New Zealand Army Logistics Preparation to 30 June 1941
This article examines the New Zealand Army’s logistics preparations in New Zealand up to 30 June 1941, immediately before the wider wartime expansion that followed the deterioration of the Pacific situation later that year. Its focus is not simply on weapons and ammunition, but on the home-base logistics system needed to make them usable: Ordnance establishments, ammunition reserves, workshops, transport, stores, infrastructure, civilian labour, inspection, and the administrative machinery required to turn equipment into capability.

This distinction matters. From 1940, New Zealand was also building a deployed expeditionary logistics organisation in Egypt and the Middle East to support the 2nd New Zealand Expeditionary Force. That overseas system drew away many experienced Regular Force officers and soldiers who had served through the interwar years, including key logistics personnel whose expertise was urgently needed both abroad and at home. This article does not attempt to examine the full logistics system deployed by 2 NZEF. Instead, it concentrates on the logistics situation within New Zealand, where the Army still had to mobilise, equip, store, maintain, feed, fuel, transport, and administer a rapidly expanding force while also supporting overseas commitments.
By mid-1941, New Zealand had not reached logistical abundance. It had, however, moved beyond passive austerity. Rearmament was underway, urgent orders had been placed, ammunition deficiencies were being addressed, infrastructure requirements had been costed, and the limitations of the small pre-war New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps, New Zealand Army Service Corps, and Mechanical Transport systems were becoming increasingly clear.
New Zealand’s rearmament did not begin suddenly in 1939, nor did it begin only because Major-General P. J. Mackesy reported on the state of the Military Forces. By the late 1930s, the Army, the NZAOC, and the NZASC were already working within their limited means to prepare for a more demanding form of war. Requisitions were being placed for modern weapons, ammunition, signalling stores, coast-defence equipment, anti-gas equipment, tentage, camp equipment, and technical stores. At the same time, the supply and transport system was slowly shifting from a horse-based structure towards motorised transport. The process was real, but it was limited, uneven, and too slow to overcome two decades of interwar economy before the Second World War arrived.
Wider strategic assumptions also shaped the Army’s position. New Zealand relied heavily on the Royal Navy, imperial defence, and the Singapore Strategy for its ultimate security. When rearmament resumed in the mid-1930s, air power received the clearest political and financial priority, leaving the Army to rebuild from a weaker base.
The shift from a 1937 NZAOC establishment of 44 military personnel and 122 civilians to an April 1939 establishment that identified 10 officers and 38 WO1s and other ranks in the Armourer, Armament, and Ammunition sections should not be overstated as dramatic numerical growth. What it does show is that rearmament was beginning to expose the need for a more clearly defined specialist NZAOC structure. The Army was not merely acquiring weapons and equipment; it also had to create the trained military depth needed to inspect, maintain, store, account for, issue, and sustain them. When the position of the NZASC is added, the wider point becomes clearer still. New Zealand’s Army was not simply short of modern equipment. It was short of the trained logistics capacity required to move, feed, fuel, maintain, and sustain a modern force. Rearmament was therefore not only an equipment programme, it was also a logistics mobilisation.
Imperial Defence, Austerity, and Normalised Risk
The pre-war Army’s condition can be understood through the concept of normalisation of deviance.[1] In this context, it does not mean that officers, soldiers, public servants, or logisticians were careless. It means that the Army gradually became accustomed to operating under constrained, abnormal, and improvised conditions. Reduced establishments, limited training, obsolete equipment, small ammunition reserves, civilianised logistics staff, thin supply and transport arrangements, and inadequate mechanical depth became part of the accepted interwar operating environment.
This process was shaped by more than local economic measures. New Zealand’s defence policy in the 1920s and early 1930s operated within a wider British imperial framework, including the assumption, formalised in Britain’s “Ten Year Rule”, that no major war was likely within a ten-year planning horizon.[2] As a Dominion of the British Empire, New Zealand’s ultimate security was still expected to rest heavily on the Royal Navy and the wider imperial defence system, especially the Singapore Strategy.[3] This strategic setting reinforced pressure to limit defence expenditure and encouraged the view that the Army could remain small in peacetime, with expansion to follow if danger returned.
Of all the Dominions, New Zealand showed particularly strong loyalty to Britain between the wars, but this loyalty did not remove the strategic anxieties created by New Zealand’s Pacific location. By the 1920s and 1930s, New Zealand leaders were already concerned that British policy did not always account for the security needs of Australia and New Zealand. This was reflected in criticism of the British reluctance to proceed with the Singapore base and of actions that appeared to weaken the collective security system on which New Zealand believed it was especially dependent. In that setting, New Zealand’s reliance on imperial defence was not passive ignorance. It was a strategic choice made by a small Dominion whose defence planning, expenditure, and Army establishments were shaped by the assumption that the main shield would be imperial sea power rather than a large standing land force.[4]
The reductions of 1930 to 1931 were central to this process. Introduced as emergency economic measures during the Depression, they reshaped what the Army expected of itself. The suspension of compulsory military training, the contraction of the Territorial Force, and the civilianisation of much of the NZAOC’s clerical and stores workforce created a much smaller defence system. The NZASC was also affected by the same economic climate, reduced training base, and limited vehicle holdings. What began as austerity became the baseline from which later mobilisation had to proceed. The effect was not simply financial; it was organisational and cultural. The Army learned to survive on too little.[5]
When the international situation deteriorated in the mid-1930s, New Zealand began to rearm, but the emphasis was uneven. Air power appeared to offer a modern, technologically advanced, and comparatively efficient means of defending an isolated maritime country.[6] The Cochrane review of New Zealand’s air defence requirements in 1936 reinforced this direction, and the Air Force Act 1937 separated the air arm from the Army and established the Royal New Zealand Air Force as an independent service.[7] Major investment followed in air bases, equipment, and training infrastructure. Air power was increasingly seen as the modern way ahead.
