound, RN - SMB.1 from Sfax to Bark South
 Escort Destroyer HMS Rockwood (L 39) - Lt. Samuel Richard le Hunte Lombard-Hobson, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Lamerton (L 88) - Lt.Cdr. Cuthbert Richard Purse, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Calpe (L 71) - Lt.Cdr. Henry Kirkwood, RN
 
 13th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Arrow (H 42) - Lt.Cdr. William Wentworth Fitzroy, RN
 
 14th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Penn (G 77) - Lt.Cdr. James Hamilton Swain, RN
 
 19th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Lookout (G 32) - Lt.Cdr. Archibald George Forman, RN
 Destroyer Flotilla Leader HMS Laforey (G 99) - Capt. Harold Thomas Armstrong, RN - Bark Beach
 Destroyer HMS Loyal (G 15) - Lt.Cdr. Hugo Edward Forbes Tweedie, RN
 Destroyer HMS Nubian (F 36) - Cdr. Douglas Eric Holland-Martin, RN
 Destroyer HMS Tartar (F 43) - Cdr. St. John Reginald Joseph Tyrwhitt, RN
 
 b]21st Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Mendip (L 60) (F) - Capt. Cecil Ramsden Langworthy Parry, RN - Bark West
 
 22nd Destroyer Flotilla
 Escort Destroyer HMS Hurworth (L 28) (F) - Cdr. Royston Hollis Wright, RN
 
 41st Escort Group
 Destroyer HMS Clare (ex USS Abel P. Upshur) (I 14) - Lt.Cdr. Gilbert Shaw Grant, RNR
 
 Escort Group C
 Destroyer Inconstant (ex Turkish - Muavenet) (H 49) - Lt.Cdr. John Henry Eaden, RN
 
 Escort Group E
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blankney (L 30) - Lt.Cdr. Douglas Henry Reid Bromley, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Blencathra (L 24) - Lt. Edgar George Warren, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brecon (L 76) - Lt.Cdr. Terence Desmond Herrick, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brissenden (L 79) - Lt. David Creagh Beatty, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Hambledon (L 37) - Lt.Cdr. Gordon Wylie McKendrick, RN
 
 Escort Group P
 Escort Destroyer HMS Aldenham (L 22) - A/Lt.Cdr. John Ivor Jones, RNR
 Escort Destroyer HMS Beaufort (L 14) - Lt. John Ronald Lawson Moore, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Exmoor (II) (L 08) - Lt. Donald Terry McBarnet, RN
 
 Escort Group Q
 Escort Destroyer HMS Dulverton (L 63) - Cdr. Stuart Austen Buss, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Tetcott (L 99) - Lt.Cdr. Henry Richard Rycroft, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Belvoir (L 32) - Lt. John Fitzroy Duyland Bush, RN
 
 Escort Group R
 Escort Destroyer HMS Easton (L 09) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Wickham Malins, RN
 
 Escort Group S
 Destroyer HMS Viceroy (D 91) - Lt. Thomas Frederick Hallifax, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Cleveland (L 46) - Lt. James Kenneth Hamilton, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Ledbury (L 90) - Lt. Denis Roy Newton Murdoch, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Tynedale (L 96) - Lt.Cdr. James John Simon Yorke, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Farndale (L 70) - Cdr. David Percy Trentham, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Puckeridge (L 108) - Lt. John Cecil Cartwright, RN
 Escort Destroyer ORP Krakowiak (a folk dance from Krakow) (ex HMS Silverton) (L 115) - Kpt.Mar. Jan Tchorznicki, ORP
 
 Escort Group T
 Escort Destroyer HMS Liddesdale (L 100) - Lt.Cdr. Angus Alexander Mackenzie, RNR
 Escort Destroyer HMS Holcombe (L 56) - Cdr. Sidney Hugh Pinchin, RN
 
 Escort Group U
 Escort Destroyer HMS Quantock (L 58) - Lt.Cdr. Richard George Lovell Pennell, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Brocklesby (L 42) - Lt. Kenneth Rupert Simpson Leadlay, RN
 
 Escort Group V
 Destroyer HMS Woolston (L 49) - Lt. Frederick William Hawkins, RN
 Destroyer HMS Wanderer (D 74) - Lt.Cdr. Reginald Fife Whinney, RN
 
 Escort Group W
 Escort Destroyer HMS Eggesford (L 15) - Lt.Cdr. Derek William Austin, RN
 Escort Destroyer HMS Whaddon (L 45) - T/A/Lt.Cdr. Robert Lucas Green, RNVR
 Escort Destroyer HMS Oakley (II) (L 98) - Lt.Cdr. Tristram Anthony Pack-Beresford, RN
 
 Escort Group X
 Escort Destroyer HMS Wheatland (L 122) - Lt.Cdr. Ronald de Leighton Brooke, RN - SBF.1
 Escort Destroyer HMS Wilton (L 128) - Lt. Adrian Paul Northey, RN - Algiers to Beach Head in Sicily
 
 Escort Group Y
 Escort Destroyer HMS Atherstone (L 05) - Lt.Cdr. Ernest Norman Wood, RNVR
 
 59th Destroyer Division
 Escort Destroyer HMS Haydon (L 75) - Lt.Cdr. Roland Chisnell Watkin, RN
 
 Escort Destroyer HHelMS Pindos (ex HMS Bolebroke) (L 65)
 Escort Destroyer HHelMS Adrias (ex HMS Border) (L 67)
 Escort Destroyer HHelMS Kanaris (ex HMS Hatherleigh) (L 53)
 Escort Destroyer HHelMS Miaoulis (ex HMS Modbury) (L 91)
 Escort Destroyer HHelMS Themistocles (ex HMS Bramham) (L 51)
 Escort Destroyer ORP Slazak (L 26) - Kmdr.Ppor. Romuald Nalecz-Tyminski, ORP
 
 Sloop HMS Shoreham (L 32 / U 32) - Cdr. Eric Hewitt, RNR
 Sloop HMS Chanticleer (U 05) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Henry Bristowe, RN
 Sloop HMS Crane (U 23) - Lt.Cdr. Ralph Grosvenor Jenkins, RN
 Sloop HMS Cygnet II (U 38) - Lt.Cdr. Francis Babington Proudfoot, RN
 Sloop HMS Erne (U 03) - Lt.Cdr. Evelyn David John Abbot, RN
 Pheasant
 Whimbrel
 Sloop HMIS Jumna (U 21)
 Sloop HMIS Sutlej (U95)
 
 Frigate HMS Bann (K 256) - Lt.Cdr. Frank Arthur Shaw, RNR
 Frigate HMS Dart (K 21) - Lt.Cdr. James Hutchinson Wright, RNR
 Frigate HMS Plym (K 271) - T/A/Lt.Cdr. Alan Foxall, RNR
 Frigate HMS Test (K 239) - Lt.Cdr. Frank Bentley Collinson, RNR
 Frigate HMS Teviot (K 222) - Lt.Cdr. Thomas Taylor, RN
 Frigate HMS Trent (K 243) - T/A/Lt.Cdr. James Gavin Rankin, RNR
 
 Corvette HMS Bluebell (K 80) - Lt. Geoffrey Herbert Walker, RNVR
 Corvette HMS Bryony (K 192) - T/Lt. Thomas Hand, RNR
 Corvette HMS Camellia (K 31) - T/Lt. Reginald Frederick James Maberley, RNVR - KMS.19
 Corvette HMS Convolvulus (K 45) -A/Lt.Cdr.  Richard Francis Roger Yarde-Buller, RNVR
 Corvette HMS Delphinium (K 77) - Lt.Cdr. Vivian Funge Smith, RNR
 Corvette HMS Dianella (ex-HMS Daffodil) (K 07) - T/Lt. James Gavin Rankin, RNR
 Corvette HMS Honeysuckle (K 27) - Lt. Henry Herbert Dietrich MacKillican, RNR
 Corvette HMS Hyacinth (K 84) - Lt.Cdr. John Douglas Hayes, RN - MKS.16
 Corvette HMS Hyderabad (RIN) (ex HMS Nettle) (K 212) - T/Lt. Thomas Cooper, RNR
 Lotus
 Oxlip
 Pentstemon
 Poppy
 Primula
 Rhododendron
 Starwort
 Vetch
 HHelMS Sakhtouris (Greek)
 
 Cutter Banff and Fishguard
 
 Minesweepers Gawler, Lismore, Ipswich, Maryborough, Geraldton, Cairns, Cessnock and Wollongong (all reach.) and a total of 25 more
 
 Gunboat HNLMS Flores
 Gunboat HNLMS Soemba
 
 In the Gulf of Sirte, , the WARSPITE division of Force H RVed with the NELSON (CinC Force H), RODNEY, INDOMITABLE (FS Rear Admiral Lumley Lyster), light cruisers CLEOPATRA and EURYALUS and destroyers OFFA, PANTHER, QUAIL, QUEENBOROUGH, QUILLIAM (D 4), TROUBRIDGE, TUMULT, TYRIAN and ORP PIORUN.
 
 07/09/43 July Force H Carrying out diversionary operation north of Crete and covered passage of convoys to Central Mediterranean for planned assault landings.
 07/09/43 Force H joins HM Battleships Nelson, Rodney and HM Fleet Aircraft Carrier Indomitable, Light Cruisers HMS Aurora (12) and HMS Penelope (97) in Gulf of Sirte to cover the assault phase of Sicily invasion against interference from Italian surface units.
 
 
 07/09/43 (Friday) (D-1)
 07/09/43 03:00 - 07/10/43 02:00 Force Z (Force H Division 3) saills from Algiers, Algeria to operational area between Sardinia and Sicily (approximately 38-30N, 11E) Vice Admiral Arthur John Power (aboard HMS King George V)
 (Force Z was to provide distant cover for Operation HUSKY assault convoys, to provide a show of force to suggest an American attack on Sardinia and Corsica and to reinforce the Eastern Task Force should it suffer casualties)
 (During the afternoon of D-1 an unseasonable force 7 north-westerly gale blew up and the smaller craft were tossed about like corks. 07/10/43 itself the Canadians and Americans landed in very rough conditions suffering the double discomfort of seasickness and a drenching through to the skin. The British conditions on the leeward side of the island were better as the landing craft moved inshore. However these unfavourable conditions had a beneficial side effect, the enemy relaxed their guard in the mistaken belief that a landing in such conditions was most unlikely and initial resistance was consequently less than expected.
 Battleship HMS King George V (41) (F) - Capt. Thomas Edgar Halsey, RN
 Battleship HMS Howe (32) - Capt. Charles Henry Lawrence Woodhouse, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Dido (37) - Capt. John Terry, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Sirius (82) - Capt. Patrick William Beresford Brooking, RN
 Destroyer HMS Jervis (F.00) - Capt. Anthony Follett Pugsley, RN
 Destroyer HMS Panther  (G41) - Lt.Cdr. Robert William Jocelyn, RN - 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Pathfinder (G10) - Cdr. Edward Albert Gibbs, RN - 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Penn (G 77) - Lt.Cdr. James Hamilton Swain, RN
 Destroyer HMS Paladin (G 69) - Lt.Cdr. Lawrence St George Rich, RN
 Destroyer HMS Petard (G 56) - Lt.Cdr. Rupert Cyril Egan, RN
 06:00 Force H (Division 1 and Division 2) join in the Gulf of Sirte (240 miles south east of Malta) to provide distant cover for Operation HUSKY.
 Licata Attack Force (JOSS Force) (CTF-86 (Combined Task Force 86)) LCI convoys leave the staging port of Sousse, Tunisia.
 07:30 Force H detaches ships for Operation ARSENAL then moves into the Ionian Sea manoeuvring so as to appear to threaten the west coast of Greece
 Operation ARSENAL (the naval bombardment of Catania)
 Light Cruiser HMS Aurora (12) (F) - Capt. Sir William Gladstone Agnew, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Penelope (97) - Capt. George Devereux Belben, RN
 Destroyer HMS Inglefield (D 02) - A/Cdr. Charles Fraser Harrington Churchill, RN - 8th Destroyer Flotilla
 Destroyer HMS Offa (G29) - Lt.Cdr. Rowland Francis Leonard, RN - 4th Destroyer Flotilla
 08:00 USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF) position Lat. 33° 52' N., Long. 13° 34' E., speed 14 knots, zig-zag Plan No. 10. Wind and sea changed to westward and increased to Force 3.
 16:00 Wind is recorded as Force 6. Convoy TJM-1 40 LST and Convoy TJF-1 2 LSI(S) and 54 LCI(L) rendezvous and later make landfall 270° 5 miles from Gozo Island light (Malta) then proceeding northwestward
 17:00 LST and LCT convoys turned North into the Approach
 18:00 Convoy TJM-1 40 LST and Convoy TJF-1 2 LSI(S) and 54 LCI(L) rendezvous with the LCT movement convoy (Convoy TJS-1) near the meridian of 14° East from there the approach was made toward Licata, Sicily.
 16:30 Gozo (Malta) sighted by USS Monrovia (APA-31) (FF)
 16:45 Wind is judged to be Force 6/7. Wind force has set LST and LCI(L)'s to Southward and Eastward. LCT's slowed considerably.
 18:50 The first section of NCF-1 was routed through the Gozo (Malta) rendezvous in order that it might follow closely behind Convoy KMF.18 (British) and yet pass the North Gozo tangent in time to allow the second section to remain on an adequate schedule. On and after 18:50 the same day the combat loaders were to pass through that point.
 19:32 CTF-86 authorizes expenditure of up to 80% of ammunition on railway batteries located on the mole at Licata. JOSS sweepers directed to cancel sweeping operations until daylight of D-Day.
 19:40 Birmingham & Brooklyn, with escorts, joined JOSS formation and steer directly for submarine reference vessel at 6 1/2 knots.
 22:20 Licata Attack Force (JOSS Force) sights flares, gun and bomb flashes from beach on starboard bow.
 22:30 Wind lessened to approximately Force 4.
 22:35 Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) sights flashes, fires and flares toward beaches.
 22:57 Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) turns off to approach transport area.
 23:57 AA fire, flares and fires on beach, as a result of bombing attack, sighted by all Attack Forces. Licata, Gela and Scoglitti afire, great amount of AA clearly visible.
 HUSKY I
 Led by Col. James Maurice "Slim Jim" Gavin, the 505th PIR (Parachute Infantry Regiment), and the 3rd Battalion of the 504th PIR (both batallions of US 82nd Airborne Division) were organized into a Regimental Combat Team. This is first US regimental size combat parachute attack as it landed behind enemy lines at Gela, Sicily.
 Their first objective was to close off roads leading to the beaches and secure the drop zone for HUSKY II. They were also to take out a series of 16 concrete "pillboxes" which controlled movement on the nearby roads. Under a nearly full moon the paratroopers crossed over the Sicilian coast on schedule and jumped on their assigned drop zone. The paratroopers were widely scattered, but were able to gather into small groups to harass the enemy.
 
