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Edinburgh City Artillery

The Edinburgh City Artillery was a part-time unit of Britain's Volunteer Force raised around Edinburgh in 1859. It was the parent unit for a number of batteries in the later Territorial Force, including heavy batteries of the Royal Garrison Artillery that fought on the Western Front during World War I. It later formed a heavy regiment that served in the Battle of France and the campaign in North West Europe during World War II, while a spin-off medium regiment fought in Sicily and Italy. Its successor units continued in the postwar Territorial Army until the 1960s.

Edinburgh City Artillery
Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Heavy Battery
51st (Lowland) Heavy Regiment
66th (Lowland) Medium Regiment
357th (Lothians) Medium Regiment
City of Edinburgh RGA Uniforms
Active1859–1961
2014 – present
Country United Kingdom
Branch Volunteer Force
TypeArtillery Corps
RoleGarrison Artillery
Heavy Artillery
Medium Artillery
SizeCurrent: Battery
Part of105th Regiment Royal Artillery
Current GarrisonLivingston and Edinburgh
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Sir Joseph Noel Paton

Volunteers edit

The enthusiasm for the Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of many Artillery Volunteer Corps (AVCs) composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular Royal Artillery in time of need.[1][2][3][4] The 1st Edinburgh (City) Artillery Volunteer Corps was raised around Edinburgh on 4 November 1859. Its members were mainly artists, and the first commanding officer (CO) was Captain Joseph (later Sir Joseph) Noel Paton, the illustrator and sculptor, with the painter John Faed as lieutenant. By October 1860, the unit had a strength of nine batteries:[5][6][7][8]

  • No 1 Battery, raised 4 November 1859
  • No 2 Battery, raised 10 January 1860
  • No 3 Battery, raised 28 January 1860
  • No 4 Battery, raised 6 March 1860
  • No 5 Battery, raised 24 March 1860
  • No 6 Battery, raised 23 May 1860
  • No 7 Battery, raised 6 June 1860
  • No 8 Battery, raised 13 August 1860
  • No 9 Battery, raised 16 October 1860

The 2nd and 4th Batteries were mainly composed of artisans, but the members of the other batteries paid for their own uniforms and equipment. The unit's badges and accoutrements bore the inscription 'EDINBURGH CITY ARTILLERY'. Its headquarters (HQ) was established at 21 Castle Street (later at King's Stables Road, and then 28 York Place), Edinburgh, and it used the Argyle Battery (12-pounder guns) at Edinburgh Castle for drill. It carried out firing practice at a 32-pounder battery at Leith Fort, and for Carbine practice it used the Queen's Edinburgh Rifles' range at Hunter's Bog in Holyrood Park.[7][8][9]

Once the unit reached full size, a retired professional officer, William M.G.M. Wellwood (formerly Captain in the 2nd Bengal Light Cavalry), was appointed CO with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel on 13 September 1860. He was succeeded by Thomas Bell on 4 April 1864, and then in turn by Sir William Baillie, 2nd Baronet, on 6 December 1866. Baillie remained in command until 1884.[7][9]

From 1864, the 1st and 2nd Berwickshire AVCs were attached to the Edinburgh City Artillery. The 1st had been raised at Eyemouth on 6 April 1860, and the 2nd at Coldingham appeared in the Army List in February 1861 but no officers were commissioned into it until 10 July 1863.[7][8][9][10][a] The 2nd Berwickshire AVC was disbanded in 1883.[8][10]

 
16-Pounder RML gun manned by Artillery Volunteers.

The AVCs were intended to serve as garrison artillery manning fixed defences, but a number of the early units manned semi-mobile 'position batteries' of smooth-bore field guns pulled by agricultural horses. However, the War Office (WO) refused to pay for the upkeep of field guns and the concept died out in the 1870s. It was revived in 1888 when some Volunteer batteries were reorganised as 'position artillery' to work alongside the Volunteer infantry brigades. In February 1889, the 1st Edinburgh AVC was issued with two position batteries of 16-pounder Rifled Muzzle-Loading guns, which were manned by four of the garrison batteries. In 1892, the two position batteries were numbered 1 and 2, and the remaining garrison batteries were redesignated Nos 3–7 Companies. The 16-pounders were replaced by 4.7-inch breechloading guns in February 1903, and position batteries were officially referred to as 'heavy' batteries from 1902.[6][7][8][11][12]

From 1 April 1882, the unit formed part of the Scottish Division of the Royal Artillery (RA); on 1 July 1889, the Volunteer artillery were regrouped into three large divisions, the 1st Edinburgh being assigned to the Southern Division. In 1899, the artillery Volunteers were transferred to the Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA), and when the divisional structure was abolished on 1 January 1902 the Edinburgh unit became the 1st Edinburgh (City) RGA (V) with the 1st Berwickshire RGA (V) still attached.[6][8][9][13] By the early 20th Century the unit carried out its gun practice from the Inchkeith Batteries. In 1907, the unit's detachment won the King's Prize at the National Artillery Association meeting at Lydd.[7]

Territorial Force edit

When the Volunteers were subsumed into the new Territorial Force (TF) under the Haldane Reforms of 1908,[14][15] the personnel of the Edinburgh City Artillery was distributed to several new units:[8][9][16][17][18]

Subsequently, the Lowland (City of Edinburgh) RGA became the Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Heavy Battery, RGA, based at McDonald Road, Edinburgh, with its own ammunition column.[9][18][19][20] It formed part of the Lowland Division of the TF.[21][22][23]

World War I edit

Mobilisation edit

On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, the Lowland Hvy Bty began mobilising at Edinburgh with its four 4.7-inch guns, under the command of Major J.B. Cameron.[21][22][24] Almost immediately, TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service. On 15 August 1914, the WO issued instructions to separate those men who had signed up for Home Service only, and form them into reserve units. On 31 August, the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service. The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original, but distinguished by a '2/' prefix. The 2/1st Lowland (City of Edinburgh) battery was formed in the 2nd Lowland Division.[25][26][27]

1/1st Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Heavy Battery edit

The battery and ammunition column completed mobilisation on 14 August and moved out to its war station at Stirling in the Scottish Coastal Defences the following day. When the Lowland Division (numbered as the 52nd (Lowland) Division) embarked for the Gallipoli Campaign in May and June 1915, its heavy battery remained training in Scotland. It moved from Stirling to Cupar on 25 October, then on 26 January 1916 it moved south to the RA depot at Woolwich to prepare for overseas service.[21][23][28][29]

1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was sent to join the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) on the Western Front, disembarking at Le Havre in France on 16 February. Two days later, it joined XVII Brigade, RGA, at Authie.[21][30] The RGA brigades were renamed Heavy Artillery Groups (HAGs) shortly afterwards, and the policy was to move batteries between HAGs as required. 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty moved to 16th HAG on 3 March, then to 48th HAG on 17 April.[31][30]

Gommecourt edit

 
Ammunition limbers gallop past a battery of British 4.7 inch guns on the Somme.

