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1st Wiltshire Battery, Royal Field Artillery

The 1st Wiltshire Battery, Royal Field Artillery, and its successors were part-time Territorial Force units of the British Army from 1908 to 1950. It carried out garrison duties in India during World War I and saw active service in the Third Afghan War. It served in various units in the interwar years, finally becoming a full regiment (as 112th (Wessex) Field Regiment) in time for World War II. It saw action with 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division in the campaign in North West Europe, including Operations Epsom, Jupiter and Bluecoat in Normandy, the crossing of the Seine, the battle for Arnhem (Operation Market Garden) in the Low Countries, and then Operations Clipper, Blackcock, Veritable and Plunder across Germany. Its short-lived postwar successor unit had little or no Wiltshire connection.

1st Wiltshire Battery, RFA
III Wessex Brigade, RFA
112th (Wessex) Field Regiment, RA
Royal Artillery cap badge
Active7 July 1908–30 August 1950
Country United Kingdom
Branch Territorial Army
RoleField artillery
SizeBattery/Regiment
Part of43rd (Wessex) Division
Garrison/HQSwindon
EngagementsThird Afghan War
Operation Epsom
Operation Jupiter
Operation Bluecoat
Operation Market Garden
Operation Clipper
Operation Blackcock
Operation Veritable
Operation Plunder

Territorial Force edit

When the Territorial Force was created in 1908 under the Haldane Reforms, it included the Wessex Division covering the south-western counties of England. Most of its components came from the former Volunteer Force, but a number of new units had to be created to complete the division. One of these was the 1st Wiltshire Battery of the Royal Field Artillery, recruited from the mainly rural county of Wiltshire that had not previously had any artillery volunteers. The battery was raised on 7 July 1908 based at the railway town of Swindon and together with the 6th Hampshire and 1st Dorsetshire Batteries[a] constituted III (or 3rd) Wessex Brigade, RFA.[b] The brigade headquarters (HQ) was also based at Swindon, taking over The Armoury at 62 Prospect Place previously used by two Volunteer companies of the Wiltshire Regiment.[4][5][6][7][8]

 
15-pounder gun, equipment of the TF's field batteries.

III Wessex Brigade, RFA

  • Brigade HQ at The Armoury, Swindon
  • 6th Hampshire Bty at Victoria Drill Hall, Lansdowne Road, Bournemouth[9]
  • Dorsetshire Bty at Barrack Street, St Michael's Lane, Bridport[10]
  • Wiltshire Bty at The Armoury, Swindon
  • 3rd Wessex Ammunition Column at Malmesbury, Wiltshire

The Commanding Officer (CO) of III Wessex Bde was Lieutenant-Colonel E.H. Bedford-Pim, a retired major in the Regular Army. The Officer Commanding (OC) of 1st Wiltshire Bty was Major the Earl of Suffolk, a former captain in the 4th Battalion (Royal North Gloucestershire Militia), Gloucestershire Regiment.[11][12]

Before World War I TF field batteries were each armed with four obsolescent 15-pounder guns.[6][8]

World War I edit

Mobilisation edit

On 29 July 1914 the Wessex Division was on Salisbury Plain carrying out its annual training camp when 'precautionary orders' were received, and next day the division took up emergency war stations in Somerset, Devon and Cornwall. The order to mobilise arrived on the evening of 4 August. Between 10 and 13 August the division concentrated on Salisbury Plain and began war training.[6][13]

On 24 September, at the special request of the Secretary of State for War, Earl Kitchener of Khartoum the Wessex Division accepted liability for service in British India to relieve the Regular Army units there for service on the Western Front. The division's infantry battalions and artillery brigades (without their brigade ammunition columns) embarked at Southampton on 8 October and were convoyed to Bombay, disembarking on 9 November. Each battery went ashore with 5 officers and 140 other ranks. The battalions and batteries were immediately distributed to garrisons across India, and the Wessex Division never saw service as a whole, though it was formally numbered the 43rd (1st Wessex) Division in 1915.[6][13][14]

All those Territorials who had not volunteered for overseas service, together with the recruits who were flooding in, formed reserve or 2nd Line units, the titles of which were the same as the original, but distinguished by a '2/' prefix. The 2/III Wessex Brigade formed immediately after the 1st Line sailed for India. Recruitment and training for the 2nd Wessex Division proceeded so quickly that on 25 November it was decided to send that to India as well, and most units embarked on 12 December 1914, becoming the 45th (2nd Wessex) Division in 1915. The remaining Home Service men remained with 3rd Line training units.[4][14][15][16][17]

 
18-pounder preserved at the Imperial War Museum.

1/III Wessex Brigade edit

On arrival in India the batteries of 43rd Divisional Artillery were sent to separate stations (those of 1/III Bde apparently to Ambala, Bareilly and Delhi). Here they continued their training, and by 1915 were providing reinforcement drafts to the Mesopotamian Front. It was not until 1916 that the units received any reinforcements from the UK to replace these drafts, and these replacements then had to be trained. In 1916 the old 15-pounder guns were replaced with modern 18-pounders and the TF brigades were given numbers – 1/III Wessex Brigade became CCXVII (or 217) Brigade RFA – while the batteries were designated A, B and C.[4][6][8][13][18]

The three batteries were redesignated again in 1917, becoming 1091 (1/6th Hampshire), 1092 (1/1st Dorsetshire) and 1093 (1/1st Wiltshire). 1092 Battery was then disbanded, providing a two-gun section to each of the other batteries to bring them up to six guns. CCXVII Bde was attached to 16th Indian Division from April 1917, when 1091 and 1093 Btys were at Lahore. In June 1917 the brigade was joined by 79 (Howitzer) Bty transferred from VI (Howitzer) Bde, a Regular unit that had remained in India and was also attached to 16th Indian Division, giving the following organisation:[6][8][14][18][19]

  • 1091 Bty (1/6th Hampshire + half 1/1st Dorsetshire)
  • 1093 Bty (1/1st Wiltshire + half 1/1st Dorsetshire)
  • 79 (Howitzer) Bty

2/III Wessex Brigade edit

The 45th Division also remained in garrison in India, supplying drafts to the First Line and other theatres throughout the war until its units had virtually disappeared. The batteries of 45th Divisional Artillery were eventually re-equipped with 18-pdrs during 1916 and were numbered, 2/III Wessex Bde becoming CCXXVII (227) Brigade, RFA and the batteries A, B and C. The batteries were numbered in 1917 as 1102, 1103 and 1104, and then 1102 was broken up to bring the others up to six guns, In April 1917 1104 Bty left and two others arrived giving the following organisation for the brigade:[4][14][18][15][16][17][19]

  • 1098 Bty (2/2nd Hampshire) – from 2/I Wessex Bde
  • 1103 Bty (2/1st Dorsetshire + half 2/6th Hampshire)
  • 1105 (H) Bty (2/1st Devonshire) – from 2/IV Wessex (H) Bde; stationed at Aden until March 1919

1104 Bty (2/1st Wiltshire + half 2/6th Hampshire) at Kamptee transferred from 45th Division to CCXVI Bde (the former 1/II Wessex), which had joined 5th (Mhow) Division. In December 1917 the battery moved to Delhi and joined CCXVIII Bde (the former 1/IV Wessex) in 16th Indian Division.[6][15][19][20]

Other fronts edit

Officers and men from both 43rd and 45th Divisions were continually being posted all over India to fill various posts. In addition they provided reinforcement drafts, mainly to Mesopotamia.[6][15] The Earl of Suffolk, OC 1/1st Wiltshire Bty, took command of a battery in Mesopotamia in 1916 and was killed in action on 21 April 1917.[12][21]

The III Wessex also supplied drafts to the Western Front. One of these was Sergeant William Gosling, a Swindon man, who was attached to V/51 Heavy Trench Mortar Battery in 51st (Highland) Division, when he won the Victoria Cross on 5 April 1915 during the bombardment for the Battle of Arras.[22]