 
 07/10/43 (Saturday) (D day)
 Convoy NCF-1
 Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) (CTF-81 (Combined Task Force 81)) assault forces in 4 APA, 3 XAP, and 2 AKA, carrying 7 days maintenance plus 2 1/3 units of fire for assault troops, including US 82nd Airborne Division. (approx. 4700 tons).
 Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) (CTF-85 (Combined Task Force 85)) assault forces in 1 AGC, 7 APA, 6 XAP and 5 AKA, carrying 21 days maintenance plus 10 units of fire for troops mounted in the U.S. (approximately 10,900 tons)..
 KOOL Force (U.S. 7th Army Reserve) assault forces in USS Orizaba (AP-24) and USS Chateau Thierry (AP-31).
 Convoy TC-1 Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) - assault forces in 14 LST, 8 LCT, and 6 LCI(L), carrying 7 days maintenance plus 2 1/3 units of fire from North Africa (approximately 2,400 tons).
 Convoy TD-1 Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) - assault forces in 16 LST and 19 LCI(L) carrying personnel and vehicles. HQ U.S.A. 7th Army along with 7 days maintenance plus 2 1/3 units of fire.
 Convoy TJ-1 Licata Attack Force (JOSS Force) - assault forces in 2 LSI(S), 40 LST, 85 LCT, and 54 LCI(L), carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 6,900 tons) plus 2 1/3 units of fire, personnel, and vehicles.
 Convoy TK-1 KOOL Force (U.S. 7th Army Reserve) - assault forces in 6 LST, 7 LCT, and 27 LCI(L), carrying personnel and vehicles and 21 days maintenance and 4 2/3 units of fire less amounts in 1st Follow-up (Convoy NCS-1).
 Force H (Division 1 and Division 2) move closer to Sicily and the invasion beaches. And at daylight is patroling approximately 40 miles off Cape Passero. Ships from Operation ARSENAL rejoin Force H (Division 1 and Division 2).
 07/10/43 Force H provides air cover during landings and build-up phases.
 07/10/43 Part of Force H deployed in Ionian Sea to prevent interference by Italian Navy during landings in Sicily (Operation HUSKY).
 07/10/43 02:45 H Hour two hours before first light
 This time had been fixed by the fact that it required the paraTroops about three hours from dropping time to assemble and carry out their mission of softening the beach defences. This despite the fact that the assault forces needed to approach the coastline under cover of darkness. But an examination of the Astronomical Data revealed no such darkness. On the contrary the assault forces were required to make the approach under a brilliant waxing moon which would not set until the vessels had hove-to in the Initial Transport Areas immediately under the coast defence guns of the enemy. These facts were well known to the naval planners who pointed out the fact that the moon phase selected was most unfavourable from naval considerations. The date, However, was not changed because it was reiterated that this phase was most favourable to dropping of the paraTroops that were the only means available to "neutralize the beach defences opposing the seaborne assaults, the most vital part of the whole plan'. In the event the American paratroopers objective became the seizure of high ground around Gela and the capture of the airfield at Ponte Olivo)
 approximately 02:00 Force Z arrives in their operational position, approximately 38-30N, 11E.
 The Light Cruisers HMS Aurora (12) and HMS Penelope (97) joined the force after detaching from convoy KMS.18B. Force H then steered a northerly course towards the Ionian Sea.
 07:30
 Aurora, Penelope, Offa  and Inglefield detached and proceeded towards the east of Sicily to carry out a bombardment of Catania. (Operation ARSENAL). Force H then moved into the Ionian Sea and manoeuvred so as to appear to threaten the west coast of Greece. This was done to divert the enemy's attention away from Sicily.  They also provided distant cover for the combined convoys, MWF.36 (Ex Port Said 5/7/43) and MWS.36 (Ex Alexandria 3/7/43), SBS.1 (slow), SBM.1 (Malta), SBF.1 (Ex Sfax 8/7/43) and MWS.36X (Ex Tripoli 8/7/43) consisting of MT freighters, tankers, landing ships and landing craft for the invasion of Sicily, Operation HUSKY.
 07/10/43 Saturday - 07/13/43 Tuesday - Convoy MWF.37 from Port Said to Malta (Via Operation Husky)
 Troopship SS Almanzora (CW) 15,551 tons
 Troopship SS Aronda (CW) 9,031 tons
 Troopship SS City of Canterbury (CW) 8,331 tons
 Troopship SS Egra (CW) 5,108 tons
 Troopship SS Empire Trooper (CW) 14,106 tons
 Hospital Ship HMHS Karoa (CW) 7,009 tons
 Troopship SS Koœciuszko (ex Czaritza or Tsarina ex Lituania) (Poland) 6,852 tons
 Troopship SS Léopoldville (Belgium) 11,509 tons
 Troopship SS Orbita (CW) 15,495 tons
 Troopship SS Rajula (CW) 8,478 tons
 Transport SS Rohna (CW) 8,602 tons
 Transport SS Takliwa (CW) 7,936 tons
 
 
 07/12/43 (Sunday) (D+2)
 
 
 07/11/43 (Sunday) (D+1) Liberty Ship USS Robert Rowan (USAT 0904) 7,176 tons Ammo & 348 Troops. Sunk by German Ju-88 bomber.
 HUSKY II
 The 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 504th PIR (Parachute Infantry Regiment), US 82nd Airborne Division, led by Col. Reuben Henry "The Little Colonel" Tucker III loaded their C-47 aircraft and take off for Sicily from Kairouan, Tunisia. Near the Sicilian coast naval vessels and shore troops mistaking the C-47 transports for German bombers open fire. 23 C-47's are shot down. Eighty-one troopers were killed, including the assistant division commander, Brigadier General Charles Keerans. Planeloads of paratroopers are forced to exit far from their intended drop zones.
 By morning, 400 of the Regiment's 1600 soldiers had reached their objective area. The others have been dropped in isolated groups on all parts of the island. Where they carried out demolitions, cut lines of communication, established island roadblocks, ambushed German and Italian motorized columns. This caused so much confusion over such an etensive area that initial German radio reports estimated the number of American parachutists dropped to be over ten times the actual number.
 07/12/43
 Covering Force deployed to prevent any attempt by Italian Fleet units to interfere with landings. (Note: Covering Force comprised HM Battleships Rodney, Nelson, Warspite, Valiant, HM Aircraft Carriers Indomitable and Formidable, HM Cruisers Aurora, Cleopatra, Penelope and Euryalus screened by HM Destroyers Quilliam, Quail. Queenborough, Isis, Faulknor, Echo, Fury, Intrepid, Raider, Eclipse, Inglefield, Ilex, Troubridge, Tumult, Tyrian, Offa, ORP Piorun and Greek RHS Vasilissa Olga)
 
 
 07/14/43 (Wednesday) (D+4)
 Convoy NCF-2 4 troop ships, carrying remainder of KOOL Forces.
 Convoy NCS-1 7 store ships carrying remainder 21 days maintenance (approx. 9,700 tons) and 4 2/3 units of fire. for KOOL Forces.
 Convoy NCS-2 1st Follow-up
 DIME Force - 10 store ships carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 7,600 tons) plus 1 1/6 units of fire and remanaing troops of US 82nd Airborne Division.
 CENT Force - 7 store ships loaded in U.S. (ex-UGS-10), carrying remainder of 21 days maintenance plus 10 units of fire for US 45th Infintry Division, vehicles, and supplies.
 Convoy TC-2 CENT Force assault forces in 8 LST, 4 LCI(L), and 2 coasters. Craft carrying personnel and vehicles; coasters carrying 7 days maintenance plus 1 1/6 units of fire (approx. 3,800 tons) for assault troops and 1st Follow-up for troops loaded in North Africa.
 Convoy TD-2 DIME Force - 10 LST, 12 LCI(L), carrying personnel and vehicles.
 Convoy TJ-2 JOSS Force - 2 LSI(S), 22 LST, 28 LCT, 34 LCI(L), and 4 coasters. LSI carrying troops; craft carrying personnel and vehicles; coasters carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 7,800 tons) plus 1 1/6 units of fire.
 MTBron 15 and TG-80.7 Are ordered to operate against enemy shipping in the West Sicilian area, including Palermo.
 
 
 07/16/43 (Friday) (D+6) HM Aircraft Carrier Indomitable Torpedoed by aircraft which had been wrongly identified during air attacks as a naval SWORDFISH returning to carrier. Repair arranged in USA.
 
 
 07/18/43 (Sunday) (D+8)
 Convoy NCS-3 7 store ships and 1 tanker, carrying 14 days maintenance (approx. 12,800 tons) plus 2 1/3 units of fire for DIME Troops in assault, 1st and 2nd Follow-ups, including US 82nd Airborne Division. Tanker carrying approximately 660 tons 100 octane gasoline.
 Convoy TC-3 CENT Force - 6 LST, 3 LCI(L), and 2 coasters. Craft carrying personnel and vehicles; coasters 7 days maintenance plus 1 1/6 units of fire (approx. 3,600 tons) for troops in assault, 1st and 2nd Follow-ups from North Africa.
 Convoy TD-3 DIME Force - 11 LST and 23 LCI(L), carrying personnel and vehicles.
 Convoy TJ-3 JOSS Force - 15 LST, 24 LCI(L), and 5 coasters. Craft carrying personnel and vehicles. Coasters carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 8600 tons) and 1 1/6 units of fire for troops in assault, 1st and 2nd Follow-up.
 To Syracusa, Sicily 1 AP carrying port depot parties, 2 store ships carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 500 tons) for 2,550 troops, and 2 LST carrying vehicles and personnel for depot parties.
 
 
 07/24/43 (Saturday) (D+14)
 Convoy NCS-1 KOOL Force - 7 store ships carrying remainder 21 days maintenance (approx. 9,700 tons) and 4 2/3 units of fire.
 Convoy NCF-2 KOOL Force - 4 troop ships, carrying remainder of KOOL Forces.
 Convoy NCS-4 DIME Force - 1 tanker carrying approximately 660 tons 100 octane gasoline.
 Convoy TC-4 CENT Force - 2 coasters, 7 days maintenance plus 3 1/3 units of fire (approx. 3,600 tons) for Troops in assault, 1st and 2nd Follow-ups from North Africa.
 Convoy TJ-4 JOSS Force - 4 coasters carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 8,600 tons) plus 2 1/3 units of fire for troops in assault, 1st and 2nd Follow-up.
 To Syracusa, Sicily 4 cargo ships, (ex-UGS-11) carrying 21 days maintenance supplies (approx. 22,000 tons) and 4 units of fire, less amounts carried in 7 other ships in UGS-11 convoy.
 
 
 08/04/43 (Wednesday) (D+25)
 JOSS Force - 4 coasters carrying maintenance supplies (approx. 6,000 tons) for troops.
 
 
 USA Naval Forces
 Landing Areas: Gela, Scoglitti, and Licata.
 0 Battleships
 0 Carriers
 5 Light Cruisers
 Light Cruiser USS Philadelphia (CL-41) (F) - Cdr. Gordon Josiah Crosby, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Savannah (CL-42) - Capt. Robert Webster Carey
 Light Cruiser USS Boise (CL-47) - Capt. Leo Hewlett Thebaud, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Birmingham (CL-62) - Capt. John Wilkes, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Brooklyn (CL-40) - Capt. Humbert William Ziroli, USN
 48 Destroyers
 0 Submarines
 48 Other warships
 94 Troopships, supply ships, LSIs etc.
 190 Landing Ships and Craft (major)
 Totals
 435 USN
 Plus Landing Craft (minor)
 510 USN
 
 Overall Allied Commander - General Dwight David EisenHower
 15th Army Group - General Harold Rupert Leofric George Alexander (British Army)
 
 Forces landing
 U.S. 7th Army - Lieutenant General George Smith "Blood and Guts" Patton Jr., USA - 66,000 Troops
 U.S. II Corps - Lieutenant General Omar Nelson "Brad" Bradley, USA
 
 British Eighth Army - General Sir Bernard Law Montgomery - 115,000 British & Canadian Troops
 British 13th Corps - Lieutenant General Miles Christopher Dempsey
 British 30th Corps - Lieutenant-General Oliver Leese
 
 Naval Commander - Admiral Andrew Browne Cunningham
 Western Naval Task Force - Vice Admiral Henry Kent Hewitt, USN
 Departure from: United States, Algeria, Tunisia
 
 Beacon Submarines
 Submarine HMS Seraph (P 219) (CENT); Submarine HMS Shakespeare (P 221) (DIME); Submarine HMS Safari (P 211) (JOSS).
 
