PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Battle of Kranji
rdfs:comment
  • The terrain around Kranji was primarily mangrove swamps and tropical forest intersected by streams and inlets. The shoreline between the Kranji River and the Johor–Singapore Causeway, nearly four kilometers long, was defended by the Australian 27th Brigade, led by Australian Brigadier Duncan Maxwell. The 27th Infantry Brigade consisted of three battalions—the 2/30th, 2/29th, and 2/26th and was supported by the 2/10th Field Artillery Regiment, as well as one platoon from the 2/4th Machine Gun Battalion.
owl:sameAs
Strength
  • ~10,000
  • ~2,000
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Partof
  • the Battle of Singapore, Pacific War
Date
  • --02-10
Commander
  • Takuma Nishimura
  • Duncan Maxwell
Caption
  • The Japanese invasion of Kranji in February 1942. The arrows indicate attacks by Japanese forces.
Result
  • Japanese victory
combatant
  • 27
  • Imperial Guards
  • Dalforce
Place
  • Kranji, Singapore, Straits Settlements
Conflict
  • Battle of Kranji
abstract
  • The terrain around Kranji was primarily mangrove swamps and tropical forest intersected by streams and inlets. The shoreline between the Kranji River and the Johor–Singapore Causeway, nearly four kilometers long, was defended by the Australian 27th Brigade, led by Australian Brigadier Duncan Maxwell. The 27th Infantry Brigade consisted of three battalions—the 2/30th, 2/29th, and 2/26th and was supported by the 2/10th Field Artillery Regiment, as well as one platoon from the 2/4th Machine Gun Battalion. They were supported by one company from Dalforce (named after its commander, Lieutenant-Colonel John Dalley of the Malayan Police Special Branch), a local Chinese militia consisting of Communists, Nationalist supporters, and other volunteers. As the war intensified, the Dalforce volunteers were given only three to four days of training and sent to the war front with elementary weapons. Lacking uniforms, the volunteers improvised by wearing a red triangle on their blue shirts to avoid being mistaken for Japanese by the Australians. The Allied forces at Kranji were to be assaulted by the Imperial Guards Division led by Major General Takuma Nishimura. 400 Imperial Guards had landed and taken Pulau Ubin, an island in the north-east of Singapore, in a feint attack on 7 February, where they encountered minimal resistance.