fbpx
Wikipedia

135th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment, Royal Artillery

135th Field Regiment was a Royal Artillery (RA) unit being formed in Britain's part-time Territorial Army (TA) on the outbreak of World War II. Spun off from an existing unit, it took over two batteries from Hertfordshire and Northamptonshire and was later granted the double subtitle '(East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry)'. As part of the 18th (East Anglian) Infantry Division the regiment remained in the United Kingdom until 1941 when it was sent to India. The division was deployed to Fortress Singapore where it was captured by the Japanese. Some of the prisoners were murdered in cold blood, many of the others died working on the Burma Railway. The regiment was never reformed.

135th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment, RA
Royal Artillery cap badge
Active7 September 1939–15 February 1942
Country United Kingdom
Branch Territorial Army
RoleField artillery
Size3 Batteries
Part of18th Infantry Division
Garrison/HQHitchin
EngagementsLiverpool Blitz
Malayan campaign
Fall of Singapore
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Lieutenant-Colonel Philip Toosey
Insignia
Hertfordshire Yeomanry collar badge

Mobilisation edit

With the rapid expansion of the TA after the Munich Crisis, existing units were ordered to form duplicates of themselves. In practice, 86th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment contributed to three new RA regiments: 135th Field Rgt, 191st (Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry) Field Rgt and 79th (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Rgt. In the case of the 135th Field Rgt this was done by combining one of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry batteries with one from another East Anglian field regiment that was being converted to the anti-aircraft (AA) role:[1][2][3]

Advance parties of the TA were mobilised on 24 August 1939 and general mobilisation was ordered on 1 September, two days before the outbreak of war. 135th Field Regiment assumed full independence from its parent unit on 7 September. The commanding officer (CO) was Brevet Colonel J. Hudson, MC, TD, a retired TA officer who had previously command 88th (2nd West Lancashire) Field Brigade, RA from 1930 to 1936. The new regiment was assigned to 18th Infantry Division, the duplicate of 54th (East Anglian) Division in which 86th Field Rgt served; 18th Divisional HQ took over responsibility on 30 September.[4][5][6]

At this time the establishment of an RA field regiment was two batteries, each of three four-gun Troops. The intention was to equip field regiments with 24 of the new 25-pounder gun-howitzers, but prior to the outbreak of war the four batteries of 86th Field Rgt had been equipped with just 16 4.5-inch howitzers of World War I pattern.[7][8]

Service edit

Home defence edit

There now followed the period known as the Phoney War. 18th Division moved to Norfolk in November 1939 as a home defence division under the 'Julius Caesar' plan, though it was still badly equipped. RHQ and 336 Bty of 135th Field Rgt were billeted at Kimberley Hall, 344 Bty at Wymondham, with the regiment's four 4.5-inch howitzers at No 5 AA Practice Camp on the coast at Weybourne. 336 Battery moved from the outbuildings of Kimberley Hall to nearby Hingham Hall when the weather turned bad. During March 1940, parties were temporarily sent to man Lewis guns for AA defence on coastal shipping, and 20 volunteers left the regiment to join No. 8 Commando, being formed from units of 18th Division.[9][10]

 
An 18-pounder Mk IIPA gun (this example is being inspected by French officers in April 1940).

When the Battle of France began on 10 May, 18th Division was redeployed for immediate coast defence. 135th Field Rgt and 53rd Infantry Brigade took over the Norfolk coastline between Wells-next-the-Sea and Sheringham. 336 Battery manned the four 4.5-inch howitzers at Weybourne, later at Cley next the Sea, while F Trp of 344 Battery had two 18-pounder Mk II PA guns on pneumatic wheels at Catton. These six guns comprised half of 18th Divisional Artillery's firepower. Those personnel of the regiment not required to man the guns became part of a temporary '18th Divisional Artillery Rifle Regiment' on anti-paratroop duties, while the signallers went to assist the training of 57th (Newfoundland) Heavy Regiment. After the British Expeditionary Force was evacuated from Dunkirk, the regiment exchanged three officers and 57 other ranks (ORs) with 97th (Kent Yeomanry) Field Rgt, which had experience of the fighting in France.[11][12][13]

On 24 August 1940 the regiment received additional guns: eight French World War I 75 mm guns,[a] carried Portee on 30-cwt Fordson trucks. These were assigned to A and B Trps of 336 Bty, while C Trp additionally manned some fixed 4-inch naval guns in beach defences. Further 75 mm guns arrived later, so that by mid-September the regiment had its full allocation of guns, albeit extemporised:[15]

During September the gunners carried out practice shoots against targets at sea and on the beaches. They also received some training on borrowed 18/25-pounders, after which the two batteries went in succession to West Down on Salisbury Plain to fire the guns there. Meanwhile, the coastal defences had been reinforced by a number of independent Defence Batteries. The first of these was 901 Defence Bty, for which 135th Field Rgt provided a cadre of 64 recently-joined ORs. The battery was commanded by Maj J.R.O'B, Warde, the senior officer transferred from 97th Field Rgt. 901 Independent Defence Bty served on the Norfolk Coast from 1 September 1940 until its disbandment on 3 March 1941.[16][17]

In November 1940, with winter approaching, the regiment moved back into billets: RHQ at Holt, 336 Bty at West Runton, 344 Bty at Sheringham. It was supporting 222nd Independent Infantry Brigade (Home), a newly-formed coast defence formation attached to 18th Division. The regiment now began to receive its allocation of motor transport, including Quad (4 x 4) gun tractors in preparation for the eventual issue of 25-pdr guns: 336 Bty had 18 Guy Quad-Ants, while 344 Bty had 18 Morris C8s. The regiment also received No 11 wireless sets. It was only now that the RA was producing enough trained battery staffs to begin the process of changing regiments from a two-battery to a three-battery organisation. (Three 8-gun batteries were easier to handle, and it meant that each infantry battalion in a brigade could be closely associated with its own battery.) On 27 November C Trp of 336 Bty and F Trp of 344 Bty were detached to become E and F Trps of a new battery initially designated as C Bty; consequently D and E Trps of 344 Bty were redesignated C and D. Inevitably C Bty now had a mixture of different equipment, and full implementation of the new organisation appears to have been delayed for some months.[1][18][19][20]

Mobile training edit

 
25-pounder gun and Morris C8 tractor (probably of 18th Division) on exercise in Scotland, March 1941.