 July 28, 1943 TF-88 (Task Force 88) - Rear Admiral Lyal Ament Davidson, USN (ComCruDiv 8 (Commanding Cruiser Division 8))
 CruDiv 8 (Cruiser Division 8)
 Light Cruiser USS Philadelphia (CL-41) (F) - Cdr. Gordon Josiah Crosby, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Savannah (CL-42) - Capt. Robert Webster Carey
 Light Cruiser USS Boise (CL-47) - Capt. Leo Hewlett Thebaud, USN
 
 Monitor HMS Abercrombie (F 109) - Capt. George Vivian Barnett Faulkner, RN
 
 DesRon 7 (Destroyer Squadron 7) Available when not required as escorts for convoys
 Destroyer USS Charles Peshall Plunkett (DD 431) (F) - Cdr. Edward Joseph Burke, USN
 DesDiv 13 (Destroyer Division 13)
 Destroyer USS William Shepherd Benson (DD-421) - Lt.Cdr. Ronald Joseph Woodman, USN
 Destroyer USS Albert Gleaves (DD-423) - Lt.Cdr. Byron Lawrence Gurnette, USN
 
 DesRon 8 (Destroyer Squadrom 8)
 DesDiv 16 (Destroyer Division 16)
 Destroyer USS Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright (DD-419) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Henry Gibbs, USN
 Destroyer USS Alexander Colden Rhind (DD-404) - Lt. Cmdr Otto William Spahr, Jr., USN
 Destroyer USS Stephen Clegg Rowan (DD-405) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Stephens Ford, USN
 Destroyer USS John Trippe (DD-403) - Cdr. Robert Dolan Williams, Sr., USN
 
 DesRon 13 (Destroyer Squadrom 13)
 DesDiv 25 (Destroyer Division 25)
 Destroyer USS Augustus C. Ludlow (DD-438) - Lt.Cdr. Liles Walker Creighton, USN
 Destroyer USS Thomas Alva Edison (DD-439) - Lt.Cdr. Hepburn Alcott Pearce, USN
 Destroyer USS Mark Lambert Bristol (DD-453) - Lt.Cdr. John Albert Glick, USN
 
 DesRon 15 (Destroyer Squadrom 15)
 DesDiv 29 (Destroyer Division 29)
 Destroyer USS William Mervine ( DD-489) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Dale Roderick Frakes, USN
 Destroyer USS John Henry Quick (DD-490) - Lt.Cdr. Philip Winslow Cann, USN
 Destroyer USS Gregory Caldwell Davidson (DD-618) - Lt.Cdr. Walter Coulter Winn, USN
 Destroyer USS Frank Edmund Beatty (DD-640) - Lt.Cdr. William Outerson, USN
 Destroyer USS Benjamin Ryan Tillman (DD-641) - Lt.Cdr. Francis Douglas McCorkle, USN
 DesDiv 30 (Destroyer Division 30)
 Destroyer USS Thomas Jefferson Cowie (DD-632) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Jonathan Whiting, USN
 Destroyer USS Austin Melvin Knight (DD-633) - Lt.Cdr. Joel Clarence Ford, Jr., USN
 Destroyer USS John James Doran (DD-634) - Lt.Cdr. Norman Ernest Smith, USN
 Destroyer USS Ralph Earle (DD-635) - Lt.Cdr. Hamilton Wilcox Howe, USN
 
 DesRon 16 (Destroyer Squadron 16) - Capt. Charles John Cater, USN
 DesDiv 31 (Destroyer Division 31)
 Destroyer USS Foxhall Alexander Parker (DD-604) (F) - Lt.Cdr. John William Bays, USN
 Destroyer USS Charles S. Kendrick (DD-612) - Lt.Cdr. Cecil Tilman Caulfield, USN
 Destroyer USS Henry Laub (DD-613) - Lt.Cdr. John Francis Gallaher, USN
 Destroyer USS Alexander Slidell Mackenzie (DD-614) - Lt.Cdr. Daniel Byrd Miller, USN
 Destroyer USS Tenant McLanahan (DD-615) - Lt.Cdr. Harry Reid Hummer, Jr., USN (to TG-80.1 Force Flagship)
 DesDiv 32 (Destroyer Division 32)
 Destroyer USS Thomas Boyle (DD-600) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Benjamin Prince Field ,Jr., USN
 Destroyer USS Stephen Champlin (DD-601) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Leroy Melson, USN
 Destroyer USS Henry C. Nields (DD-616) - Lt.Cdr. Albert Rossville Heckey, USN
 Destroyer USS John Ordronaux (DD-617) - Lt.Cdr. Robert J. Brodie, Jr., USN (Ordronaux was assigned a squadron of torpedo boats to patrol outside a minefield off Porto Empedocle)
 
 DesRon 17 (Destroyer Squadron 17) - Capt. Dashiell Livingston Madeira, USN
 DesDiv 33 (Destroyer Division 33)
 Destroyer USS John McLeod Murphy (DD-603) - Lt.Cdr. Leonard Scott Bailey, USNR
 Destroyer USS James Henry Glennon (DD-620) - Lt.Cdr. Floyd Charles Camp, USN
 Destroyer USS William Nicholson Jeffers (DD-621) - Lt.Cdr. William Thomas McGarry, USN
 Destroyer USS William Alfred Truman Maddox (DD 622) - Lt.Cdr. Eugene Sylvester Sarsfield, USN
 Destroyer USS Charles Preston Nelson (DD-623) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Munro Marvin Riker, USN
 DesDiv 34 (Destroyer Division 34)
 Destroyer USS Smedley Darlington Butler (DD-636) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Mitchell Dudley Matthews, USN - Available until 08/06/43
 Destroyer USS Bancroft Gherardi (DD-637) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN - Available until 08/06/43
 Destroyer USS William Lewis Herndon (DD-638) - Cdr. Granville Alexander Moore, USN
 Destroyer USS William Bradford Shubrick (DD-639) - Lt.Cdr. Louis Allen Bryan, USN (Bombed)
 
 MinDiv 13 (Minesweeper Division 13) - Cdr. William Leroy Messmer, USN
 Minesweeper USS Staff (AM-114) - Lt.Cdr. Ralph Thomas McDaniel, USNR
 Minesweeper USS Skill (AM-115) - Lt.Cdr. Edward Julius Kevern, USNR
 Minesweeper USS Speed (AM-116) - Lt.Cdr. Herbert A. Peterson, USN
 Minesweeper USS Strive (AM-117) - Lt.Cdr. John Laurence Maloney, USN
 Minesweeper USS Steady (AM-118) - Lt.Cdr. F. W. Maennle, USNR (with TG-81.8 Sweeper Group)
 Minesweeper USS Sustain (AM-119) - (F) - Lt.Cdr. Morgan Hamilton Harris, USNR (with TG-81.8 Sweeper Group)
 
 Minesweeper USS YMS-62
 Minesweeper USS YMS-69
 Minesweeper USS YMS-207
 Minesweeper USS YMS-208
 Minesweeper USS YMS-226
 Minesweeper USS YMS-227
 
 MTBron 15 (17 PT) (PT-201 - PT-2018)  - Cdr. Stanley M. Barnes, USN
 14 PTs
 
 Landing Craft
 2 LSTs
 10 LCI(L)s Due to damage in action, replacements made were 3 LSTs and 5 LCTs
 7 LCTs
 
 Escort Craft
 4 PCs Due to damage in action 2 PCs were replaced 6 SCs 4 Minesweeper YMSs
 
 Western Naval Task Force
 U.S. Seventh Army - Lieutenant General George Smith Patton,Jr., USA - 66,000 Troops
 1sr Ranger Battalion
 3rd Ranger Battalion
 4th Ranger Battalion
 70th Tank Battalion
 753th Tank Battalion
 601st Tank Destroyer Battalion
 813th Tank Destroyer Battalion (2 platoons)
 39th Engineer Regiment
 39th Engineer Shore Regiment
 5th Armored Artilery Group (58th Armored Field Artilery Battalion, 62nd Armored Field Artilery Battalion, and 65th Armored Field Artilery Battalion)
 17th Artilery Regiment
 36th Artilery Regiment
 77th Artilery Regiment
 178th Artilery Regiment
 Free French 4th Moroccan Tabor
 
 KOOL Force (Western Task Force RESERVE)
 Attack Transport USS Chateau Thierry (AP-31) 9,050 tons
 Attack Transport USS Orizaba (AP-24) 11,293 tons
 
 Combat Command B, Second Armored Division
 18th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division
 
 The Shore Party organization adopted by the 7th Army consisted of::
 CENT Force - 40th Combat Engineer Regiment (3 Battalions)
 DIME Force - 531st Engineer Shore Regiment
 JOSS Force - 36th Combat Engineer Regiment (3 Battalions)
 KOOL Force - 540th Combat Engineer Regiment (2 Battalions)
 
 
 U.S.A. 2nd Corps - Lieutenant General Omar Nelson "Brad" Bradley, USA
 US 1st Infantry Division - Major General Terry de la Mesa Allen Sr., USA (08/07/43 replaced by Major General Clarence R. Huebner, USA)
 16th Infantry Regiment
 18th Infantry Regiment
 26th Infantry Regiment
 5th Field Artilery Battalion
 7th Field Artilery Battalion
 32nd Field Artilery Battalion
 33rd Field Artilery Battalion
 1st Engineer Combat Regiment
 1st Reconnaissance Troop
 
 U.S. Provisional Corps
 
 CruDiv 8 (Cruiser Division 8)
 Light Cruiser USS Philadelphia (CL-41) (F) - Cdr. Gordon Josiah Crosby, USN (with TG-85.3 Fire Support Group)
 Light Cruiser USS Savannah (CL-42) - Capt. Robert Webster Carey
 Light Cruiser USS Boise (CL-47) - Capt. Leo Hewlett Thebaud, USN
 
 DesRon 17 (Destroyer Squadron 17) - Capt. Dashiell Livingston Madeira, USN
 DesDiv 33 (Destroyer Division 33) - Lt.Cdr. Leonard Scott Bailey, USNR
 Destroyer USS Charles Preston Nelson (DD-623) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Munro Marvin Riker, USN
 Destroyer USS John McLeod Murphy (DD-603) - Lt.Cdr. Leonard Scott Bailey, USNR
 Destroyer USS James Henry Glennon (DD-620) - Lt.Cdr. Floyd Charles Camp, USN
 Destroyer USS William Nicholson Jeffers (DD-621) - Lt.Cdr. William Thomas McGarry, USN (with TG-81.5 Fire Support)
 Destroyer USS William Alfred Truman Maddox (DD 622) - Lt.Cdr. Eugene Sylvester Sarsfield, USN
 DesDiv 34 (Destroyer Division 34) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN
 Destroyer USS Smedley Darlington Butler (DD-636) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Mitchell Dudley Matthews, USN
 Destroyer USS Bancroft Gherardi (DD-637) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN
 Destroyer USS William Lewis Herndon (DD-638) - Cdr. Granville Alexander Moore, USN
 Destroyer USS William Bradford Shubrick (DD-639) - Lt.Cdr. Louis Allen Bryan, USN (Bombed) (with TG-81.5 Fire Support)
 
 
 07/05/43 (Monday) (D-5) - 07/10/43 (Saturday) (D Day) Convoy NCF-1 from: Oran, Algeria to: Operation HUSKY
 07/10/43 (in convoy NCF-1), the assault forces in 4 APA, 3 XAP, and 2 AKA, carrying 7 days maintenance plus 2 1/3 units of fire for assault Troops, including US 82nd Airborne Division. (approx. 4,700 tons).
 
 Attack Transport USS Barnett (APA-5) 9.750 tons - Capt. George Elmer Maynard, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Bellatrix (AKA-3) 7,480 tons - Capt. Oliver Henderson Ritchie, USNR  - Regimental cargo vessel, carrying a supplementary 5 day supply of gas, ammunition and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing
 Attack Transport USS Calvert (PA-32) 8,429 tons - Capt. Lyman Augustus Thackray - Carrying the 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Charles Carroll (APA-28) - Cdr. Harold Biesemeier, USN - Carrying the Combat Team commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Dorothea Lynde Dix (AP-67) 6,736 tons Carrying 2nd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Elizabeth Cady Stanton (AP-69) 14,909 tons - Capt. Ross Ainsworth Dierdorff, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Florence Nightingale (AP-70) 7,773 tons - Capt. Joseph William McColl Jr., USN - Carrying 3rd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Frederick N. Funston (AP-89) 12,093 tons - Cdr. John Edward Murphy - Carrying the 3rd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Joseph Theodore Dickman (APA-13) 13,529 tons - Capt. Charles W. Harwood, USCG - Carrying 1st Ranger Battalion
 Attack Transport USS Leonard Wood (APA-12) 13,712 tons transport (F) - Capt Merlin O'Neill, USCG - Carrying the Regimental commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Mary Lyon (AP-71) 7,898 tons - Cdr. Thor C. Sorensen, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Neville (APA-9) 7,475 tons - Cdr. Oral Raymond Swigart, USN - Carrying the 2nd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Thomas Jefferson (AP-60) 7,176 tons - Capt. Philip Pindell Welch, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Thurston (AP-77) 5,185 tons - Capt. Jack Ellett Hurff, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS William Phillips Biddle (APA-8) 7,884 tons - Capt. Paul Rolland Glutting - Carrying 3rd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Fleet Oiler USS Niobrara (AO-72) 10,180 tons - Cdr. John William Marts, Jr., USN
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Charles (4120) 2,950 tons - Cdr. Stratford Hercules Dennis, RN - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Leopold (4251) 2,950 tons - Lt.Cdr. John Alverdus Lowe, RNR - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 
 
 CTF-81 (Combined Task Force 81) Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) - Rear Admiral John Lesslie Hall, Jr., USN
 Attack Transport USS Samuel Chase (APA-56) 11,760 tons - Cdr. Robert Clarence Heimer, USCG
 
 531st Engineer Shore Regiment
 
 TransDiv 3 (Transport Division 3) (8 APA-AKA)
 5xAPA USS Joseph T. Dickman (APA-13), USS Barnett (APA-5), USS Mary Lyon (AP-71), USS Thurston (AP-77), USS Elizabeth Cady Stanton (AP-69)
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Charles and HMS Prince Leopold
 
 Beach Identification Group
 Submarine HMS Shakespeare (P 221)  - Lt. Michael Frederic Roberts Ainslie, RN
 Destroyer USS Cole (DD-155) - Lt.Cdr. Briscoe Chipman, USN (from DesRon 30 - DesDiv 60)
 
 TG-81.2 (Task Group 81.2) Transport Group - Capt. Campbell D. Edgar, USN (in USS Barnett (APA-5))
 Section 1 - Capt. Charles W. Harwood, USCG
 Attack Transport USS Joseph Theodore Dickman (APA-13) 13,529 tons - Capt. Charles W. Harwood, USCG - Carrying 1st Ranger Battalion
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Charles (4120) 2,950 tons - Cdr. Stratford Hercules Dennis, RN - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Leopold (4251) 2,950 tons - Lt.Cdr. John Alverdus Lowe, RNR - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 Section 2 - Capt. Campbell D. Edgar, USN
 Attack Transport USS Barnett (APA-5) 9.750 tons - Capt. George Elmer Maynard, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Monrovia (ex Del Argentino) (APA-31) (FF) 8,889 tons - Capt. Thomas Baldwin Brittain, USN (Command ship for Operation HUSKY)
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Oberon (AKA-14) 7,391 tons - Cdr. Ion Purcell
 
 LCI Flotilla 2
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-1
 
 LCI Flotilla 3 - Lt. T. Gore, USNR - 9 LCI's
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-81 - Lt. George F. Hutchinson, Jr., USCGR
 