North West Frontier and Afghanistan edit

16th Indian Division was formed in December 1916 as a reserve for the North West Frontier. CCXVII and CCXVIII brigades were both assigned to it by 1918 and were still with it in 1919 after World War I had ended.[19] Field artillery was of relatively little use on the Frontier because of its flat trajectory and the need for large teams of horses to move the guns, with consequent forage problems. Their mobility was constrained by the rough terrain.[23] Nevertheless, 1091 (1/6th Hampshire), 1093 (1/1st Wiltshire) and 1104 (2/1st Wiltshire) Btys were all deployed in the Third Afghan War.[6][24] When war broke out on 6 May 1919, a lack of transport initially prevented 16 Division from carrying out its task and deploying forward from its base at Lahore to allow 1st (Peshawar) Division to advance on Jalalabad. Eventually a brigade group was sent up to Peshawar by train on 20 May. However, an Afghan incursion into the Kurram Valley on 27 May halted the advance on Jalalabad and 16th Division was diverted to Kohat, beginning to arrive on 30 May. The Afghan advance threatened Thall and a brigade group was sent out as a relief force. The Amir of Afghanistan suspended operations on 2 June. None of the TF artillery batteries were directly involved with these operations.[25] The remaining TF units in India were progressively demobilised and the last unit cadres returned home before the end of 1919.[6][15]

Interwar edit

When the TF was reconstituted on 7 February 1920, the Wiltshire part of III Wessex Bde reformed as a battery of 2nd Wessex Brigade along with three Hampshire batteries. The following year the TF was reorganised as the Territorial Army (TA) and the units were renumbered:[4][11][26][27][28]55th (Wessex) Field Brigade

  • Brigade HQ at the Drill Hall, Ryde, Isle of Wight
  • 217, 218, 219 (Hampshire) Btys
  • 220 (Wiltshire) Bty at Swindon

220 (Wiltshire) Bty was commanded by the Marquess of Ailesbury, DSO, TD.[11] The RFA was subsumed into the Royal Artillery in 1924 and its units were redesignated 'Field Brigades' and 'Field Batteries'.[11][27][28]

During 1927 the brigade was reorganised: two of the Hampshire batteries left to join 95th (Hampshire Yeomanry) Field Bde and were replaced by two batteries formed in 1920 from the West Somerset Yeomanry, which had been serving in 94th (Dorset and Somerset Yeomanry) Field Bde. On 23 August 1927, 217 Bty was reformed at Swindon as a howitzer battery:[11][26][27][29][30]

  • Brigade HQ & 373 (West Somerset Yeomanry) Field Bty at Taunton
  • 217 (Wiltshire) Field Bty (H) at Swindon
  • 220 (Wiltshire) Field Bty at Swindon
  • 374 (West Somerset Yeomanry) Field Bty at Glastonbury, later Shepton Mallet

The brigade continued as 'Army Troops' in 43rd (W) Divisional Area.[31] The establishment of a TA field artillery brigade was four 6-gun batteries, three equipped with 18-pounder guns and one with 4.5-inch howitzers, all of World War I patterns. However, the batteries only held four guns in peacetime. The guns and their first-line ammunition wagons were horsedrawn and the battery staffs were mounted. Partial mechanisation was carried out from 1927, but the guns retained iron-tyred wheels until pneumatic tyres began to be introduced just before the outbreak of World War II. A few Quad gun tractors were issued to TA batteries in early 1939. The rearmament programme of 1938 introduced the Ordnance QF 25-pounder gun-howitzer, initially in the form of the hybrid 18/25-pounder consisting of a 25-pdr gun mounted on a converted 18-pdr carriage, but these were only just being issued to Regular units when war broke out, and TA units had to wait.[32][33]

In 1938 the RA modernised its nomenclature and a lieutenant-colonel's command was designated a 'regiment' rather than a 'brigade'; this applied to TA field brigades from 1 November 1938.[11][27][30]

112th (Wessex) Field Regiment edit

 
Emplacing an 18-pounder with wooden wheels at the start of World War II

Mobilisation edit

After the Munich Crisis the TA was doubled in size and its units formed duplicates. In the case of the 55th (Wessex) this was done on 22 July 1939 by splitting off the two Wiltshire batteries to form 112th Field Rgt, with Regimental Headquarters (RHQ) at Swindon. The new regiment remained with 43rd (Wessex) Division while 55th (Wessex) Field Rgt (now often referred to simply as the 'West Somerset Yeomanry') joined the new duplicate 45th Division and later fought with the Guards Armoured Division.[4][34][35][36]

Part of the reorganisation was that field regiments changed from four six-gun batteries to an establishment of two batteries, each of three four-gun troops.[33][37]

Home Defence edit

 
43rd (Wessex) Division's formation sign

In May 1940 43rd (W) Division was preparing to go overseas to join the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in France, but the German invasion of the Low Countries on 10 May ended the 'Phoney War' before the division was ready.[35] Once the Battle of France was lost and the BEF was being evacuated from Dunkirk, 43rd (W) Division was one of the few reasonably well-equipped formations left in Home Forces to counter a German invasion of the United Kingdom (its three field regiments had 48 25-pounders between them on 31 May 1940 against an establishment of 72). It formed part of the mobile GHQ Reserve disposed on the line from Northampton through North London to Aldershot, from which brigade groups could be despatched to any threatened area. During the period when invasion was most feared, the division was stationed just north of London.[38][39][40][41] By the end of 1940 the division was stationed in East Kent, where it remained for the next four years, first in defensive mode, later training intensively for the Allied invasion of Normandy (Operation Overlord). It was later noted that its habitual training area round Stone Street, outside Folkestone, bore a marked resemblance to the Bocage countryside in Normandy where it would later fight. Exercises with live ammunition were carried out on the South Downs. Collaboration was developed between the infantry brigades and their supporting arms: 112th (Wessex) Field Rgt was usually grouped with 130th Infantry Brigade for training and later operations.[35][42][43][44]

 
25-pounder gun and Quad tractor on exercise 1941.

It was only in the autumn of 1940 that the RA began producing enough battery staffs to start 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.)[3][45] 112th Field Rgt formed a new 477 Field Bty on 25 March 1941 at Sarre, Kent.[26][34] The regiment was granted its '(Wessex)' subtitle on 17 February 1942.[4][34]

Normandy edit

43rd (W) Division moved into its concentration area in Sussex round Battle, Hastings and Rye by 6 April 1944. D Day for Overlord was 6 June, and on 13 June the division began moving to the embarkation ports. Disembarkation was delayed by bad weather, but the bulk of the division was concentrated north of Bayeux by 24 June with VIII Corps.[35][46]

The division was committed to its first action in the Battle of the Odon (Operation Epsom) starting on 26 June. The object was to follow 15th (Scottish) Division's advance and then secure the captured objectives in 'Scottish Corridor'. However, this entailed some heavy fighting for the infantry against a Panzer counter-attack on 27 June, an attack cross open cornfields on 28 June, and an advance under fire to ford the River Odon and dig in on 29 June. A German counter-attack against them in the evening was destroyed by the divisional artillery.[35][47][48][49][50]

The division's first major offensive action of its own was Operation Jupiter, to take Hill 112, which had been briefly captured by British armour during 'Epsom' but had to be abandoned. The attack on 10 July was supported by all the divisional artillery and mortars, plus the artillery of adjacent divisions. It was supposed to break through and seize bridgeheads over the River Orne, but the massive barrage only stunned and failed to suppress the defenders from 10th SS Panzer Division. When the Wessex infantry went forward they came under heavy fire as they fought their way up the slopes. The fighting drew in all the reserves until 5th Battalion Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry (DCLI) was the last uncommitted battalion. It attacked up the slopes of Hill 112, described as 'one of the most tragic acts of self-sacrifice in the entire North West European Campaign'.[51] Launched at 20.30 towards 'The Orchard' on the crest of the hill, and supported by a squadron of tanks and all available guns, the attack reached the orchard, but could get no further. The DCLI held out through the night but by mid-afternoon on 11 July all the anti-tank guns on the hill had been knocked out, the tanks had to retire to the reverse slope, and the defence was almost over. When the order was given to withdraw some 60 survivors of 5th DCLI were brought down. Both sides remained dug in on the slopes, with the hilltop left in No man's land. The division had to hold its positions under mortar fire for another 10 days, described by the commander of 214th Bde as comparable only 'to the bombardment at Passchendaele'. This defence was followed by a final set-piece attack, Operation Express, which succeeded in capturing Maltot on 22 July.[52][53][54][55]

 
25-pounders in action in Normandy, June 1944.