At the beginning of 1941, 18th Division moved from coastal defence duties to GHQ Reserve and began mobile training for overseas service. On 1 January, 135th Rgt moved to billets between Lockerbie and Annan in Dumfriesshire, Scotland. At the same time parties were sent to the ordnance depot at Donnington in Shropshire to collect the regiment's allocation of 24 Mk II 25-pdrs and limbers. The division trained in the Scottish Borders until the beginning of April, when it moved to Cheshire, with 135th Field Rgt billeted in Macclesfield. The regiment spent a few days at the end of April at No 4 Field Practice Camp at Trawsfynydd in North Wales, where it fired its 25-pdrs for the first time. On 5 May the regiment sent a large party to assist in air raid duties at Liverpool, which had suffered four successive nights of heavy bombing. Two nights later the city suffered one of the worst raids of the Liverpool Blitz and the regiment suffered its first casualties by enemy action, one killed and two seriously injured.[21][22]

 
18th Division's insignia, depicting a cartographic symbol for a windmill, appropriate to East Anglia. First issued in the summer of 1941.[23]

The Blitz ended on 16 May and the firewatching party returned to billets. 336 Battery moved to a mill building at Congleton, and later to Knowsley Park. Battle training in North Wales and the Welsh Borders continued during the summer. The provisional C Bty was formally established as 499 Bty on 1 June and its acting commander, Captain O.H. Daltry, promoted to major; Lord de Ramsey became the battery-captain. As the regiment approached readiness, Maj Philip Toosey, was promoted from second-in-command of 59th (4th West Lancashire) Medium Regiment to lieutenant-colonel to succeed LCol Hudson in command of 135th Field Regiment on 1 September 1941. Warning orders to proceed overseas arrived on 22 September.[6][24][25]

At sea edit

18th Division was earmarked as a reinforcement for Middle East Forces. The men were issued with desert uniforms and sun helmets. The regiment handed in its Guy and Morris Quads and received new Canadian-built Chevrolet CGT Quad gun tractors. It loaded them together with the guns and vehicles (all painted desert sand colour) aboard ship at Liverpool in mid-October. The personnel of the regiment embarked on the SS Sobieski at Gourock on the Firth of Clyde and sailed on 31 October as part of convoy CT5.[26]

The Sobieski took the regiment to Halifax, Nova Scotia, where 135th Field Rgt and 53rd Bde transshipped to the USS Mount Vernon and CT5 sailed on via Port of Spain to Cape Town. Training continued during the voyage. A Troop manned the Bofors 40 mm guns that had been shipped for AA defence, and practised against balloons while at sea. While the convoy was at sea news of the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor and Malaya was received. From Cape Town the convoy's destination was changed from the Middle East to India. Then on 23 December the Mount Vernon was detached and sent alone via Mombasa to join a convoy proceeding direct to Malaya.[27][28][29][30][31][32]

Malayan campaign edit

 
25-pounder Mk II gun preserved at the Imperial War Museum.

The Mount Vernon docked at Singapore on 13 January 1942 and 135th Field Rgt landed during a Japanese air raid. Its guns and equipment were in other ships of CT5 on their way to Bombay, so it had to be re-equipped on arrival with whatever guns were available from the Singapore Ordnance Depot, 336 Battery being issued with eight 4.5-inch howitzers and 344 Bty with eight 25-pdrs, all towed by Chevrolet 4 x 4 112-ton trucks; 499 Bty remained without guns. A number of officers of the Federated Malay States Volunteers (FMSV) were attached to the regiment to act as interpreters and liaison officers equipped with civilian vehicles as reconnaissance and staff cars. Together with 53rd Bde the regiment was attached to 11th Indian Division.[29][33][34]

53rd Brigade was immediately rushed across the Straits of Johore onto the Malay Peninsula to secure the communications of the British (including Indian and Australian) forces retreating from northern Johore against further Japanese landings that were reported on the coast. A reconnaissance ('recce') party from 135th Field Rgt consisting of Lt-Col Toosey and the three battery commanders accompanied the brigade while the guns were being serviced. On the evening of 18 January C Trp took up positions covering the beach near Pontian Kechil, with a 30-strong detachment from 499 Bty for local defence. Next day BHQ and D Trp of 344 Bty under Maj H.M. Peacock deployed in a 'hide' outside Pontian Kechil, supporting 28th Indian Bde on the coast road. The battery established an observation post (OP) on Pulau Pisang island, guarded by a platoon from 2nd Battalion 2nd Gurkha Rifles; the OP was out of wireless range, but Heliograph signalling to the beach position worked well. Meanwhile, on On 20 January, 336 Bty under Maj C.F.W. Banham drove out to the Mount Austin Estate north of Johor Bahru on the road to Kota Tinggi to recce likely anti-tank positions. 499 Battery under Maj Daltry was finally issued with a collection of requisitioned vehicles to tow its guns (8 x 4-5-inch howitzers) and join the rest of the regiment.[35][36]

The British commander, Lieutenant-General Arthur Percival intended to hold the enemy advance on the line of the Batu PahatAyer HitamKluangMersing, with 11th Indian Division holding the Batu Pahat sector. On the night of 23/24 January 336 Bty moved up alongside 344 Bty at its hide at Skudai, while 499 Bty brought its guns up, exchanged E Trp's 4.5s for D Trp's longer-range 25-pdrs, and moved on to Batu Pahat to support 15th Indian Bde. However, the Japanese had already cut the Batu Pahat–Ayer Hitam road and were threatening the coast road to Batu Pahat from Senggarang. 53rd Brigade moved to garrison this road, but 6th Bn Norfolk Regiment, moving up from Rengit to Senggarang with A Trp was ambushed, one of the 4.5-inch howitzers being lost, though Capt T.P. Halford-Thompson got the other into action. A Company of 6th Norfolks with another of A Trp's guns attempted to clear the road, but could only do so temporarily.[37][38][39]

It was now clear that the British force would have to retire from Johore towards Singapore Island. On the night of 25/26 January 15th Indian Bde began to withdraw down the coast road towards Senggarang and Benut, picking up the detachments of 53rd Bde as it went. But the road was now blocked by Japanese forces in several places. 11th Indian Division now organised a mixed column under Maj Banham ('Bancol') to re-open the road from Rengit to Senggarang. The two sections of B Trp were ordered to advance by leap-frog bounds so that they could provide continuous fire support for the scratch force of Norfolks and FMSV armoured cars. The armoured cars advanced under fire from both sides of the road until a road bock was encountered and the length of the road came under fire, the infantry being cut down, one howitzer lost and the other saved (together with many wounded) by Bombardier Thompson who turned the gun tractor round in the narrow road. Banham in an Indian Carrier did get through to Senggarang, where he reported the road impassable for wheeled vehicles. The commander of 15th Indian Bde decided to retire to Benut through the mangrove swamps along the shoreline, so A Trp's remaining howitzer was put out of action by dropping the breech-block into the river. Banham, Halford-Thompson and the men of 336 Bty reached Benut late on 27 January. Meanwhile, Rengit was under heavy attack and was overrun during the night of 26/27 January; guns and vehicles were disabled and the survivors made their way to Benut, where they were evacuated by Royal Navy gunboats. Lieutenant Lang of 336 Bty took a party to the mouth of the Benut River and helped boatloads of evacuees.[38][40][41]

53rd Brigade HQ at Benut was now effectively the front line, defended by 3rd Bn 16th Punjab Regiment and the two remaining howitzers of B Trp of 336 Bty under Capt J.M. Neal. The brigade was given permission to withdraw during the night of 27/28 January to Pontian Kechil, which was still held by 28th Indian Bde and 344 Bty. The Benut river bridge and 336 Bty's ammunition dump were blown up and 336 Bty withdrew its two guns. On the night of 30/31 January all the troops in Johore withdrew across the causeway onto Singapore Island, Lt-Col Toosey withdrawing his guns by leap-frog bounds to ensure continuous fire support.[29][42][43]

Defence of Singapore edit

 
Map of the British deployment for the defence of Singapore Island.