 Control Group 2
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-621
 3 SC (Submarine Chasers)
 
 Section 3 - Capt. Ross Ainsworth Dierdorff, USN
 Attack Transport USS Elizabeth Cady Stanton (AP-69) 14,909 tons - Capt. Ross Ainsworth Dierdorff, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Thurston (AP-77) 5,185 tons - Capt. Jack Ellett Hurff, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Samuel Chase (APA-56) 11,760 tons - Cdr. Robert Clarence Heimer, USCG
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Betelgeuse (AKA-11) 14,225 tons - Cdr. John Franklin Grube, USN
 
 LCI(L) Flotilla 4 - Lt.Cdr. H. B. Taliaferro, USNR - 8 LCI's
 Group Seven - Cdr Joseph A. Bresnan, USCG, aboard LCI(L)-89
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-83 - Lt. George F. Hutchinson, Jr., USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-84 - Lt.jg. Everett Mains, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-85 - Lt.jg. Coit Hendley, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-86 - Lt.jg Harold A. Levin, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-87 - Lt. John C. Whitbeck, USCG
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-88 - Lt. William B. Cole USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-89 (F) - Lt. Edison M. Fabian, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-90 - Lt.jg. William E. Stevens, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-91 - Lt.jg. Robert Barbee, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-92 - Lt. Robert M. Salmon, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-93 - Lt.jg. Budd B. Bornhoft, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-94 - Lt. Gene R. Gislason, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-95 - Lt.jg. Clinton Earl McAuliffe, USCG
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-96 - Lt.jg. Marshall L. Lee, USCGR
 Group Eight - Cdr Aden C. Unger, USCG, aboard the LCI(L)-321.
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-319 - Lt.jg. Francis X. Riley, USCG
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-320 - Lt.jg. William K. Scammel, Jr, USCG
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-321 (F) - Lt.jg. J. E. Hollis,  USCG
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-322 - Lt.jg. Grant C. Kidston,  USCG
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-323 - Lt. William H. E. Schroeder, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-324 - Lt. Andrew Duncan, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-325 - Lt. William V. Lorimer, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-326 - Lt. Samuel W. Allison, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-349 - Lt.jg. Thomas A. Walsh, USCGR
 Landing Craft Infantry (Large) USS LCI(L)-350 - Lt.jg. Pierce B. Ussell, USCGR
 
 Control Group 3
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-627
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-625
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-694
 
 TG-81.3 (Task Group 81.3) LST Group - Cdr. William Dudley Wright, USN
 14 LST's
 
 TG-81.4 (Task Group 81.4) LCI Group - Capt. John H. Leppert, USN
 LCI(L) Flotilla 3 - Lt.Cdr. H. B. Taliaferro, USNR
 
 TG-81.5 (Task Group 81.5) Fire Support Groups - Capt. Leo Hewlett Thebaud, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Savannah (CL-42) - Capt. Robert Webster Carey
 Light Cruiser USS Boise (CL-47) - Capt. Leo Hewlett Thebaud, USN
 Destroyer USS William Nicholson Jeffers (DD-621) - Lt.Cdr. William Thomas McGarry, USN (from DesRon 17 - DesDiv 33)
 Destroyer USS William Bradford Shubrick (DD-639) - Lt.Cdr. Louis Allen Bryan, USN (Bombed) (from DesRon 17 - DesDiv 34)
 
 TG-81.6 (Task Group 81.6) Screen - Capt. Dashiell Livingston Madeira, USN
 DesRon 17 (Destoyer Squadron 17) - Capt. Dashiell Livingston Madeira, USN
 DesDiv 33 (Destroyer Division 33) - Lt.Cdr. Leonard Scott Bailey, USNR (less USS Jeffers (DD-621) with TG-81.5 Fire Support)
 Destroyer USS Charles Preston Nelson (DD-623) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Munro Marvin Riker, USN
 Destroyer USS John McLeod Murphy (DD-603) - Lt.Cdr. Leonard Scott Bailey, USNR
 Destroyer USS James Henry Glennon (DD-620) - Lt.Cdr. Floyd Charles Camp, USN
 Destroyer USS William Alfred Truman Maddox (DD 622) - Lt.Cdr. Eugene Sylvester Sarsfield, USN
 DesRon 17 (Destroyer Squadron 17) DesDiv 34 (Destroyer Division 34) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN (less USS Shubrick (DD-639) with TG-81.5 Fire Support)
 Destroyer USS Smedley Darlington Butler (DD-636) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Mitchell Dudley Matthews, USN
 Destroyer USS Bancroft Gherardi (DD-637) - Lt.Cdr. John William Schmidt, USN
 Destroyer USS William Lewis Herndon (DD-638) - Cdr. Granville Alexander Moore, USN
 
 DesRon 30 (Destroyer Squadron 30)
 DesDiv 60 (Destroyer Division 60) - (Less USS Cole (DD-155) with TF-81 - Beach Identification Group)
 Destroyer USS Dallas (DD-199) (F) - Cdr. Anthony Carroll Roessler, USN
 Destroyer USS Bernadou (DD-153) - Lt.Cdr. Benjamin Long Edes Talman, USN
 
 
 TG-81.7 (Task Group 81.7) Control Group - Lt.Cdr. Robert D. Lowther, USNR (4 PC's and 5 SC's) - Lt.Cdr. Robert Dickson Lowther, USN ?
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-621
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-624
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-625
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-627
 
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-676
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-690
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-691
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-692
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-693
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-694
 
 TG-81.8 (Task Group 81.8) Sweeper Group - Lt.Cdr. Morgan Hamilton Harris, USNR
 Minesweeper USS Steady (AM-118) - Lt.Cdr. F. W. Maennle, USNR ((from MinDiv 13)
 Minesweeper USS Sustain (AM-119) - (F) - Lt.Cdr. Morgan Hamilton Harris, USNR ((from MinDiv 13)
 
 Minesweeper USS YMS-62
 Minesweeper USS YMS-69
 Minesweeper USS YMS-207
 Minesweeper USS YMS-208
 Minesweeper USS YMS-226
 Minesweeper USS YMS-227
 
 TG-81.9 (Task Group 81.9) Salvage Group - Lt. Oscar W. Huff, USNR
 Fleet Tug USS Hopi (ATF-71) - (F) - Lt. Oscar W. Huff (towing pontoon causeways)
 Salvage Ship USS Brant (ARS 32) - Lt. Henry Melvin Anderson, USN
 4 Harbor Tugs
 
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-621
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-624
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-625
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-627
 
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-676
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-690
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-691
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-692
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-693
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-694
 
 Fleet Tug USS Hopi (ATF-71) - (F) - Lt. Oscar W. Huff, USN (towing pontoon causeways)
 Rescue and Salvage Ship USS Redwing (ARS-4) - Lt.jg. Martin Conrad (Ski) Sibitzky, USN
 
 16 LST (including 2 carrying pontoons),
 
 19 LCI(L),
 
 
 RED Beach
 Attack Transport USS Joseph Theodore Dickman (APA-13) 13,529 tons - Capt. Charles W. Harwood, USCG - Carrying 1st Ranger Battalion
 
 GREEN Beach
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Charles (4120) 2,950 tons - Cdr. Stratford Hercules Dennis, RN - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Leopold (4251) 2,950 tons - Lt.Cdr. John Alverdus Lowe, RNR - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 
 YELLOW Beach
 Attack Transport USS -  (APA-5) 9.750 tons - Capt. George Elmer Maynard, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 
 BLUE Beach
 Attack Transport USS Mary Lyon (AP-71) 7,898 tons - Cdr. Thor C. Sorensen, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 
 RED 2 Beach
 Attack Transport USS Thurston (AP-77) 5,185 tons -Capt. Jack Ellett Hurff, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 
 GREEN 2 Beach
 Attack Transport USS Elizabeth Cady Stanton (AP-69) 14,909 tons - Capt. Ross Ainsworth Dierdorff, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 
 
 CTF-85 (Combined Task Force 85) Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force) - Rear Admiral Alan Goodrich Kirk, USN
 TG-85.1 (Task Group 85.1 "Wood's Hole") Attack Group One - Rear Admiral Alan Goodrich Kirk, USN
 US 45th Infantry Division - Maj.Gen. Troy Houston Middleton, USA
 Amphibious Force Command Ship USS Ancon (AGC-4) 10,021 tons (Flagship of Cent Attack Force) - Capt. Paul Luker Mather, USN
 
 On D day, (in convoy NCF-1), the assault forces in:
 1 AGC - Amphibious Force Command Ship USS Ancon (AGC-4) 10,021 tons (Flagship of Cent Attack Force) - Capt. Paul Luker Mather, USN
 7 APA, 6 XAP and 5 AKA, carrying 21 days maintenance plus 10 units of fire for Troops mounted in the U.S. (approximately 10,900 tons) - less amounts Carrying in 1st Follow-up (convoy NCS-2).
 
 Screen - Capt. Thomas Lippitt Wattles, USN
 DesRon 16 (Destroyer Squadron 16) - Capt. Thomas Lippitt Wattles, USN
 DesDiv 31 (Destroyer Division 31)
 Destroyer USS Foxhall Alexander Parker (DD-604) (F) - Lt.Cdr. John William Bays, USN
 Destroyer USS Charles S. Kendrick (DD-612) - Lt.Cdr. Cecil Tilman Caulfield, USN
 Destroyer USS Henry Laub (DD-613) - Lt.Cdr. John Francis Gallaher, USN
 Destroyer USS Alexander Slidell Mackenzie (DD-614) - Lt.Cdr. Daniel Byrd Miller, USN
 
 Minecraft - Cdr. William Leroy Messmer, USN
 MinDiv 13 (Minesweeper Division 13) - Cdr. William Leroy Messmer, USN (less USS Steady (AM-118) and USS Sustain (AM-119) with TG-81.8 ) (4 AM)
 Minesweeper USS Staff (AM-114) - Lt. J. H. Napier, USNR
 Minesweeper USS Skill (AM-115) - Lt.Cdr. Edward Julius Kevern, USNR
 Minesweeper USS Speed (AM-116) - Lt. Raymond Charles Dryer, USN
 Minesweeper USS Strive (AM-117) - Lt.Cdr. J. L. Maloney (USNR?)
 
 5 Minesweeper YMS
 
 Beach Identification Group
 Submarine HMS Seraph - Lt. Norman Limbury Auchinleck Jewell, RN
 Destroyer USS Thomas Jefferson Cowie (DD-632) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Jonathan Whiting, USN
 
 TransDiv 1 (Transport Division 1) - Capt. Wallace B. Phillips, USN (3 APA, 2 AP, 2 AKA)
 Attack Transport USS Leonard Wood (APA-12) 13,712 tons transport (F) - Capt. Merlin O'Neill, USCG - Carrying the Combat Team commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS James O'Hara (APA-90) 10,067 tons - Lt.Cdr. Charles Vern Allen, USN
 Attack Transport USS Harry Lee (APA-10) 9,989 tons - Cdr. J. G. Pomeroy, USN
 Attack Transport USS Dorothea Lynde Dix (AP-67) 6,736 tons - Capt. Leo B Schulten, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Florence Nightingale (AP-70) 7,773 tons - Capt. Joseph William McColl Jr., USN - Carrying 3rd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Andromeda (AKA-15) 6,556 tons - Cdr. William Anthony Fly, USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Alcyone (AKA -7) 14,225 tons - Capt. Daniel Michael McGurl, USN - Regimental cargo vessel Carrying a supplementary 5 day supply of gasoline, ammunition, and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing.
 
 TransDiv 7 (Transport Division 7) - Capt. Donald Wood Loomis, USN (3 APA, 1 AP, 1 AKA)
 Attack Transport USS Calvert (named for Calvert county MD) (APA-32) 8,429 tons - Capt. Lyman Augustus Thackray - Carrying the 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Neville (APA-9) 7,475 tons - Cdr. Oral Raymond Swigart, USN - Carrying the 2nd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Frederick N. Funston (APA-89) 12,093 tons - Cdr. John Edward Murphy - Carrying the 3rd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Anne Arundel (ex Mormacyork) (AP-76) 7,796 tons - Cdr. Lunsford Yandell Mason Jr., USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Bellatrix (AKA-3) 7,480 tons - Capt. Oliver Henderson Ritchie, USNR - Regimental cargo vessel, carrying a supplementary 5 day supply of gas, ammunition and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing.
 8 LST's
 6 LCI's
 6 LCT's
 Fleet Tug USS Narragansett (AT-88) 1,235 tons - Ltjg. Charles John Wichmann, USN - towing pontoon causeways
 Fleet Tug USS USS Nauset (AT-89) - Lt. Joseph Orleck, USN - towing pontoon causeways
 (18 APA-AKA)
 
 
 TG-85.2 (Task Group 85.2 "Bailey's Beach") Attack Group Two - Rear Admiral L. A. Davisdon, USN (in USS Philadelphia (CL-41))
 TransDiv 5 (Transport Division 5) - Capt. Watson Osgood Bailey, USN (3 APA, 1 AP, 1 AKA)
 Attack Transport USS Charles Carroll (APA-28) 8,409 tons - Cdr. Harold Biesemeier, USN - Carrying the Combat Team commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Thomas Jefferson (AP-60) 7,176 tons - Capt. Philip Pindell Welch, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS William Phillips Biddle (APA-8) 7,884 tons - Capt. Paul Rolland Glutting - Carrying 3rd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Susan Brownell Anthony (AP-72) 8,193 tons - Capt. Henry Hartley, USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Arcturus (AKA-1) 7,480 tons - Cdr. John Reid McKinney, USN
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Procyon (AKA-2) 7,480 tons - Cdr. Beverly Armistead Hartt, USN - Regimental cargo vessel Carrying a supplementary 5 day supply of gas, ammunition and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing.
 5 LST's
 
 
 TG-85.3 (Task Group 85.3) Fire Support Group - Rear Admiral Lyal Ament Davidson, USN (in USS Philadelphia (CL-41))
 Light Cruiser USS Philadelphia (CL-41) (F) - Cdr. Gordon Josiah Crosby, USN
 Monitor HMS Abercrombie (F 109) - Capt. George Vivian Barnett Faulkner, RN
 
