March 23, 1945.
2100 hours.
The west bank of the Rine near Ree, Germany.
28 soldiers of the seventh Black Watch squeeze inside a steel box on tracks.
It looks like nothing they have ever trained for.
It is 26 ft long, 10 ft wide, open topped, and it was never designed for a European river.
It was designed for a Florida swamp.
The engine roars, the tracks bite mud.
The thing lurches down the bank and hits the water.

4 minutes later, the ramp drops on the far side, and the Highlanders pour out onto German soil.
They are the first British assault troops across the Rine at Ree and they crossed it inside a borrowed American swamp rescue machine that the British adapted into the most effective river assault vehicle in Northwest Europe.
This is the story of the Buffalo.
By early 1945, the Rine was the last great natural barrier protecting the German heartland.
No modern army had forced a major opposed crossing of the Rine in over a century.
At the British assault points near Ree and Vzel, the river stretched 300 to 450 yd wide, flowing at three knots.
The Germans had opened upstream dam gates to raise water levels even further.
Between Emer and Ree, branches of the Alterine created a double water obstacle.
Low-lying boulders on the eastern bank were deliberately flooded.
Mud flats stretched beyond the dikes.
The defenses were formidable.
General Alfred Schle’s first parachute army deployed roughly 70,000 soldiers east of the Rine.
The second parachute corps alone fielded 10 to 12,000 elite folure across three divisions.
The 47th Panza Corps held the 116th Panza Division and the 15th Panza Grenadier Division in reserve with roughly three dozen operational tanks between them.
814 anti-aircraft guns ringed vessel.
Gunners slept fully clothed at their posts.
Conventional stormboats were the standard equipment for river crossings.
They offered zero armor protection, carried only 10 to 12 men, and were completely at the mercy of a three knot current.
Their engines were unreliable.
Lieutenant Colonel Charles Richardson of the sixth king’s own Scottish borderers would later deliver a damning verdict.
He recommended the stormboat never be used again.
Many of his men had to paddle with their rifle butts or their bare hands, landing hundreds of yards downstream of their objective.
Britain needed something radically different.
They found it in the most unlikely place.
The LVT4 landing vehicle tracked MarkV began life as a hurricane rescue machine.
In 1928, a catastrophic storm killed over 1,800 people around Lake Oki Chobee in Florida.
Donald Robling, great-grandson of the man who designed the Brooklyn Bridge, spent the next decade building amphibious rescue vehicles in his workshop.
His tracked alligator could drive on land at 25 mph and swim at 2 mph.
A 1937 article in Life magazine caught the eye of the United States Marine Corps, who saw immediate military potential.
By 1941, the first production LVT1 rolled off the assembly line at the Food Machinery Corporation plant in Dunardan, Florida.
The LVT2 followed in 1942, powered by a Continental W 679A engine producing 250 horsepower, but both models shared a critical floor.
The engine sat at the rear.
Troops and cargo could only enter or exit by climbing over the high hull sides, a process that was slow, exhausting, and lethal under fire.
In August 1943, FMC engineers made a single design change that transformed the vehicle.
They moved the engine forward directly behind the driver’s cab.
This freed the entire rear hull for cargo and allowed a large bottom hinged ramp to be installed at the stern.
The LVT4 was born.
That ramp changed everything.
Troop capacity nearly doubled from roughly 16 to 30 fully equipped soldiers.
Jeeps, Bren carriers, and 25 pounder field guns could now be driven directly on and off.
Loading and unloading under fire became dramatically faster.
Troops exited from the rear, shielded by the forward hull.
Four buffaloos could lift an entire infantry company.
According to production records, 8,348 LVT4s were built during the war.
The most produced variant of any LVT.
The finished vehicle weighed 27,400 lb empty, rising to 36,400 fully loaded.
It could manage 20 mph on land and 7 mph in water.
Fuel capacity was 163 g.
The cargo hold offered 541 cubic feet of space and could take 9,000 lb of equipment.
Base armor was thin, just under 2 mm of structural steel, but bolt-on applique kits added 13 mm to the front and 6.4 mm to the sides.
Britain acquired its buffaloos through the American lend program.
Approximately 500 LVT4s arrived in British hands, designated Buffalo 4 in British service.
all fell under the 79th Armored Division, the specialist formation commanded by Major General Sir Percy Hobart.
The vehicle itself was entirely American in design and manufacture.
What the British brought was tactical adaptation.
They concentrated all buffaloos under a single specialist division, developed integrated combined arms doctrine, and built months of operational experience from earlier campaigns.
Hobart’s men added a 20 mm Pulston cannon, two Browning machine guns, a number 19 wireless set, and 4-in smoke discharges to every vehicle.
Some received infrared lighting for night operations.
The principal Buffalo formation was the 33rd armored brigade, fielding four regiments, the fourth Royal Tank Regiment, the first Northamptonshire ymanry, the 11th Royal Tank Regiment, and the first East Riding Yomenry.