After a short rest 43rd (W) Division moved to XXX Corps to launch an attack towards the dominating height of Mont Pinçon as part of Operation Bluecoat. Casualties were heavy, particularly from mines, and the advance was slow. After a succession of pre-dawn attacks, the division was still 4 miles (6.4 km) from Mont Pinçon on 5 August. In the end the hill fell to a surprise attack by a few tanks on the evening of 6 August. By daybreak the summit was firmly held by tanks and infantry, despite heavy German bombardment.[56][57][58][59][60]

43rd (W) Division then participated in XXX Corps' pursuit of the broken enemy, many of whom were caught in the Falaise pocket. The main opposition came from mortars and booby-trapped mines.[61][62]

Seine crossing edit

The breakout achieved, XXX Corps drove flat out for the River Seine (Operation Loopy), with 43rd (W) Division sent ahead to make an assault crossing at Vernon. The division had to move in three groups at specific times to cross a road that was also being used by US troops. The roughly 100 vehicles of 112th Field Rgt moved with the bulk of the divisional artillery in Group Two and arrived too late to participate in the bombardment covering the initial assault crossing on the evening of 25 August.[63][64][65][66]

The assault was followed by two days of bitter fighting as the defenders counter-attacked the bridgeheads and shelled the bridging sites. The divisional artillery assembled on the hillside overlooking Vernon and fired with the assistance of air observation post aircraft against the counter-attacks on the other side of the river. By 28 August the Sappers had bridged the river, the armour had begun to cross in numbers and 130th Bde was clearing the high ground opposite, allowing 112th Field Rgt's reconnaissance parties to follow up. After the Seine crossing, 43rd (W) Division was 'grounded' while the rest of XXX Corps raced across northern France and Belgium.[67][68][69]

Operation Market Garden edit

When 43rd (W) Division next moved, the war was now 250 miles (400 km) away. The first elements moved up to Brussels to protect headquarters, then the division concentrated at Diest to take part in Operation Market Garden, beginning on 17 September. In 'Garden', the ground part of the operation, XXX Corps was to link up river crossings as far as the Nederrijn at Arnhem via a 'carpet' of airborne troops. 43rd (W) Division was to follow Guards Armoured Division, carrying out assault crossings if any of the bridges were found to be destroyed, and guarding the 'corridor' to Arnhem. The advance up the only road ('Club Route') was slow but on 21 September 43rd (W) Division caught up with the Guards at Nijmegen. Further progress was blocked by strong German forces, and 1st Airborne Division holding out at Arnhem was in a desperate plight. 43rd (W) Division fought its way through to the Nederrijn, with the road behind being frequently cut by German tanks. During the night of 23/24 September the division ferried a few reinforcements across to 1st Airborne, but another assault crossing on the night of 24/25 September suffered heavy casualties and few supplies were got across. By now 1st Airborne had been effectively destroyed, and the only course now was to evacuate the survivors. This was carried out on 25/26 September, a dark night with heavy rain. The whole divisional artillery opened up at 21.00, while the sappers crossed and recrossed the river in stormboats ferrying around 2300 exhausted survivors of 1st Airborne back to the south bank.[70][71][72][73][74]

 
25-pounders in action in the Netherlands October 1944.

In the aftermath of Market Garden, 43rd (W) Division was stationed on 'The Island' (between the Rivers Waal and Nederrijn), fighting off some serious counter-attacks in early October.[75]

Operation Clipper edit

43rd (W) Division was relieved on 10 November and then shifted east with XXX Corps to cooperate with the Ninth US Army by capturing the Geilenkirchen salient in Operation Clipper. This entailed breaching the Siegfried Line defences and capturing a string of fortified villages. The division's attack was launched on 18 November and after bitter fighting Geilenkirchen was surrounded by nightfall. After driving off some counter-attacks byPanzers during the night, the division captured the town next day. But thereafter heavy rain turned the whole battlefield into mud and guns could not be moved, while the infantry struggled to consolidate their positions under heavy shellfire from the Siegfried Line guns. The divisional artillery endeavoured to support the infantry on the ground. By 22 November any further advance was impossible due to the waterlogged state of the country, which then had to be defended in conditions resembling the worst of the Western Front in World War I.[76][77][78] 4th and 5th Battalions Dorset Regiment were bogged down in what became known as 'Dorset Wood', with their gunner observation post (OP): 'In the many gun duels Major P. Steele Perkins of 112 Field Regiment invariably had the last word'.[79]

Planning was under way to renew the offensive when the Germans attacked in the Ardennes (the Battle of the Bulge) on 16 December. 43rd (W) Division was positioned to counter-attack should the Germans cross the Maas. From 20 December a battle group under 43rd (Wessex) Reconnaissance Regiment with 112nd Field Rgt, two anti-tank troops and two infantry companies covered the river with a series of OPs and small detachments holding possible crossing places. The frontage to cover was so wide that the 25-pdrs of 112th Field Rgt were later supplemented by a battery from 94th (Queen's Own Dorset Yeomanry) Field Rgt and by the 5.5-inch guns of 21st (West Riding) Medium Rgt. However, the Panzers got no closer than 12 miles (19 km) before being stopped.[80]

Rhineland edit

Once the German Ardennes Offensive had been halted, 43rd (W) Division returned to the offensive in early 1945 in Operation Blackcock to reduce the Roer Triangle. The advance was supported by massive artillery concentrations. However, further exploitation was prevented by bad weather.[81][82][83] The division then fought through the month-long battle of the Reichswald (Operation Veritable). This was also launched before dawn on 8 February with a massive bombardment. The divisional objective was to follow 15th (S) Division's advance and then pass through to capture Kleve. However, the main roads were blocked, the minor roads flooded, and a huge traffic jam of wheeled vehicles resulted. For much of the battle only tracked or amphibious vehicles could be used beyond Kleve and the guns were immobile. On 16 February 43rd (W) Division broke through to the Goch escarpment and on 8 March it entered Xanten on the Rhine.[84][85][86][87]

 
25-pounders moving up to cross the Rhine, March 1945.

Operation Plunder edit

Although 43rd (W) Division was not scheduled to take part in the assault crossing of the Rhine (Operation Plunder) on 23/24 March. However, the division's leading brigade crossed the river on 25 March behind 51st (Highland) Division, and found itself in immediate combat, but had broken through by 29 March.[88][89][90] During the subsequent pursuit, 43rd (W) Division was given the task of opening 'Club Route' for XXX Corps. The division combined with 8th Armoured Brigade to form five battle groups for the first 25 miles (40 km) drive. The advance began on 30 March: after initial traffic jams, the groups either overcame or bypassed German rearguards and Lochem was liberated on 1–2 April. The division was then given the task of taking Hengelo to secure the flank while Guards Armoured Division drove for the Dortmund–Ems Canal; 43rd (W) by-passed the end of the Twente Canal and liberated the town. It then moved back into Germany to capture Cloppenburg on 14 April after a stiff fight and fight off a final counter-attack next day.[91][92][93]

The pursuit continued through April and ended with the division's capture of Bremen against spasmodic opposition and XXX Corps' drive into the Cuxhaven peninsula. The German surrender at Lüneburg Heath came on 4 May, and hostilities ended at 08.00 next day.[94][95][96]

The division's units were then employed as occupation forces in XXX Corps' district in Germany.[35] The regiment was serving in British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) when it passed into suspended animation on 26 April 1946.[4][34]

 
43rd (Wessex) Division's memorial at Castle Hill, Mere, in Wiltshire.