48th Heavy Artillery Group was assigned to support VII Corps' Attack on the Gommecourt Salient in the forthcoming 'Big Push' (the Battle of the Somme). The battery was ordered to Berles-au-Bois north of Gommecourt at the beginning of May and spent a week preparing positions for its guns. It was then ordered to hand these over to 116th Hvy Bty, which would move in during June, so for several weeks the battery's gunners had to labour both to finish these positions for 116th Hvy Bty, and their own new positions, including a shell store for 400 rounds. Throughout May and through most of June, the battery fired on German positions around Adinfer Wood.[28][29]

48th Heavy Artillery Group's main role was Counter-battery fire to destroy the German artillery facing 56th (1st London) Division's attack front, although the Territorials' 4.7-inch guns could not actually reach the German heavy gun positions in the rear, and accuracy of the 4.7-inch batteries was generally poor. The planned seven-day bombardment of the German positions began on 24 June but 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty did not begin registering its guns on Bucquoy until 27 June (X Day). Later, the guns practised a six-minute 'hurricane' bombardment on the German positions in which the battery fired 68 rounds. Y Day was spent shelling German gun positions, but the weather was poor for observation, and the battery only fired 20 rounds. Because of the weather, the attack was postponed for two days, and the additional days (Y1 and Y2) were used for further bombardment. The battery was silent on Y1. On Y2, 48th HAG engaged 18 separate targets, and 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty fired 220 rounds, but this was far below the 400 per battery permitted, because of continuing difficulties of observation. Many of these rounds were wide of their intended targets. The failure to neutralise the German guns would have disastrous results for the attacking infantry.[28][29][32][33][34][35]

On Z Day (1 July), the entire artillery supporting 56th Division fired a 65-minute bombardment of the German front, starting at 06.25. At 07.30, the guns lifted onto their pre-arranged targets in the German support and reserve lines as the infantry got out of their forward trenches and advanced towards Gommecourt. At first, this went well for 56th Division. Despite casualties from the German counter-bombardment on their jumping-off trenches, the smoke and morning mist helped the infantry, and they reached the German front line with little loss and moved on towards the second and reserve lines. The artillery Observation Posts (OPs) reported the signboards erected by the leading waves to mark their progress. However, the OPs themselves came under attack from the German guns, which laid a Barrage across No man's land preventing supplies and reinforcements from reaching the leading infantry waves who had entered the German trenches. The heavy guns tried to suppress the German artillery, but the commander of 56th Division commented that although 'our counter-battery groups engaged a large number of German batteries – the results were not apparent'. From 07.25 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty spent the day firing mainly at battery positions around Le Quesnoy Farm at ranges around 8,000 yards (7,300 m). Left and Right Sections (two guns each) each took a different target, then switched to another pair of targets at 07.40. It was not until 09.30 that the CO of 48th HAG could report that one of the Group's target batteries had been silenced. 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty engaged the same four German batteries again at 10.46 and at 11.30, and fired on another battery near Adinfer Wood at 14.35, but none of these targets received more than 43 shells during the day (barely half the battery's allowance) and as the fire was unobserved the damage was probably negligible. (Although No 8 Squadron Royal Flying Corps identified 63 German batteries firing on VII Corps' front, many of these were out of range, and the aircrews were unable to spot fall of shot for the British guns because of smoke, haze and confusion.) By mid-afternoon, 56th Division's slight gains were being eroded by German counter-attacks, and all the remaining gains had to be abandoned after dark. VII Corps' costly attack was only a diversion from the main BEF attack further south, and was not renewed after the first day.[36][37][38][39]

Arras edit

 
RGA manhandling a 60-pounder gun, 1917.

Over the next year, the 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was moved from one HAG to another as circumstances demanded. It was transferred to 46th on 28 August, 47th on 13 September and 8th on 5 October before returning to 47th on 29 December. All these moves were within Third Army, which was no longer involved in the Somme Offensive.[40]

The obsolescent 4.7-inch guns were progressively replaced in the BEF by 60-pounders during 1916. In December 1916, the WO decided that all heavy batteries should be composed of six guns and 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was brought up to that strength on 23 January 1917 when it was joined by a section of 201st Hvy Bty (newly arrived in France and immediately broken up).[19][30][31][b]

The battery rejoined 8th HAG on 13 January 1917.[40] This group supported VII Corps in its attack at the opening of the Battle of Arras on 9 April. This time there were many more guns available and the artillery plan was much more carefully worked out. After the preliminary bombardment, howitzers laid a standing barrage on the German trenches at Zero hour while the 60-pounders swept and searched in depth to catch machine gunners and moving infantry. As the attacking infantry reached their second objective (the Blue Line), their field guns moved up in support and the 60-pounder batteries moved forward into the vacated positions. On VII Corps' front, the attack was partially successful, but infantry–artillery communication was still limited, and follow-up attacks over succeeding days suffered from hastily prepared artillery plans.[41][42]

Later war edit

After the Arras offensive, the 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was rested from 15 to 30 May. It then joined XVII Corps' Heavy Artillery on 8 June, being assigned to 35th HAG from 18 June, then 22nd HAG from 9 July, and then moved to 45th HAG in Fourth Army from 28 August. At the time, Fourth Army was on the Flanders Coast waiting to exploit a breakthrough from the Ypres Salient that never came.[30][40]

The battery was withdrawn from the line on 7 November, and was then resting, moving and training until 16 December. By now HAG allocations were becoming more fixed. From 28 December 1917 until the Armistice, 1/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was in 81st HAG, which became 81st Mixed Brigade, RGA, on 1 February 1918.[30][40]

The German Army opened its Spring Offensive on 21 March 1918 against Third and Fifth Armies. At the end of the first day 81st Bde was sent up to reinforce Third Army. During the 'Great Retreat' of March and early April, the artillery did their best to support rearguards until a new line was stabilised.[43]

81st Brigade was transferred from Third Army to First Army on 1 May, and remained with it until the Armistice with Germany.[30][40][44] After the German offensive was held, the Allies went over to the attack themselves during the summer of 1918 (the Hundred Days Offensive). By now, British attacks were supported by massive artillery concentrations. When XXII Corps attacked on 24 October at the Battle of the Selle, its two divisions were supported by no fewer than eight RGA heavy brigades including the 81st. Half of the 'heavies' were used for counter-battery tasks, the rest for the bombardment and barrage.[45][46]

When the BEF demobilised in 1919, the battery was placed in suspended animation.[18]

2/1st Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Heavy Battery edit

2/1st Lowland Heavy Battery was raised at Edinburgh before the end of 1914. The 2nd Lowland Division (later numbered the 65th (2nd Lowland) Division) slowly assembled in early 1915, hampered by lack of equipment for training. By August 1915, it had concentrated around Bridge of Allan, with 2/1st Lowland Hvy Bty training alongside its 1st Line parent at Stirling. In November, the division moved into winter quarters, with the heavy battery at Buddon.[19][21]

Western Front edit

In May 1916, the 2/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was sent to join the BEF, disembarking at Le Havre on 30 May. It joined VI Corps' Heavy Artillery in Third Army near Arras on 1 June, and was assigned to 8th HAG on 10 June.[26] The battery was brought up to six guns on 31 July 1916, when it was joined by a section from the newly arrived 149th Hvy Bty. 8th HAG was not involved in the Gommecourt attack, and spent the rest of 1916 in routine trench warfare under Third Army.[19][30][40]

Like the 1/1st Battery, the 2/1st (also with 60-pounders) was moved from one HAG to another. On 25 November 1916, it was transferred to 35th HAG, on 17 December to 65th, then two days later to 54th, returning to 35th on 8 January 1917, then to 39th on 11 February, all within Third Army. Like its parent unit, 2/1st Lowland Hvy Bty in 39th HAG fired in support of VII Corps in the Arras offensive (see above).[30]

After Arras, 2/1st Lowland Hvy Bty moved back to 35th HAG on 30 May, to 58th on 9 June, and then on 16 June it returned to 39th HAG. On 5 October, it moved to 92nd HAG in Fifth Army, which was engaged in the final stages of the Battle of Passchendaele. Conditions for the gunners in this battle were appalling, with immense labour being required to position guns and gun platforms in thick mud on a bare slope without any cover. Exhausted artillery units were having to be rotated. After the battle ended, 2/1st Lowland Hvy Bty was rested from 18 December.[30][40][47]

 
A 60-pounder gun being moved up in 1918.

