top of page

Tiger’s Defeat Finally Put In Context



The first detailed account of the battle in which the world’s most famous tank, Tiger 131, was captured has finally been told.


Dale Oscroft has researched the Battle of Gueriat el Atach in April 1943, which was one of the most important actions in the fall of Tunisia and the Nazi surrender in North Africa. During intense fighting, his father John fired his anti-tank PIAT weapon at the side of the feared Tiger tank which was advancing on positions held by John’s battalion, the 2nd Sherwood Foresters. To his dismay, the projectile bounced off harmlessly.


Fearing the worst as the turret began to turn towards him, he was relieved to see the tank disabled by an armour piercing round which jammed the turret. Abandoned by its crew, the tank proved to be a massive intelligence prize - it was the first time an intact Tiger had been captured in the West.


The story of the battle has never been told in detail, but now Dale’s book ‘Tiger 131: The Forgotten Battle’ is available.


It has been published by The Tank Museum in Dorset, where Tiger 131 – the world’s only working Tiger I - is on display. The book is available from The Tank Museum Shop and describes the astonishing fight to take the Tunisian ridge. Dale said:

“My father had mentioned an action in which the Foresters captured a Tiger tank in Tunisia after its turret had been jammed. But it was only when I was on holiday in Dorset in 2012 and saw Tiger 131 on a visit to the Tank Museum that I thought it might be connected."

“The Tiger had been captured in Tunisia after sustaining a jammed turret but the account of the action placed it some ten miles away from where the Foresters had fought. Subsequently, my research revealed the true circumstances of its capture, confirming that it was indeed the same tank my father had tried to knock-out."


“Its capture following the lucky shell strike was so important that Prime Minister Winston Churchill and King George VI were pictured with the tank when they visited Tunisia following the Axis surrender. The Battle of Gueriat el Atach began on St George’s Day, Good Friday, in April 1943. The objective was a ridge with a number of peaks."

“It was one of the last battles in Tunisia and a key part in the final expulsion of the enemy. The Germans had the ridge well defended when the 1st British Infantry Division attacked it with six infantry battalions and five squadrons of tanks."

“On the first day, casualties were about 50 per cent and on the second day over 30 per cent. In total there were around 1,000 Allied soldiers killed, wounded or missing. Almost 50 tanks were also lost. Not only was the ridge well defended by German infantry and tanks, but the latter included at least two Tiger tanks which were far more powerful than anything we had."


“The terrain was difficult too, with rock just below the surface making the digging of trenches near impossible. There were also fields of crops in which the enemy hid, and the area was mined. Another issue the attackers faced was appalling radio communications which meant for much of the fighting over two days those managing the battle had little idea of what was going on."


“It fell to those doing the actual fighting to make life and death decisions and for many, like my father, it was their first taste of action. It took enormous courage and sacrifice to capture the ridge and the Germans too showed enormous bravery."

“The Foresters were attacking Point 174 - the highest point on the ridge - and it was there that Tiger 131 came within five yards of their positions. After my father’s PIAT had failed to knock out the tank it all looked grim."

“Desperately, a number of Foresters turned around an anti-tank gun which they had captured in the fighting and they fired it at the Tiger just as a number of tanks supporting the attack also opened fire."


“A shot from either a British tank or the Foresters sent a shell ricocheting down the underside of the Tiger’s gun barrel to wedge itself in the traversing mechanism, disabling the turret. It was a significant moment in the battle and in the North African campaign. The ridge was captured and, having been pushed off what was basically their last line of defence, the Axis forces in Tunisia surrendered a few weeks afterwards."


“My account of the battle for the ridge draws on the recollections of the men who fought there and the narrative describes the fighting from their perspective.”


The units who took part in the battle were the 6th Gordon Highlanders, 1st Loyal Regiment, 2nd North Staffordshires, 1st Duke of Wellington’s, 142 and 145 Royal Armoured Corps, 48 Royal Tank Regiment, 1st King’s Shropshire Light Infantry and the 2nd Sherwood Foresters.


A Victoria Cross was awarded to Lt Willward Sandys-Clarke of the 1st Loyals, and there were also six DSOs, twelve Military Crosses, two DSMs and twenty Military Medals awarded.


Senior Historian Stuart Wheeler of The Tank Museum said: “The story of Tiger 131 has changed over the years as more details were discovered.


“Dale, with meticulous research, has now contextualised the capture of this tank, which is the most famous in the world. He has shown the importance of the engagement in the battle for Tunisia. This incredible story underpins our Tiger Day events, and with the next event on 18 April 2026, we are just weeks away from telling this story alongside Tiger 131 live in our arena.“


After the fall of Tunisia, John Oscroft went on to serve with the Foresters in Italy. There, he participated in the intense fighting for the Anzio beachhead after which he fought from Rome to the Gothic line in the Apennine Mountains where he was frostbitten.


In January 1945, John and the Foresters were moved to Palestine, the battalion having by then sustained 200 percent casualties during its war service.


After being demobbed in 1946 he returned to his job in a hosiery factory in Sutton in Ashfield, married Violet, had son Dale and died aged 59 in 1982.


Tiger 131: The Forgotten Battle is available exclusively from The Tank Museum Shop for £12.99. Visit tankmuseumshop.org.

Most Read

British Superbike Rider Gears Up For Charity

British Superbike Rider Gears Up For Charity

Edmund Best, a British National Superstock rider for team SymCirrus Motorsport, has declared his support for The Bridge Homelessness to...