Postwar edit

When the TA was reformed on 1 January 1947 the regiment was revived as 312 (Wessex) Medium Regiment. The new regiment was based at Bristol and had little or no Wiltshire connection. It formed part of 90 (Field) Army Group RA.[4][34][97][98][99][100]

Later the regiment was merged on 30 August 1950 into 498 (Gloucestershire) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Rgt as 312 (Gloucestershire) HAA Rgt, and on 10 March 1955 this in turn became a single Bristol-based battery in 311 (City of Bristol) HAA Rgt.[97][98][100]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The 1st Dorsetshire Bty at Bridport was provided by No 4 Company of the 1st Dorsetshire Royal Garrison Artillery (Volunteers), while 6th Hampshire Bty was converted from Nos 1 and 2 Companies of the same unit based at Bournemouth on the DorsetHampshire border.[1]
  2. ^ In contemporary RA usage a brigade was a lieutenant-colonel's command consisting of independent batteries 'brigaded' together; it was not comparable with an infantry or cavalry brigade commanded by a brigadier-general.[2][3]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Litchfield & Westlake, pp. 55–6.
  2. ^ Litchfield, pp. 1 & 5.
  3. ^ a b Sainsbury, Chapter 1: 'Historical Background to the Territorial Artillery, 1920–1945', pp. 1–12.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Litchfield, p. 244.
  5. ^ Frederick, p. 682.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 43–8.
  7. ^ Swindon at Drill Hall Project.
  8. ^ a b c d 43rd Divisional Artillery at Long, Long Trail.
  9. ^ Bournemouth at Drill Hall Project.
  10. ^ Bridport at Drill Hall Project.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Monthly Army List, various dates.
  12. ^ a b Suffolk at Winchester College at War.
  13. ^ a b c 43rd (1st Wessex) Division at Long, Long Trail.
  14. ^ a b c d Forgotten Fronts, pp. 354–5.
  15. ^ a b c d e Becke, pp. 55–60.
  16. ^ a b 45th (2nd Wessex) Division at Long, Long Trail.
  17. ^ a b 45th Divisional Artillery at Long, Long Trail.
  18. ^ a b c Frederick, p. 695.
  19. ^ a b c d Perry, pp. 137–40.
  20. ^ Perry, pp. 67–71.
  21. ^ Suffolk at CWGC Records.
  22. ^ Gosling in Gliddon.
  23. ^ Robson, pp. 26–7.
  24. ^ Robson, p. 281.
  25. ^ Robson, pp. 57, 77, 86, 99–103.
  26. ^ a b c Frederick, pp. 489–95
  27. ^ a b c d Frederick, p. 516.
  28. ^ a b Litchfield, pp. 93–5.
  29. ^ Frederick, p. 524.
  30. ^ a b Litchfield, pp. 208–9.
  31. ^ Titles & Designations 1927.
  32. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, p. 4.
  33. ^ a b Sainsbury, Chapter 2: 'The Development of Field Artillery Tactics, Organisation and Equipment, 1920–1945', pp. 13–29.
  34. ^ a b c d e Frederick, p. 528.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Joslen, pp. 69–70.
  36. ^ Joslen, pp. 11, 73.
  37. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, Annex A,
  38. ^ Collier, Chapter VII.
  39. ^ Collier, Map 5.
  40. ^ Collier, Map 6.
  41. ^ Collier, Maps 17.
  42. ^ Collier, Map 20.
  43. ^ Collier, Map 27.
  44. ^ Essame, pp. 2–4, Appendix C.
  45. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, pp. 99–100.
  46. ^ Essame, pp. 13–17.
  47. ^ Buckley, pp. 77–82.
  48. ^ Ellis, Normandy, pp. 279–86.
  49. ^ Essame, pp. 20–34.
  50. ^ Saunders, Epsom, pp. 87–9, 100–6, 143–9.
  51. ^ Saunders, Hill 112, p. 124.
  52. ^ Buckley, p. 92.
  53. ^ Ellis, Normandy, pp. 317–8.
  54. ^ Essame, pp. 37–50.
  55. ^ Saunders, Hill 112.
  56. ^ Buckley, pp. 153–68.
  57. ^ Ellis, Normandy, pp. 388–90, 402, 409–10.
  58. ^ Essame, pp. 53–7.
  59. ^ Horrocks, pp. 189–90.
  60. ^ Hunt, Mont Pinçon.
  61. ^ Buckley, pp. 180–1.
  62. ^ Essame, pp. 73–89.
  63. ^ Buckley, pp. 184–7.
  64. ^ Ellis, Normandy, pp. 453–5, 465–6.
  65. ^ Essame, pp. 91, 94–109.
  66. ^ Ford, pp. 28–34, 49–59; Appendix 1.
  67. ^ Buckley, pp. 187–9.
  68. ^ Essame, pp. 109–13.
  69. ^ Ford, pp. 59, 107, 176.
  70. ^ Buckley, pp. 228–30.
  71. ^ Ellis, Germany, pp. 42–3.
  72. ^ Essame, pp. 113–38.
  73. ^ Horrocks, pp. 221–30.
  74. ^ Ryan, pp. 462–5, 477–8, 486, 489, 509–13, 515–31.
  75. ^ Essame, p. 140–56.
  76. ^ Ellis, Germany, p. 161.
  77. ^ Essame, pp. 164–86.
  78. ^ Horrocks, pp. 233–6.
  79. ^ Essame, p. 176.
  80. ^ Essame, pp. 186–94.
  81. ^ Buckley, pp. 265–8.
  82. ^ Ellis, Germany, pp. 241–7.
  83. ^ Essame, pp. 195–200.
  84. ^ Buckley, pp. 274–7.
  85. ^ Ellis, Germany, pp. 261–76.
  86. ^ Essame, pp. 202–31.
  87. ^ Horrocks, pp. 250–5.
  88. ^ Ellis, Germany, pp. 288–9, 293–4.
  89. ^ Essame, pp. 233–40.
  90. ^ Horrocks, pp. 261–2.
  91. ^ Ellis, Germany, pp. 306–8, 311–2.
  92. ^ Essame, pp. 241–56.
  93. ^ Horrocks, pp. 260–2.
  94. ^ Ellis, Germany, pp. 307–16, 338–40.
  95. ^ Essame, pp. 256–70.
  96. ^ Horrocks, pp. 246, 261–6.
  97. ^ a b Frederick, p. 1004.
  98. ^ a b Litchfield, pp. 86–8.
  99. ^ Litchfield, Appendix 5.
  100. ^ a b 289–322 Rgts RA at British Army 1945 onwards.