At Singapore, 135th Field Rgt was reunited with its own 25-pounder guns, just arrived with the rest of 18th Division. 336 Battery was the last to refit, due to the casualties it had suffered, and moved into positions near Nee Song on 4 February. The regiment formed part of the Northern Area defences between the Naval Base and the causeway. 499 Battery established an OP in a water tower on the edge of the naval base, whole 344 Bty's was in a partially completed building overlooking the causeway; other forward observation officers (FOOs) were established along the water's edge. 4th (Hazara) Mountain Battery, Indian Artillery, equipped with two 6-inch howitzers, and a section of 273 Anti-Tank Bty armed with 2-pounder guns were attached to 135th Field Rgt on 3 February. On 5 February the Japanese guns moved into position across the straits and the regiment engaged in counter-battery (CB) fire missions against them. Roving sections were used so that the permanent artillery positions were nor revealed to the Japanese. But ammunition was restricted to an average of 20 rounds per gun to conserve stock for a long siege, and this was halved on 7 February. The gun areas, wagon lines and OPs came under Japanese fire and the telephone cables between guns and OPs were frequently cut, but the regiment (with its experience of coast defence deployments in the UK) had duplicated and even quadruplicated some of its links. A joint 135th Field Rgt/4th Mtn Bty OP under an overhanging rock at Bukit Mandai received 25 direct hits but the FOOs (Capt G. Keane, 135th Feld Rgt, and Jemadar Jogindar Singh, 4th Mtn Bty) remained at their posts, bringing down fire on the enemy's gun flashes, and temporarily silencing the guns firing on the naval base.[33][44][45]

On the evening of 8 February the Japanese began their landings. The OPs at Bukit Mandai and the water tower reported landing craft and 135th Field Rgt and 4th Mtn Bty dispersed them, but the main landings during the night were on the western side of the island. From there the Japanese advanced towards the causeway and the exposed west flank of 11th Indian Division. On 10 February, 8th Indian Bde was ordered to put in a counter-attack on Point 95 overlooking the causeway with fire support from 135th Field Rgt. At 17.00, after 10 minutes of intense artillery fire (1500 rounds), the infantry were able to walk up the hill entirely unopposed, but they were unable to reach their further objective. 135th Field Rgt fired 7000 rounds that day, and received the personal congratulations from the Commander-in-Chef of ABDA, Sir Archibald Wavell, who was visiting the island.[29][46][47][48]

During the night of 10/11 February the regiment carried out harassing fire (HF) tasks. In the prevailing confusion, a relief of the garrison on Pt 95 was bungled, and it had to be recaptured again in the morning, supported by 135th's guns. By now the Japanese were within three miles of the regiment's gun positions, so 344 and 499 Btys were withdrawn to join 336 Bty at Nee Soon. Next morning the regiment was moved again, changing front to go into action at Sembawang airfield, with 336 Bty and 4th Mtn Bty covering the Mandai Road, 344 covering Thomson Road, and 499 covering Seletar Creek. By now Percival was pulling his troops back to the Singapore City perimeter defences. In the Northern Sector 53rd Bde provided a rearguard at Nee Soon, supported by 366 Bty. As the Japanese advanced to Sembawang airfield they were engaged over open sights by 499 Bty before it withdrew (some rounds fired while the guns were already hooked into the limbers), and three tanks were knocked out by the troop of 273 A/T Bty. However, the order to withdraw did not reach 499 Bty's B Echelon in the wagon lines in a rubber plantation, and the men and vehicles with their FMSV liaison officers were captured in an ambush when they finally pulled out. 366 Battery withdrew from its rearguard after dark but one of its Quad gun tractors broke down, so it was overturned into a monsoon drain and the battery's Bedford 15 cwt wireless truck successfully towed out two limbers and a 25-pounder.[49][50]

On the morning of 13 February 336 Bty was established on the Balestier road, with A Trp in the open on the polo ground, two of B Trp's guns camouflaged in front gardens and two in garages. 344 Battery finally found suitable positions and came into action in the afternoon. Both troops of 499 Bty placed their guns inside palm-thatch barrack huts, which gave them cover from view, but no cover from incoming fire. With signal cable becoming scarce, 336's telephone exchange was responsible for the whole regiment. Both 11th Indian and 18th Divisions were trying to deploy their artillery in the same small area. Batteries of different regiments were mixed up, and firing in different directions in response to calls. A section of 135th Field Rgt firing over open sights narrowly missed the command post of B Trp, 155th (Lanarkshire Yeomanry) Field Rgt.[51][52][53]

The whole city and defence perimeter were now under shellfire and air attack, and it was clear that the defence was nearly ended. Toosey was now ordered to join the evacuation of key personnel and cadres from Singapore, but he refused (quoting the Artillery Training manual) so that he could remain with his men during their impending captivity. Major Daltry was placed in command of 135th Field Rgt's cadre but he was seriously wounded on the dockside and it was left to Battery Sergeant Major Waldock to lead the 12-strong party, which escaped on 15 February in a small boat to Sumatra and then to Ceylon. Toosey was later awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his heroism and leadership during the defence of Singapore.[29][54][55]

On the morning of 14 February Battery Quartermaster Sergeant Cluff of 499 Bty's B Echelon made his way through the regiment's own fire to the forward RHQ. He brought a message from their captors that the prisoners would be executed if the British did not surrender immediately. Cluff was passed up to the RA HQ and his message sent to Malaya Command HQ. On the expiry of the implied 24 hour deadline, the prisoners (11 of 499 Bty and two FMSV liaison officers) were shot and bayoneted. Amazingly two of the gunners survived, one making his way back to British lines, the other looked after by a Chinese family until he rejoined about a week after the surrender.[56]

Firing continued throughout 14 February, with 11th Indian and 18th Divisions holding their ground, but field gun ammunition was running short and the city's water supply breaking down. In the evening the regiment was warned of Japanese tanks attacking, and Sergeant Hughes's gun of B Trp was detached and placed in an anti-tank role facing north on Balestier Road. However, the attack did not materialise, but infantry fighting continued through the night. The following day a ceasefire was arranged; initially the British agreed to hand over all their guns, but orders arrived from ABDA that they were to be destroyed. 336 Battery did this by putting a shell in the breech, another in the barrel, and then pulling the firing lever from a safe distance using Trolleybus wire. They later assured their captors that the damage was due to Japanese shelling.[57][58][59]

135th Field Regiment went into captivity on 16 February.[30] It was officially authorised on 17 February 1942 to use the same '(East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry)' subtitles used by its parent unit, but it had already been destroyed before this could take effect.[1] No attempt was made to reform the regiment in India on the basis of BSM Waldock's cadre.[55]

 
Photograph of Philip Toosey taken in 1942

Bridge on the River Kwai edit

The men were imprisoned in Selarang Barracks at Changi, converted into a Prisoner-of-war camp. In June 1942, 500 men of 135th Field Rgt were sent to Sime Road Camp to work as labourers on a Japanese war memorial, some of the others remaining at Changi during the notorious Selarang Barracks incident. In October a party of 18th Division prisoners, including about 400 of 135th Field Rgt, was sent to Thailand to work on the Wan Po viaduct across the Mae Klong river on the Burma Railway. Toosey was the senior Allied officer in the PoW camp at Tha Maa Kham (known as Tamarkan) that housed the men building the bridge. This was described in a book by Pierre Boulle and later in the Oscar-winning film The Bridge on the River Kwai in which Alec Guinness played the senior British officer. Both the book and film outraged former prisoners because Toosey did not collaborate, unlike the fictional Colonel Nicholson.[29][60]