Crews trained on the river Muse in the Netherlands, learning the hard way that approaching a riverbank at the wrong angle sent the whole vehicle spinning downstream.
Now, before we see how the buffalo performed on the Rine, if you’re enjoying this deep dive into British engineering, hit subscribe.
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Right, let us get into the combat record.
The Buffalo had already proven itself months earlier.
that while Cheron in November 1944, RAF Bomber Command deliberately breached the island’s dikes, flooding the interior, just 11 operational buffaloos from a squadron, 11th RTR, carried Royal Scots infantry through the lagoon directly into the town square of Middberg.
According to afteraction reports, approximately 140 British troops in those 11 vehicles accepted the surrender of 2,000 German prisoners.
The German commander called the Buffalo’s tanks to justify capitulating.
Whether that was genuine confusion or a face-saving excuse remains debated, but the result was the same.
The lessons from Veluran, the Shelt, and training exercises all fed directly into planning for Operation Plunder, the Rine Crossing.
Montgomery assembled over 4,000 artillery pieces, a 66 mile smokec screen, the longest in history, and around 600 buffaloos.
The logistical scale was staggering, but what mattered most was what would happen in the water.
On the night of March 23, 1945, 5,500 guns opened fire along a 35 km front.
At 2100 hours, buffaloos of the fourth Royal Tank Regiment and the Northamptonshire ymanry carried the 51st Highland Division into the water near Ree.
At 2200 hours, the first commando brigade crossed at Wessel.
At 0200 on the 24th, the 15th Scottish division crossed between Bizlick and Venan, fied by the 11th RTR and East Riding Yomenry.
The results were devastating in their efficiency.
Fourth RTR buffalo crossed the Rine in 4 minutes.
That speed was tactically decisive.
A 4-minute crossing meant German artillery had almost no time to adjust fire onto moving targets.
It meant troops arrived on the far bank as a concentrated organized force rather than a scattered trickle.
It meant the assault wave was across before defenders could react.
The 154th Brigade loaded at 2030, entered the water at 2100, and reports confirmed troops on the far bank by 21106, 6 minutes from water entry to boots on enemy soil.
The contrast with stormboats was absolute.
The eighth Royal Scots of the 15th Scottish Division crossed in Buffalo and according to their battalion agitant, Captain Fargus, suffered no casualties whatsoever.
He recorded that spasmodic mortifier was directed at the vehicles but caused no harm.
In the same brigade on the same night on the same river, the sixth KOSB crossed in stormboats and landed hundreds of yards downstream in complete disorder.
The 46th Royal Marine Commando crossed in Buffaloos at 2159 and secured their bridge head in 15 minutes.
Marine Fred Harris of 45 commando recalled that since nothing could be seen from the vehicles except the night sky and traces overhead.
There was little to do except try not to think about being sunk.
Marine Tom Buckingham remembered that finding the way was easy because the Royal artillery had Bow’s guns firing two lines of red traces to mark the route.
Over 3 days from March 24 to 26, the four Buffalo regiments completed more than 3,800 trips.
They carried the fighting strength of the Highland Division.
the 15th Scottish division, the third Canadian division, and the 43rd Wessex Division across the Rine.
Total Buffalo crew casualties across all those crossings were 38.
Total vehicles destroyed, nine.
Meanwhile, 16,000 German prisoners were taken.
On March 26th, Winston Churchill himself crossed the Rine in a Buffalo of Sea Squadron, 11th RTR, accompanied by Field Marshall Brooke and Montgomery.
No alternative came close.
The DUKW, America’s wheeled amphibian, carried less than half the cargo, had no armor, no ramp, and its wheels would have struggled severely on the Rin’s mud banks.
American doctrine explicitly stated that LVTs handle assault work and operations involving mud.
While DUKWS should not participate in assault operations, the British designed Terrapin was even worse.
Slower in water at just 5 km per hour, unarmed with no ramp and a tendency to swing violently if one of its two engines failed, Germany fielded no equivalent tracked amphibious assault carrier on the Western Front.
The asymmetry was total.
The LVT4 went on to serve in Korea into China and Suez.
Its rear ramp concept became the template for every subsequent American amphibious assault vehicle from the LVTP5 through the AAV7A1 still in service today.
A buffalo believed to have crossed the Rine was excavated from 30 feet underground near Crowland in Lincolnshire in 2021.
It had been buried since 1947 when the army used surplus buffaloos to plug flood defenses.
The rear ramp still functioned.
An American inventor built a swamp rescue machine.
The Marines turned it into a beach assault vehicle.
The British concentrated 500 of them under a single specialist division, rewired the doctrine, retrained their tank crews, and used them to carry an army across the most heavily defended waterway in Europe.
3,800 crossings, 38 casualties, nine vehicles lost.
The Buffalo was borrowed.
What the British did with it was entirely their
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