On 5 January 1918, 2/1st Lowland Hvy Bty joined the mixed-calibre 93rd HAG (93rd (Mixed) Brigade, RGA, from 1 February), and remained with this brigade for the rest of the war. 93rd Brigade was at the time with Fourth Army, but on 14 March it transferred to Fifth Army, just in time to be caught up in the Spring Offensive and Great Retreat.[30][40]

93rd Brigade moved to Fourth Army for the Battle of Amiens on 8 August 1918, supporting the Australian Corps in a barrage that was so thick and accurate that all the Australians' Phase 1 objectives were secured by 07.00, and scarcely a German shell fell after 05.40. The Australians continued to advance rapidly, sometimes running into their own barrage in their eagerness.[40][48][49]

The advance continued in a succession of bounds through the Hundred Days Offensive. By early October the Australians were taken out of the line for rest, handing their artillery including 93rd Bde over to the II US Corps for the Battle of Cambrai, in which the Americans advanced up to the River Selle.[50][51]

By the time of the Battle of the Selle (see above), II US Corps was about to be withdrawn for rest, and 93rd Bde was assigned to IX Corps' Reserve. The heavy batteries were well forward so that they could shell the Germans' lines of retreat across the Sambre. 93rd Brigade was part of the massive artillery support for IX Corps' attack on 23 October. After the Battle of the Sambre, the campaign continued as a pursuit until the Armistice, in which the heavy artillery could only play a limited part.[52][53][54]

When the BEF demobilised in 1919, the battery was disbanded.[18]

Interwar edit

 
Dalmeny Street drill hall today

When the TF was reconstituted as the Territorial Army in 1920–1, the Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Hvy Bty formed the basis of a new 2nd (Lowland) Medium Brigade, RGA, quickly renumbered as the 57th (Lowland) Medium Brigade, RGA. It consisted of one battery derived from the Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Hvy Bty, the others being converted from the 6th and 8th Battalions of the Royal Scots:[9][18][55][56]

  • HQ at 6 Wemyss Place, Edinburgh
  • 225th (City of Edinburgh) Medium Bty at Drill Hall, 124 McDonald Road, Edinburgh – from Lowland Hy Bty, RGA
  • 226th (City of Edinburgh) Medium Bty (Howitzers) at Drill Hall, Dalmeny Street, Leithfrom 6th Bn Royal Scots
  • 227th (Haddingtonshire) Medium Bty (Howitzers) at Drill Hall, Dalmeny Street, Leith – from 8th Bn Royal Scots
  • 228th (Peeblesshire and Midlothian) Medium Bty (Howitzers) at High Street, Dunbarfrom 8th Bn Royal Scots

(The Leith and Dunbar Drill Halls had previously belonged to the 7th Battalion, Royal Scots.[9][20]) The CO (Lt-Col J.B. Cameron, DSO, TD) and senior major (E.G. Thompson, MC) of the new brigade were prewar officers of the 1st Lowland (City of Edinburgh) Hvy Bty. Affiliated to it were the cadet corps of North Berwick, Haddington, and Tranent Industrial School.[9] The brigade served as 'Army Troops' in 52nd (Lowland) Divisional Area of Scottish Command.[57] In 1924, the RGA was subsumed into the RA, and in 1938 RA brigades were redesignated as regiments.[18][56]

World War II edit

Mobilisation edit

When the TA was doubled in size after the Munich Crisis of 1938, the regiment split into two:[18][55][56][58]

  • 57th (Lowland) Medium Rgt
    • Regimental HQ, 225 and 226 (City of Edinburgh) Btys at Edinburgh
  • 66th Medium Rgt
    • RHQ and 227 (Haddingtonshire) Bty at Prestonpans
    • 228 (Peeblesshire and Midlothian) Bty at Leith

Shortly after the outbreak of war, on 14 September 1939, 57th (Lowland) Medium Rgt was converted to the heavy artillery role at Leith, initially being designated 2nd Heavy Regiment, then 51st (Lowland) Heavy Regiment. It had A, B, C and D Heavy Batteries.[18][59][60]

51st (Lowland) Heavy Regiment edit

Battle of France edit

At this time heavy regiments consisted of four 4-gun batteries, which in the 51st were designated A, B, C, and D.[61][c] 51st (Lowland) Hvy Rgt would have been equipped with 6-inch guns (one Bty) and 9.2-inch howitzers (three batteries), both of World War I vintage.[63][d] In November 1939, the newly converted regiment deployed to join the British Expeditionary Force in France under Lt-Col D. McDowell, who had been CO since 1936.[9][66][68][61]

On 10 May 1940, the Phoney War ended with the German invasion of the Low Countries, and the BEF followed the pre-arranged Plan D and advanced into Belgium to take up defences along the River Dyle. It was largely in position by 15 May and subject to German probing attacks.[69] However, the Panzers of the Wehrmacht's Army Group A had broken through the Ardennes and threatened the BEF's flank, so on 16 May it began to withdraw to the River Escaut.[70] On 17 May a gap opened up between the BEF and the Belgian Army, and a battery of 51sth (L) Hvy Rgt was among the artillery reinforcements thrown into this gap along the River Dendre, where there was fierce fighting.[71] After leaving rearguards on the Dendre, the BEF occupied the Escaut line on 21 May, but by now the enemy was in its rear. To hold the line of the Aire Canal north of Saint-Omer the BEF organised a scratch force of rear elements ('Polforce'), including 51st (L) Hvy Rgt, to defend the crossings. The bridge at Saint-Momelin was held for three days against 1st Panzer Division by one gun of 98th (Surrey & Sussex Yeomanry) Field Rgt and the gunners of 51st (L) Hvy Rgt acting as infantry, equipped with nothing more than rifles and a few Bren guns.[e] They had the satisfaction of intercepting a German radio message that said 'Bridge at Momelin strongly held, try elsewhere'. The defenders at St Momelin were relieved by French troops on 25 May and fell back into the 'pocket' round Dunkirk from which the BEF was preparing evacuation (Operation Dynamo).[72][73][74]

Home defence edit

All the BEF's heavy equipment such as artillery had to be disabled and left behind in France, and this could only be slowly replaced. By the Autumn of 1940, 51st (L) Hvy Rgt with its attached Royal Corps of Signals section had joined Western Command, facing the possibility of German invasion by sea and air. The available heavy guns were sited within range of likely landing places.[67][75][76][77][78] The regiment moved to Eastern Command in March 1941 and gained a Light Aid Detachment (LAD) of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers.[79][80][81][82][83][84] On 11 March 1942 the regiment's four batteries were redesignated P, Q, R and S, and on 1 January 1943 they were numbered as 1, 2, 4 and 6 Heavy Btys.[60]

The anticipated invasion never came, and the field force in the UK began to prepare for offensive action once more. One innovation was the Army Group Royal Artillery (AGRA), a powerful artillery brigade, usually comprising one heavy, three medium and one field regiment, which could be rapidly moved about the battlefield, and had the punch to destroy enemy artillery.[85][86][87] 51st (L) Hvy Rgt, together with its attached signal section and LAD, was assigned to 4 AGRA, formed in May 1943 as part of Second Army.[61][88][89]

By now, the RA's heavy regiments were equipped with two batteries of 7.2-inch howitzers and two of US-made 155mm 'Long Tom' guns.[63][86]

North West Europe edit

 
7.2-inch howitzer of 51st (Lowland) Heavy Regiment in France, 2 September 1944.
 
7.2-inch howitzer firing, 2 September 1944.