The men of 135th Field Rgt were progressively split up as the work on the railway was completed in 1943 and parties of PoWs were moved to other labouring jobs in Thailand, Formosa and Japan.[29][60][61]

The Far East prisoners of war were released after the Surrender of Japan in August 1945. During and immediately after the war 135th Field Regiment lost 67 men killed in action or died of wounds, and a further 159 died while prisoners of the Japanese, including those lost at sea in transit to Japan, those killed in Allied bombing of installations close to their camps, and some whose aircraft crashed while being repatriated after the Japanese surrender. Officially 135th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment was disbanded on 1 January 1947, but the regiment regarded the remembrance service held in December 1945 as its final parade.[1][2][62]

Insignia edit

When the Hertfordshire Yeomanry was transferred to the Royal Artillery in 1920 as part of what became 86th Field Rgt, it was obliged to adopt the RA cap badge, but the whole of the 86th retained the Herts Yeomanry's hart badge as a collar badge and on undress caps, officers also wearing it beneath the rank badges on their shoulder straps. Although its titular link to the Yeomanry was not authorised until after its capture, 135th Field Rgt kept up this tradition. When a representative detachment of the regiment was inspected by King George VI before sailing to Singapore, the officers had defied orders to remove all distinguishing badges, and had continued to wear the Hertfordshire Yeomanry badge on their shoulder straps. The King was reported to have said 'Good, I am glad to see that you are still wearing it and I hope you will continue to do so'.[2][63] The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) design for headstones for members of 135th Field Rgt includes both the RA and Hertfordshire Yeomanry badges.[64]

Memorials edit

 
CWGC cemetery at Kachanaburi, Thailand, where many of those who died on the Burma Railway are buried.

A stone tablet commemorating the men of all four Hertfordshire Yeomanry artillery regiments who died during World War II was unveiled on 19 September 1954 in the War Memorial Chapel of St Albans Cathedral.[65][66]

In 1956 Lady de Ramsey created a Lady Chapel at the Church of St Thomas à Becket, Ramsey, as a thanksgiving gift for the safe return of her husband from a Japanese PoW camp.[67]

Fragments from the Burma Railway are included in the Far East Prisoners of War Memorial in St Martin-in-the-Fields, London.[68] A memorial consisting of original rails and sleepers from the Burma Railway was installed at the National Memorial Arboretum at Alrewas, Staffordshire, in 2002.[69] A Far East Prisoners of War Memorial Building was also erected at the Arboretum in 2005.[70]

A memorial to those prisoners who died in the construction of the Burma Railway was erected in Camden High Street, London, in 2012.[71]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Probably US-built examples being received at the time under Lend-Lease.[14]
  2. ^ Possibly a mistake for 4.5-inch howitzers.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Frederick, pp. 491, 493, 522, 531.
  2. ^ a b c Litchfield, pp. 101–4.
  3. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 62–5.
  4. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 65–6, 69, 153–4, Appendix 3.
  5. ^ Joslen, pp. 60–1.
  6. ^ a b Monthly Army List, various dates.
  7. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, Annex A.
  8. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 17–9, 61.
  9. ^ Collier, Chapter V.
  10. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 154–6.
  11. ^ Collier, Chapter VII.
  12. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, pp. 95–6.
  13. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 156–8.
  14. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, p. 103.
  15. ^ Sainsbury, p. 159.
  16. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 159–60.
  17. ^ Frederick, p. 931.
  18. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, pp. 99–100.
  19. ^ Joslen, p. 385.
  20. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 22, 160, 165.
  21. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 161–5.
  22. ^ Collier, Appendix XXX.
  23. ^ Sainsbury, p. 165.
  24. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 165–6.
  25. ^ Anon, History, pp. 94, 99; Appendix VII.
  26. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 166–7.
  27. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 167–70.
  28. ^ Farndale, Far East, p. 42.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Farndale, Far East, Annex D.
  30. ^ a b Joslen, p. 293.
  31. ^ Playfair, p. 123.
  32. ^ Woodburn Kirby, pp. 253, 256.
  33. ^ a b Farndale, Far East, Annex A.
  34. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 170–2.
  35. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 172–4.
  36. ^ Woodburn Kirby, p. 306, Maps 18, 20.
  37. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 175–6.
  38. ^ a b Farndale, Far East, pp. 47–9.
  39. ^ Woodburn Kirby, pp. 320–1.
  40. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 177–80.
  41. ^ Woodburn Kirby, pp. 327–30, 334, 340.
  42. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 179–84.
  43. ^ Woodburn Kirby, pp. 340–2.
  44. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 184–7.
  45. ^ Woodburn Kirby, p. 373, Map 21.
  46. ^ Farndale, Far East, p. 58.
  47. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 187–90.
  48. ^ Woodburn Kirby, pp. 375–6, 383, 388–9, Map 22.
  49. ^ Farndale, pp. 58–60.
  50. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 190–3, 196.
  51. ^ Farndale, Far East, p. 63.
  52. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 193–4.
  53. ^ Woodburn Kirby, p. 410.
  54. ^ Farndale, Far East, p. 65.
  55. ^ a b Sainsbury, pp. 194–6.
  56. ^ Sainsbury, 196–7.
  57. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 197–8.
  58. ^ Farndale, Far East, pp. 63.
  59. ^ Woodburn Kirby, pp. 411–5.
  60. ^ a b Sainsbury, pp. 98–213.
  61. ^ Farndale, Far East, p. 69.
  62. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 214 & 250.
  63. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 34–6, 166.
  64. ^ Sainsbury, pp. 249–50.
  65. ^ Sainsbury, Pt 3, pp. 204–5.
  66. ^ IWM WMR Ref 49184.
  67. ^ Historic England, 'Memorials listed for 75th anniversary of VJ Day'.
  68. ^ IWM WMR Ref 11582.
  69. ^ IWM WMR Ref 61703.
  70. ^ IWM WMR Ref 61414.
  71. ^ IWM WMR Ref 83198.

References edit

  • Anon, History of the 359 (4th West Lancs.) Medium Regiment R.A. (T.A.) 1859–1959, Liverpool: 359 Medium Regiment, 1959.* Basil Collier, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Defence of the United Kingdom, London: HM Stationery Office, 1957/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2004 ISBN 978-1-84574-055-9.
  • Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Years of Defeat: Europe and North Africa, 1939–1941, Woolwich: Royal Artillery Institution, 1988/London: Brasseys, 1996, ISBN 1-85753-080-2.
  • Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Far East Theatre 1939–1946, London: Brasseys, 2002, ISBN 1-85753-302-X.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol I, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-007-3.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol II, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-009-X.
  • Lt-Col H.F. Joslen, Orders of Battle, United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War, 1939–1945, London: HM Stationery Office, 1960/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2003, ISBN 1-843424-74-6.
  • Norman E.H. Litchfield, The Territorial Artillery 1908–1988 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1992, ISBN 0-9508205-2-0.
  • Maj-Gen I.S.O. Playfair, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Mediterranean and Middle East, Vol III: (September 1941 to September 1942) British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb, London: HM Stationery Office, 1960 /Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2004, ISBN 1-845740-67-X
  • Lt-Col J.D. Sainsbury, The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments, Royal Artillery, Part 1: The Field Regiments 1920-1946, Welwyn: Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust/Hart Books, 1999, ISBN 0-948527-05-6.
  • Maj-Gen S. Woodburn Kirby, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The War Against Japan Vol I, The Loss of Singapore, London: HM Stationery Office, 1957/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2004, ISBN 1-845740-60-2.