The result was that the Army became, in practical terms, the “Cinderella service”. This phrase should not be read as meaning that no one cared about the Army, or that Army officers were inactive. Rather, it captures the period’s order of priorities. The Navy and imperial sea communications remained central to strategic thinking, the Air Force attracted the most visible modern investment, and the Army was left to manage with a small regular cadre, a weakened Territorial system, ageing equipment, limited motor transport, inadequate ammunition reserves, and a logistics structure still shaped by the interwar economy.
This does not mean New Zealand ignored preparedness. The evidence points in the opposite direction. During the interwar period, the Army continued to plan, train, revise mobilisation arrangements, conduct exercises, experiment with mechanisation, and order modern equipment where possible. New Zealand was not asleep. It was alert, but constrained.
[8]The problem was more subtle. The Army adapted to scarcity so successfully that scarcity itself became embedded in the system. Reduced manpower, limited ammunition, ageing equipment, inadequate transport, and civilianised stores support were no longer seen only as emergency conditions to be corrected at speed. They became the environment within which the Army learned to function.
The limits of that system were exposed publicly by the Four Colonels’ Revolt. Senior Territorial officers protested the condition and direction of the Territorial Force, challenging a system in which reduced strength, limited training, poor morale, and inadequate equipment had become accepted as normal. Their protest breached military regulations, and the officers were placed on the retired list rather than court-martialled.[9] Yet the significance of the episode lies less in the disciplinary outcome than in what it revealed. By the late 1930s, informed military opinion recognised that the Army’s constrained condition was not simply economical, it was dangerous.
Seen through the lens of normalisation of deviance, the revolt was a warning sign. It showed that some officers were no longer willing to accept reduced establishments, weak Territorial strength, limited equipment, and low morale as normal. This interpretation avoids two extremes. It avoids the simplistic claim that New Zealand ignored defence between the wars. It also avoids the opposite error, suggesting that because planning existed, the Army was adequately prepared. The reality sits between the two. Interwar austerity, imperial defence assumptions, reliance on Singapore, and the prioritisation of air power created a force that was professionally aware and adaptable but also conditioned to operate below the level that modern war would demand.
Rearmament Before War
It would be misleading to suggest that New Zealand’s military rearmament began only with the emergency orders placed after the outbreak of war. The NZAOC files from the late 1930s show that a limited, uneven, but genuine process of re-equipment had already begun.
The evidence is scattered through requisitions, stock returns, and NZAOC correspondence rather than presented as a single grand programme. That in itself is revealing. Rearmament before 1939 was not a dramatic national mobilisation, but a piecemeal process of ordering selected modern weapons, replenishing ammunition, improving coast defences, obtaining technical stores, and trying to keep existing equipment serviceable.
Some requisitions reached back into the mid-1930s. Outstanding High Commissioner requisitions included entries dated from 1935 onward for detonators, fuzes, guncotton, mortar cartridges, grenades, and related explosive stores. The same schedules also recorded requisitions for 1936, 1937, and 1938: directors, switchboards, wireless components, mortar fittings, rangefinders, survey equipment, smoke generators, and other technical stores. This shows that the Army was already attempting to rebuild elements of its technical and ammunition base before the immediate pre-war crisis.[10]
By 1938 and 1939, the pattern had become more clearly connected to modern fighting equipment. The NZAOC schedules record orders for Bren guns and equipment, 3-inch mortars, 3-inch mortar equipment for mortars already in store, and QF 2-pounder carriages and equipment. Other entries included Boys anti-tank rifles, anti-gas equipment, medical equipment, tentage, and camp equipment. These were not simply replacements for worn-out stock. They represented the first stages of a deliberate effort to align New Zealand’s forces with contemporary British practice.
New Zealand’s limited rearmament was more forward-looking than it might first appear. Where funds and British supply allowed, New Zealand sought access to modern British-pattern equipment before, or almost as soon as, those items were accepted into British service. Orders and requisitions in the late 1930s included Bren guns, Boys anti-tank rifles, 3-inch mortars, 2-pounder anti-tank equipment, modern rangefinding stores, defence electric lights, searchlights, signalling equipment, and associated technical stores. These were not obsolete leftovers or belated purchases of discarded equipment. In several cases, they represented equipment at the leading edge, and sometimes the bleeding edge, of contemporary military technology. They were the types then reshaping British and imperial forces.
This distinction matters. New Zealand was not indifferent to modernisation, nor unaware of the direction in which British military practice was moving. It was attempting to align itself with the newest available imperial standards, including weapons, instruments, communications equipment, and technical systems that were only just entering wider British service. The weakness lay elsewhere: finance, British production capacity, imperial priority, shipping, and the small scale of New Zealand’s requirements meant that modernisation could be recognised and even ordered well before it could be delivered in useful quantity.
The best summary is therefore not that New Zealand began rearming in 1939. Rather, by 1939, New Zealand’s rearmament was already underway, but it remained limited, fragmented, and too slow to meet the scale of the coming war.