References edit

  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2a: The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st-Line Territorial Force Divisions (42–56), London: HM Stationery Office, 1935/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-84734-739-8.
  • John Buckley, Monty's Men: The British Army and the Liberation of Europe, London: Yale University Press, 2013, ISBN 978-0-300-13449-0.
  • Maj L.F. Ellis, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: Victory in the West, Vol I: The Battle of Normandy, London: HM Stationery Office, 1962/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2004, ISBN 1-84574-058-0.
  • Maj L.F. Ellis, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: Victory in the West, Vol II: The Defeat of Germany, London: HM Stationery Office, 1968/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2004, ISBN 1-84574-059-9.
  • Maj-Gen H. Essame, The 43rd Wessex Division at War 1944–45, London: William Clowes, 1952.
  • Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Forgotten Fronts and the Home Base 1914–18, Woolwich: Royal Artillery Institution, 1988, ISBN 1-870114-05-1.
  • 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.
  • Ken Ford, Assault Crossing: The River Seine 1944, 2nd Edn, Bradford: Pen & Sword, 2011, ISBN 978-1-84884-576-3.
  • 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.
  • Gerald Gliddon, VCs Handbook: The Western Front 1914–1918, History Press, 2013
  • Lt-Gen Sir Brian Horrocks, A Full Life, London: Collins, 1960.
  • Eric Hunt, 'Battleground Europe: Normandy: Mont Pinçon, Barnsley: Leo Cooper, 2003, ISBN 0-85052-944-1.
  • 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 1-84342-474-6.
  • Norman E.H. Litchfield, The Territorial Artillery 1908–1988 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1992, ISBN 0-9508205-2-0.
  • Norman Litchfield & Ray Westlake, The Volunteer Artillery 1859–1908 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1982, ISBN 0-9508205-0-4.
  • F.W. Perry, History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 5b: Indian Army Divisions, Newport, Gwent: Ray Westlake, 1993, ISBN 1-871167-23-X.
  • Brian Robson, Crisis on the Frontier: The Third Afghan War and the Campaign in Waziristan 1919–20, Staplehurst: Spellmount, 2004, ISBN 978-1-86227-211-8.
  • Cornelius Ryan, A Bridge Too Far, London: Hamish Hamilton, 1974/Coronet 1975, ISBN 0-340-19941-5.
  • 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.
  • Tim Saunders, Battleground Europe: Operation Epsom: Normandy, June 1944, Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2003, ISBN 0-85052-954-9.
  • Tim Saunders, Battleground Europe: Normandy: Hill 112, Battles of the Odon – 1944, Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2000, ISBN 978-0-85052-737-7.
  • War Office, Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army, London: War Office, 7 November 1927 (RA sections also summarised in Litchfield, Appendix IV).

External sources edit

  • Chris Baker, The Long, Long Trail
  • Commonwealth War Graves Commission records
  • The Drill Hall Project
  • Winchester College at War
  • British Army units from 1945 on