51st (Lowland) Heavy Rgt landed in Normandy with 4 AGRA in June 1944, shortly after D-Day.[61][89][86][90] On 8 and 9 July, the guns of 4 AGRA were part of the massive artillery support for I Corps' attack on Caen (Operation Charnwood).[89][91] After the breakout from the Normandy beachhead, I Corps was tasked with clearing the port of Le Havre on 10 September (Operation Astonia), again supported by 4 AGRA engaged in counter-battery (CB) fire.[89][92][93][94]

By now, I Corps was operating under the command of First Canadian Army advancing into the southern Netherlands.[95] At the end of October, 51st (L) Hvy Rgt was detached from 4 AGRA to support II Canadian Corps in its attack on Walcheren (Operation Infatuate). It returned to 4 AGRA in I Corps on 4 November and deployed around Etten-Leur, with a section of 7.2s west of Breda, directing harassing fire (HF) against German movements on the Moerdijk bridges. From 5 to 8 November, the regiment was engaged in CB and HF tasks around the Maas (French: Meuse) estuary, 2 and 6 Btys expending 800 rounds on CB tasks on 6 November alone. On 11 November, the regiment moved, establishing RHQ at De Rips, with 1 and 2 Btys (7.2-inch) on 11th Armoured Division's front east of Deurne, 4 and 6 Btys (155mm) on 3rd Division's front between Oploo and Overloon. The gunners then spent the next few days preparing gun positions. From 15 to 24 November, 1 and 2 Btys supported 11th Armd Division and 15th (Scottish) Division in their attack towards the Mass, though there was only a little CB and counter-mortar (CM) fire. On 25 and 27 November, 4 Bty carried out shoots against a German strongpoint at Kasteel, directed by air observation post (AOP) aircraft. On 28 and 29 November, 4 and 6 Btys carried out small CB programmes, but 1 and 2 Btys were now out of range.[62]

 
RA gunners load a US 155mm 'Long Tom' gun.

On 1 December, the regiment moved back into Belgium to join XXX Corps. During late December the corps was diverted south to strengthen the northern side of the 'Bulge' formed by the German Ardennes Offensive, and by early January 1945, 51st (L) Hvy Rgt was with 9 AGRA in XII Corps in the southern Netherlands, supporting 7th Armoured and 52nd (Lowland) Divisions with CB and HF missions.[62][96][97]

Once the Ardennes crisis was passed, Second Army began planning Operation Blackcock to clear the Roer Triangle. The regiment was split up, with the 7.2-inch howitzers of 1 Bty west of Sittard attached to 13th Medium Rgt in 3 AGRA, supporting 7th Armd Division, while 4 Bty was attached to 43rd (Wessex) Division for CM tasks. 51st (L) Heavy Rgt supplied 9 AGRA's liaison representatives at these two divisional HQs. The bulk of the regiment moved to Gangelt and began the artillery preparation for 'Blackcock' on 15 January. During this bombardment, 4 Bty fired on dug-in tanks near Berberen. On 20 January, the regiment shifted its positions so that the 155mm guns could reach targets across the River Ruhr. The fire tasks were completed and 4 Bty reverted to regimental control by 23 January. The regiment moved to 'harbour' at Loon op Zand 1–3 February except 2 Bty, which was under 68th (4th West Lancashire) Medium Rgt supporting the Canadians.[62]

For Operation Veritable (the clearance of the Klever Reichswald), 51st (L) Hvy Rgt (less one 155mm battery) reverted to 4 AGRA, which was assigned to XXX Corps to support 51st (Highland) Division. The batteries moved into 'hides' near Beers ahead of the operation.[98][62] The assembly of heavy guns and ammunition in forward areas for this offensive along inadequate roads was a major achievement. The concentration of artillery fire was the greatest employed by the British Army so far in the war.[99][100] The guns opened fire at H Hour (10.30) on 8 February.[62] XXX Corps' commander, Lt-Gen Sir Brian Horrocks, later recalled that 'The noise was appalling, and the sight was awe-inspiring. All across the front shells were exploding. ... It soon became clear that the enemy was completely bemused as a result of our colossal bombardment; their resistance was slight'.[101] The infantry followed the artillery fire closely, at the risk of incurring casualties from friendly fire, and overran the German forward positions. However, the battle slowed down into a series of short-range night and dawn attacks through flooded country from one 'island' village to another behind a barrage: 'it was a slog in which only two things mattered, training and guns ... Slowly and bitterly we advanced through the mud supported by our superb artillery'.[102] The British artillery prevented the Germans from assembling effective counter-attack forces.[103] 51st (L) Heavy Rgt fired in support of 51st (H) Division, 15th (S) Division and 32nd Guards Brigade over succeeding days, shifting its position to near Gennep on 15 February.[62] 'Veritable' ground on until 10 March, but succeeded in clearing the ground west of the Rhine.[104]

The Rhine crossing (Operation Plunder), involved an even greater concentration of artillery. 4 AGRA was once again supporting XXX Corps. The artillery opened fire at 17.00 on 23 March with CB fire to neutralise the 150 enemy guns that had been identified on the corps front, and that night the infantry crossings began. By 28 March, Second Army had broken out of its Rhine bridgehead and was pursuing the enemy across North Germany.[105][106][107]

In early April, 51st (L) Hvy Rgt returned to the Netherlands to come under the command of 1st Canadian AGRA near Bemmel. From 12 to 17 April the regiment supported 49th (West Riding) Division's assault crossing of the River Ijssel and clearance of the enemy pocket at Arnhem. On the last day of this action 1 Bty supported the Independent Belgian Brigade by firing on an enemy-held factory. The battery commander personally established the OP and after 10 ranging shots the battery fired 20 rounds 'for effect', of which 12 were direct hits.[62]

The regiment moved to the Otterloo area, where there was little firing apart from night HF tasks, though 4 Bty sent a fighting patrol on foot to comb nearby woods for Germans. On 23 April, the regiment fired on two hostile batteries, but the fighting was coming to an end.[62] Victory in Europe Day was declared on 8 May. The regiment was placed in suspended animation on 10 April 1946.[18][55][60]

66th (Lowland) Medium Regiment edit

Home Defence edit

66th Medium Regiment was not deployed to France with the BEF, and thus avoided the evacuation from Dunkirk. During the 'invasion summer' of 1940 and up to the end of 1941 it formed the medium artillery component of V Corps in southern England.[78][79][80][76][108] At the beginning of the war, medium batteries were equipped with eight World War I 60-pounders or 6-inch howitzers. From 1941, however, these were progressively replaced by 4.5-inch and 5.5-inch medium guns.[64][65][63]

66th Medium Rgt moved to Eastern Command in December 1941 and gained a signal section and LAD.[80][81][82][83] During this period, it trained alongside 3rd Division.[18] On 17 February 1942, 66th Medium Rgt was authorised to use its parent regiment's 'Lowland' subtitle.[18][56] The regiment left Eastern Command in December 1942 and came under direct WO control preparatory to embarking for overseas service. By mid-February, it had sailed for the Middle East.[83]

Sicily and Italy edit

On arrival in Egypt the regiment joined 6 AGRA, formed in May 1943 at Almaza. Shortly afterwards it came under Eighth Army, which at that time was planning for the Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky).[108][109]

66th (L) Medium Rgt landed in Sicily with one battery of 4.5-inch guns and one of 5.5s. It came into action on 17 July, together with six field regiments, in support of an attack on the Fossa Bottaceto, south of Catania, by 6th and 9th Bns Durham Light Infantry and the tanks of 3rd County of London Yeomanry (Sharpshooters). The guns fired a concentration for 30 minutes before Zero (which was at 01.00), then barrages and concentrations as required. The operation bogged down in close country and an attempt to restart it the next night broke down when the artillery was directed to fire on the Bottaceto itself, while German troops were still in position in front of it.[110]

After Sicily had been secured, Eighth Army moved to the invasion of mainland Italy, with 6 AGRA supporting XIII Corps, tasked with crossing the Strait of Messina to land around Reggio di Calabria on 3 September (Operation Baytown). The assembled guns fired vast amounts of ammunition without reply, and the assault troops met little opposition on the lightly held shore.[108][111]

