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Kangaroo file photo [7362]

Kangaroo

CountryCanada
Primary RoleOther

Contributor:

ww2dbaseThe Kangaroo armored personnel carriers (APCs) were not vehicles of a single design; rather, the name collectively referred to any APC that was at one time a tank but was converted into a troop transport. The first Kangaroo APCs were converted by Canadian units (under the order of Canadian General Guy Simonds) at the work shop code named Kangaroo from M7 Priest self-propelled artillery vehicles in late 1944 that they deemed obsolete (as the M7 Priest vehicles were replaced by Sexton successors). They were first used in Operation Totalize south of Caen, France and subsequently in Canadian attacks on the various English Channel ports. Later, Ram cruiser tanks and M4 Sherman tanks were also used to create Kangaroo APCs, and most of them were operated by the Canadian 1st Armored Personnel Carrier Squadron and the Canadian 49th Armored Personnel Carrier Regiment under the British 79th Armored Division (of Hobart's Funnies fame). Compared to the more traditional troop transports at this time such as the Universal Carrier or M3 Halftrack, Kangaroos offered better tactical mobility on the battlefield while providing adequate armor protection against enemy fire, thus allowing troops to advance together with tanks. Kangaroo APCs were considered the forerunner of modern APC designs.

ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia.

Last Major Revision: Jan 2009

Photographs

A column of Kangaroo armored personnel carrier converted from M7 Priest self-propelled artillery vehicles, France, Aug 1944Kangaroo armored command post vehicle converted from M7 Priest vehicle in a Dutch town, followed by a Kangaroo armored personnel carrier converted from Ram tank, circa 1945
See all 5 photographs of Kangaroo



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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Peter Wilson says:
7 Sep 2012 01:44:18 PM

The first Kangaroos were operated by the 1st Canadian Armoured Carrier Regiment in October 1944 in the European theatre. Subsequently the British 49th Armoured Personnel Carrier Regiment was formed and both were brought within the within the British 79th Armoured Division in December 1944.

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Kangaroo Photo Gallery
A column of Kangaroo armored personnel carrier converted from M7 Priest self-propelled artillery vehicles, France, Aug 1944Kangaroo armored command post vehicle converted from M7 Priest vehicle in a Dutch town, followed by a Kangaroo armored personnel carrier converted from Ram tank, circa 1945
See all 5 photographs of Kangaroo


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