wiltshire, battery, royal, field, artillery, successors, were, part, time, territorial, force, units, british, army, from, 1908, 1950, carried, garrison, duties, india, during, world, active, service, third, afghan, served, various, units, interwar, years, fin. The 1st Wiltshire Battery Royal Field Artillery and its successors were part time Territorial Force units of the British Army from 1908 to 1950 It carried out garrison duties in India during World War I and saw active service in the Third Afghan War It served in various units in the interwar years finally becoming a full regiment as 112th Wessex Field Regiment in time for World War II It saw action with 43rd Wessex Infantry Division in the campaign in North West Europe including Operations Epsom Jupiter and Bluecoat in Normandy the crossing of the Seine the battle for Arnhem Operation Market Garden in the Low Countries and then Operations Clipper Blackcock Veritable and Plunder across Germany Its short lived postwar successor unit had little or no Wiltshire connection 1st Wiltshire Battery RFAIII Wessex Brigade RFA112th Wessex Field Regiment RARoyal Artillery cap badgeActive7 July 1908 30 August 1950Country United KingdomBranchTerritorial ArmyRoleField artillerySizeBattery RegimentPart of43rd Wessex DivisionGarrison HQSwindonEngagementsThird Afghan WarOperation EpsomOperation JupiterOperation BluecoatOperation Market GardenOperation ClipperOperation BlackcockOperation VeritableOperation Plunder Contents 1 Territorial Force 2 World War I 2 1 Mobilisation 2 2 1 III Wessex Brigade 2 3 2 III Wessex Brigade 2 4 Other fronts 2 5 North West Frontier and Afghanistan 3 Interwar 4 112th Wessex Field Regiment 4 1 Mobilisation 4 2 Home Defence 4 3 Normandy 4 4 Seine crossing 4 5 Operation Market Garden 4 6 Operation Clipper 4 7 Rhineland 4 8 Operation Plunder 5 Postwar 6 Footnotes 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 External sourcesTerritorial Force editWhen the Territorial Force was created in 1908 under the Haldane Reforms it included the Wessex Division covering the south western counties of England Most of its components came from the former Volunteer Force but a number of new units had to be created to complete the division One of these was the 1st Wiltshire Battery of the Royal Field Artillery recruited from the mainly rural county of Wiltshire that had not previously had any artillery volunteers The battery was raised on 7 July 1908 based at the railway town of Swindon and together with the 6th Hampshire and 1st Dorsetshire Batteries a constituted III or 3rd Wessex Brigade RFA b The brigade headquarters HQ was also based at Swindon taking over The Armoury at 62 Prospect Place previously used by two Volunteer companies of the Wiltshire Regiment 4 5 6 7 8 nbsp 15 pounder gun equipment of the TF s field batteries III Wessex Brigade RFA Brigade HQ at The Armoury Swindon 6th Hampshire Bty at Victoria Drill Hall Lansdowne Road Bournemouth 9 Dorsetshire Bty at Barrack Street St Michael s Lane Bridport 10 Wiltshire Bty at The Armoury Swindon 3rd Wessex Ammunition Column at Malmesbury WiltshireThe Commanding Officer CO of III Wessex Bde was Lieutenant Colonel E H Bedford Pim a retired major in the Regular Army The Officer Commanding OC of 1st Wiltshire Bty was Major the Earl of Suffolk a former captain in the 4th Battalion Royal North Gloucestershire Militia Gloucestershire Regiment 11 12 Before World War I TF field batteries were each armed with four obsolescent 15 pounder guns 6 8 World War I editMobilisation edit On 29 July 1914 the Wessex Division was on Salisbury Plain carrying out its annual training camp when precautionary orders were received and next day the division took up emergency war stations in Somerset Devon and Cornwall The order to mobilise arrived on the evening of 4 August Between 10 and 13 August the division concentrated on Salisbury Plain and began war training 6 13 On 24 September at the special request of the Secretary of State for War Earl Kitchener of Khartoum the Wessex Division accepted liability for service in British India to relieve the Regular Army units there for service on the Western Front The division s infantry battalions and artillery brigades without their brigade ammunition columns embarked at Southampton on 8 October and were convoyed to Bombay disembarking on 9 November Each battery went ashore with 5 officers and 140 other ranks The battalions and batteries were immediately distributed to garrisons across India and the Wessex Division never saw service as a whole though it was formally numbered the 43rd 1st Wessex Division in 1915 6 13 14 All those Territorials who had not volunteered for overseas service together with the recruits who were flooding in formed reserve or 2nd Line units the titles of which were the same as the original but distinguished by a 2 prefix The 2 III Wessex Brigade formed immediately after the 1st Line sailed for India Recruitment and training for the 2nd Wessex Division proceeded so quickly that on 25 November it was decided to send that to India as well and most units embarked on 12 December 1914 becoming the 45th 2nd Wessex Division in 1915 The remaining Home Service men remained with 3rd Line training units 4 14 15 16 17 nbsp 18 pounder preserved at the Imperial War Museum 1 III Wessex Brigade edit On arrival in India the batteries of 43rd Divisional Artillery were sent to separate stations those of 1 III Bde apparently to Ambala Bareilly and Delhi Here they continued their training and by 1915 were providing reinforcement drafts to the Mesopotamian Front It was not until 1916 that the units received any reinforcements from the UK to replace these drafts and these replacements then had to be trained In 1916 the old 15 pounder guns were replaced with modern 18 pounders and the TF brigades were given numbers 1 III Wessex Brigade became CCXVII or 217 Brigade RFA while the batteries were designated A B and C 4 6 8 13 18 The three batteries were redesignated again in 1917 becoming 1091 1 6th Hampshire 1092 1 1st Dorsetshire and 1093 1 1st Wiltshire 1092 Battery was then disbanded providing a two gun section to each of the other batteries to bring them up to six guns CCXVII Bde was attached to 16th Indian Division from April 1917 when 1091 and 1093 Btys were at Lahore In June 1917 the brigade was joined by 79 Howitzer Bty transferred from VI Howitzer Bde a Regular unit that had remained in India and was also attached to 16th Indian Division giving the following organisation 6 8 14 18 19 1091 Bty 1 6th Hampshire half 1 1st Dorsetshire 1093 Bty 1 1st Wiltshire half 1 1st Dorsetshire 79 Howitzer Bty2 III Wessex Brigade edit The 45th Division also remained in garrison in India supplying drafts to the First Line and other theatres throughout the war until its units had virtually disappeared The batteries of 45th Divisional Artillery were eventually re equipped with 18 pdrs during 1916 and were numbered 2 III Wessex Bde becoming CCXXVII 227 Brigade RFA and the batteries A B and C The batteries were numbered in 1917 as 1102 1103 and 1104 and then 1102 was broken up to bring the others up to six guns In April 1917 1104 Bty left and two others arrived giving the following organisation for the brigade 4 14 18 15 16 17 19 1098 Bty 2 2nd Hampshire from 2 I Wessex Bde 1103 Bty 2 1st Dorsetshire half 2 6th Hampshire 1105 H Bty 2 1st Devonshire from 2 IV Wessex H Bde stationed at Aden until March 19191104 Bty 2 1st Wiltshire half 2 6th Hampshire at Kamptee transferred from 45th Division to CCXVI Bde the former 1 II Wessex which had joined 5th Mhow Division In December 1917 the battery moved to Delhi and joined CCXVIII Bde the former 1 IV Wessex in 16th Indian Division 6 15 19 20 Other fronts edit Officers and men from both 43rd and 45th Divisions were continually being posted all over India to fill various posts In addition they provided reinforcement drafts mainly to Mesopotamia 6 15 The Earl of Suffolk OC 1 1st Wiltshire Bty took command of a battery in Mesopotamia in 1916 and was killed in action on 21 April 1917 12 21 The III Wessex also supplied drafts to the Western Front One of these was Sergeant William Gosling a Swindon man who was attached to V 51 Heavy Trench Mortar Battery in 51st Highland Division when he won the Victoria Cross on 5 April 1915 during the bombardment for the Battle of Arras 22 North West Frontier and Afghanistan edit 16th Indian Division was formed in December 1916 as a reserve for the North West Frontier CCXVII and CCXVIII brigades were both assigned to it by 1918 and were still with it in 1919 after World War I had ended 19 Field artillery was of relatively little use on the Frontier because of its flat trajectory and the need for large teams of horses to move the guns with consequent forage problems Their mobility was constrained by the rough terrain 23 Nevertheless 1091 1 6th Hampshire 1093 1 1st Wiltshire and 1104 2 1st Wiltshire Btys were all deployed in the Third Afghan War 6 24 When war broke out on 6 May 1919 a lack of transport initially prevented 16 Division from carrying out its task and deploying forward from its base at Lahore to allow 1st Peshawar Division to advance on Jalalabad Eventually a brigade group was sent up to Peshawar by train on 20 May However an Afghan incursion into the Kurram Valley on 27 May halted the advance on Jalalabad and 16th Division was diverted to Kohat beginning to arrive on 30 May The Afghan advance threatened Thall and a brigade group was sent out as a relief force The Amir of Afghanistan suspended operations on 2 June None of the TF artillery batteries were directly involved with these operations 25 The remaining TF units in India were progressively demobilised and the last unit cadres returned home before the end of 1919 6 15 Interwar editMain article 55th Wessex Brigade Royal Field Artillery When the TF was reconstituted on 7 February 1920 the Wiltshire part of III Wessex Bde reformed as a battery of 2nd Wessex Brigade along with three Hampshire batteries The following year the TF was reorganised as the Territorial Army TA and the units were renumbered 4 11 26 27 28 55th Wessex Field Brigade Brigade HQ at the Drill Hall Ryde Isle of Wight 217 218 219 Hampshire Btys 220 Wiltshire Bty at Swindon220 Wiltshire Bty was commanded by the Marquess of Ailesbury DSO TD 11 The RFA was subsumed into the Royal Artillery in 1924 and its units were redesignated Field Brigades and Field Batteries 11 27 28 Main article 55th Wessex Field Regiment Royal Artillery During 1927 the brigade was reorganised two of the Hampshire batteries left to join 95th Hampshire Yeomanry Field Bde and were replaced by two batteries formed in 1920 from the West Somerset Yeomanry which had been serving in 94th Dorset and Somerset Yeomanry Field Bde On 23 August 1927 217 Bty was reformed at