External sources edit

  • Imperial War Museum, War Memorials Register

135th, east, anglian, hertfordshire, yeomanry, field, regiment, royal, artillery, 135th, field, regiment, royal, artillery, unit, being, formed, britain, part, time, territorial, army, outbreak, world, spun, from, existing, unit, took, over, batteries, from, h. 135th Field Regiment was a Royal Artillery RA unit being formed in Britain s part time Territorial Army TA on the outbreak of World War II Spun off from an existing unit it took over two batteries from Hertfordshire and Northamptonshire and was later granted the double subtitle East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry As part of the 18th East Anglian Infantry Division the regiment remained in the United Kingdom until 1941 when it was sent to India The division was deployed to Fortress Singapore where it was captured by the Japanese Some of the prisoners were murdered in cold blood many of the others died working on the Burma Railway The regiment was never reformed 135th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment RARoyal Artillery cap badgeActive7 September 1939 15 February 1942Country United KingdomBranchTerritorial ArmyRoleField artillerySize3 BatteriesPart of18th Infantry DivisionGarrison HQHitchinEngagementsLiverpool BlitzMalayan campaignFall of SingaporeCommandersNotablecommandersLieutenant Colonel Philip TooseyInsigniaHertfordshire Yeomanry collar badge Contents 1 Mobilisation 2 Service 2 1 Home defence 2 2 Mobile training 2 3 At sea 2 4 Malayan campaign 2 5 Defence of Singapore 2 6 Bridge on the River Kwai 3 Insignia 4 Memorials 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 External sourcesMobilisation editMain article Hertfordshire Yeomanry With the rapid expansion of the TA after the Munich Crisis existing units were ordered to form duplicates of themselves In practice 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment contributed to three new RA regiments 135th Field Rgt 191st Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry Field Rgt and 79th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Heavy Anti Aircraft Rgt In the case of the 135th Field Rgt this was done by combining one of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry batteries with one from another East Anglian field regiment that was being converted to the anti aircraft AA role 1 2 3 Regimental Headquarters RHQ at Yeomanry House Hertford then at 91 Bancroft Hitchin from 20 September 1939 336 Northampton Field Battery at Lincoln Road Peterborough from 84th East Anglian Field Rgt 344 Hitchin Field Battery at Bearton Camp Hitchin from 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field RgtAdvance parties of the TA were mobilised on 24 August 1939 and general mobilisation was ordered on 1 September two days before the outbreak of war 135th Field Regiment assumed full independence from its parent unit on 7 September The commanding officer CO was Brevet Colonel J Hudson MC TD a retired TA officer who had previously command 88th 2nd West Lancashire Field Brigade RA from 1930 to 1936 The new regiment was assigned to 18th Infantry Division the duplicate of 54th East Anglian Division in which 86th Field Rgt served 18th Divisional HQ took over responsibility on 30 September 4 5 6 At this time the establishment of an RA field regiment was two batteries each of three four gun Troops The intention was to equip field regiments with 24 of the new 25 pounder gun howitzers but prior to the outbreak of war the four batteries of 86th Field Rgt had been equipped with just 16 4 5 inch howitzers of World War I pattern 7 8 Service editHome defence edit There now followed the period known as the Phoney War 18th Division moved to Norfolk in November 1939 as a home defence division under the Julius Caesar plan though it was still badly equipped RHQ and 336 Bty of 135th Field Rgt were billeted at Kimberley Hall 344 Bty at Wymondham with the regiment s four 4 5 inch howitzers at No 5 AA Practice Camp on the coast at Weybourne 336 Battery moved from the outbuildings of Kimberley Hall to nearby Hingham Hall when the weather turned bad During March 1940 parties were temporarily sent to man Lewis guns for AA defence on coastal shipping and 20 volunteers left the regiment to join No 8 Commando being formed from units of 18th Division 9 10 nbsp An 18 pounder Mk IIPA gun this example is being inspected by French officers in April 1940 When the Battle of France began on 10 May 18th Division was redeployed for immediate coast defence 135th Field Rgt and 53rd Infantry Brigade took over the Norfolk coastline between Wells next the Sea and Sheringham 336 Battery manned the four 4 5 inch howitzers at Weybourne later at Cley next the Sea while F Trp of 344 Battery had two 18 pounder Mk II PA guns on pneumatic wheels at Catton These six guns comprised half of 18th Divisional Artillery s firepower Those personnel of the regiment not required to man the guns became part of a temporary 18th Divisional Artillery Rifle Regiment on anti paratroop duties while the signallers went to assist the training of 57th Newfoundland Heavy Regiment After the British Expeditionary Force was evacuated from Dunkirk the regiment exchanged three officers and 57 other ranks ORs with 97th Kent Yeomanry Field Rgt which had experience of the fighting in France 11 12 13 On 24 August 1940 the regiment received additional guns eight French World War I 75 mm guns a carried Portee on 30 cwt Fordson trucks These were assigned to A and B Trps of 336 Bty while C Trp additionally manned some fixed 4 inch naval guns in beach defences Further 75 mm guns arrived later so that by mid September the regiment had its full allocation of guns albeit extemporised 15 336 Bty A Trp at Lowes Farm Holt 4 x 75mm B Trp at Aylmerton 4 x 75mm C Trp 2 x 18 pdrs 2 x 4 inch 344 Bty D Trp 4 x 18 pdrs b E Trp 4 x 75mm F Trp 4 x 75mm During September the gunners carried out practice shoots against targets at sea and on the beaches They also received some training on borrowed 18 25 pounders after which the two batteries went in succession to West Down on Salisbury Plain to fire the guns there Meanwhile the coastal defences had been reinforced by a number of independent Defence Batteries The first of these was 901 Defence Bty for which 135th Field Rgt provided a cadre of 64 recently joined ORs The battery was commanded by Maj J R O B Warde the senior officer transferred from 97th Field Rgt 901 Independent Defence Bty served on the Norfolk Coast from 1 September 1940 until its disbandment on 3 March 1941 16 17 In November 1940 with winter approaching the regiment moved back into billets RHQ at Holt 336 Bty at West Runton 344 Bty at Sheringham It was supporting 222nd Independent Infantry Brigade Home a newly formed coast defence formation attached to 18th Division The regiment now began to receive its allocation of motor transport including Quad 4 x 4 gun tractors in preparation for the eventual issue of 25 pdr guns 336 Bty had 18 Guy Quad Ants while 344 Bty had 18 Morris C8s The regiment also received No 11 wireless sets It was only now that the RA was producing enough trained battery staffs to begin the process of changing regiments from a two battery to a three battery organisation Three 8 gun batteries were easier to handle and it meant that each infantry battalion in a brigade could be closely associated with its own battery On 27 November C Trp of 336 Bty and F Trp of 344 Bty were detached to become E and F Trps of a new battery initially designated as C Bty consequently D and E Trps of 344 Bty were redesignated C and D Inevitably C Bty now had a mixture of different equipment and full implementation of the new organisation appears to have been delayed for some months 1 18 19 20 Mobile training edit nbsp 25 pounder gun and Morris C8 tractor probably of 18th Division on exercise in Scotland March 1941 At the beginning of 1941 18th Division moved from coastal defence duties to GHQ Reserve