Nutting, David Colver, 1919-2015, Squadron Leader

Key Information

Type of entity

Person

Authorized form of name

Nutting, David Colver, 1919-2015, Squadron Leader

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

Other form(s) of name

Description area

Dates of existence

1919-2015

History

In Sep 1942, the Director of Naval Intelligence authorised the formation of the Special Intelligence Unit, composed of 33 (Royal Marines) Troop, 34 (Army) Troop, 35 (RAF) Troop and 36 (Royal Navy) Troop. The Special Intelligence Unit was later renamed 30 RN Commando (Special Engineering Unit), and was redesignated 30 Assault Unit in [Dec] 1943. The unit's operational role was to move ahead of advancing Allied forces, or to undertake covert infiltrations into enemy territory by land, sea or air, to capture much needed Intelligence, in the form of codes, documents, equipment or enemy personnel. The Unit often worked closely with the Intelligence Corps' Field Security sections. Individual Troops were present in all operational theatres and usually operated independently, gathering information from captured facilities. The unit served in North Africa, the Greek Islands, Norway, Pantelleria, Sicily, Italy, and Corsica, 1942-1943. In Nov 1943, 30 RN Commando returned to the UK to prepare for the Allied invasion of German occupied Europe. In Normandy, France, 30 Assault Unit (codenamed WOOLFORCE and PIKEFORCE) landed on JUNO and UTAH beaches, attempted to capture a German radar station at Douvres-la-Delivrande, and later fought their way into Cherbourg. During Jul 1944 the Unit served in Rennes and Brest, and followed French forces into Paris, France, Aug 1944. In Sep 1944 30 Assault Unit began a series of operations in the Channel coast ports as they were captured by the Allies. By May 1945, Royal Marines from 30 Assault Unit had captured the German Naval Base at Bremen, Germany. A 30 Assault Unit Royal Marines detachment was sent to the Far East in 1945, but the Japanese surrender precluded operations. Subsequent activities in Singapore, Indo-China and Hong Kong eventually provided much useful intelligence. 30 Assault Unit was finally disbanded in 1946.

Relationships area

Access points area

Subjects

Place access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

KCL-AF0339

Institution identifier

0099 KCLMA

Status

Final

Level of detail

Partial

Language(s)

Script(s)

  • Clipboard

  • Export

  • EAC

Related subjects

Related places