Swindon as a howitzer battery 11 26 27 29 30 Brigade HQ amp 373 West Somerset Yeomanry Field Bty at Taunton 217 Wiltshire Field Bty H at Swindon 220 Wiltshire Field Bty at Swindon 374 West Somerset Yeomanry Field Bty at Glastonbury later Shepton MalletThe brigade continued as Army Troops in 43rd W Divisional Area 31 The establishment of a TA field artillery brigade was four 6 gun batteries three equipped with 18 pounder guns and one with 4 5 inch howitzers all of World War I patterns However the batteries only held four guns in peacetime The guns and their first line ammunition wagons were horsedrawn and the battery staffs were mounted Partial mechanisation was carried out from 1927 but the guns retained iron tyred wheels until pneumatic tyres began to be introduced just before the outbreak of World War II A few Quad gun tractors were issued to TA batteries in early 1939 The rearmament programme of 1938 introduced the Ordnance QF 25 pounder gun howitzer initially in the form of the hybrid 18 25 pounder consisting of a 25 pdr gun mounted on a converted 18 pdr carriage but these were only just being issued to Regular units when war broke out and TA units had to wait 32 33 In 1938 the RA modernised its nomenclature and a lieutenant colonel s command was designated a regiment rather than a brigade this applied to TA field brigades from 1 November 1938 11 27 30 112th Wessex Field Regiment edit nbsp Emplacing an 18 pounder with wooden wheels at the start of World War IIMobilisation edit After the Munich Crisis the TA was doubled in size and its units formed duplicates In the case of the 55th Wessex this was done on 22 July 1939 by splitting off the two Wiltshire batteries to form 112th Field Rgt with Regimental Headquarters RHQ at Swindon The new regiment remained with 43rd Wessex Division while 55th Wessex Field Rgt now often referred to simply as the West Somerset Yeomanry joined the new duplicate 45th Division and later fought with the Guards Armoured Division 4 34 35 36 Part of the reorganisation was that field regiments changed from four six gun batteries to an establishment of two batteries each of three four gun troops 33 37 Home Defence edit nbsp 43rd Wessex Division s formation signIn May 1940 43rd W Division was preparing to go overseas to join the British Expeditionary Force BEF in France but the German invasion of the Low Countries on 10 May ended the Phoney War before the division was ready 35 Once the Battle of France was lost and the BEF was being evacuated from Dunkirk 43rd W Division was one of the few reasonably well equipped formations left in Home Forces to counter a German invasion of the United Kingdom its three field regiments had 48 25 pounders between them on 31 May 1940 against an establishment of 72 It formed part of the mobile GHQ Reserve disposed on the line from Northampton through North London to Aldershot from which brigade groups could be despatched to any threatened area During the period when invasion was most feared the division was stationed just north of London 38 39 40 41 By the end of 1940 the division was stationed in East Kent where it remained for the next four years first in defensive mode later training intensively for the Allied invasion of Normandy Operation Overlord It was later noted that its habitual training area round Stone Street outside Folkestone bore a marked resemblance to the Bocage countryside in Normandy where it would later fight Exercises with live ammunition were carried out on the South Downs Collaboration was developed between the infantry brigades and their supporting arms 112th Wessex Field Rgt was usually grouped with 130th Infantry Brigade for training and later operations 35 42 43 44 nbsp 25 pounder gun and Quad tractor on exercise 1941 It was only in the autumn of 1940 that the RA began producing enough battery staffs to start 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 3 45 112th Field Rgt formed a new 477 Field Bty on 25 March 1941 at Sarre Kent 26 34 The regiment was granted its Wessex subtitle on 17 February 1942 4 34 Normandy edit 43rd W Division moved into its concentration area in Sussex round Battle Hastings and Rye by 6 April 1944 D Day for Overlord was 6 June and on 13 June the division began moving to the embarkation ports Disembarkation was delayed by bad weather but the bulk of the division was concentrated north of Bayeux by 24 June with VIII Corps 35 46 The division was committed to its first action in the Battle of the Odon Operation Epsom starting on 26 June The object was to follow 15th Scottish Division s advance and then secure the captured objectives in Scottish Corridor However this entailed some heavy fighting for the infantry against a Panzer counter attack on 27 June an attack cross open cornfields on 28 June and an advance under fire to ford the River Odon and dig in on 29 June A German counter attack against them in the evening was destroyed by the divisional artillery 35 47 48 49 50 The division s first major offensive action of its own was Operation Jupiter to take Hill 112 which had been briefly captured by British armour during Epsom but had to be abandoned The attack on 10 July was supported by all the divisional artillery and mortars plus the artillery of adjacent divisions It was supposed to break through and seize bridgeheads over the River Orne but the massive barrage only stunned and failed to suppress the defenders from 10th SS Panzer Division When the Wessex infantry went forward they came under heavy fire as they fought their way up the slopes The fighting drew in all the reserves until 5th Battalion Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry DCLI was the last uncommitted battalion It attacked up the slopes of Hill 112 described as one of the most tragic acts of self sacrifice in the entire North West European Campaign 51 Launched at 20 30 towards The Orchard on the crest of the hill and supported by a squadron of tanks and all available guns the attack reached the orchard but could get no further The DCLI held out through the night but by mid afternoon on 11 July all the anti tank guns on the hill had been knocked out the tanks had to retire to the reverse slope and the defence was almost over When the order was given to withdraw some 60 survivors of 5th DCLI were brought down Both sides remained dug in on the slopes with the hilltop left in No man s land The division had to hold its positions under mortar fire for another 10 days described by the commander of 214th Bde as comparable only to the bombardment at Passchendaele This defence was followed by a final set piece attack Operation Express which succeeded in capturing Maltot on 22 July 52 53 54 55 nbsp 25 pounders in action in Normandy June 1944 After a short rest 43rd W Division moved to XXX Corps to launch an attack towards the dominating height of Mont Pincon as part of Operation Bluecoat Casualties were heavy particularly from mines and the advance was slow After a succession of pre dawn attacks the division was still 4 miles 6 4 km from Mont Pincon on 5 August In the end the hill fell to a surprise attack by a few tanks on the evening of 6 August By daybreak the summit was firmly held by tanks and infantry despite heavy German bombardment 56 57 58 59 60 43rd W Division then participated in XXX Corps pursuit of the broken enemy many of whom were caught in the Falaise pocket The main opposition came from mortars and booby trapped mines 61 62 Seine crossing edit The breakout achieved XXX Corps drove flat out for the River Seine Operation Loopy with 43rd W Division sent ahead to make an assault crossing at Vernon The division had to move in three groups at specific times to cross a road that was also being used by US troops The roughly 100 vehicles of 112th Field Rgt moved with the bulk of the divisional artillery in Group Two and arrived too late to participate in the bombardment covering the initial assault crossing on the evening of 25 August 63 64 65 66 The assault was followed by two days of bitter fighting as the defenders counter attacked the bridgeheads and shelled the bridging sites The divisional artillery assembled on the hillside overlooking Vernon and fired with the assistance of air observation post aircraft against the counter attacks on the other side of the river By 28 August the Sappers had bridged the river the armour had begun to cross in numbers and 130th Bde was clearing the high ground opposite allowing 112th Field Rgt s reconnaissance parties to follow up After the Seine crossing 43rd W Division was grounded while the rest of XXX Corps raced across northern France and Belgium 67 68 69 Operation Market Garden edit When 43rd W Division next moved the war was now 250 miles 400 km away The first elements moved up to Brussels to protect headquarters then the division concentrated at Diest to take part in Operation Market Garden beginning on 17 September In Garden the ground part of the operation XXX Corps was to link up river crossings as far as the Nederrijn at Arnhem via a carpet of airborne troops 43rd W Division was to follow Guards Armoured Division carrying out assault crossings if any of the bridges were found to be destroyed and guarding the corridor to Arnhem The advance up the only road Club Route was slow but on 21 September 43rd W Division caught up with the Guards at Nijmegen Further progress was blocked by strong German forces and 1st Airborne Division holding out at Arnhem was in a desperate plight 43rd W Division fought its way through to the Nederrijn with the road behind being frequently cut by German tanks During the night of 23 24 September the division ferried a few reinforcements across to 1st Airborne but another assault crossing on the night of 24 25 September suffered heavy casualties and few supplies were got across By now 1st Airborne had been effectively destroyed and the only course now was to evacuate the survivors This was carried out on 25 26 September a dark night with heavy rain The whole divisional artillery opened up at 21 00 while the sappers crossed and recrossed the river in stormboats ferrying around 2300 exhausted survivors of 1st Airborne back to the south bank 70 71 72 73 74 nbsp 25 pounders in action in the Netherlands October 1944 In the aftermath of Market Garden 43rd W Division was stationed on The Island between the Rivers Waal and Nederrijn fighting off some serious counter attacks in early October 75 Operation Clipper edit 43rd W Division was relieved on 10 November and then shifted east with XXX Corps to cooperate with the Ninth US Army by capturing the Geilenkirchen salient in Operation Clipper This entailed breaching the Siegfried Line defences and capturing a string of fortified villages The division s attack was launched on 18 November and after bitter fighting Geilenkirchen was surrounded