By November, the Allies had advanced to the German Winter Line. 66th (L) Medium Rgt with 6 AGRA supported V Corps in the Battle of the Sangro. For three days from 29 November, the guns helped 78th and 8th Indian Divisions to break into the Bernhardt Line, the 5.5s firing over 350 rounds per gun and the 4.5s over 327, despite there being only one road up which to supply this ammunition. In the first half of December, during the Moro River Campaign, 2nd New Zealand Division supported by 6 AGRA and 66th (L) Medium Rgt made sustained but unsuccessful attempts to take the hilltop town of Orsogna.[112]

After the long winter stalemate round Monte Cassino the Allied forces were reorganised for a spring offensive in 1944. Additional AOP aircraft were allocated, and 6 AGRA benefited from 'Rover David', a 'cab rank system' for direct fighter-bomber support that could be called down on fleeting targets.[113] Once Rome had fallen in June, 6 AGRA was with XIII Corps in the pursuit to the Trasimene Line and the advance on Florence. During four days of preparation for 2nd New Zealand Division to assault the Arezzo position (10–14 July), the guns fired on enemy artillery batteries to cover the lull. The attack was an anti-climax, the terrain offering more resistance than the enemy, but the steep nature of the ground made accurate artillery support difficult, and there was heavier fighting on 15 July before the Germans broke contact and retreated. In the subsequent advance to the Gothic Line, the AGRAs were decentralised across the wide front, with medium regiments assigned to individual divisions.[114]

6 AGRA continued with XIII Corps when that formation fought under Fifth US Army to breach the Gothic Line in September 1944.[115] When 78th Division came back into the line in October, taking over positions in the Santerno Valley, 66th (L) Medium Rgt was directly attached to it, though the precarious bridges across the Santero made the relief and subsequent supply a very slow business.[116] 6 AGRA remained in XIII Corps for the victorious Spring 1945 offensive in Italy (Operation Grapeshot).[117]

The regiment passed into suspended animation on 21 March 1946.[18][56]

Postwar edit

When the TA was reconstituted on 1 January 1947, the 51st Heavy Rgt reformed at Edinburgh as 357th (Lothians) Medium Regiment, Royal Artillery, while 66th Medium Rgt was formally disbanded. The new regiment formed part of 85 (Field) AGRA. It changed its 'Lothians' subtitle to 'Lowland' on 12 December 1955, when it had the following organisation:[18][55][56][59][60][118][119][120]

  • RHQ
  • P (City of Edinburgh) Bty
  • Q (Lothian) Bty

When the Coast Artillery branch of the RA was abolished in 1956, 357th Medium Rgt absorbed 416th (Clyde) (Mixed) Coast Rgt to form 357th (Lowland) Light Regiment with the former coast artillery forming R (Clyde) Bty.[18][55][118][121]

The TA was reorganised on 1 May 1961 after National Service was abolished. R (Clyde) Bty was amalgamated into the 277th (Highland) Field Regiment while the rest of 357th Light Rgt was amalgamated with the 278th (Lowland) Field Regiment to become 278th (Lowland) Field Regiment (The City of Edinburgh Artillery). (278th Field Rgt was descended from the 1st Lowland Brigade, RFA, to which the Edinburgh City Artillery had contributed one battery in 1908, see above.)[18][55][118][122][123]

When the TA was reduced into the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve (TAVR) on 2 April 1967, 278th Fd Rgt became Q (City of Edinburgh) Battery in a combined Lowland Regiment, Royal Artillery, which was disbanded in 1975.[55][122][123][124][125][126]

Reformation edit

As a result of Army 2020, on 5 November 2014, 278 (Lowland) Battery was formed in Livingston, and shortly thereafter formed a detachment in Edinburgh completing the lineage link. As part of the 105th Regiment Royal Artillery, the battery was equipped with the L118 light gun.[127][128][129]

Uniforms and insignia edit

The original uniform of the Edinburgh City Artillery was a dark blue tunic, black braided, with blue collar and cuffs that were later changed to scarlet, and a red stripe down the trousers. Officers wore black lace at first, later changed to white or silver cord and then red from 1878. A Busby was worn in full dress up to 1908, and a round peakless Forage cap in undress, with a different badge for each battery. Most of the battery badges were a variation on the Royal Arms of Scotland. The badge on the grenade-shape busby plume holder and officers' Sabretaches used the arms of Edinburgh above a scroll inscribed 'EDINBURGH CITY ARTILLERY'.[7][8]

While training with 3rd Division in 1942, 66th (Lowland) Medium Rgt wore a blue diamond-shaped shoulder flash bearing the numeral 7 embroidered in red.[18]

In 1958 the sword and full-dress pouch that had belonged to Sir Joseph Noel Paton, was presented by his family to 278th (Lowland) Fd Rgt, successors to 1st Lowland Brigade. They were worn by the commander of P (1st City of Edinburgh) Battery on every Royal saluting parade until 1967.[18]