and began mobile training for overseas service On 1 January 135th Rgt moved to billets between Lockerbie and Annan in Dumfriesshire Scotland At the same time parties were sent to the ordnance depot at Donnington in Shropshire to collect the regiment s allocation of 24 Mk II 25 pdrs and limbers The division trained in the Scottish Borders until the beginning of April when it moved to Cheshire with 135th Field Rgt billeted in Macclesfield The regiment spent a few days at the end of April at No 4 Field Practice Camp at Trawsfynydd in North Wales where it fired its 25 pdrs for the first time On 5 May the regiment sent a large party to assist in air raid duties at Liverpool which had suffered four successive nights of heavy bombing Two nights later the city suffered one of the worst raids of the Liverpool Blitz and the regiment suffered its first casualties by enemy action one killed and two seriously injured 21 22 nbsp 18th Division s insignia depicting a cartographic symbol for a windmill appropriate to East Anglia First issued in the summer of 1941 23 The Blitz ended on 16 May and the firewatching party returned to billets 336 Battery moved to a mill building at Congleton and later to Knowsley Park Battle training in North Wales and the Welsh Borders continued during the summer The provisional C Bty was formally established as 499 Bty on 1 June and its acting commander Captain O H Daltry promoted to major Lord de Ramsey became the battery captain As the regiment approached readiness Maj Philip Toosey was promoted from second in command of 59th 4th West Lancashire Medium Regiment to lieutenant colonel to succeed LCol Hudson in command of 135th Field Regiment on 1 September 1941 Warning orders to proceed overseas arrived on 22 September 6 24 25 At sea edit 18th Division was earmarked as a reinforcement for Middle East Forces The men were issued with desert uniforms and sun helmets The regiment handed in its Guy and Morris Quads and received new Canadian built Chevrolet CGT Quad gun tractors It loaded them together with the guns and vehicles all painted desert sand colour aboard ship at Liverpool in mid October The personnel of the regiment embarked on the SS Sobieski at Gourock on the Firth of Clyde and sailed on 31 October as part of convoy CT5 26 The Sobieski took the regiment to Halifax Nova Scotia where 135th Field Rgt and 53rd Bde transshipped to the USS Mount Vernon and CT5 sailed on via Port of Spain to Cape Town Training continued during the voyage A Troop manned the Bofors 40 mm guns that had been shipped for AA defence and practised against balloons while at sea While the convoy was at sea news of the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor and Malaya was received From Cape Town the convoy s destination was changed from the Middle East to India Then on 23 December the Mount Vernon was detached and sent alone via Mombasa to join a convoy proceeding direct to Malaya 27 28 29 30 31 32 Malayan campaign edit nbsp 25 pounder Mk II gun preserved at the Imperial War Museum The Mount Vernon docked at Singapore on 13 January 1942 and 135th Field Rgt landed during a Japanese air raid Its guns and equipment were in other ships of CT5 on their way to Bombay so it had to be re equipped on arrival with whatever guns were available from the Singapore Ordnance Depot 336 Battery being issued with eight 4 5 inch howitzers and 344 Bty with eight 25 pdrs all towed by Chevrolet 4 x 4 11 2 ton trucks 499 Bty remained without guns A number of officers of the Federated Malay States Volunteers FMSV were attached to the regiment to act as interpreters and liaison officers equipped with civilian vehicles as reconnaissance and staff cars Together with 53rd Bde the regiment was attached to 11th Indian Division 29 33 34 53rd Brigade was immediately rushed across the Straits of Johore onto the Malay Peninsula to secure the communications of the British including Indian and Australian forces retreating from northern Johore against further Japanese landings that were reported on the coast A reconnaissance recce party from 135th Field Rgt consisting of Lt Col Toosey and the three battery commanders accompanied the brigade while the guns were being serviced On the evening of 18 January C Trp took up positions covering the beach near Pontian Kechil with a 30 strong detachment from 499 Bty for local defence Next day BHQ and D Trp of 344 Bty under Maj H M Peacock deployed in a hide outside Pontian Kechil supporting 28th Indian Bde on the coast road The battery established an observation post OP on Pulau Pisang island guarded by a platoon from 2nd Battalion 2nd Gurkha Rifles the OP was out of wireless range but Heliograph signalling to the beach position worked well Meanwhile on On 20 January 336 Bty under Maj C F W Banham drove out to the Mount Austin Estate north of Johor Bahru on the road to Kota Tinggi to recce likely anti tank positions 499 Battery under Maj Daltry was finally issued with a collection of requisitioned vehicles to tow its guns 8 x 4 5 inch howitzers and join the rest of the regiment 35 36 The British commander Lieutenant General Arthur Percival intended to hold the enemy advance on the line of the Batu Pahat Ayer Hitam Kluang Mersing with 11th Indian Division holding the Batu Pahat sector On the night of 23 24 January 336 Bty moved up alongside 344 Bty at its hide at Skudai while 499 Bty brought its guns up exchanged E Trp s 4 5s for D Trp s longer range 25 pdrs and moved on to Batu Pahat to support 15th Indian Bde However the Japanese had already cut the Batu Pahat Ayer Hitam road and were threatening the coast road to Batu Pahat from Senggarang 53rd Brigade moved to garrison this road but 6th Bn Norfolk Regiment moving up from Rengit to Senggarang with A Trp was ambushed one of the 4 5 inch howitzers being lost though Capt T P Halford Thompson got the other into action A Company of 6th Norfolks with another of A Trp s guns attempted to clear the road but could only do so temporarily 37 38 39 It was now clear that the British force would have to retire from Johore towards Singapore Island On the night of 25 26 January 15th Indian Bde began to withdraw down the coast road towards Senggarang and Benut picking up the detachments of 53rd Bde as it went But the road was now blocked by Japanese forces in several places 11th Indian Division now organised a mixed column under Maj Banham Bancol to re open the road from Rengit to Senggarang The two sections of B Trp were ordered to advance by leap frog bounds so that they could provide continuous fire support for the scratch force of Norfolks and FMSV armoured cars The armoured cars advanced under fire from both sides of the road until a road bock was encountered and the length of the road came under fire the infantry being cut down one howitzer lost and the other saved together with many wounded by Bombardier Thompson who turned the gun tractor round in the narrow road Banham in an Indian Carrier did get through to Senggarang where he reported the road impassable for wheeled vehicles The commander of 15th Indian Bde decided to retire to Benut through the mangrove swamps along the shoreline so A Trp s remaining howitzer was put out of action by dropping the breech block into the river Banham Halford Thompson and the men of 336 Bty reached Benut late on 27 January Meanwhile Rengit was under heavy attack and was overrun during the night of 26 27 January guns and vehicles were disabled and the survivors made their way to Benut where they were evacuated by Royal Navy gunboats Lieutenant Lang of 336 Bty took a party to the mouth of the Benut River and helped boatloads of evacuees 38 40 41 53rd Brigade HQ at Benut was now effectively the front line defended by 3rd Bn 16th Punjab Regiment and the two remaining howitzers of B Trp of 336 Bty under Capt J M Neal The brigade was given permission to withdraw during the night of 27 28 January to Pontian Kechil which was still held by 28th Indian Bde and 344 Bty The Benut