The Logistics Baseline, 1937 to April 1939
The pre-war NZAOC establishment shows how small the support organisation still was. In 1937, the NZAOC military establishment numbered 44 personnel. This was supported by a civilian establishment of 122, giving a combined NZAOC establishment of 166. That establishment covered the Main Ordnance Depot, the Ordnance Workshop at Trentham, Northern and Southern Command elements, clerical staff, storemen, armourers, artificers, saddlers, tent repairers, tradesmen, caretakers, night-watchmen, and other support personnel.[11]
The Director of Ordnance Services had already recognised the danger of a small establishment. In March 1937, when commenting on proposed NZAOC military and civilian establishments, he noted that the figures assumed that the existing organisation and establishment of the Territorial Force would remain largely unchanged, and that no major increase beyond existing schemes for coast and air defence was contemplated. He warned that if any great development of mechanisation took place during the next five years, the establishment of the Ordnance Workshops would probably prove inadequate.
The April 1939 figures add an important intermediate point. They show that, immediately before the outbreak of war, the uniformed Ordnance specialist base remained extremely small. The return listed only 38 WO1s and other ranks across the Armourer, Armament, and Ammunition sections at the Main Ordnance Depot, Waikato Camp and Burnham Camp. This figure did not include the 10 NZAOC officers and should not be read as the entire Ordnance workforce. Ordnance stores were still substantially staffed by civilians, while military personnel were concentrated in specialist armourer, armament, and ammunition duties.[12]
| Section | Main Ordnance Depot | Waikato | Burnham | Total |
| Armourer Section | 11 | 3 | 3 | 17 |
| Armament Section | 9 | 8 | 2 | 19 |
| Ammunition Section | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Total WO1s and other ranks | 21 | 12 | 5 | 38 |
Even with those qualifications, the figure is revealing. On the eve of war, the uniformed technical core available to support weapons, ammunition, and armament stores was still modest. The system relied on a combination of a small uniformed technical cadre and a civilian stores workforce. This arrangement could sustain a peacetime Army, but it was not designed for mass mobilisation, large-scale mechanisation, major ammunition expansion, or the rapid receipt of modern weapons and technical equipment from overseas.
This civilian staffing was not accidental. It was the result of an economic decision taken during the Depression. On 14 July 1930, all ranks of the Corps, except officers, armament artificers, and armourers, were transferred to the civil service. The clerical and stores sections of the Corps were demilitarised, placed on a civilian basis, graded by the Public Service Commissioner, and subjected to reduced pay rates. This helps explain why the April 1939 uniformed Ordnance figures appear so small. They do not show the whole NZAOC labour force, but the remaining uniformed technical cadre within a system where much of the stores and clerical work had been civilianised.[13]
The question of whether NZAOC staff should again wear uniform became a live issue during the war. A January 1940 letter to the Prime Minister argued that NZAOC men had once worn uniform, were serving in the war, and were “the backbone” of the system. A further letter complained that men at Trentham doing NZAOC work were not provided with a uniform or rank, despite working for King and country. By 30 June 1941, this question had not been fully resolved. It would take the increasing pressure of wartime expansion to force a final decision.[14]
The NZASC and the Interwar Logistics Base
The New Zealand Army Service Corps provides an important companion to the NZAOC story. If the NZAOC showed the difficulty of storing, maintaining, inspecting, and issuing equipment, the NZASC showed the parallel challenge of moving and sustaining the force. In the interwar period, the NZASC remained small, underfunded, and still partly shaped by horse transport, but it was not inactive. Its officers and soldiers continued to train, revise establishments, experiment with motor transport, and preserve a body of practical knowledge in supply and transport that would become vital after 1939.
At the centre of this continuity was Stanley Herbert Crump. His First World War experience had been directly relevant to the problems New Zealand would face again in the Second World War. He had served in Egypt and Palestine with the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade and the Mounted ANZAC Divisional Train, gaining experience in supply, transport, movement, and sustainment in difficult country. Senior officers praised his resourcefulness, reliability, and ability to keep formations supplied despite heat, dust, mud, poor roads, and long marches. That experience mattered because the Middle East would again become the main theatre in which New Zealand’s Army Service Corps had to prove itself.[15]
After the war, Crump remained in the Regular Force and became closely associated with the Permanent Army Service Corps. By 1923 he was Officer Commanding the PASC, while also fulfilling duties connected with supplies, transport, and Quartermaster-General functions at General Headquarters. The establishment of a permanent ASC element had been considered carefully after the First World War. In 1919, Lieutenant Colonel William Avery argued that such a corps was needed to control mechanical transport equipment, provide supply and transport services in the military districts, instruct Territorial ASC units, provide trained officers for mobilisation, and ensure proper care of ASC vehicles and equipment.[16]
This was significant. It shows that the interwar ASC was not merely a dormant remnant of the First World War. Its permanent cadre existed to preserve knowledge, train the Territorial ASC, maintain equipment, and provide the nucleus for mobilisation. The problem was that this nucleus remained small and had to operate within the same financial and political constraints that affected the rest of the Army.
The ASC’s development also illustrates the uneven transition from horse to motor transport. As late as the mid-1930s, each military district still retained a section dedicated to horse transport and only one section for Motor Transport. The horse had not yet disappeared from New Zealand military logistics. Nevertheless, the direction of travel was clear. In 1937, Major-General J. E. Duigan reported that successful transportation in war had always depended on the efficient use of civil resources and that the modern Army was now dependent on the motor industry for its mobility. He also noted that using motor transport instead of horse-drawn vehicles for unit transport had been successfully tried and would be adopted in the future.[17]
The change was gradual rather than dramatic. New Zealand moved more slowly than Australia and Britain in mechanising its supply and transport services. Financial constraints limited the number of military vehicles that could be acquired in peacetime, and Territorial ASC units continued to train with limited equipment. Yet the evidence shows steady adaptation. By 1938, despite the small number of trucks and lorries physically owned by the New Zealand Military Forces, Territorial ASC units were conducting increasingly motorised convoys and drills. One South Island exercise in August 1938 was described as the largest motorised military convoy assembled in the South Island, although its total strength was still modest: six lorries, four vans, four cars, three motorcycles, and accompanying army kitchens and trailers.