Honorary Colonels edit

The following served as Honorary Colonel of the unit:[9][130]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The Berwickshire AVCs should not be confused with the 1st Berwick-on-Tweed AVC, which was attached to the 1st Newcastle-upon-Tyne Artillery Volunteers, the county of Berwickshire being in Scotland but the town of Berwick-upon-Tweed being in England.
  2. ^ 201st Heavy Bty had been formed at Woolwich on 24 June 1916; its other sections were posted to 1/1st Lowland and 151st (Darlington) Hvy Btys.[19]
  3. ^ By November 1944, the regiment's batteries were designated 1, 2, 4 and 6.[62]
  4. ^ Ellis[64] and Farndale[65] state that the three howitzer batteries of a heavy regiment were equipped with either 9.2-inch or 8-inch howitzers. Because the Regular 1st Heavy Rgt was equipped with 8-inch howitzers,[66] of which 12 were captured in France,[67] the 24 captured 9.2-inch howitzers must have equipped the two TA heavy regiments deployed with the BEF.
  5. ^ A heavy regiment was only issued with 53 pistols, 205 rifles, 10 Light machine guns and 17 anti-tank rifles, for about 700 men.[64][65]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Beckett.
  2. ^ Grierson, pp. 1–12.
  3. ^ Litchfield & Westlake, pp. 1–4.
  4. ^ Spiers, pp. 163–8.
  5. ^ Beckett, Appendix VIII.
  6. ^ a b c Frederick, p. 656.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Grierson, pp. 128–30.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Litchfield & Westlake, pp. 62–5.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Army List, various dates.
  10. ^ a b c Litchfield & Westlake, p. 32.
  11. ^ Beckett, pp. 178–9.
  12. ^ Litchfield and Westlake, p. 6.
  13. ^ Litchfield and Westlake, pp. 3–6.
  14. ^ Dunlop, Chapter 14.
  15. ^ Spiers, Chapter 10.
  16. ^ London Gazette 20 March 1908.
  17. ^ Frederick, pp. 678, 684.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Litchfield, pp. 295–8.
  19. ^ a b c d e Frederick, pp. 696–701.
  20. ^ a b Lothians at Great War Centenary Drill Halls.
  21. ^ a b c d e Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 111–4.
  22. ^ a b
  23. ^ a b 52 Div at Long, Long Trail.
  24. ^
  25. ^ Becke, Pt 2b, p. 6.
  26. ^ a b Becke, Pt 2b, pp. 64–5.
  27. ^ 65 Div at Long, Long Trail.
  28. ^ a b c MacDonald, Offensive Spirit, pp. 199–20.
  29. ^ a b c MacDonald, Pro Patria, pp. 178–9.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i j 'Allocation of Heavy Batteries RGA', The National Archives (TNA), Kew, file WO 95/5494/2.
  31. ^ a b Farndale, Western Front, Annex E.
  32. ^ MacDonald, Pro Patria, pp. 192–6.
  33. ^ Edmonds, 1916, Vol I, p. 460.
  34. ^ Farndale, Western Front, p. 148.
  35. ^ Ward, pp. 34 and 45.
  36. ^ Edmonds, pp. 462–4, 471–3.
  37. ^ MacDonald, Pro Patria, pp. 258–67, 345, 364-8, 373–6, 385, 392–405.
  38. ^ MacDonald, Offensive Spirit, pp. 426–7, 432, 519–20.
  39. ^ Ward, p. 45.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i 'Allocation of HA Groups', TNA file WO 95/5494/1.
  41. ^ Farndale, Western Front, pp. 164–82.
  42. ^ Ward, pp. 117–31.
  43. ^ Farndale, Western Front, pp. 265–71.
  44. ^ Farndale, Western Front, Annex M.
  45. ^ Farndale, Western Front, pp. 313–4.
  46. ^ Edmonds & Maxwell-Hyslop, pp. 381–3.
  47. ^ Farndale, Western Front, pp. 211–4.
  48. ^ Blaxland, pp. 167–71.
  49. ^ Farndale, Western Front, p. 290.
  50. ^ Edmonds & Maxwell-Hyslop, p. 188.
  51. ^ Yockelson, pp. 193–8.
  52. ^ Edmonds & Maxwell-Hyslop, pp. 354–7.
  53. ^ Farndale, Western Front, pp. 307–12.
  54. ^ Yockelson, p. 209.
  55. ^ a b c d e f g Frederick, pp. 299–300.
  56. ^ a b c d e f Frederick, pp. 723, 734, 737.
  57. ^ Titles and Designations, 1927.
  58. ^ Scottish Command 3 September 1939 at Patriot Files.
  59. ^ a b Farndale, Years of Defeat, Annex M.
  60. ^ a b c d Frederick, pp. 556–7.
  61. ^ a b c d "51 Hvy Rgt at RA 1939–45".
  62. ^ a b c d e f g h i 51 Hvy Rgt at RA Netherlands.
  63. ^ a b c Forty, pp. 222–6.
  64. ^ a b c Ellis, France and Flanders, Appendix I.
  65. ^ a b c Farndale, Years of Defeat, Annex A.
  66. ^ a b Farndale, Years of Defeat, p. 4.
  67. ^ a b Farndale, Years of Defeat, Annex E.
  68. ^ Joslen, p. 462.
  69. ^ Ellis, France and Flanders, Chapter III.
  70. ^ Ellis, France and Flanders, Chapter IV.
  71. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, p. 45.
  72. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, pp. 60, 74, Map 16.
  73. ^ Ellis, France and Flanders, Chapter VII.
  74. ^ Ellis, France and Flanders, Chapter VIII.
  75. ^ Farndale, pp. 95–6.
  76. ^ a b Farndale, Years of Defeat, Annex D.
  77. ^ Collier, Chapter VIII.
  78. ^ a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery, 26 December 1940, TNA files WO 212/4 and WO 33/2365.
  79. ^ a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional Units), 25 March 1941, with amendments, TNA files WO 212/5 and WO 33/2323.
  80. ^ a b c Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional units), 22 October 1941, with amendments, TNA files WO 212/6 and WO 33/1883.
  81. ^ a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional units), 2 April 1942, TNA file WO 212/515.
  82. ^ a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional Units), 14 August 1942, TNA file WO 212/7 and WO 33/1927.
  83. ^ a b c Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional Units), 22 November 1942, with amendments, TNA file WO 212/8 and WO 33/1962.
  84. ^ Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional Units), 18 February 1943, TNA file WO 212/9 and WO 33/1987.
  85. ^ Buckley, p. 41 & fn 60, p. 309.
  86. ^ a b c Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol I, Appendix IV.
  87. ^ Farndale, Years of Defeat, p. 99.
  88. ^ Order of Battle of the Forces in the United Kingdom, Part 2: 21 Army Group, 24 July 1943, with amendments, TNA file WO 212/238.
  89. ^ a b c d 4 AGRA at RA 1939-45.
  90. ^ Joslen, p. 463.
  91. ^ Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol I, pp. 311–5.
  92. ^ Buckley, p. 193.
  93. ^ Doherty, pp. 104–1.
  94. ^ Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol II, p. 14.
  95. ^ Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol II, p. 6.
  96. ^ Buckley, pp. 260–1.
  97. ^ Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol II, p. 190.
  98. ^ Anon, Operation Veritable, Appendix A.
  99. ^ Buckley, pp. 270–2.
  100. ^ Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol II, pp. 255–7.
  101. ^ Horrocks, pp. 248–9.
  102. ^ Horrocks, pp. 250–1.
  103. ^ Buckley, pp. 272–7.
  104. ^ Buckley, p. 278.
  105. ^ Buckley, pp. 283–5.
  106. ^ Ellis, Victory in the West, Vol II, pp. 285–8, 297.
  107. ^ Horrocks, pp. 257–8.
  108. ^ a b c "66 Med Rgt at RA 1939–45".
  109. ^ 6 AGRA at RA 1939–45.
  110. ^ Molony, Vol V, pp. 104–5.
  111. ^ Molony, Vol V, pp. 234, 238.
  112. ^ Molony, Vol V, pp. 489–500.
  113. ^ Molony, Vol VI, Pt I, pp. 67–8.
  114. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt II, pp. 5, 76–9, 90.
  115. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt II, p. 263.
  116. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt II, pp. 390–1.
  117. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt III, p. 223.
  118. ^ a b c Frederick, p. 1007.
  119. ^ Litchfield, Appendix 5.
  120. ^ Watson, TA 1947.
  121. ^ Litchfield, p. 307.
  122. ^ a b Frederick, p. 1000.
  123. ^ a b 266–288 Rgts RA at British Army 1945 on.
  124. ^ Frederick, p. 1043.
  125. ^ Litchfield, p. 294.
  126. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 December 2005. Retrieved 27 December 2005.
  127. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 August 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2014.
  128. ^ "Livingston based, 278 (Lowland) Battery Royal Artillery Flag Raising – RA Association". www.thegunners.org.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  129. ^ "Regimental Family – RA Association". www.thegunners.org.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  130. ^ a b Burke's.