river bridge and 336 Bty s ammunition dump were blown up and 336 Bty withdrew its two guns On the night of 30 31 January all the troops in Johore withdrew across the causeway onto Singapore Island Lt Col Toosey withdrawing his guns by leap frog bounds to ensure continuous fire support 29 42 43 Defence of Singapore edit nbsp Map of the British deployment for the defence of Singapore Island At Singapore 135th Field Rgt was reunited with its own 25 pounder guns just arrived with the rest of 18th Division 336 Battery was the last to refit due to the casualties it had suffered and moved into positions near Nee Song on 4 February The regiment formed part of the Northern Area defences between the Naval Base and the causeway 499 Battery established an OP in a water tower on the edge of the naval base whole 344 Bty s was in a partially completed building overlooking the causeway other forward observation officers FOOs were established along the water s edge 4th Hazara Mountain Battery Indian Artillery equipped with two 6 inch howitzers and a section of 273 Anti Tank Bty armed with 2 pounder guns were attached to 135th Field Rgt on 3 February On 5 February the Japanese guns moved into position across the straits and the regiment engaged in counter battery CB fire missions against them Roving sections were used so that the permanent artillery positions were nor revealed to the Japanese But ammunition was restricted to an average of 20 rounds per gun to conserve stock for a long siege and this was halved on 7 February The gun areas wagon lines and OPs came under Japanese fire and the telephone cables between guns and OPs were frequently cut but the regiment with its experience of coast defence deployments in the UK had duplicated and even quadruplicated some of its links A joint 135th Field Rgt 4th Mtn Bty OP under an overhanging rock at Bukit Mandai received 25 direct hits but the FOOs Capt G Keane 135th Feld Rgt and Jemadar Jogindar Singh 4th Mtn Bty remained at their posts bringing down fire on the enemy s gun flashes and temporarily silencing the guns firing on the naval base 33 44 45 On the evening of 8 February the Japanese began their landings The OPs at Bukit Mandai and the water tower reported landing craft and 135th Field Rgt and 4th Mtn Bty dispersed them but the main landings during the night were on the western side of the island From there the Japanese advanced towards the causeway and the exposed west flank of 11th Indian Division On 10 February 8th Indian Bde was ordered to put in a counter attack on Point 95 overlooking the causeway with fire support from 135th Field Rgt At 17 00 after 10 minutes of intense artillery fire 1500 rounds the infantry were able to walk up the hill entirely unopposed but they were unable to reach their further objective 135th Field Rgt fired 7000 rounds that day and received the personal congratulations from the Commander in Chef of ABDA Sir Archibald Wavell who was visiting the island 29 46 47 48 During the night of 10 11 February the regiment carried out harassing fire HF tasks In the prevailing confusion a relief of the garrison on Pt 95 was bungled and it had to be recaptured again in the morning supported by 135th s guns By now the Japanese were within three miles of the regiment s gun positions so 344 and 499 Btys were withdrawn to join 336 Bty at Nee Soon Next morning the regiment was moved again changing front to go into action at Sembawang airfield with 336 Bty and 4th Mtn Bty covering the Mandai Road 344 covering Thomson Road and 499 covering Seletar Creek By now Percival was pulling his troops back to the Singapore City perimeter defences In the Northern Sector 53rd Bde provided a rearguard at Nee Soon supported by 366 Bty As the Japanese advanced to Sembawang airfield they were engaged over open sights by 499 Bty before it withdrew some rounds fired while the guns were already hooked into the limbers and three tanks were knocked out by the troop of 273 A T Bty However the order to withdraw did not reach 499 Bty s B Echelon in the wagon lines in a rubber plantation and the men and vehicles with their FMSV liaison officers were captured in an ambush when they finally pulled out 366 Battery withdrew from its rearguard after dark but one of its Quad gun tractors broke down so it was overturned into a monsoon drain and the battery s Bedford 15 cwt wireless truck successfully towed out two limbers and a 25 pounder 49 50 On the morning of 13 February 336 Bty was established on the Balestier road with A Trp in the open on the polo ground two of B Trp s guns camouflaged in front gardens and two in garages 344 Battery finally found suitable positions and came into action in the afternoon Both troops of 499 Bty placed their guns inside palm thatch barrack huts which gave them cover from view but no cover from incoming fire With signal cable becoming scarce 336 s telephone exchange was responsible for the whole regiment Both 11th Indian and 18th Divisions were trying to deploy their artillery in the same small area Batteries of different regiments were mixed up and firing in different directions in response to calls A section of 135th Field Rgt firing over open sights narrowly missed the command post of B Trp 155th Lanarkshire Yeomanry Field Rgt 51 52 53 The whole city and defence perimeter were now under shellfire and air attack and it was clear that the defence was nearly ended Toosey was now ordered to join the evacuation of key personnel and cadres from Singapore but he refused quoting the Artillery Training manual so that he could remain with his men during their impending captivity Major Daltry was placed in command of 135th Field Rgt s cadre but he was seriously wounded on the dockside and it was left to Battery Sergeant Major Waldock to lead the 12 strong party which escaped on 15 February in a small boat to Sumatra and then to Ceylon Toosey was later awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his heroism and leadership during the defence of Singapore 29 54 55 On the morning of 14 February Battery Quartermaster Sergeant Cluff of 499 Bty s B Echelon made his way through the regiment s own fire to the forward RHQ He brought a message from their captors that the prisoners would be executed if the British did not surrender immediately Cluff was passed up to the RA HQ and his message sent to Malaya Command HQ On the expiry of the implied 24 hour deadline the prisoners 11 of 499 Bty and two FMSV liaison officers were shot and bayoneted Amazingly two of the gunners survived one making his way back to British lines the other looked after by a Chinese family until he rejoined about a week after the surrender 56 Firing continued throughout 14 February with 11th Indian and 18th Divisions holding their ground but field gun ammunition was running short and the city s water supply breaking down In the evening the regiment was warned of Japanese tanks attacking and Sergeant Hughes s gun of B Trp was detached and placed in an anti tank role facing north on Balestier Road However the attack did not materialise but infantry fighting continued through the night The following day a ceasefire was arranged initially the British agreed to hand over all their guns but orders arrived from ABDA that they were to be destroyed 336 Battery did this by putting a shell in the breech another in the barrel and then pulling the firing lever from a safe distance using Trolleybus wire They later assured their captors that the damage was due to Japanese shelling 57 58 59 135th Field Regiment went into captivity on 16 February 30 It was officially authorised on 17 February 1942 to use the same East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry subtitles used by its parent unit but it had already been destroyed before this could take effect 1 No attempt was made to reform the regiment in India on the basis of BSM Waldock s cadre 55 nbsp Photograph of Philip Toosey taken in 1942Bridge on the River Kwai edit The men were imprisoned in