This matters for understanding 1939. When the Second World War began, New Zealand did not have a fully motorised ASC ready to support a modern division. The official history of the Petrol Company later observed that in 1919 the Army Service Corps could muster only twenty motor trucks and cars, and that by 1939 New Zealand possessed only eighty-six military motor vehicles of all kinds. It also noted that after compulsory military training was abolished in 1930, the NZASC was reduced from 457 all ranks to 287, and by 1939 had dwindled to 168, mostly Territorials, divided among the three military commands. Each command had a composite ASC company that undertook all ASC duties and still used horse transport. The judgement was blunt: when the Second World War broke out, New Zealand had no unit specially formed or trained to supply a modern fighting force with petrol, oil, and lubricants, or to service its vehicles.[18]
That statement should not be read as meaning that there was no preparation. Rather, it captures the difference between a trained nucleus and a fully developed wartime capability. The interwar NZASC had preserved expertise, trained Territorial personnel, experimented with motorisation, and provided officers and soldiers with practical knowledge of supply and transport. What it lacked was scale. It did not possess enough vehicles, specialist units, trained manpower, or mechanical depth to support a modern division without rapid expansion.
The mobilisation of the ASC in 1939, therefore, paralleled the NZAOC problem. The Supply Company official history recorded that, although the unit’s operations were based on motor transport, there were only ten training vehicles in camp, two of them artillery tractors, and those few vehicles had to be shared with 4 Reserve Mechanical Transport Company. Petrol Company faced similar limitations, receiving a mixed collection of civilian-style vehicles, including butchers’ vans, brewery wagons, and a small number of heavier trucks, to provide at least some motor transport training before embarkation.[19]
The NZASC also contributed to the broader administrative and welfare dimensions of mobilisation. In October 1939, public concern over soldiers’ nutrition led to the creation of a committee to examine military food, with Crump serving in his role as Quartermaster-General. The committee considered the diet of troops in New Zealand camps and drew on advice from the Medical Research Council. This was another reminder that logistics was not confined to vehicles and supplies. It also included feeding, nutrition, camp administration, and soldiers’ health and morale.[20]
The interwar NZASC therefore reinforces the central argument of this article. New Zealand was not idle before 1939, but neither was it ready in the full sense required by modern war. Like the NZAOC, the ASC had preserved a small professional core and had begun adapting to mechanisation, but it remained constrained by limited money, reduced establishments, horse-era habits, and a shortage of vehicles. By 1939, it possessed experience and intent, but not the scale, equipment, or depth required to sustain a modern expeditionary force without urgent wartime expansion.
Weapons, Ammunition, and the 1939 Capability Gap
The same pattern was visible in weapons and ammunition. The 1939 figures reveal the practical limits of New Zealand’s defence position at the outbreak of war. In many areas, requirements were clear, but holdings were low, incomplete, or still represented by orders rather than equipment physically in hand. More importantly, weapons, ammunition, transport, and storage are inseparable. A gun without ammunition was not a capability. Ammunition without safe storage, transport, inspection, and trained personnel was not a capability either. Nor could equipment become operational capability unless the Army possessed the supply and transport system required to move it, feed it, fuel it, and keep it in use.
The most obvious example was anti-tank defence. The requirement for 2-pounder anti-tank guns was recorded as ninety weapons, but only sixteen were shown as on order. This left a balance of seventy-four still required. The shortage was not simply numerical. Anti-tank warfare had become one of the defining problems of modern land operations, and the 2-pounder represented New Zealand’s intended move towards a more credible anti-armour capability. Yet in 1939, the Army had only on order a fraction of what it believed it required.[21]
Anti-tank ammunition was even more fragile. The 2-pounder anti-tank gun had a war reserve requirement, but the 1939 schedule showed no stock in hand, and the reserve was dependent on future delivery. This meant that anti-tank capability was doubly constrained, by the limited number of guns and by the uncertain arrival of ammunition.
The position with light automatic weapons was similarly revealing. Against a requirement of 1,245 light machine guns, only forty Brens were available in 1939, with 312 on order. The Bren was central to modern infantry firepower. However, its limited availability meant that much of the force still depended on older Hotchkiss and Lewis light machine guns while awaiting more modern equipment.
Rifles presented a different type of problem. The requirement for .303 rifles was recorded at 22,470, while 73,481 were shown as available or on order. The rifle issue was therefore less about absolute absence and more about mobilisation, distribution, training, reinforcement, and the demands of an expanding force.
Field artillery was also a mixed picture. The older 18-pounder remained important, with fifty-four recorded. There were also eighteen 4.5-inch howitzers, four 60-pounders, twelve 6-inch howitzers, and smaller numbers of other field and coast-defence weapons. These provided a basis for training and mobilisation, but they also reflected the persistence of First World War-era equipment in New Zealand service. The modern 25-pounder appeared in planning, with a requirement for ninety guns, but remained an aspirational transformation for the Army’s field artillery holdings.