 Desron 15, Desron 16 (16 DD)
 DesRon 15 (Destroyer Squadrom 15)
 DesDiv 29 (Destroyer Division 29)
 Destroyer USS William Mervine ( DD-489) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Dale Roderick Frakes, USN
 Destroyer USS John Henry Quick (DD-490) - Lt.Cdr. Philip Winslow Cann, USN (temp assigned to DesDiv 34)
 Destroyer USS Gregory Caldwell Davidson (DD-618) - Lt.Cdr. Walter Coulter Winn, USN
 Destroyer USS Benjamin Ryan Tillman (DD-641) - Lt.Cdr. Francis Douglas McCorkle, USN
 Destroyer USS Frank Edmund Beatty (DD-640) - Lt.Cdr. William Outerson, USN.
 DesDiv 30 (Destroyer Division 30) - Cdr. Roger Brown Nickerson, USN
 Destroyer USS Austin Melvin Knight (DD-633) - Lt.Cdr. Joel Clarence Ford, Jr., USN
 Destroyer USS John James Doran (DD-634) - Lt.Cdr. Norman Ernest Smith, USN
 Destroyer USS Ralph Earle (DD-635) - Lt.Cdr. Hamilton Wilcox Howe, USN
 
 DesRon 16 (Destroyer Squadrom 16) Capt. Thomas Lippitt Wattles, USN (less USS McLanahan (DD-615) and USS Ordronaux (DD-617))
 DesRon 31 (Destroyer Squadrom 31)
 Destroyer USS Foxhall Alexander Parker (DD-604) (F) - Lt.Cdr. John William Bays, USN
 Destroyer USS Charles S. Kendrick (DD-612) - Lt.Cdr. Cecil Tilman Caulfield, USN
 Destroyer USS Henry Laub (DD-613) - Lt.Cdr. John Francis Gallaher, USN
 Destroyer USS Alexander Slidell Mackenzie (DD-614) - Lt.Cdr. Daniel Byrd Miller, USN
 DesDiv 32 - Cdr. Beverley Randolph Harrison, USN
 Destroyer USS Thomas Boyle (DD-600) (F) - Lt.Cdr. Benjamin Prince Field ,Jr., USN
 Destroyer USS Stephen Champlin (DD-601) - Lt.Cdr. Charles Leroy Melson, USN
 Destroyer USS Henry C. Nields (DD-616) - Lt.Cdr. Albert Rossville Heckey, USN
 
 
 DesRon 30 (Destroyer Squadrom 30)
 DesRon 60 (Destroyer Squadrom 60) (3 Old Destroyers)
 Destroyer USS Dallas (DD-199) (F) - Cdr. Anthony Carroll Roessler, USN
 Destroyer USS Bernadou (DD-153) - Lt.Cdr. Benjamin Long Edes Talman, USN
 CDestroyer USS Cole (DD-155) - Lt.Cdr. B. Chipman, USN
 
 Minesweeper USS YMS-16
 Minesweeper USS YMS-18
 Minesweeper USS YMS-34
 Minesweeper USS YMS-36
 Minesweeper USS YMS-37
 Minesweeper USS YMS-43
 Minesweeper USS YMS-55
 Minesweeper USS YMS-58
 Minesweeper USS YMS-63
 Minesweeper USS YMS-64
 Minesweeper USS YMS-82
 Minesweeper USS YMS-83
 
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-542
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-551
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-556
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-557
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-558
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-591
 
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-1029
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-1030
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-1043
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-1044
 
 Fleet Tug USS Narragansett (AT-88) 1,235 tons - Lt.jg. Charles John Wichmann, USN - towing pontoon causeways
 Fleet Tug USS USS Nauset (AT-89) - Lt. Joseph Orleck, USN - towing pontoon causeways
 
 14 LST (Including 10 loaded for US 45th Division; 3 carrying pontoons),
 
 8 LCT-5
 
 6 LCI(L)
 40th Combat Engineer Regiment (3 Bns)
 
 07/05/43 (Monday) - 07/10/43 (Saturday) Convoy NCF-1from Oran and USA to Gela Attack Force (DIME Force) and Scoglitti Attack Force (CENT Force)
 Assault forces in 1 AGC, 7 APA, 6 XAP and 5 AKA, carrying 21 days maintenance plus 10 units of fire for Troops mounted in the U.S. (approximately 10,900 tons) - less amounts Carrying in 1st Follow-up (convoy NCS-2).
 
 Attack Transport USS Monrovia (ex Del Argentino) (APA-31) (FF) 8,889 tons - Capt. Thomas Baldwin Brittain, USN (Command ship for Operation HUSKY)
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Bellatrix (AKA-3) 7,480 tons - Capt. Oliver Henderson Ritchie, USNR  - Regimental cargo vessel, carrying a supplementary 5 day supply of gas, ammunition and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing
 Attack Transport USS Barnett (APA-5) 7,712 tons - Capt. George Elmer Maynard, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Calvert (PA-32) 8,429 tons - Capt. Lyman Augustus Thackray - Carrying the 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Charles Carroll (APA-28) - Cdr. Harold Biesemeier, USN - Carrying the Combat Team commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Dorothea Lynde Dix (AP-67) 6,736 tons Carrying 2nd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Elizabeth Cady Stanton (AP-69) 14,909 tons - Capt. Ross Ainsworth Dierdorff, USN - Carrying 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Florence Nightingale (AP-70) 7,773 tons - Capt. Joseph William McColl Jr., USN - Carrying 3rd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Frederick N. Funston (AP-89) 12,093 tons - Cdr. John Edward Murphy - Carrying the 3rd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Joseph Theodore Dickman (APA-13) 13,529 tons - Capt. Charles W. Harwood, USCG - Carrying 1st Ranger Battalion
 Attack Transport USS Leonard Wood (APA-12) 13,712 tons transport (F) Capt Merlin O'Neill, USCG - Carrying the Regimental commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Mary Lyon (AP-71) 7,898 tons - Cdr. Thor C. Sorensen, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 26th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Neville (APA-9) 7,475 tons - Cdr. Oral Raymond Swigart, USN - Carrying the 2nd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Thomas Jefferson (AP-60) 7,176 tons - Capt. Philip Pindell Welch, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Thurston (AP-77) 5,185 tons - Capt. Jack Ellett Hurff, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry, US 1st Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS William Phillips Biddle (APA-8) 7,884 tons - Capt. Paul Rolland Glutting - Carrying 3rd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Charles (4120) 2,950 tons - Cdr. Stratford Hercules Dennis, RN - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 Landing Ship Infntry (Small) HMS Prince Leopold (4251) 2,950 tons - Lt.Cdr. John Alverdus Lowe, RNR - Carrying half of 4th Ranger Battalion
 Fleet Oiler USS Niobrara (AO-72) 10,180 tons - Cdr. John William Marts, Jr., USN
 
 TransDiv 1 (179th Regimental Combat Team, US 45th Infantry Division)
 Amphibious Force Command Ship USS Ancon (AGC-4) 10,021 tons (Flagship of Cent Attack Force) - Capt. Paul Luker Mather, USN
 
 GREEN Beach
 Attack Transport USS Dorothea Lynde Dix (AP-67) 11,625 tons Carrying 2nd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 
 YELLOW Beach
 Attack Transport USS Leonard Wood (APA-12) 13,712 tons transport (F) Capt Merlin O'Neill, USCG - Carrying the Regimental commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 
 RED Beach
 Attack Transport USS Florence Nightingale (AP-70) 7,773 tons - Capt. Joseph William McColl Jr., USN - Carrying 3rd Battalion 179th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 
 RESERVE
 Attack Transport USS Harry Lee (AP-10) 9,989 tons alternately maligned as the "Listing Lee" or "Horrible Harry" CarryingService Co.,Anti-Tank Co.,Cannon Co.,Medical Detachment, and Headquarters Company
 Attack Transport USS James O' Hara (AP-90) 10,067 tons CarryingB Battery, 189th Field Artillery
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Alcyone (AKA -7) 14,225 tons - Capt. Daniel Michael McGurl, USN - Regimental cargo vessel Carryinga supplementary 5 day supply of gasoline, ammunition, and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing.
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Andromeda (AKA-15) 6,556 tons - Cdr. William Anthony Fly, USN
 
 TransDiv 1 also had the 160th Field Artillery Battalion (75mm), B Company 120th Medical Battalion, 1 Company of the 2nd Chemical Mortar Battalion, and B Company 120th Engineers.
 
 TransDiv 5 (157th Regimental Combat Team, US 45th Infantry Division)
 GREEN2 Beach
 Attack Transport USS Thomas Jefferson (AP-60) 7,176 tons - Capt. Philip Pindell Welch, USN - Carrying 2nd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 
 YELLOW2 Beach
 Attack Transport USS Charles Carroll (APA-28) - Cdr. Harold Biesemeier, USN - Carryingthe Combat Team commander, his staff, and Troops of the 1st Battalion 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 RESERVE
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Susan Brownell Anthony (AP-72) 8,193 tons - Capt. Henry Hartley, USN
 Attack Transport USS William Phillips Biddle (APA-8) 7,884 tons - Capt. Paul Rolland Glutting - Carrying 3rd Battalion, 157th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Procyon (AKA-2) 7,480 tons - Cdr. Beverly Armistead Hartt, USN - Regimental cargo vessel Carryinga supplementary 5 day supply of gas, ammunition and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing.
 
 TransDiv 5 also had the 158th Field Artillery Battalion, A Company 120th Medical Battalion, 1 Company of the 2nd Chemical Mortar Battalion, and A Company 120th Engineers. Possibly also A btry 189th FA
 
 TransDiv 7 (180th Regimental Combat Team, US 45th Infantry Division)
 TransDiv 7 also had the 171st Field Artillery Battalion (105MM), C Company 120th Medical Battalion, 1 Company of the 2nd Chemical Mortar Battalion, and C Company 120th Engineers.
 RED Beach
 Attack Transport USS Calvert (PA-32) 8,429 tons - Capt. Lyman Augustus Thackray - Carryingthe 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Transport USS Neville (APA-9) 7,475 tons - Cdr. Oral Raymond Swigart, USN - Carrying the 2nd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 
 RESERVE
 Attack Transport USS Anne Arundel (ex Mormacyork) (AP-76) 7,796 tons  - Cdr. Lunsford Yandell Mason Jr., USN
 Attack Transport USS Frederick N. Funston (AP-89) 12,093 tons - Cdr. John Edward Murphy - Carryingthe 3rd Battalion, 180th Infantry, US 45th Infantry Division
 Attack Cargo Ship USS Bellatrix (AKA-3) 7,480 tons - Capt. Oliver Henderson Ritchie, USNR  - Regimental cargo vessel, carrying a supplementary 5 day supply of gas, ammunition and rations as well as additional equipment that was not essential for the initial landing.
 
 
 
 Licata Attack Force (JOSS Force) (CTF-86 (Combined Task Force 86)) - Rear Admiral Richard Lansing Conolly, USN (abord Amphibious Force Command Ship USS Biscayne (AGC-18))
 3rd Infantry Division
 2nd Arm. Div. (less 1 Armored. Combat Command)
 3rd Ranger Battalion
 
 07/10/43 Convoy TJ-1
 Assault forces in 2 LSI(S), 40 LST, 85 LCT, and 54 LCI(L), carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 6,900 tons) plus 2 1/3 units of fire for JOSS assault forces, personnel, and vehicles.
 
 07/14/43 (D+4) Convoy TJ-2
 2 LSI(S), 22 LST, 28 LCT, 34 LCI(L), and 4 coasters. LSI carrying troops; craft carrying personnel and vehicles; coasters carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 7,800 tons) plus 1 1/6 units of fire for JOSS assault forces and first Follow-up.
 
 07/18/43 (D+8) Convoy TJ-3
 15 LST, 24 LCI(L), and 5 coasters. Craft carrying personnel and vehicles. Coasters carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 8600 tons) and 1 1/6 units of fire for JOSS assault forces, 1st, and 2nd Follow-up.
 
 07/24/43 (D+14) Convoy TJ-4
 4 coasters carrying 7 days maintenance (approx. 8,600 tons) plus 2 1/3 units of fire for troops in assault, 1st and 2nd Follow-up. On D+25, 4 coasters carrying maintenance supplies (approx. 6,000 tons).
 
 After the 2nd Follow-up craft convoys, all craft (U.S. and British) were placed in a pool for the build-up of Allied armies.
 
 
 In the vicinity of Licata, one Ranger Battalion and three Regimental Combat Teams comprising the 3rd Infantry Division reinforced, (JOSS Force), were landed in assault. The Ranger Battalion was landed over assigned beaches in LCA's; having been embarked in two British LSI(S)'s, the Princess Charlotte and Princess Astrid. Two Regimental Combat Teams were landed in column of Battalions, the assault Battalions, respectively landing in LCVP's, having embarked in LST's; the following Battalions, in each case landing in LCI(L)'s. Two Battalions of the third Regimental Combat Team were landed in column, in LCVP's; having embarked in LST's. The third Battalion of this Regimental Combat Team was landed, behind the Ranger Battalion, in LCVP's; having embarked in LST's. One armored Combat Command, Combat Command A, Second Armored Division, acted as floating reserve for the JOSS Force.
 The JOSS assault beaches and assigned Army forces were as follows, reading as from West to East, total frontage approximately 22,000 yards.
 