Selarang Barracks at Changi converted into a Prisoner of war camp In June 1942 500 men of 135th Field Rgt were sent to Sime Road Camp to work as labourers on a Japanese war memorial some of the others remaining at Changi during the notorious Selarang Barracks incident In October a party of 18th Division prisoners including about 400 of 135th Field Rgt was sent to Thailand to work on the Wan Po viaduct across the Mae Klong river on the Burma Railway Toosey was the senior Allied officer in the PoW camp at Tha Maa Kham known as Tamarkan that housed the men building the bridge This was described in a book by Pierre Boulle and later in the Oscar winning film The Bridge on the River Kwai in which Alec Guinness played the senior British officer Both the book and film outraged former prisoners because Toosey did not collaborate unlike the fictional Colonel Nicholson 29 60 The men of 135th Field Rgt were progressively split up as the work on the railway was completed in 1943 and parties of PoWs were moved to other labouring jobs in Thailand Formosa and Japan 29 60 61 The Far East prisoners of war were released after the Surrender of Japan in August 1945 During and immediately after the war 135th Field Regiment lost 67 men killed in action or died of wounds and a further 159 died while prisoners of the Japanese including those lost at sea in transit to Japan those killed in Allied bombing of installations close to their camps and some whose aircraft crashed while being repatriated after the Japanese surrender Officially 135th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment was disbanded on 1 January 1947 but the regiment regarded the remembrance service held in December 1945 as its final parade 1 2 62 Insignia editWhen the Hertfordshire Yeomanry was transferred to the Royal Artillery in 1920 as part of what became 86th Field Rgt it was obliged to adopt the RA cap badge but the whole of the 86th retained the Herts Yeomanry s hart badge as a collar badge and on undress caps officers also wearing it beneath the rank badges on their shoulder straps Although its titular link to the Yeomanry was not authorised until after its capture 135th Field Rgt kept up this tradition When a representative detachment of the regiment was inspected by King George VI before sailing to Singapore the officers had defied orders to remove all distinguishing badges and had continued to wear the Hertfordshire Yeomanry badge on their shoulder straps The King was reported to have said Good I am glad to see that you are still wearing it and I hope you will continue to do so 2 63 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission CWGC design for headstones for members of 135th Field Rgt includes both the RA and Hertfordshire Yeomanry badges 64 Memorials edit nbsp CWGC cemetery at Kachanaburi Thailand where many of those who died on the Burma Railway are buried A stone tablet commemorating the men of all four Hertfordshire Yeomanry artillery regiments who died during World War II was unveiled on 19 September 1954 in the War Memorial Chapel of St Albans Cathedral 65 66 In 1956 Lady de Ramsey created a Lady Chapel at the Church of St Thomas a Becket Ramsey as a thanksgiving gift for the safe return of her husband from a Japanese PoW camp 67 Fragments from the Burma Railway are included in the Far East Prisoners of War Memorial in St Martin in the Fields London 68 A memorial consisting of original rails and sleepers from the Burma Railway was installed at the National Memorial Arboretum at Alrewas Staffordshire in 2002 69 A Far East Prisoners of War Memorial Building was also erected at the Arboretum in 2005 70 A memorial to those prisoners who died in the construction of the Burma Railway was erected in Camden High Street London in 2012 71 See also editHertfordshire Yeomanry 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery Northamptonshire Battery Royal Field ArtilleryFootnotes edit Probably US built examples being received at the time under Lend Lease 14 Possibly a mistake for 4 5 inch howitzers Notes edit a b c d Frederick pp 491 493 522 531 a b c Litchfield pp 101 4 Sainsbury pp 62 5 Sainsbury pp 65 6 69 153 4 Appendix 3 Joslen pp 60 1 a b Monthly Army List various dates Farndale Years of Defeat Annex A Sainsbury pp 17 9 61 Collier Chapter V Sainsbury pp 154 6 Collier Chapter VII Farndale Years of Defeat pp 95 6 Sainsbury pp 156 8 Farndale Years of Defeat p 103 Sainsbury p 159 Sainsbury pp 159 60 Frederick p 931 Farndale Years of Defeat pp 99 100 Joslen p 385 Sainsbury pp 22 160 165 Sainsbury pp 161 5 Collier Appendix XXX Sainsbury p 165 Sainsbury pp 165 6 Anon History pp 94 99 Appendix VII Sainsbury pp 166 7 Sainsbury pp 167 70 Farndale Far East p 42 a b c d e f g Farndale Far East Annex D a b Joslen p 293 Playfair p 123 Woodburn Kirby pp 253 256 a b Farndale Far East Annex A Sainsbury pp 170 2 Sainsbury pp 172 4 Woodburn Kirby p 306 Maps 18 20 Sainsbury pp 175 6 a b Farndale Far East pp 47 9 Woodburn Kirby pp 320 1 Sainsbury pp 177 80 Woodburn Kirby pp 327 30 334 340 Sainsbury pp 179 84 Woodburn Kirby pp 340 2 Sainsbury pp 184 7 Woodburn Kirby p 373 Map 21 Farndale Far East p 58 Sainsbury pp 187 90 Woodburn Kirby pp 375 6 383 388 9 Map 22 Farndale pp 58 60 Sainsbury pp 190 3 196 Farndale Far East p 63 Sainsbury pp 193 4 Woodburn Kirby p 410 Farndale Far East p 65 a b Sainsbury pp 194 6 Sainsbury 196 7 Sainsbury pp 197 8 Farndale Far East pp 63 Woodburn Kirby pp 411 5 a b Sainsbury pp 98 213 Farndale Far East p 69 Sainsbury pp 214 amp 250 Sainsbury pp 34 6 166 Sainsbury pp 249 50 Sainsbury Pt 3 pp 204 5 IWM WMR Ref 49184 Historic England Memorials listed for 75th anniversary of VJ Day IWM WMR Ref 11582 IWM WMR Ref 61703 IWM WMR Ref 61414 IWM WMR Ref 83198 References editAnon History of the 359 4th West Lancs Medium Regiment R A T A 1859 1959 Liverpool 359 Medium Regiment 1959 Basil Collier History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Defence of the United Kingdom London HM Stationery Office 1957 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 978 1 84574 055 9 Gen Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery The Years of Defeat Europe and North Africa 1939 1941 Woolwich Royal Artillery Institution 1988 London Brasseys 1996 ISBN 1 85753 080 2 Gen Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery The Far East Theatre 1939 1946 London Brasseys 2002 ISBN 1 85753 302 X J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol I Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 007 3 J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol II Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 009 X Lt Col H F Joslen Orders of Battle United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War 1939 1945 London HM Stationery Office 1960 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2003 ISBN 1 843424 74 6 Norman E H Litchfield The Territorial Artillery 1908 1988 Their Lineage Uniforms and Badges Nottingham Sherwood Press 1992 ISBN 0 9508205 2 0 Maj Gen I S O Playfair History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol III September 1941 to September 1942 British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb London HM Stationery Office 1960 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 67 X Lt Col J D Sainsbury The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments Royal Artillery Part 1 The Field Regiments 1920 1946 Welwyn Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust Hart Books 1999 ISBN 0 948527 05 6 Maj Gen S Woodburn Kirby History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The War Against Japan Vol I The Loss of Singapore London HM Stationery Office 1957 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 1 845740 60 2 External sources edit Imperial War Museum War Memorials Register Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 135th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery amp oldid 1175871505, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.