Ammunition holdings reveal the same unevenness. For the 18-pounder, the war reserve requirement was 56,700 rounds. The 1939 schedule showed 14,696 rounds in stock and 5,500 on order, for a total of 20,196 rounds in sight. This was well short of the desired reserve. A later memorandum of 22 September 1939 recorded urgent orders for a further 36,000 rounds, 15,000 from India and 21,000 from the United Kingdom.[22]
For the 4.5-inch howitzer, the requirement was 18,900 rounds. The same schedule showed 3,389 rounds in stock and 5,539 on order, for a total of 8,928 rounds in sight. The September 1939 memorandum then recorded urgent orders for a further 10,000 rounds, 7,000 from India and 3,000 from the United Kingdom.
The 25-pounder was different. It represented the desired future of field artillery, but in 1939, it was still more of a requirement than a practical holding for New Zealand. This is important because it highlights the gap between the intent to modernise and the physical delivery. The Army knew what it needed and was attempting to align with British developments. Still, global demand, British production priorities, shipping, and local infrastructure all slowed the conversion of requirement into capability.
Small arms ammunition was held in much larger quantities, but even here, the figures show an Army working towards readiness rather than resting on abundance. For .303 ammunition, the schedule recorded 22,629,121 rounds in stock, 19,000,000 on order, and a total in sight of 45,629,121 rounds, against a recommended war reserve of 48,000,000 rounds. It also noted an estimated annual training turnover of 5,000,000 rounds.
| Ammunition type | In stock | On order | Total in sight | Recommended war reserve |
| .303 ammunition | 22,629,121 | 19,000,000 plus components | 45,629,121 | 48,000,000 |
| .455 pistol ammunition | 120,947 | 192,000 | 312,947 | 300,000 |
| Anti-tank rifle ammunition | Nil | 100,000 | 100,000 | 100,000 |
| 3-inch mortar ammunition | 5,184 | 15,664 | 23,848 | 24,000 |
By 30 June 1941, the Army’s ammunition position had improved in some areas, but it remained uneven. The essential point is not that New Zealand had solved its ammunition problem by mid-1941. It had not. Rather, the Army had recognised the scale of the deficiency, placed urgent orders, and begun the difficult process of aligning ammunition reserves, storage, transport, inspection, and issue systems with the requirements of a modernising force.[23]
Urgent Orders and the Shift from Peace to War
The September 1939 memorandum is especially useful because it shows how quickly assumptions changed once war approached. It stated that earlier estimates had been prepared on a peacetime basis, but that urgent orders had since been placed for ammunition and field artillery tractor equipment.
The urgent ammunition orders were substantial. The United Kingdom orders were estimated at £79,000, equivalent to approximately NZ$10.5 million in 2026, while the orders placed in India were estimated at £80,641, approximately NZ$10.7 million in 2026. Orders were also placed for 100 Marmon-Herrington adapters fitted to vehicles at £74,000, approximately NZ$9.8 million in 2026.[24]
These figures matter because they show that New Zealand’s early mobilisation was not simply administrative. It involved real financial commitment, rapid overseas procurement, and the practical effort to turn older or impressed vehicles into artillery tractors.
The Marmon-Herrington adapter order is especially useful because it demonstrates the practical character of early wartime logistics. New Zealand was not merely buying guns and ammunition. It was also trying to create the transport and traction capacity needed to move artillery in a more mobile war.[25] This was a small but telling example of a wider problem. Weapons required ammunition, but they also required vehicles, tractors, spares, workshops, mechanics, drivers, and storage.
Old Weapons, New War
One of the most important themes in the 1937 to 30 June 1941 evidence is the coexistence of old and new. The 18-pounder, 4.5-inch howitzer, 60-pounder, 6-inch howitzer, Lewis guns, Hotchkiss guns and older coast-defence systems remained part of the Army’s practical inventory. At the same time, Bren guns, Boys anti-tank rifles, 3-inch mortars, 2-pounder equipment, wireless sets, modern range-finding gear, and searchlight equipment were being sought or introduced.
This should not be dismissed as mere backwardness. In 1939 and 1940, New Zealand had to train, mobilise, defend ports and key installations, support overseas commitments, and prepare for possible attack, all at once. Under those conditions, an older gun with ammunition, trained detachments, and an existing maintenance base was often more useful than a modern gun that had not yet arrived.
The NZAOC problem was therefore not simply one of obtaining new weapons. It was also one of keeping older weapons in service, sourcing ammunition for multiple calibres, accounting for mixed holdings, maintaining spares, and supporting training with equipment that was often already nearing obsolescence.
This was integrated logistics in practice. The issue was never just, “how many guns?” It was also, “what ammunition?”, “what sights?”, “what carriages?”, “what spares?”, “what trained maintainers?”, “what storage?”, and “what risk?”
Motorisation Before 30 June 1941
The same pattern was visible in motor transport. Modern war required not only guns, rifles, mortars, ammunition, and wireless equipment, but vehicles, trailers, tyres, tools, spare parts, workshops, mechanics, drivers, vehicle parks, recovery arrangements, fuel, and accounting systems. In 1939, the NZAOC remained largely shaped around clothing, camp equipment, ammunition, arms, and accessories, while the NZASC had only limited vehicle holdings and an uneven motorisation base.
Before the war, the Army possessed only a small motor vehicle fleet. One later account records that by September 1939, the Army owned 62 vehicles, while the MT Stores history records the pre-war Army vehicle holdings as 56 vehicles. Another ASC-focused account reported that the total number of military motor vehicles was 86 by 1939. The differences are not decisive for the argument. All point to the same conclusion: the pre-war Army was not yet organised for the motor transport demands of a rapidly expanding wartime force.