by nightfall After driving off some counter attacks byPanzers during the night the division captured the town next day But thereafter heavy rain turned the whole battlefield into mud and guns could not be moved while the infantry struggled to consolidate their positions under heavy shellfire from the Siegfried Line guns The divisional artillery endeavoured to support the infantry on the ground By 22 November any further advance was impossible due to the waterlogged state of the country which then had to be defended in conditions resembling the worst of the Western Front in World War I 76 77 78 4th and 5th Battalions Dorset Regiment were bogged down in what became known as Dorset Wood with their gunner observation post OP In the many gun duels Major P Steele Perkins of 112 Field Regiment invariably had the last word 79 Planning was under way to renew the offensive when the Germans attacked in the Ardennes the Battle of the Bulge on 16 December 43rd W Division was positioned to counter attack should the Germans cross the Maas From 20 December a battle group under 43rd Wessex Reconnaissance Regiment with 112nd Field Rgt two anti tank troops and two infantry companies covered the river with a series of OPs and small detachments holding possible crossing places The frontage to cover was so wide that the 25 pdrs of 112th Field Rgt were later supplemented by a battery from 94th Queen s Own Dorset Yeomanry Field Rgt and by the 5 5 inch guns of 21st West Riding Medium Rgt However the Panzers got no closer than 12 miles 19 km before being stopped 80 Rhineland edit Once the German Ardennes Offensive had been halted 43rd W Division returned to the offensive in early 1945 in Operation Blackcock to reduce the Roer Triangle The advance was supported by massive artillery concentrations However further exploitation was prevented by bad weather 81 82 83 The division then fought through the month long battle of the Reichswald Operation Veritable This was also launched before dawn on 8 February with a massive bombardment The divisional objective was to follow 15th S Division s advance and then pass through to capture Kleve However the main roads were blocked the minor roads flooded and a huge traffic jam of wheeled vehicles resulted For much of the battle only tracked or amphibious vehicles could be used beyond Kleve and the guns were immobile On 16 February 43rd W Division broke through to the Goch escarpment and on 8 March it entered Xanten on the Rhine 84 85 86 87 nbsp 25 pounders moving up to cross the Rhine March 1945 Operation Plunder edit Although 43rd W Division was not scheduled to take part in the assault crossing of the Rhine Operation Plunder on 23 24 March However the division s leading brigade crossed the river on 25 March behind 51st Highland Division and found itself in immediate combat but had broken through by 29 March 88 89 90 During the subsequent pursuit 43rd W Division was given the task of opening Club Route for XXX Corps The division combined with 8th Armoured Brigade to form five battle groups for the first 25 miles 40 km drive The advance began on 30 March after initial traffic jams the groups either overcame or bypassed German rearguards and Lochem was liberated on 1 2 April The division was then given the task of taking Hengelo to secure the flank while Guards Armoured Division drove for the Dortmund Ems Canal 43rd W by passed the end of the Twente Canal and liberated the town It then moved back into Germany to capture Cloppenburg on 14 April after a stiff fight and fight off a final counter attack next day 91 92 93 The pursuit continued through April and ended with the division s capture of Bremen against spasmodic opposition and XXX Corps drive into the Cuxhaven peninsula The German surrender at Luneburg Heath came on 4 May and hostilities ended at 08 00 next day 94 95 96 The division s units were then employed as occupation forces in XXX Corps district in Germany 35 The regiment was serving in British Army of the Rhine BAOR when it passed into suspended animation on 26 April 1946 4 34 nbsp 43rd Wessex Division s memorial at Castle Hill Mere in Wiltshire Postwar editWhen the TA was reformed on 1 January 1947 the regiment was revived as 312 Wessex Medium Regiment The new regiment was based at Bristol and had little or no Wiltshire connection It formed part of 90 Field Army Group RA 4 34 97 98 99 100 Later the regiment was merged on 30 August 1950 into 498 Gloucestershire Heavy Anti Aircraft Rgt as 312 Gloucestershire HAA Rgt and on 10 March 1955 this in turn became a single Bristol based battery in 311 City of Bristol HAA Rgt 97 98 100 Footnotes edit The 1st Dorsetshire Bty at Bridport was provided by No 4 Company of the 1st Dorsetshire Royal Garrison Artillery Volunteers while 6th Hampshire Bty was converted from Nos 1 and 2 Companies of the same unit based at Bournemouth on the Dorset Hampshire border 1 In contemporary RA usage a brigade was a lieutenant colonel s command consisting of independent batteries brigaded together it was not comparable with an infantry or cavalry brigade commanded by a brigadier general 2 3 Notes edit Litchfield amp Westlake pp 55 6 Litchfield pp 1 amp 5 a b Sainsbury Chapter 1 Historical Background to the Territorial Artillery 1920 1945 pp 1 12 a b c d e f g h i Litchfield p 244 Frederick p 682 a b c d e f g h i j Becke Pt 2a pp 43 8 Swindon at Drill Hall Project a b c d 43rd Divisional Artillery at Long Long Trail Bournemouth at Drill Hall Project Bridport at Drill Hall Project a b c d e f Monthly Army List various dates a b Suffolk at Winchester College at War a b c 43rd 1st Wessex Division at Long Long Trail a b c d Forgotten Fronts pp 354 5 a b c d e Becke pp 55 60 a b 45th 2nd Wessex Division at Long Long Trail a b 45th Divisional Artillery at Long Long Trail a b c Frederick p 695 a b c d Perry pp 137 40 Perry pp 67 71 Suffolk at CWGC Records Gosling in Gliddon Robson pp 26 7 Robson p 281 Robson pp 57 77 86 99 103 a b c Frederick pp 489 95 a b c d Frederick p 516 a b Litchfield pp 93 5 Frederick p 524 a b Litchfield pp 208 9 Titles amp Designations 1927 Farndale Years of Defeat p 4 a b Sainsbury Chapter 2 The Development of Field Artillery Tactics Organisation and Equipment 1920 1945 pp 13 29 a b c d e Frederick p 528 a b c d e f Joslen pp 69 70 Joslen pp 11 73 Farndale Years of Defeat Annex A Collier Chapter VII Collier Map 5 Collier Map 6 Collier Maps 17 Collier Map 20 Collier Map 27 Essame pp 2 4 Appendix C Farndale Years of Defeat pp 99 100 Essame pp 13 17 Buckley pp 77 82 Ellis Normandy pp 279 86 Essame pp 20 34 Saunders Epsom pp 87 9 100 6 143 9 Saunders Hill 112 p 124 Buckley p 92 Ellis Normandy pp 317 8 Essame pp 37 50 Saunders Hill 112 Buckley pp 153 68 Ellis Normandy pp 388 90 402 409 10 Essame pp 53 7 Horrocks pp 189 90 Hunt Mont Pincon Buckley pp 180 1 Essame pp 73 89 Buckley pp 184 7 Ellis Normandy pp 453 5 465 6 Essame pp 91 94 109 Ford pp 28 34 49 59 Appendix 1 Buckley pp 187 9 Essame pp 109 13 Ford pp 59 107 176 Buckley pp 228 30 Ellis Germany pp 42 3 Essame pp 113 38 Horrocks pp 221 30 Ryan pp 462 5 477 8 486 489 509 13 515 31 Essame p 140 56 Ellis Germany p 161 Essame pp 164 86 Horrocks pp 233 6 Essame p 176 Essame pp 186 94 Buckley pp 265 8 Ellis Germany pp 241 7 Essame pp 195 200 Buckley pp 274 7 Ellis Germany pp 261 76 Essame pp 202 31 Horrocks pp 250 5 Ellis Germany pp 288 9 293 4 Essame pp 233 40 Horrocks pp 261 2 Ellis Germany pp 306 8 311 2 Essame pp 241 56 Horrocks pp 260 2 Ellis Germany pp 307 16 338 40 Essame pp 256 70 Horrocks pp 246 261 6 a b Frederick p 1004 a b Litchfield pp 86 8 Litchfield Appendix 5 a b 289 322 Rgts RA at British Army 1945 onwards References editMaj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2a The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st Line Territorial Force Divisions 42 56 London HM Stationery Office 1935 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 84734 739 8 John Buckley Monty s Men The British Army and the Liberation of Europe London Yale University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0 300 13449 0 Maj L F Ellis History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Victory in the West Vol I The Battle of Normandy London HM Stationery Office 1962 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 1 84574 058 0 Maj L F Ellis History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Victory in the West Vol II The Defeat of Germany London HM Stationery Office 1968 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 1 84574 059 9 Maj Gen H Essame The 43rd Wessex Division at War 1944 45 London William Clowes 1952 Gen Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery The Forgotten Fronts and the Home Base 1914 18 Woolwich Royal Artillery Institution 1988 ISBN 1 870114 05 1 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 Ken Ford Assault Crossing The River Seine 1944 2nd Edn Bradford Pen amp Sword 2011 ISBN 978 1 84884 576 3 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 Gerald Gliddon VCs Handbook The Western Front 1914 1918 History Press 2013 Lt Gen Sir Brian Horrocks A Full Life London Collins 1960 Eric Hunt Battleground Europe Normandy Mont Pincon Barnsley Leo Cooper 2003 ISBN 0 85052 944 1 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 84342 474 6 Norman E H Litchfield The Territorial Artillery 1908 1988 Their Lineage Uniforms and Badges Nottingham Sherwood Press 1992 ISBN 0 9508205 2 0 Norman Litchfield amp Ray Westlake The Volunteer Artillery 1859 1908 Their Lineage Uniforms and Badges Nottingham Sherwood Press 1982 ISBN 0 9508205 0 4 F W Perry History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 5b Indian Army Divisions Newport Gwent Ray Westlake 1993 ISBN 1 871167 23 X Brian Robson Crisis on the Frontier The Third Afghan War and the Campaign in Waziristan 1919 20 Staplehurst Spellmount 2004 ISBN 978 1 86227 211 8 Cornelius Ryan A Bridge Too Far London Hamish Hamilton 1974 Coronet 1975 ISBN 0 340 19941 5 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 Tim Saunders Battleground Europe Operation Epsom Normandy June 1944 Barnsley Pen amp Sword 2003 ISBN 0 85052 954 9 Tim Saunders Battleground Europe Normandy Hill 112 Battles of the Odon 1944 Barnsley Pen amp Sword 2000 ISBN 978 0 85052 737 7 War Office Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army London War Office 7 November 1927 RA sections also summarised in Litchfield Appendix IV External sources edit Chris Baker The Long Long Trail Commonwealth War Graves Commission records The Drill Hall Project Winchester College at War British Army units from 1945 on Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1st Wiltshire Battery Royal Field Artillery amp oldid 1178329580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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