References edit

  • Anon, British Army of the Rhine Battlefield Tour: Operation Veritable, Germany: BAOR, 1947/Uckfield: Naval and Military Press, 2021, ISBN 978-1-78331-813-1.
  • 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 1-847347-39-8.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2b: The 2nd-Line Territorial Force Divisions (57th–69th), with the Home-Service Divisions (71st–73rd) and 74th and 75th Divisions, London: HM Stationery Office, 1937/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-39-8.
  • Ian F.W. Beckett, Riflemen Form: A Study of the Rifle Volunteer Movement 1859–1908,
  • Gregory Blaxland, Amiens: 1918, London: Frederick Muller, 1968/Star, 1981, ISBN 0-352-30833-8.
  • John Buckley, Monty's Men: The British Army and the Liberation of Europe, London: Yale University Press, 2013, ISBN 978-0-300-13449-0.
  • Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 100th Edn, London, 1953.
  • Basil Collier, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Defence of the United Kingdom, London: HM Stationery Office, 1957.
  • Richard Doherty, Hobart's 79th Armoured Division at War: Invention, Innovation and Inspiration, Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2011, ISBN 978-1-84884-398-1.
  • Col John K. Dunlop, The Development of the British Army 1899–1914, London: Methuen, 1938.
  • Brig-Gen Sir James E. Edmonds, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium, 1916, Vol I, London: Macmillan,1932/Woking: Shearer, 1986, ISBN 0-946998-02-7.
  • Brig-Gen Sir James E. Edmonds & Lt-Col R. Maxwell-Hyslop, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium 1918, Vol V, 26th September–11th November, The Advance to Victory, London: HM Stationery Office, 1947/Imperial War Museum and Battery Press, 1993, ISBN 1-870423-06-2.
  • Major L.F. Ellis, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The War in France and Flanders 1939–1940, London: HM Stationery Office, 1954/Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2004.
  • Major 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 1-845740-58-0.
  • Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Western Front 1914–18, Woolwich: Royal Artillery Institution, 1986, ISBN 1-870114-00-0.
  • 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.
  • George Forty, British Army Handbook 1939–1945, Stroud: Sutton, 1998, ISBN 0-7509-1403-3.
  • 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.
  • Maj-Gen J.M. Grierson, Records of the Scottish Volunteer Force 1859–1908, Edinburgh: Blackwood, 1909.
  • Lt-Gen Sir Brian Horrocks, A Full Life, London: Collins, 1960.
  • Gen Sir William Jackson, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Mediterranean and Middle East, Vol VI: Victory in the Mediterranean, Part I|: June to October 1944, London: HMSO, 1987/Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2004, ISBN 1-845740-71-8.
  • Gen Sir William Jackson, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Mediterranean and Middle East, Vol VI: Victory in the Mediterranean, Part I|I: November 1944 to May 1945, London: HMSO, 1988/Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2004, ISBN 1-845740-72-6.
  • Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1960]. Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield, East Sussex: Naval and Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84342-474-1.
  • 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.
  • Alan MacDonald, Pro Patria Mori: The 56th (1st London) Division at Gommecourt, 1st July 1916, 2nd Edn, West Wickham: Iona Books, 2008, ISBN 978-0-9558119-1-3.
  • Alan MacDonald, A Lack of Offensive Spirit? The 46th (North Midland) Division at Gommecourt, 1st July 1916, West Wickham: Iona Books, 2008, ISBN 978-0-9558119-0-6.
  • Brig C.J.C. Molony,History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Mediterranean and Middle East, Vol V: The Campaign in Sicily 1943 and the Campaign in Italy 3rd September 1943 to 31st March 1944, London: HMSO, 1973/Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2004, ISBN 1-845740-69-6.
  • Brig C.J.C. Molony, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Mediterranean and Middle East, Vol VI: Victory in the Mediterranean, Part I: 1st April to 4th June 1944, London: HMSO, 1987/Uckfield, Naval & Military Press, 2004, ISBN 1-845740-70-X.
  • Edward M. Spiers, The Army and Society 1815–1914, London: Longmans, 1980, ISBN 0-582-48565-7.
  • 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).
  • Maj C.H. Dudley Ward, The Fifty Sixth Division, 1st London Territorial Division, 1914–1918, London: John Murray, 1921/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2001, ISBN 978-1-84342-111-5.
  • Mitchell A. Yockelson, Borrowed Soldiers: Americans under British Command, 1918, Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-8061-5349-0.

External sources edit

  • British Army units from 1945 on
  • Great War Centenary Drill Halls.
  • The Long, Long Trail
  • Orders of Battle at Patriot Files
  • Royal Artillery 1939–1945
  • Royal Artillery Units Netherlands 1944–1945
  • Graham Watson, The Territorial Army 1947