This exposed another limit in the pre-war support system. The Army was trying to align itself with British modern military practice, which by 1939 was increasingly motorised. Some of this thinking had already reached New Zealand through equipment such as Bren guns and Universal Carriers, as well as limited experiments in mechanisation. However, interwar defence policy, financial constraints, and the small size of the pre-war logistics organisations meant that New Zealand did not possess a support structure comparable to that of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps or the Royal Army Service Corps in Britain. The NZAOC had limited experience supporting Mechanical Transport at scale, while the NZASC had preserved knowledge of supply and transport but lacked the vehicles, manpower, and specialist units needed for a modern expeditionary division.
The response was organisational as much as material. Recognising that the Army’s motor fleet would expand beyond what the existing structures could easily absorb, the Quartermaster-General established a separate Mechanical Transport Branch. This allowed the NZAOC to concentrate on its core responsibilities, while the MT Branch managed and maintained the growing fleet of purchased and impressed vehicles. The branch drew heavily on the expertise of the New Zealand motor industry, with many staff recruited directly into the New Zealand Temporary Staff. In the early years of the war, the Army relied heavily on civilian vehicles impressed into service, and on existing stocks from motor manufacturers and dealerships, which were purchased to provide MT spares.[26]
For the period to 30 June 1941, the important point is not the later scale of the MT organisation, but the fact that motorisation had already exposed a structural weakness. The Army could not simply acquire vehicles and expect them to produce mobility. Each vehicle created a requirement for drivers, fitters, mechanics, tyres, tools, spares, workshops, recovery, fuel, records, and stores control. Motorisation, therefore, added another layer to the same problem faced by the NZAOC and the NZASC more broadly. New capability demanded a larger and more specialised support system.
Infrastructure, the Hidden Cost of Rearmament
The 1939 to 1940 Mackesy-related papers provide clear evidence that planners understood rearmament as both an infrastructure and an equipment problem. The follow-up work divided the programme into three parts: reserve ammunition for weapons already possessed or ordered, modern fighting and technical equipment for the Territorial Force, and the magazine, garage, and storage accommodation needed to house the equipment and ammunition covered by the first two parts. It also recommended that, if the proposals were approved in principle, an immediate start be made on local expenditure for accommodation.[27]
This is one of the most important points in the article. It shows that New Zealand’s early war preparation was not just a matter of ordering guns, rifles, mortars, vehicles, and ammunition. Those items had to be received, protected, stored, maintained, issued, moved, and accounted for.
The proposed infrastructure programme was substantial:
| Infrastructure item | 1939 estimate | Indicative 2026 NZD |
| Additional magazines for ammunition | £126,000 | NZ$16.7 million |
| Garage accommodation, 440 vehicles at £160 each | £70,400 | NZ$9.3 million |
| Storage accommodation | £100,000 | NZ$13.2 million |
| Total accommodation | £296,400 | NZ$39.2 million |
The accommodation programme is significant because it demonstrates that rearmament created second-order demands. More ammunition requires more magazines. More vehicles require garage accommodation. More technical equipment requires storage. A larger Army needed not only weapons, but a larger physical logistics system.
By 30 June 1941, many of these requirements had been recognised, but the full expansion of depots, magazines, workshops, Mechanical Transport stores, supply systems, and inspection systems still lay ahead. The point is not that New Zealand had solved the logistics infrastructure problem by mid-1941, but that it had begun to define it.
Later wartime construction would reveal the full scale of the problem through a nationwide magazine construction programme. But for this article, the crucial point is that the requirement for magazines, garages, and storage had already been recognised before 30 June 1941. Ammunition did not merely appear in an inventory. It required land, roads, traverses, buildings, guard accommodation, repair workshops, water, electricity, camouflage, rail access, safety distances, and trained staff.[28]
Industry, Inspection, and the Home Logistics Base
New Zealand’s early wartime logistics system also had to prepare for the output of local industry. Large quantities of stores were still expected from overseas, but domestic production was becoming increasingly important. Local industry would go on to produce or assemble Universal Carriers, small-arms ammunition, mortars, mortar bombs, shell fuzes, gunnery instruments, Sten guns, wireless equipment, military clothing, boots, pumps, petrol tanks, grenades, road-construction equipment, water bottles, and other stores.
This industrial effort did not reduce NZAOC or NZASC work. It increased it. Every locally produced item had to be inspected, proved where necessary, received, stored, packaged, maintained, accounted for, issued, and, in many cases, transported to camps, depots, ports, or units. New Zealand industry became part of the Army logistics support system, but military logistics organisations remained the mechanism that turned industrial output into usable military stores.
By 30 June 1941, the later full system had not yet matured, but the requirement was already apparent. Rearmament was neither simply an industrial nor a military problem. It was a combined logistics problem linking government, industry, inspection, transport, storage, accounting, and issue.
The Capital Cost of Readiness
The overall 1939 programme was costed in three main parts:[29]
| Programme component | 1939 estimate | Indicative 2026 NZD |
| Part A, reserve ammunition for existing equipment | £276,971 | NZ$36.7 million |
| Part B, modern fighting equipment | £1,898,753 | NZ$251.4 million |
| Part C, magazine, garage, and storage accommodation | £296,400 | NZ$39.2 million |
| Total programme | £2,472,124 | NZ$327.3 million |
The scale of these sums is important. The 1939 programme was not a minor tidy-up of existing stocks. It was a major capital proposal to modernise the Territorial Force, build ammunition reserves, and provide the physical infrastructure needed to sustain the new equipment.
The fact that Part C alone equates to roughly NZ$39 million in 2026 terms underlines how much of rearmament lies outside the weapons themselves. Magazines, garages, stores, workshops, handling arrangements, supply systems, transport arrangements, and accounting systems were not secondary details. They were the practical foundation of readiness.