 06/29/43 (D-11) TG-86.1 (Task Group 86.1) from Mers el Kebir, Algeria to Licata, Sicily
 Crudiv 13 (Cruiiser Division 13)
 Light Cruiser USS Brooklyn (CL-40) - Capt. Humbert William Ziroli, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Birmingham (CL-62) - Capt. John Wilkes, USN
 
 Destroyer USS James Buck (DD-420) (F) - Lt. George Solon Lambert, USN (from DesRon 13)
 Destroyer USS Augustus C. Ludlow (DD-438) - Lt.Cdr. Liles Walker Creighton, USN (from DesRon 13 - DesDiv 25)
 
 Beach Identification Group
 Destroyer USS Mark Lambert Bristol (DD-453) - Lt.Cdr. John Albert Glick, USN (from DesRon 13 - DesDiv 25)
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-546
 Submarine HMS Safari (P 211) - Lt. Richard Barklie Lakin, RN
 
 TG-86.2 (Task Group 86.2)
 
 TG-86.3 (Task Group 86.3)
 Minesweeper USS Sentinel (AM-113) - Lt.Cdr. George Lincoln Phillips, USN
 
 
 Amphibious Force Command Ship USS Biscayne (AGC-18) (F) - Cdr. Robert Lummings Young, USN
 Landing Ship Infantry (Small) HMS Princess Josephine Charlotte (4.238) 2,950 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Small) HMS Princess Astrid (4.226) 2,950 tons
 
 Crudiv 13 (Cruiiser Division 13)
 Light Cruiser USS Brooklyn (CL-40) - Capt. Humbert William Ziroli, USN
 Light Cruiser USS Birmingham (CL-62) - Capt. John Wilkes, USN
 
 DesRon 13 - Capt. Harry Sanders, USN
 Destroyer USS James Buck (DD-420) (F) - Lt. George Solon Lambert, USN
 DesDiv 25 -
 Destroyer USS Woolsey (DD-437) (F) - Cdr. Henry Robert Wier, USN
 Destroyer USS Augustus C. Ludlow (DD-438) - Lt.Cdr. Liles Walker Creighton, USN
 Destroyer USS Thomas Alva Edison (DD-439) - Lt.Cdr. Hepburn Alcott Pearce, USN
 Destroyer USS Mark Lambert Bristol (DD-453) - Lt.Cdr. John Albert Glick, USN
 DesDiv 26 - Capt. Vernon Huber, USN
 Destroyer USS Charles Wilkes (DD-441) (F) - Cdr. Frederick Wolsieffer, USN
 Destroyer USS Claude Augustus Swanson (DD-443) (temp F) - Cdr. Edward Livingston Robertson Jr., USN.
 Destroyer USS Nicholson (named for the Nicholson family) (DD-442) - Cdr. Lewis Merrill Markham Jr., USN
 Destroyer USS Francis Asbury Roe (DD-418) - Lt.Cdr. Rathel Linwood Nolan Jr., USN
 
 
 Minesweeper USS Seer (AM-112) - Cdr. Albert Frederick Block, USN
 Minesweeper USS Sentinel (AM-113) - Lt.Cdr. George Lincoln Phillips, USN
 
 Minesweeper USS YMS-3
 Minesweeper USS YMS-13
 Minesweeper USS YMS-15
 Minesweeper USS YMS-20
 Minesweeper USS YMS-21
 Minesweeper USS YMS-78
 
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-543
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-545
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-546
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-550
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-559
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-562
 Submarine Chaser USS PC-626
 
 
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-497
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-498
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-503
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-506
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-508
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-522
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-526
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-530
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-532
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-533
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-534
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-535
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-638
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-639
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-649
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-651
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-655
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-666
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-695
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-696
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-697
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-770
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-771
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-977
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-978
 Submarine Chaser USS SC-979
 
 Fleet Tug Moreno (ATF-87) (towing pontoon causeways) - Lt. (jg) V. H. Kyllberg, USN
 Harbor Tug USS Intent (YT-458) O. W. Norr
 Harbor Tug USS Resolute (YT-459) R. L. Self
 
 40 LST (Including 5 carrying pontoons; others carrying 6 LCVP and fitted as hospital carriers),
 
 85 LCT-5
 54 LCI(L)
 
 12 LCT-3 or 4, British
 9 LCG(L), British
 7 LCF(L), British
 
 
 36th Combat Engineer Regiment (3 Bns)
 
 
 RED Beach
 1st Battalion, 7th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 
 GREEN WEST Beach
 Landing Ship Infantry (Small) HMS Princess Josephine Charlotte (4.238) 2,950 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Small) HMS Princess Astrid (4.226) 2,950 tons
 3rd Ranger Battalion 2-LSI(S)'s
 
 GREEN EAST Beach
 2nd Battalion, 15th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 
 YELLOW Beach
 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 1st Battalion, 15th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 
 BLUE Beach
 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 3rd Battalion, 30th Infantry, US 3rd Infantry Divison
 
 
 TASK ORGANIZATION
 TF-80 (Task Force 80) CONTROL Force
 TG-80.1 (Task Group 80.1) Force Flagship
 Attack Transport USS Monrovia (ex Del Argentino) (APA-31) (FF) 8,889 tons - Capt. Thomas Baldwin Brittain, USN (Command ship for Operation HUSKY)
 Destroyer USS Tenant McLanahan (DD-615) - Lt.Cdr. Harry Reid Hummer, Jr., USN (from DesRon 16, DesDiv 31)
 
 TG-80.2 (Task Group 80.2) Escort Group
 Desron 7 less Desdiv 14 and Mayo, Eight (9 DD).
 
 TG-80.3 (Task Group 80.3) Screening Group
 Destroyer USS John Ordronaux (DD-617) - Lt.Cdr. Robert J. Brodie, Jr., USN
 MTBron 15 (17 PT) (PT-201 - PT-2018)
 
 TG-80.4 (Task Group 80.4) Demonstration Group
 10 -- ARBs,
 PT-213.
 
 TG-80.5 (Task Group 80.5) Minelaying Group
 Minelayer USS Keokuk (CM-8)
 Minelayer USS Salem (CM-11)
 Minelayer USS Weehawken (CM-12)
 Escorts (as assigned).
 
 TG-80.6 (Task Group 80.6) Reserve Group
 Attack Transport USS Orizaba (AP-24) 11,293 tons
 Attack Transport USS Chateau Thierry (AP-31) 9,050 tons
 6x LST
 7x LCT
 11x LCI(L)
 16x LCI(L), British.
 
 
 TF-87 (Task Force 87) Train - Capt. Tuggle, USN
 Repair Ship USS Delta (AR-9) 8,975 tons
 Repair Ship USS Vulcan (AR-5) 12,911 tons
 Ammunition Ship USS Mount Baker (ex USS Kilauea) (AE-4) 6,350 tons
 Stores Ship USS Tarazed (ex Chiriqui) (AF-13) 6,983 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Winooski (ex Calusa) (AO-38) 9,900 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Mattaponi (AO-41) 10,600 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Chicopee (ex Esso Trenton) (AO-34) 10,097 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Salamonie (ex Esso Columbia) (AO-26) 11,316 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Chemung (ex Esso Annapolis) (AO-30) 11,335 tons
 Fleet Oiler USS Niobrara (AO-72) 10,180 tons - Cdr. John William Marts, Jr., USN
 Liberty Ship SS William I Chamberlain (2576) 14,245 tons
 
 
 Air Forces Commander: Air Marshal Arthur William Tedder.
 Off Sicily, Axis planes bomb invasion shipping and screening ships, sinking Destroyer Maddox (DD-622), 36°52'N, 13°56'E; tank landing ships LST-313, 37°01'N, 14°15'E; and minesweeper Sentinel (AM-113), 37°06'N, 13°55'E. Collisions in the crowded waters off the beaches account for damage to destroyers Francis Asbury Roe (DD-418) and Claude Augustus Swanson (DD-443) at 37°03'N, 13°36'E, and LST-345 and submarine Chaser USS PC-621 at 37°02'N, 14°15'E.
 
 German submarine U-371 attacks convoy off the Algerian coast, torpedoing Liberty Ship USS Matthew Maury - WSAT (550) (USAT) at 37°00'N, 05°00'E, and Tanker USS Gulfprince 6,561 tons at 37°13'N, 05°12'E. There are no casualties on board the former (including the 28-man Armed Guard), which is towed to the Algerian port of Bougie and subsequently returns to service. The latter is abandoned by the 36-man merchant complement and 28-man Armed Guard, the survivors being rescued by British trawler HMS Sir Gareth and freighter Empire Commerce; one Armed Guard sailor dies of his wounds on board the latter. A salvage crew later boards Gulfprince and the ship is towed to Algiers by British salvage tugs HMS Weazel and HMS Hudson; she subsequently is chartered by the Navy for use as a mobile storage facility in North African waters.
 
 Eastern Naval Task Force - Vice Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay, RN
 Departure from: Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Malta; Canadian division from Britain
 Landing Areas: South of Syracuse, SE coast
 6 Battleships
 2 Carriers
 10 Cruisers
 80 Destroyers
 26 Submarines
 250 Other warships
 237 Troopships, supply ships, LSIs etc.
 319 Landing Ships and Craft (major) 319
 Totals
 930 RN
 Plus Landing Craft (minor)
 715
 
 British Eighth Army - General Sir Bernard Law Montgomery
 
 British& Allied Naval Forces
 Submarines
 Submarine HMS Osiris (N 67) - Lt. Arthur George Chandler, RNR
 Submarine HMS Parthian (N 75) - Lt. Cyril Astell Pardoe, RNR
 Submarine HMS Rorqual (N 74) - LtCdr. Lennox William Napier, RN
 Submarine HMS Safari (P 211) - Lt. Richard Barklie Lakin, RN
 Submarine HMS Saracen (P 247) - Lt. Michael Geoffrey Rawson Lumby, RN
 Submarine HMS Seraph (P 219) - Lt. Norman Limbury Auchinleck Jewell, RN
 Submarine HMS Severn (N 57) - LtCdr. Andrew Neil Gillespie Campbell, RN
 Submarine HMS Shakespeare (P 221)  - Lt. Michael Frederic Roberts Ainslie, RN
 Submarine HMS Sibyl (P 217) - Lt. Ernest John Donaldson Turner, RN
 Submarine HMS Sickle (P 224) - Lt. James Ralph Drummond, RN
 Submarine HMS Simoom (P 225) - Lt. Geoffrey Deryck Nicholson Milner, RN
 Submarine HMS Sportsman (P 229) - Lt. Richard Gatehouse, RN
 Submarine HMS Tactician (P 314) - LtCdr. Anthony Foster Collett, RN
 Submarine HMS Taurus (P 339) - LtCdr. Mervyn Robert George Wingfield, RN
 Submarine HMS Templar (P 316) - Lt. Denis John Beckley, RN
 Submarine HMS Torbay (N 79) - Lt. Robert Julian Clutterbuck, RN
 Submarine HMS Trespasser (P 312) - LtCdr. Richard Molyneux Favell, RN
 Submarine HMS Tribune (N 76) - Lt. Stewart Armstrong Porter, RN or Anthony Francis Murray-Johnson, RN ?
 Submarine HMS Trident (N 52) - Lt. Peter Edward Newstead, RN
 Submarine HMS Trooper (N 91) - Lt. Guy Stewart Chetwode Clarabut, RN
 Submarine HMS Ultor (P 53) - Lt. George Edward Hunt, RN
 Submarine HMS Unbroken (P 42) - Lt. Bruce John Bevis Andrew, RN
 Submarine HMS Uproar (P 31) - Lt. Laurence Edward Herrick, RN
 Submarine HMS Unison (P 43) - Lt. Anthony Robert Daniell, RN
 Submarine HMS United (P 44) - Lt. John Charles Young Roxburgh, RN
 Submarine HMS Universal (P 57) - Lt. Cecil Gordon, RN
 Submarine HMS Unrivalled (P 45) - Lt. Hugh Bentley Turner, RN
 Submarine HMS Unruffled (P 46) - Lt. John Samuel Stevens, RN
 Submarine HMS Unruly (P 49) - Lt. John Paton Fyfe, RN
 Submarine HMS Unseen (P 51) - Lt. Michael Lindsay Coulton Crawford, RN
 Submarine HMS Unshaken (P 54) - Herbert Patrick Westmacott, RN
 Submarine HMS Unsparing (P 55) - Lt. Aston Dalzell Piper, RNR
 Submarine HMS Usurper (P 56) - Lt. David Roger Oakeley Mott,  RN
 
 
 LIST OF CORVETTES & CAPTAINS - IN OPERATION HUSKY
 
 Corvette HMS Bluebell (K 80) - Lt. Geoffrey Herbert Walker, RNVR
 Corvette HMS Bryony (K 192) - Lt. Thomas Hand, RNR
 Corvette HMS Camellia (K 31) - T/Lt. Reginald Frederick James Maberley, RNVR
 Corvette HMS Convolvulus (K 45) - A/LtCdr. Richard Francis Roger Yarde-Buller (Lord Churston), RNVR
 Corvette HMS Delphinium (K 77) - Cdr. Vivian Funge Smith, RNR
 Corvette HMS Dianella (K 07) - T/Lt. James Gavin Rankin, RNR
 Corvette HMS Honeysuckle (K 27) - Lt. Henry Herbert Dietrich MacKillican, RNR
 Corvette HMS Hyacinth (K 84) - LtCdr. John Douglas Hayes, RN
 Corvette HMS Hyderabad (K 212) - T/Lt. Thomas Cooper, RNR
 Corvette HMS Lotus (II) (K 130) - Lt. Harry John Hall, RNR
 Corvette HMS Oxlip (K 123) - Lt. Charles William Leadbetter, RNR
 Corvette HMS Pentstemon (K 61) - T/Lt. Douglas Cameron Williams, RNVR
 Corvette HMS Poppy (K 213) - T/Lt. Denzil Richard Cranley Onslow, RNR
 Corvette HMS Primula (K 14) - Lt. John Ivor Jones, RNR
 Corvette HMS Rhododendron (K 78) - T/Lt. Oliver Birrell Medley, RNVR
 Corvette HMS Starwort (K 20) - Lt. Arthur Horace Kent, RNR
 Corvette HMS Vetch (K 132) - T/A/LtCdr. Herbert James Beverley, RNR or Lt. Kenneth Michael Bertie Menzies, RN
 
 Some of ; LIST OF `LITTLE SHIPS' & CAPTAINS - IN OPERATION HUSKY
 
 WHALERS (A/S)
 HMSAS Protea (S.Africa) Lt. G Burnwood SANF
 SOUTHERN SEA (S.Africe) Lt. W L Graham SANF
 SOUTHERN ISLE (S.Africa) Lt. M R T Terry-LLoyd SANF
 
 OILERS
 CEDARDALE Master LtCdr. A E Curtain RNR
 PEARLEAF Master A S Kernick
 
 PETROL CARRIER
 NASPRITE Master F J King
 
 FLEET REPAIR SHIPS
 VINDICTIVE R.Adm G R S Watkins
 WAYLAND Capt. Hon D R S Carson
 
 LANDING CRAFT REPAIR SHIP
 VULCAN LtCdr. J E Grice
 
 SUBMARINE DEPOT SHIP
 MAIDSTONE Capt G B H Fawkes
 
 LIST OF `LITTLE SHIPS' & CAPTAINS - IN OPERATION HUSKY
 
 COASTAL CRAFT DEPOT SHIP
 VIENNA LtCdr. S J Holland
 
 M/SWEEPER DEPOT SHIP
 PRODUCT LtCdr. B P A Wing RNR
 M/S DEPOT TRAWLER
 BUDE Lt. F A J Andrew
 
 NAVAL HOSPITAL SHIPS
 AMARAPOORA S/Capt J H B Martin
 MAINE S/Capt R A W Ford
 OXFORDSHIRE S/Capt J A Maxwell
 VASNA S/Capt R A Brown
 VITA S/Capt K A I Mackenzie
 
 Force A (Vice Admiral Thomas Hope Troubridge) - Lead ship Bulolo with the convoys and MWS.36 MWF.36 (see 19.6.-9.7.) - Lands the British XIII.. Corps (LtGen. Dempsey) with the 3rd Royal Maine Commandos, the 5th Infantry Div. and 50th Infantry Div.südlich the Maddalena peninsula in the sector "Acid North" and south of Avola in the sector "Acid South". As a control post the brit. Submarine unruffled is used.
 