RHS Calls For Compensation Due To Financially Devastating Impact Of A3/M25 Roadworks

RHS Calls For Compensation Due To Financially Devastating Impact Of A3/M25 Roadworks

With 350,000 fewer people visiting RHS Garden Wisley annually due to the National Highways A3/M25 roadworks, resulting in £6 million...

What Is The Nation's Favourite Pizza?

What Is The Nation's Favourite Pizza?

Once regarded as an occasional treat or a post-pub indulgence, pizza has risen—like a well-proofed dough—to claim a central spot in...

Categories

  • Jul 28, 2025
  • 3 min read

As the draft legislation for the Finance Bill is laid out, the NFU is urging the government to look at its alternative ‘clawback’ solution to the family farm tax to prevent farmers – the food producers of this country – becoming collateral damage from the planned reforms.


The government has outlined plans to hold a technical consultation on the draft legislation, including on inheritance tax, to ensure it ‘works as intended’.


This is a common process in the development of a Finance Bill, but given the appalling consequences of this legislation, the NFU will be holding the government to account on every element of this policy. The NFU has repeatedly provided evidence that the current policy does not achieve the government’s intentions of closing a loophole, protecting family farms, or generating as much revenue as it should. Nor do we agree that it is ‘not expected to have a material impact on food security’.


On the other hand, the NFU’s ‘clawback’ solution would allow the Treasury to raise the revenue it seeks without tearing apart farming families or jeopardising domestic food production.


Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has previously said: “If somebody makes powerful representations, then my instinct is to consider what’s being said. Getting it right is more important than ploughing on with a package which doesn’t necessarily achieve the desired outcome.”


The NFU agrees, and they are far from alone.


Since the Budget in November 2024, swathes of MPs from all parties, including members of the government’s own back benches, alongside county councils4, farming and business organisations, the food supply chain and over a quarter of a million members of the British public have joined the call to stop the family farm tax. Even the Office for Budget Responsibility and the government’s own Efra Committee have highlighted the impact these reforms will have on vulnerable elderly farmers.


Throughout the summer, NFU members have also made their voices heard. At county shows across the country, thousands of letters and postcards were collected from farmers and the public to be sent directly to MPs – each sharing personal stories of how this tax will devastate their family farms.


NFU President Tom Bradshaw said: “At the heart of this battle are the elderly farmers who have devoted their entire lives to growing food for the country and supporting their rural communities. They should not become collateral damage. To see them face such uncertainty, knowing the legacy they and their families have worked hard for and grown could be ripped away by this tax, is heartbreaking. I cannot begin to imagine the fear many must be feeling right now – their homes, their livelihoods and everything they’ve worked for is under threat."


“I have spoken directly to the Prime Minister and Treasury Exchequer Secretary James Murray about the disastrous impact of this tax. Yet, despite our persistent efforts, Chancellor Rachel Reeves still refuses to meet us to discuss our alternative ‘clawback’ proposal. The Treasury claims our solution will raise less revenue, but is refusing to release the modelling on how it came to this conclusion."
“I echo the Prime Minister’s own words: getting this right is more important than pushing ahead with a policy that does not achieve its intentions."

“Farmers, supermarkets, councils, MPs across the political spectrum and the wider public have all voiced their concerns about this tax. This issue goes far beyond farming. The food and farming sector supports millions of jobs, fuels our domestic food supply and contributes billions to the UK economy. When you undermine farm businesses, you undermine a vital part of our national infrastructure. If this legislation goes ahead, it will unquestionably have devastating and irreversible impacts on the country and it is so poorly designed that it will inevitably have to be changed in the future."


“I want to thank every one of our members who took the time to write postcards and letters to their MPs over the summer – your voices are vital. We continue to urge all farmers and the public to make their representations directly to their MPs to show first-hand the impact of this damaging tax."


“The Prime Minister must now take his own advice and listen to the overwhelming evidence that the current policy will not work as intended. To ignore the consequences this tax will bring would be a betrayal of the very people who feed our nation. We cannot stand by and watch the backbone of the countryside be broken when there is a credible alternative being offered."


“This is a moment that demands listening, compassion and action. The government needs to sit down with farming representatives to find a solution that protects the future of our domestic food production – before it is too late.”

Most Read

British Superbike Rider Gears Up For Charity

British Superbike Rider Gears Up For Charity

Edmund Best, a British National Superstock rider for team SymCirrus Motorsport, has declared his support for The Bridge Homelessness to...

RHS Calls For Compensation Due To Financially Devastating Impact Of A3/M25 Roadworks

RHS Calls For Compensation Due To Financially Devastating Impact Of A3/M25 Roadworks

With 350,000 fewer people visiting RHS Garden Wisley annually due to the National Highways A3/M25 roadworks, resulting in £6 million...

What Is The Nation's Favourite Pizza?

What Is The Nation's Favourite Pizza?

Once regarded as an occasional treat or a post-pub indulgence, pizza has risen—like a well-proofed dough—to claim a central spot in...

Categories

Edinburgh Cultural Guide Builds Slow-Travel Project

Edinburgh Cultural Guide Builds Slow-Travel Project

An Edinburgh-based tour operator is turning a personal storytelling project into a sustainable tourism activity thanks to tailored guidance from Business Gateway.

Local Pub Famous For Its Pies Celebrates National Awards

Local Pub Famous For Its Pies Celebrates National Awards

A village pub in south Warwickshire is once again proving it has the recipe for success after scooping a string of awards for five of its pies.

St Austell Brewery Wins Four Medals At International Brewing Awards

St Austell Brewery Wins Four Medals At International Brewing Awards

St Austell Brewery is celebrating a remarkable achievement after winning four medals at the 2026 International Brewing Awards - one of the world’s oldest and most respected beer competitions.

Recent Posts

bottom of page