When the manpower, industrial, NZAOC, NZASC, and MT evidence is added, the point becomes even stronger. A modern Army could not be built merely by approving equipment tables or placing orders overseas. The Army needed trained personnel to staff depots, workshops, ammunition sections, inspection organisations, mechanical transport branches, supply and transport branches, industrial inspection systems, catering arrangements, and administrative control systems. The cost of readiness was therefore financial, physical, organisational, industrial, and human.
Preparation Before Expansion
By 30 June 1941, New Zealand had not solved its logistics problem, but it had begun to define it. Rearmament was underway, urgent overseas orders had been placed, and selected holdings of rifles, Bren guns, mortars, grenades, ammunition, and coast-defence stores had improved. Yet readiness remained uneven. Modern anti-aircraft equipment was still limited; the 25-pounder had not yet fully replaced older field artillery, anti-tank equipment remained short, and ammunition reserves were still vulnerable to movement, training consumption, redistribution, and delayed overseas supply.
The central issue was balance. The Army was not simply acquiring stores; it was trying to build a force in which weapons, ammunition, transport, workshops, depots, trained personnel, inspection systems, and infrastructure developed together. The NZAOC, NZASC, Mechanical Transport organisation, and Quartermaster-General’s Branch each carried part of that burden. Together, they show that rearmament was never just a weapons programme. It was the beginning of a national logistics mobilisation.
By mid-1941, the foundations had been laid, but the system remained thin. The larger expansion still lay ahead, and it would test every part of the logistics structure that had been preserved, improvised, or rebuilt during the late 1930s.
Lessons for Contemporary New Zealand Military Logisticians
The 1937 to 30 June 1941 experience offers useful lessons for contemporary New Zealand military logisticians, but they should be handled with care. The purpose is not to judge the interwar Army with the benefit of hindsight. The officers, soldiers, public servants, and civilian workers of the period operated within severe financial, political, industrial, and imperial constraints. The value of the case study lies in demonstrating how a small logistics system behaves when it must expand rapidly under strategic pressure.
The first lesson is that preparedness cannot be measured by equipment holdings alone. Weapons, vehicles, radios, ammunition, fuel, rations, and technical stores only become military capability when the supporting system exists to receive, inspect, store, issue, maintain, repair, move, feed, fuel, and account for them. The pre-war Army had identified many of its equipment deficiencies, and orders for modern stores were already being placed. The limiting factor was often the depth of the logistics system beneath those orders.
The second lesson is that small peacetime compromises can become normalised. The interwar Army adapted to reduced establishments, civilianised stores support, limited transport, old weapons, small ammunition reserves, horse-era supply structures, and inadequate infrastructure. These arrangements were understandable in the circumstances, but over time, they became the accepted baseline. A workaround that keeps a system functioning in peacetime may conceal a weakness that becomes critical during mobilisation or crisis.
The third lesson is that logistics manpower is a capability. The small pre-war NZAOC cadre, the civilianised stores workforce, the tiny April 1939 uniformed technical establishment, and the reduced NZASC all show that trained logisticians cannot be created instantly. Storemen, supply personnel, cooks, petrol personnel, drivers, ammunition personnel, armourers, artificers, mechanics, clerks, inspectors, transport staff, and technical specialists all require experience and continuity. Modern systems may be more digital, but they still depend on trained people who understand both the process and the operational consequences.
The fourth lesson is that modernisation creates second-order demands. In the 1930s and 1940s, the expansion of motor transport created requirements for workshops, spares, tyres, tools, mechanics, vehicle depots, fuel arrangements, drivers, traffic control, convoy procedures, and MT stores. The same principle applies today. New platforms, digital systems, protected mobility, sensors, autonomous systems, or deployed networks all generate support burdens that may be larger and more complex than the original acquisition suggests.
The final lesson is that readiness is cumulative. The Army could expand after 1939 because some framework already existed, but that framework was thin. Depots, workshops, magazines, transport systems, supply arrangements, catering systems, inspection arrangements, and trained personnel all had to grow under pressure. The enduring lesson is that logistics readiness must be built before the crisis. Once mobilisation begins, the logistics system is no longer preparing for war. It is already part of the fight.
Conclusion
By 30 June 1941, New Zealand had not reached logistical abundance, but it had moved beyond passive austerity. Rearmament was underway, urgent orders had been placed, ammunition deficiencies were being addressed, infrastructure requirements had been costed, and the weaknesses of the small pre-war NZAOC, NZASC, and Mechanical Transport systems were increasingly visible.
The evidence from 1937 to mid-1941 changes the way New Zealand’s early wartime preparation should be understood. Rearmament did not begin suddenly in 1939, nor was the Army intellectually dormant before the war. Requisitions for ammunition, explosives, modern weapons, signalling stores, coast-defence equipment, anti-gas equipment, tentage, and technical stores show that modernisation was already underway. The NZASC story points in the same direction. Its interwar training, permanent cadre, Territorial structure, and gradual shift from horse to motor transport show that preparation existed but remained limited, uneven, and short of the scale required for modern war.
The deeper weakness was logistical. Weapons required ammunition, ammunition required magazines, vehicles required workshops and spares, local production required inspection, and all of it required trained personnel, records, transport, storage, supply, feeding, fuel, and administrative control. The growth from a 1937 NZAOC establishment of 44 military personnel and 122 civilians, through an April 1939 technical establishment of 10 officers and 38 WO1s and other ranks, together with the reduced and lightly motorised NZASC, shows that this was never only a weapons programme. It was a logistics mobilisation.