 Force N (Capt. Lord Ashbourne (Edward Russell Gibson)) - Lead ship Keren with parts of convoys MWS.36 and MWF.36 - lands the British 231st Independent Brigade (Brig Urquhart.) On the east coast of the Pachino peninsula in the sector "Bark East.". Control posts: submarine Unseen.
 
 Force B (Rear Admiral Sir Rhoderick Robert McGrigor.) - Lead ship Largs with the convoys SBS.1, SBM.1 and SBF.1 - lands the British 51st Inf Div... (Maj.-Gen. Wimberley) near Cap Passero. Control posts: submarine Unison.
 
 Force V (Rear Admiral Sir Philip Louis Vian) - Lead ship Hilary with Convoy KMF.18 (British) and Convoy KMS.18 (British) - lands the 1st Canadian Division (General Guy Granville Simonds) on the west coast of the Pachino peninsula. Control point: submarine Unrivalled.
 
 
 Destroyer HMS Isis (D 87) - Cdr. Basil Jones, RN
 Destroyer HMS Intrepid (D 10) - Cdr. Charles Arthur de Winton Kitcat, RN (8th Destroyer Flotilla)
 Destroyer HMS Troubridge (R 00) - Capt. Charles Leslie Firth, RN
 Destroyer HMS Tumult (R 11) - Lt.Cdr. Norman Lanyon, RN
 Destroyer HMS Tyrian (R 67) - Cdr. Charles Woollven Greening, RN
 07/08/43 Destroyers HMS Tumult (R 11), HMS Troubridge (R 00), and HMS Tyrian (R 67) sailed from Malta to join major ships deployed in the Ionian Sea to provide cover for landings
 
 
 
 11/15/42 Force Q Bone, Algeria
 Light Cruiser HMS Aurora (12) (F) - Capt. Sir William Gladstone Agnew, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Argonaut (61) - Capt. Eric William Longley Longley-Cook, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Sirius (82) - Capt. Patrick William Beresford Brooking, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Charybdis (88) - Capt. George Arthur Wallis Voelcker, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Scylla (98) - Capt. Ian Agnew Patterson Macintyre, RN
 Destroyer HMS Quentin (G 78) - Lt.Cdr. Allan Herbert Percy Noble, RN
 Destroyer HMAS Quiberon (G 81) - Cdr. George Scott Stewart, RAN
 
 11/15/42 Light Cruisers HMS Aurora (12), HMS Argonaut (61), HMS Sirius (82), and HMS Charybdis (88) with Destroyer HMS Quentin (G 78) and HMAS Quiberon (G 81) deploy as Force Q based at Bone for offensive operations against enemy convoys in Gulf of Tunis.
 12/01/42 Light Cruiser HMS Aurora (12) takes passage to Bone, Algeria with Force Q as flagship.
 12/02/42 Battle of Skerki Bank (north of Cape Bon): Force Q carries out surface gun attack on convoy of four ships. the Italian Destroyer (Cacciatorpediniere) RN Folgore and the four mercant ships are sunk.The Italian Destroyer (Cacciatorpediniere) RN Nicoloso da Recco and Torpedo boat RN Procione are damaged. During return passage to Bone Destroyer HMS Quentin (G 78) is sunk by air attacks.
 12/14/43 During deployment with Force Q, HMS Argonaut (61) is hit on starboard side by torpedoes from Italian Submarine RN Mocenigo west of Galita Island. Argonaut sustains heavy structural damage to Bow and stern structure which were blown off. Steering was unusable and the after two turrets could not be used. She is taken to Algiers, Algeria.
 12/16/43 Light Anti-aircraft Cruisers HMS Dido (37) and HMS Sirius (82) deploy with Force Q.
 12/26/43 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Dido (37) transferred to Force H at Gibraltar.
 01/43 Light Cruiser HMS Penelope (97) - Capt. George Devereux Belben, RN replaces the damaged Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Argonaut (61) in Force Q. Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Dido (37) rejoins Force Q.
 
 LCIs (Landing Craft Infantry) forming up outside Sousse harbour before sailing to Pantelleria. Men of the 2nd Battalion, North Staffordshire Regiment drinking tea on board. LCIs taking formation.
 «HMS Royal Ulsterman» signalling by Aldis lamp to the LCIs. The wake of the ship and other LCIs in the middle distance. Night barrage at Sousse as the invasion fleet forms up. Panning shot of LCIs, TLCs (Tank Landing Craft), destroyers and [MCs]. The highest peak of Pantelleria standing out of the sea. The Landing Craft Assault ships
 «HMS Beatrix» and
 «HMS Queen Emma» leaving to make the initial assault. Flying Fortresses arriving to bomb the island. A Destroyer crosses the bow of the LCI. The LCAs returning for reinforcements. Semaphore Hill is viewed on the right as the boat approaches. Smoke from a burning dump. Bombs bursting on the Midway feature. Semaphore Hill and damaged buildings. Military and civilian prisoners lined up. Bomb damage to the harbour. A donkey is pressed into service by prisoners. Prisoners working on the road. A burning petrol dump. A knocked out sound locator. A white ensign being hoisted over a building on the island.
 
 04/31/43 12th Cruiser Squadron takes part in preparatory exercises for Operation Corkscrew.
 
 Operation Corkscrew
 06/11/43 Operation Corkscrew the Allied invasion of the Italian island of Pantelleria (between Sicily and Tunisia).
 1st British Infantry Division MajGen. Walter Edmond Clutterbuck
 
 Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Largs 4,504 tons
 Landing Ship Infantry (Medium) HMS Prinses Beatrix (4.44) 4,136 tons - A/Cdr. Thomas Bennett Brunton, RN - capacity 2 LCM's, 6 LCA's or LCS(M)'s and 372 Troops
 Landing Ship Infantry (Medium) HMS Queen Emma (4.180) 4,136 tons - Capt. George Louis Downall Gibbs DSO, RN - capacity 2 LCM's, 6 LCA's or LCS(M)'s and 372 Troops
 Landing Ship Infantry (H - Hand-operated davits) HMS Royal Scotsman (F 115) 3,244 tons - Lt.Cdr, James Davison Armstrong DSC, RD, RNR - capacity 6 LCA's and 830 Troops
 Landing Ship Infantry (H - Hand-operated davits) HMS Royal Ulsterman (F 63) 3,244 tons - A/Lt.Cdr. William Roland Kemp Clark DSC, RD, RNR - capacity 6 LCA's and 830 Troops
 
 Force Q
 Light Cruiser HMS Aurora (12) (F) - Capt. Sir William Gladstone Agnew, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Newfoundland (59) - Capt. William Rudolph Slayter, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Orion (85) - Capt. George Cunningham Paton Menzies, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Euryalus (42) - Capt. Richard Oliver-Bellasis, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Penelope (97) - Capt. George Devereux Belben, RN
 
 Destroyer HMS Nubian (F 36) - Cdr. Douglas Eric Holland-Martin, RN
 Destroyer HMS Tartar (F 43) - Cdr. St. John Reginald Joseph Tyrwhitt, RN
 Destroyer Flotilla Leader HMS Laforey (G 99) - Capt. Harold Thomas Armstrong, RN
 Destroyer HMS Lookout (G 32) - Lt.Cdr. Archibald George Forman, RN
 Destroyer HMS Loyal (G 15) - Lt.Cdr. Hugo Edward Forbes Tweedie, RN
 Destroyer HMS Troubridge (R 00) - Capt. Charles Leslie Firth, RN
 Destroyer Flotilla Leader HMS Jervis (F.00) - Capt. John Stuart Crawford, RN
 Destroyer Escort Destroyer HMS Whaddon (L 45) - Lt.Cdr. Jack Barrington Palmer, RN
 
 Force H
 07/11/43
 Force H cruised off eastern Sicily.
 5 destroyers
 
 07/05/43 05:00
 Battleships King George V (Flag, Vice Admiral Arthur John Power) and Howe escorted by destroyers ARROW 21st Destroyer Flotilla, Jervis, Paladin, Panther , Pathfinder, Penn, Petard and Tyrian sailed from Gibraltar for Algiers.
 
 07/06/43 08:00
 Force H is joined by battleships Nelson and Rodney, aircraft carrier Indomitable and their screen of 7 destroyers off Oran, Algeria.
 
 07/08/43
 King George V, Howe, Jervis, Panther , Pathfinder, Penn, Paladin and Petard arrive at Algiers.
 
 07/09/43 03:00
 King George V, Howe, light cruisers Dido and Sirius and destroyers Jervis, Panther , Pathfinder, Penn, Paladin and Petard sailed from Algiers as Force Z (also known as Division 3 of Force H) for their operational position between Sardinia and Sicily.
 (The task of Force Z was to provide distant cover for the HUSKY assault convoys, to provide a show of force to suggest an American attack on Sardinia and Corsica and to reinforce the Eastern Task Force should it suffer casualties)
 (During the afternoon of D-1 an unseasonable force 7 north-westerly gale blew up and the smaller craft were tossed about like corks. 07/10/43 itself the Canadians and Americans landed in very rough conditions suffering the double discomfort of seasickness and a drenching through to the skin. The British conditions on the leeward side of the island were better as the landing craft moved inshore. However these unfavourable conditions had a beneficial side effect, the enemy relaxed their guard in the mistaken belief that a landing in such conditions was most unlikely and initial resistance was consequently less than expected.
 H Hour had been set at 02:45 07/10/43, two hours before first light. This time had been fixed by the fact that it required the paraTroops about three hours from dropping time to assemble and carry out their mission of softening the beach defences. This despite the fact that the assault forces needed to approach the coastline under cover of darkness. But an examination of the Astronomical Data revealed no such darkness. On the contrary the assault forces were required to make the approach under a brilliant waxing moon which would not set until the vessels had hove-to in the Initial Transport Areas immediately under the coast defence guns of the enemy. These facts were well known to the naval planners who pointed out the fact that the moon phase selected was most unfavourable from naval considerations. The date, However, was not changed because it was reiterated that this phase was most favourable to dropping of the paraTroops that were the only means available to "neutralize the beach defences opposing the seaborne assaults, the most vital part of the whole plan'. In the event the American paratroopers objective became the seizure of high ground around Gela and the capture of the airfield at Ponte Olivo)
 
 07/10/43 approximately 02:00
 Force Z arrived in their operational position, approximately 38-30N, 11E.
 
 07/11/43
 Force Z cruising in operational position. At 1800 hours Force Z moved eastwards towards the western coast of Sicily. At 2330 hours the force was approximate position 38N, 12-15E at which time King George V and Howe commenced a 14in shoot against the port of Trapani and the islands of Favignana and Levanzo as a diversion to suggest landings on west coast of Sicily (Operation FRACTURE). Dido and Sirius Carrying out a bombardment of the port of Marsala at the same time.
 
 07/12/43
 Force Z off the western coast of Sicily with King George V and Howe continuing their bombardment. At 0030 the bombardment was checked and Force Z regrouped and set course westerly to return to their operational area. (Just before Force Z completed their bombardment the area was bombed by RAF Wellingtons of the Northwest African Strategic Air Force, flying from North Africa)
 During the operation Destroyer Pathfinder hit a submerged rock and sustained damage to her port propeller. She detached from Force Z and went to Alexandria for replacement of the propeller.
 
 07/13/43
 Force Z cruising in operational position.
 
 07/14/43
 Force Z returns to Algiers.
 (Under the original plan King George V and Howe would now returned to the Home Fleet. However Admiral Cunningham CinC Mediterranean requested and was granted permission to retain the two battleships in the Mediterranean for Operation AVALANCHE, the assault on the Italian mainland at Salerno)
 
 07/10/43
 Light Cruiser HMS Cleopatra (33) - Capt. John Felgate Stevens, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Euryalus (42) - Capt. Richard Oliver-Bellasis, RN
 rendezvoused in the Gulf of Sirte where they waited to join a convoy consisting of sixty freighters, five tankers, and twenty nine landing craft which represented part of the invasion force, which was to arrive from Alexandria and Port Said. This would be the beginning of “operation Huskey", the Allied landings of Sicily.
 
 Support Force East
 Monitor HMS Roberts (F 40) - A/Capt. Ronald Ernest Cotton Dunbar, RN
 Monitor HMS Abercrombie (F 109) - Capt. George Vivian Barnett Faulkner, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Newfoundland (59) - Capt. William Rudolph Slayter, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Mauritius (80) - Capt. William Wellclose Davis, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Uganda (66) - Capt. Sir William Gerrard Andrewes, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Orion (85) - Capt. George Cunningham Paton Menzies, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Carlisle (D 67) - A/Cdr. Dudley Alfred Parker, RN
 Light Cruiser HMS Colombo (D 89) - Capt. Derrick Henry Hall-Thompson, RN
 Light Anti-aircraft Cruiser HMS Delhi (D 74) - Capt. Allan Thomas George Cumberland Peachey, RN
 .
 
 
 Escort Destroyer HMS Tetcott (L 99)
 Allied Ships Damaged or Sunk by Axis Aircraft, 14 May – 2 September 1943 (pdf)
 
 Eighth Army Beach Groups for Operation HUSKY
 
 The Royal Naval Beach Commandos worked ‘hand in glove’ with the Beach Groups (initially referred to as Beach Bricks in the Middle East).
 