That mobilisation was still incomplete by mid-1941. The Army had preserved important professional knowledge, retained a small regular and Territorial logistics base, and begun to identify the infrastructure and manpower required for expansion. Yet it still lacked the depth needed for a fully modern force. The normalisation of interwar constraint had left New Zealand with a system that could begin mobilisation but not expand without strain.
The story of 1937 to 30 June 1941 is therefore not one of simple failure or effortless mobilisation. It is the story of an Army, and its Ordnance, Army Service Corps, Mechanical Transport, and Quartermaster-General’s services, attempting to turn limited interwar resources into wartime capability. By mid-1941, that transition was incomplete, but its direction was unmistakable: readiness depended as much on logistics, manpower, industry, motor transport, storage, inspection, supply, transport, fuel, feeding, and infrastructure as it did on guns and ammunition.
Notes
[1] D. Vaughan, The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture, and Deviance at NASA (University of Chicago Press, 1996).
[2] Christopher M Bell, “Winston Churchill and the ten-year rule,” Journal of Military History 74, no. 4 (2010).
[3] Paul William Gladstone Ian McGibbon, The Oxford companion to New Zealand Military History (Auckland; Melbourne; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, 2000), , 495-96.
[4] AA Cruickshank, “Changing Perspectives of New Zealand’s Foreign Policy,” Pacific Affairs 40, no. 1/2 (1967).
[5] “The 1931 Reductions of the New Zealand Military: A Historical Analysis,” To the Warrior His Arms, History of the Royal New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps and it predecessors, 2017, https://rnzaoc.com/2024/07/13/the-1931-reductions-of-the-new-zealand-military-a-historical-analysis/.
[6] Ian McGibbon, The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Military History, 101-02.
[7] C. Darby and G.G. Pentland, RNZAF: The First Decade, 1937-46 (Kookaburra, 1978), 7. https://books.google.co.nz/books?id=mX1cAAAACAAJ.
[8] “Debunking the Myth of New Zealand’s Military Unpreparedness During the Interwar Period,” To the Warrior His Arms, History of the Royal New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps and it predecessors, 2025, https://rnzaoc.com/2020/12/21/ordnance-in-the-manawatu-1915-1996/.
[9] Peter Cooke and John Crawford, The Territorials (Wellington: Random House New Zealand Ltd, 2011), 274-28.
[10] “QMG (Quartermaster General) – Ordnance,” Archives New Zealand Item No R18527670 (1937-1939).
[11] “Establishments – Ordnance corps “, Archives New Zealand No R22441743 (9 January 1937 – 1946).
[12] “Establishments – Ordnance Corps “.
[13] “H-19 Defence Forces of New Zealand, Annual report of the General Officer Commanding the Forces June 1930 to May 1931,” 1 January, Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, (1931), https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/parliamentary/AJHR1931-I-II.2.2.6.20.
[14] Major J.S Bolton, A History of the Royal New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps (Trentham: RNZAOC, 1992).
[15] James Russell, “Brigadier Stanley Crump – An Underappreciated New Zealand Military Logistics Commander: a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand” (Massey University, 2022), 12-14.
[16] Russell, “Brigadier Stanley Crump – An Underappreciated New Zealand Military Logistics Commander: a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand,” 14-15.
[17] Russell, “Brigadier Stanley Crump – An Underappreciated New Zealand Military Logistics Commander: a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand,” 16.
[18] Arthur Leon Nelson Kidson, Petrol Company (Historical Publications Branch, 1961, Wellington, 1961), Non-fiction, 1-2.
[19] Arthur Leon Nelson Kidson, Petrol Company.
[20] Russell, “Brigadier Stanley Crump – An Underappreciated New Zealand Military Logistics Commander: a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand.”
[21] “Organisation for National Security, Chiefs of Staff Committee – Recommendations No 42 – 43 of Mackesy report – Supply of modern equipment for the army and the provision of reserves of ammunition, September 1939,” Archives New Zealand No R16640388 (1939).
[22] “Organisation for National Security, Chiefs of Staff Committee – Recommendations No 42 – 43 of Mackesy report – Supply of modern equipment for the army and the provision of reserves of ammunition, September 1939.”
[23] “Appendices to Report on QMG (Quartermaster-General’s) Branch,” Archives New Zealand Item No R25541151 (30 June 1944), .
[24] For the indicative modern equivalents in this article, 1939 pounds have been converted on a broad CPI basis into 2026 New Zealand dollars. For consistency, £1 in 1939 is treated here as approximately NZ$132.40 in 2026. These figures should be treated as comparative values, not exact modern procurement equivalents, because defence equipment, land, buildings, labour, shipping, and specialist stores do not all inflate at the same rate.
[25] “Trucks converted with Marmon-Herrington All-Wheel Drive Conversion Kits,” Marmon-Herrington military vehicles, 2002, 2026, https://www.mapleleafup.nl/marmonherrington/truck.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
[26] “MT Stores – 1939-1963,” To the Warrior His Arms, History of the Royal New Zealand Army Ordnance Corps and it predecessors, 2024, https://rnzaoc.com/2021/06/29/mt-stores-39-63/.
[27] “Chief of the General Staff: Gun Ammunition, general army equipment and New Zealand Force numbers,” Archives New Zealand No R22849606 (1940).
[28] “Appendices to Report on QMG (Quartermaster-General’s) Branch.”
[29] “Chief of the General Staff: Gun Ammunition, general army equipment and New Zealand Force numbers.”