 
 
 Eastern Naval Task Force - Vice Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay, RN on the Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Antwerp commanding Force A, B, and V.
 Force A (ex Force W) (sailed from the Middle East) - Rear Admiral Troutbridge on the Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Bulolo
 Lieutenant General Miles Christopher Dempsey's British 13th Corps (the 5th British & 50th British Divisions) was to land between Syracuse and Avola on the south east coast,
 Escorted by 58 warships of all classes including 14 destroyers and 11 fleet minesweepers.
 
 
 Force B - (from Tunisia) Rear Admiral McGrigor on the Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Largs 4,504 tons.
 231st Independent Brigade was 15 miles to the south at Marzamemi and Sir Oliver Leese's 30th Corps (including the 51st Highland Division) were allotted the southernmost tip of the island south west of Cape Passero.
 Escorted by 20 warships including 10 destroyers and 8 minesweepers.
 
 
 Force V - (from the United Kingdom) Rear Admiral Sir Philip Vian, RN (on Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Hilary (F.22))
 Farther to the west and round the corner of the island was and the 1st Canadian Division, both under Lieutenant-General Oliver William Hargreaves Leese's 30 Corps.
 Escorted by four ships in the headquarters group, 21 destroyers, four groups of corvettes, frigates and the like totalling 30, and 7 minesweepers
 
 Further still to the West between Scicli and Licata, with the vital airfield at Gela in the middle, were Divisions of the US 7th Army and US 2nd Corps . They were to land on three beaches "Cent," "Dime" and "Joss" with a division allotted to each plus an armoured brigade for "Joss." The remainder of the Armoured Division to which it belonged was kept afloat as a reserve. The American Operation was under the command of Lieutenant-General Patton and Vice-Admiral Hewitt.
 In addition a number of special operations were in place. The first was No 3 Commando and the South African Squadron of the SAS to the extreme right near Syracuse. The second involved Nos 40 and 41 Royal Marine Commando, under Laycock, to the left of the Canadians near Pachino. The third was a number of airborne landings, both British and American, to speed up the capture of airfields.
 
 Eighth Army Landings
 Canadian Soldiers .com
 British Order of Battle Sicily 06/09/43 – 07/17/43
 Regia Marina, 10 June 1940
 Beach groups [/ url]
 [url=http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/USA-MTO-Sicily/USA-MTO-Sicily-5.html] Hyperwar Map of Final Allied Preparations
 
 Sicily's southeast coast - the British Beaches
 Beacon Submarines
 Submarine HMS Unruffled (P 46) (Acid Centre), Submarine HMS Unseen (P 51) (Bark East), Submarine HMS Unison (P 43) (Bark South), Submarine HMS Unrivalled (P 45) (Bark West)
 
 Eighth Army - Gen. Bernard Law Montgomery
 British 13th Corps - Lieutenant General Miles Christopher Dempsey
 British 30th Corps - Lieutenant-General Oliver Leese
 
 
 Operation Ladbroke 07/09/43 - 1st British Airborne Division
 1st Airlanding Brigade assigned to assault key locations in/around Syracuse 9/10th July
 2nd Battalion, South Staffordshire Regiment
 1st Battalion, The Border Regiment
 9th Field Company, Royal Engineers attached, less one and half sections
 1st Battalion, The Glider Pilot Regiment detachments attached as infantry following landing
 
 The conditions under which these airborne landings took place served to enhance their inherently dangerous qualities. The scant quarter moon was due to set shortly before midnight, thereby affording the landing force little in the way of visual support. Such little light as this moon did provide, and the navigational aids available to the aircrews, upon which they relied under conditions of radio silence, were eroded by weather conditions. During the afternoon and evening a strong wind had begun to blow, and by midnight it was blowing 40 miles per hour aloft. This caused both the British and American forces to become disoriented, some of both groups missing their first visual checkpoint at Malta. The aircraft began to straggle after one another in mixed formations, their approach being further inhibited by enemy flak. In addition, the preliminary air assault had resulted in fires and attendant smoke, obscuring final check points for the landing force.
 
 In the British sector these unfortunate circumstances led to even more unfortunate results. Many tow pilots released their charges prematurely, with the result that the British naval forces in the Eastern Task Force saw "the depressing sight of large numbers of gliders floating in the water" at 5 AM on D-day. About 47 gliders met their fate in this way; indeed, only 12 of the 137 gliders landed in the target zone, with the remaining 75 scattered in the southeastern part of the island. Similarly, the American parachutists were dispersed over a 60 mile pattern between Licata and Cap Noto.
 
 In spite of this rather dubious beginning, the Allied airborne troops performed well. A British force of only 8 officers and 65 men held the canal bridge south of Syracuse until 3:30 PM on D-day, and by that time only 4 officers and 15 men had not become casualties. They were just withdrawing when a relief force from the landing forces arrived to drive the enemy away from the bridge, which remained intact. The tiny force of paratroops stayed on to defend the bridge while the British 17th Infantry Brigade, 5th Division, advanced across it. Contemporaneously, the American paratroops held the high ground in the Gela area to prevent enemy reinforcements from reaching the beach, an action credited with speeding the subsequent advance from the beachhead by 48 hours.
 
 Even the widely dispersed paratroop forces gave a good account of themselves. The British 1st Airlanding Brigade, which landed in the southeast, attacked the Italian posts vigorously, thereby disorganizing the beach defenses and reserves. Elements of the U.S. 505th Parachute Regimental Combat Team achieved decisive results. Its 3rd Battalion seized the high ground near Vittoria and held it against German tanks until relieved by the landing forces. The 2nd Battalion captured the town of Marina di Ragusa, making contact with the U.S. 45th Infantry Division on D+1. As a result of these aggressive activities, the 505th RCT captured 20-30,000 Italian prisoners.
 
 
 Acid Centre (Between Avola and Syracuse)
 Force A (ex Force W) - Rear Admiral Troutbridge on the Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Bulolo (F.82)
 Hospital Ship HMHS Talamba (43) 8,018 tons Bombed & sunk off Syracuse during the landings. She was Attacked even though fully illuminated and showing red cross markings.
 
 07/10/43 No. 3 Commando (the first British unit to use the title of "Commando") - LtCol. John Durnford-Slater
 Nos. 4, 5 and 6 Troops commanded by LtCol. John Durnford-Slater land ahead of the main force near Cassible carry out a successful night attack on an Italian artillery battery without sustaining any losses.
 Nos. 1, 2 and 3 Troops commanded by Cpt. Peter Young land at Scoglio Imbiancato unopposed after delays link up with the rest of No. 3 Commando.
 No. 3 Commando takes Cassible later that night.
 07/14/43 No. 3 Commando abord Landing Ship Infantry (Small) HMS Prince Albert (4.35) 2,938 tons land behind enemy lines in the Bay of Agnone, and capture the Ponte dei Malati bridge. Even though forced to abandon the bridge they prevent its destruction. This allows the 50th (Northumbrian) British Infantry Division to retake the bridge. Due to the heavy losses the bridge is renamed the No. 3 Commando Bridge in their honour.
 
 George Sector - Royal Naval Beach Commando E controlling the George Sector beaches
 GREEN Beach
 Amber Beach
 RED Beach
 
 Under the command of the 5th British Infantry Division - Maj.Gen. Horatio Pettus Mackintosh Berney-Ficklin
 32nd Beach Brick (2nd Battalion The Highland Light Infantry, including companies from 3rd batallion 12th Frontier Force Rifles (British Indian Army) and the 32nd Beach Brick RAF Component) - Cassibile (beaches Nos. 45 and 46)
 
 3rd County of London Yeomanry (The Sharpshooters) (part of 4th Armoured Brigade after the landings)
 
 How Sector - Royal Naval Beach Commando C controlling the How Sector beaches.
 Red Beach
 Amber Beach
 GREEN Beach
 .
 
 Under the command of the 50th (Northumbrian) British Infantry Division - Maj.Gen. Sidney Chevalier Kirkman
 33rd Beach Brick (1st Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders including companies from 3rd batallion 12th Frontier Force Rifles (British Indian Army) and the 33rd Beach Brick RAF Component) - George beach (beach No. 44)
 34th Beach Brick (1st Battalion, The Welch Regiment including companies from 3rd batallion 10th Baluch Regiment (British Indian Army) and the 34th Beach Brick RAF Component) - Fox beach north of Reggio de Calabria
 
 44th Royal Tank Regiment (part of 4th Armoured Brigade after the landings)
 
 
 Jig Sector - Royal Naval Beach Commando F controlling the ‘Jig’ Sector beaches.
 Green Beach I
 Green Beach II
 Amber Beach I
 Amber Beach II
 
 
 British 30th Corps - Lieutenant-General Oliver Leese
 
 Bark East (Marzamemi northeast of Pachino)
 Force ‘N’ - Captain Lord Ashbourne, RN in Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Hilary
 
 Force ‘N’ sailed from the Middle East as part of Force ‘A’. This force landed in Nan Sector of the Bark East Assault Area.
 
 15 miles to the south at Marzamemi and Sir Oliver Leese's 30th Corps (including the 51st Highland Division) were allotted the southernmost tip of the island south west of Cape Passero.
 
 231st Independent Brigade Group (British) commanded by Brigadier General Robert Elliott "Roy" Urquhart consisted of:
 231st (Malta) Infantry Brigade (British) - Brigadier General Robert Elliott "Roy" Urquhart (06/10/43 attached to 51st Highland Infantry Division )
 31st Beach Brick (7th Battalion Royal Marines, including companies from 3rd batallion 10th Baluch Regiment (British Indian Army) and the 31st Beach Brick RAF Component)
 'B' Squadron, 46th Royal Tank Regiment detached from 23rd Armoured Brigade to 231st Infantry Brigade for landings
 
 Nan Sector - Royal Naval Beach Commando K controlling the Nan Sector beaches.
 Amber Beach
 Red Beach
 Scramble Red Beach
 
 
 Bark South (Southeast of Pachino)
 Force B - Rear Admiral Rhoderick Robert McGrigor, RN on Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Largs 4,504 tons
 Force 'B' under Rear-Admiral Rhoderick Robert McGrigor, RN in HMS Largs sailed from Tunisia for Malta on 07/05/43 with the 51st Highland Infantry Division, commanded by Major General Douglas Neil Wimberley. The division disembarked on July 6, 1943 at Valetta where the Division moved into three camps embarking again on July 9, 1943 for the invasion of Sicily.
 
 The Highland Division landed in Queen sector on a four-battalion frontage led by the 154th Brigade. For the landing the brigade was split into two groups, the 154th brigade group landing on the Red beaches and the 1st Gordon Highlanders group landing on the Green beaches.
 
 51st Highland Infantry Division - Maj.Gen. Douglas Neil Wimberley
 20th Beach Group (2 Companies 4th Battalion, The Hampshire)
 21st Beach Group (2 Companies 4th Battalion, The Hampshire) 81st RAF Component and 82nd RAF Component
 50th Royal Tank Regiment detached from 23rd Armoured Brigade to 51st Highland Infantry Division for landings
 
 
 Queen Sector - Royal Naval Beach Commando M controlling the Queen Sector beaches.
 154th Infantry brigade group landed on the Red beaches and consisted of:
 1st Black Watch (Old Contemptibles),
 7th Black Watch,
 7th Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders,
 11th Royal Horse Artillery,
 50th Royal Tank Regiment (minus two squadrons),
 Two companies 1st battalion 7th Middlesex (machine guns),
 244th Field Company Royal Engineers,
 176th Field Ambulance and other administrative and logistic elements.
 
 Amber Beach
 Red Beach III
 Red Beach I
 Red Beach II
 
 1st Gordon Highlanders group landed on the Green beaches. Their objectives were the Capo Passero Island and the village of Portopalo, a tuna factory, a lighthouse and the ridge beyond dominating the approach to Pachino, these they achieved by 09:00.
 1st Gordon Highlanders,
 456th Battery Royal Artillery,
 One squadron of 50th Royal Tank Regiment,
 "C" company 1st battalion 7th Middlesex,
 275th Field Company Royal Engineers,
 174th field ambulance and other administrative and logistic elements.
 
 Green Beach III
 Green Beach IV
 
 
 Bark West (Southwest of Pachino)
 Force V - Rear Admiral Sir Philip Vian on the Amphibious Headquarters Ship HMS Hilary (F.22)
 Farther to the west and round the corner of the island was and the
 Force ‘V’ was to land the Canadians in the Bark West assault area on the west side of the Pachino Peninsula, on a total front (including that of the two Commandos) of roughly 10,000 yards.
 
 Under command of 1st Canadian Infantry Division landing at Bark West
 1st Canadian Division - General Guy Granville Simonds
 3rd Beach Group (Pioneer Companies)
 4th Beach Group (Pioneer Companies)
 No 68 and 69 RAF Beach Units
 
 
 The 1st and later the 3rd Canadian Infantry Brigades landed in Roger sector.
 
 Sugar Sector
 the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade landed in Sugar sector with the aid of Royal Naval Beach Commando G.
 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade
 The Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
 The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada
 The Edmonton Regiment
 
 Red Beach - Royal Naval Beach Commando N - N1 party
 "A" Company, The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment
 
 Amber Beach - Royal Naval Beach Commando N - N2 party
 
 GREEN Beach - Royal Naval Beach Commando N - N3 party
 The Edmonton Regiment
 The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada
 
 1st Canadian Infantry Brigade
 The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment
 48th Highlanders of Canada
 The Royal Canadian Regiment
 3rd Canadian Infantry Brigade
 The West Nova Scotia Regiment
 The Carlton and York Regiment
 Royale 22e (Van Doos (corruption of vingt-deux, French for "twenty-two.")) (Canada) Infantry regiment
 
 Roger Sector
 12th Canadian Army Tank Regiment (The Three Rivers Regiment (Tank))
 
 Amber Beach
 
 Green Beach II
 The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment (minus "A" Company)
 The Royal Canadian Regiment
 
 Green Beach I
 48th Highlanders of Canada
 
 Commando Cove - West of Punta Castellazzo - The Royal Marine Commandos landed on the extreme left wing of the Eighth Army.
 Special Service Brigade - Lt.Col. Robert Edward "Lucky" Laycock
 No. 40 (Forty Commando) Royal Marine Commando
 No. 41 (Four One) Royal Marine Commando
 
 In addition a number of special operations were in place. The first was No 3 Commando and the South African Squadron of the SAS to the extreme right near Syracuse. The second involved Nos 40 and 41 Royal Marine Commando, under Laycock, to the left of the Canadians near Pachino. The third was a number of airborne landings, both British and American, to speed up the capture of airfields.
 
 
 
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