edinburgh, city, artillery, part, time, unit, britain, volunteer, force, raised, around, edinburgh, 1859, parent, unit, number, batteries, later, territorial, force, including, heavy, batteries, royal, garrison, artillery, that, fought, western, front, during,. The Edinburgh City Artillery was a part time unit of Britain s Volunteer Force raised around Edinburgh in 1859 It was the parent unit for a number of batteries in the later Territorial Force including heavy batteries of the Royal Garrison Artillery that fought on the Western Front during World War I It later formed a heavy regiment that served in the Battle of France and the campaign in North West Europe during World War II while a spin off medium regiment fought in Sicily and Italy Its successor units continued in the postwar Territorial Army until the 1960s Edinburgh City ArtilleryLowland City of Edinburgh Heavy Battery51st Lowland Heavy Regiment66th Lowland Medium Regiment357th Lothians Medium RegimentCity of Edinburgh RGA UniformsActive1859 19612014 presentCountry United KingdomBranchVolunteer ForceTypeArtillery CorpsRoleGarrison ArtilleryHeavy ArtilleryMedium ArtillerySizeCurrent BatteryPart of105th Regiment Royal ArtilleryCurrent GarrisonLivingston and EdinburghEngagementsWorld War I Western Front World War II Battle of France Sicily Italy North West EuropeCommandersNotablecommandersSir Joseph Noel Paton Contents 1 Volunteers 2 Territorial Force 3 World War I 3 1 Mobilisation 3 2 1 1st Lowland City of Edinburgh Heavy Battery 3 2 1 Gommecourt 3 2 2 Arras 3 2 3 Later war 3 3 2 1st Lowland City of Edinburgh Heavy Battery 3 3 1 Western Front 4 Interwar 5 World War II 5 1 Mobilisation 5 2 51st Lowland Heavy Regiment 5 2 1 Battle of France 5 2 2 Home defence 5 2 3 North West Europe 5 3 66th Lowland Medium Regiment 5 3 1 Home Defence 5 3 2 Sicily and Italy 6 Postwar 7 Reformation 8 Uniforms and insignia 9 Honorary Colonels 10 Footnotes 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 External sourcesVolunteers editThe enthusiasm for the Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of many Artillery Volunteer Corps AVCs composed of part time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular Royal Artillery in time of need 1 2 3 4 The 1st Edinburgh City Artillery Volunteer Corps was raised around Edinburgh on 4 November 1859 Its members were mainly artists and the first commanding officer CO was Captain Joseph later Sir Joseph Noel Paton the illustrator and sculptor with the painter John Faed as lieutenant By October 1860 the unit had a strength of nine batteries 5 6 7 8 No 1 Battery raised 4 November 1859 No 2 Battery raised 10 January 1860 No 3 Battery raised 28 January 1860 No 4 Battery raised 6 March 1860 No 5 Battery raised 24 March 1860 No 6 Battery raised 23 May 1860 No 7 Battery raised 6 June 1860 No 8 Battery raised 13 August 1860 No 9 Battery raised 16 October 1860The 2nd and 4th Batteries were mainly composed of artisans but the members of the other batteries paid for their own uniforms and equipment The unit s badges and accoutrements bore the inscription EDINBURGH CITY ARTILLERY Its headquarters HQ was established at 21 Castle Street later at King s Stables Road and then 28 York Place Edinburgh and it used the Argyle Battery 12 pounder guns at Edinburgh Castle for drill It carried out firing practice at a 32 pounder battery at Leith Fort and for Carbine practice it used the Queen s Edinburgh Rifles range at Hunter s Bog in Holyrood Park 7 8 9 Once the unit reached full size a retired professional officer William M G M Wellwood formerly Captain in the 2nd Bengal Light Cavalry was appointed CO with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel on 13 September 1860 He was succeeded by Thomas Bell on 4 April 1864 and then in turn by Sir William Baillie 2nd Baronet on 6 December 1866 Baillie remained in command until 1884 7 9 From 1864 the 1st and 2nd Berwickshire AVCs were attached to the Edinburgh City Artillery The 1st had been raised at Eyemouth on 6 April 1860 and the 2nd at Coldingham appeared in the Army List in February 1861 but no officers were commissioned into it until 10 July 1863 7 8 9 10 a The 2nd Berwickshire AVC was disbanded in 1883 8 10 nbsp 16 Pounder RML gun manned by Artillery Volunteers The AVCs were intended to serve as garrison artillery manning fixed defences but a number of the early units manned semi mobile position batteries of smooth bore field guns pulled by agricultural horses However the War Office WO refused to pay for the upkeep of field guns and the concept died out in the 1870s It was revived in 1888 when some Volunteer batteries were reorganised as position artillery to work alongside the Volunteer infantry brigades In February 1889 the 1st Edinburgh AVC was issued with two position batteries of 16 pounder Rifled Muzzle Loading guns which were manned by four of the garrison batteries In 1892 the two position batteries were numbered 1 and 2 and the remaining garrison batteries were redesignated Nos 3 7 Companies The 16 pounders were replaced by 4 7 inch breechloading guns in February 1903 and position batteries were officially referred to as heavy batteries from 1902 6 7 8 11 12 From 1 April 1882 the unit formed part of the Scottish Division of the Royal Artillery RA on 1 July 1889 the Volunteer artillery were regrouped into three large divisions the 1st Edinburgh being assigned to the Southern Division In 1899 the artillery Volunteers were transferred to the Royal Garrison Artillery RGA and when the divisional structure was abolished on 1 January 1902 the Edinburgh unit became the 1st Edinburgh City RGA V with the 1st Berwickshire RGA V still attached 6 8 9 13 By the early 20th Century the unit carried out its gun practice from the Inchkeith Batteries In 1907 the unit s detachment won the King s Prize at the National Artillery Association meeting at Lydd 7 Territorial Force editWhen the Volunteers were subsumed into the new Territorial Force TF under the Haldane Reforms of 1908 14 15 the personnel of the Edinburgh City Artillery was distributed to several new units 8 9 16 17 18 The Lowland City of Edinburgh RGA Some personnel merged with parts of the 1st Argyll RGA and the 1st Renfrewshire RGA to form the Forth amp Clyde RGA a coast defence unit based at Edinburgh The 1st City of Edinburgh Battery was formed in the 1st Lowland Brigade Royal Field Artillery the rest of which came from the 1st Midlothian RGA Members of Edinburgh University who had served in Left Half 1st Heavy Battery transferred to the Edinburgh University contingent of the Senior Division of the Officers Training Corps OTC 1st Berwickshire RGA V was disbanded 8 10 Subsequently the Lowland City of Edinburgh RGA became the Lowland City of Edinburgh Heavy Battery RGA based at McDonald Road Edinburgh with its own ammunition column 9 18 19 20 It formed part of the Lowland Division of the TF 21 22 23 World War I editMobilisation edit On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914 the Lowland Hvy Bty began mobilising at Edinburgh with its four 4 7 inch guns under the command of Major J B Cameron 21 22 24 Almost immediately TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service On 15 August 1914 the WO issued instructions to separate those men who had signed up for Home Service only and form them into reserve units On 31 August the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original but distinguished by a 2 prefix The 2 1st Lowland City of Edinburgh battery was formed in the 2nd Lowland Division 25 26 27 1 1st Lowland City of Edinburgh Heavy Battery edit The battery and ammunition column completed mobilisation on 14 August and moved out to its war station at Stirling in the Scottish Coastal Defences the following day When the Lowland Division numbered as the 52nd Lowland Division embarked for the Gallipoli Campaign in May and June 1915 its heavy battery remained training in Scotland It moved from Stirling to Cupar on 25 October then on 26 January 1916 it moved south to the RA depot at Woolwich to prepare for overseas service 21 23 28 29 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was sent to join the British Expeditionary Force BEF on the Western Front disembarking at Le Havre in France on 16 February Two days later it joined XVII Brigade RGA at Authie 21 30 The RGA brigades were renamed Heavy Artillery Groups HAGs shortly afterwards and the policy was to move batteries between HAGs as required 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty moved to 16th HAG on 3 March then to 48th HAG on 17 April 31 30 Gommecourt edit nbsp Ammunition limbers gallop past a battery of British 4 7 inch guns on the Somme 48th Heavy Artillery Group was assigned to support VII Corps Attack on the Gommecourt Salient in the forthcoming Big Push the Battle of the Somme The battery was ordered to Berles au Bois north of Gommecourt at the beginning of May and spent a week preparing positions for its guns It was then ordered to hand these over to 116th Hvy Bty which would move in during June so for several weeks the battery s gunners had to labour both to finish these positions for 116th Hvy Bty and their own new positions including a shell store for 400 rounds Throughout May and through most of June the battery fired on German positions around Adinfer Wood 28 29 48th Heavy Artillery Group s main role was Counter battery fire to destroy the German artillery facing 56th 1st London Division s attack front although the Territorials 4 7 inch guns could not actually reach the German heavy gun positions in the rear and accuracy of the 4 7 inch batteries was generally poor The planned seven day bombardment of the German positions began on 24 June but 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty did not begin registering its guns on Bucquoy until 27 June X Day Later the guns practised a six minute hurricane bombardment on the German positions in which the battery fired 68 rounds Y Day was spent shelling German gun positions but the weather was poor for observation and the battery only fired 20 rounds Because of the weather the attack was postponed for two days and the additional days Y1 and Y2 were used for further bombardment The battery was silent on Y1 On Y2 48th HAG engaged 18 separate targets and 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty fired 220 rounds but this was far below the 400 per battery permitted because of continuing difficulties of observation Many of these rounds were wide of their intended targets The failure to neutralise the German guns would have disastrous results for the attacking infantry 28 29 32 33 34 35 On Z Day 1 July the entire artillery supporting 56th Division fired a 65 minute bombardment of the German front starting at 06 25 At 07 30 the guns lifted onto their pre arranged targets in the German support and reserve lines as the infantry got out of their forward trenches and advanced towards Gommecourt At first this went well for 56th Division Despite casualties from the German counter bombardment on their jumping off trenches the smoke and morning mist helped the infantry and they reached the German front line with little loss and moved on towards the second and reserve lines The artillery Observation Posts OPs reported the signboards erected by the leading waves to mark their progress However the OPs themselves came under attack from the German guns which laid a Barrage across No man s land preventing supplies and reinforcements from reaching the leading infantry waves who had entered the German trenches The heavy guns tried to suppress the German artillery but the commander of 56th Division commented that although our counter battery groups engaged a large number of German batteries the results were not apparent From 07 25 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty spent the day firing mainly at battery positions around Le Quesnoy Farm at ranges around 8 000 yards 7 300 m Left and Right Sections two guns each each took a different target then switched to another pair of targets at 07 40 It was not until 09 30 that the CO of 48th HAG could report that one of the Group s target batteries had been silenced 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty engaged the same four German batteries again at 10 46 and at 11 30 and fired on another battery near Adinfer Wood at 14 35 but none of these targets received more than 43 shells during the day barely half the battery s allowance and as the fire was unobserved the damage was probably negligible Although No 8 Squadron Royal Flying Corps identified 63 German batteries firing on VII Corps front many of these were out of range and the aircrews were unable to spot fall of shot for the British guns because of smoke haze and confusion By mid afternoon 56th Division s slight gains were being eroded by German counter attacks and all the remaining gains had to be abandoned after dark VII Corps costly attack was only a diversion from the main BEF attack further south and was not renewed after the first day 36 37 38 39 Arras edit nbsp RGA manhandling a 60 pounder gun 1917 Over the next year the 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was moved from one HAG to another as circumstances demanded It was transferred to 46th on 28 August 47th on 13 September and 8th on 5 October before returning to 47th on 29 December All these moves were within Third Army which was no longer involved in the Somme Offensive 40 The obsolescent 4 7 inch guns were progressively replaced in the BEF by 60 pounders during 1916 In December 1916 the WO decided that all heavy batteries should be composed of six guns and 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was brought up to that strength on 23 January 1917 when it was joined by a section of 201st Hvy Bty newly arrived in France and immediately broken up 19 30 31 b The battery rejoined 8th HAG on 13 January 1917 40 This group supported VII Corps in its attack at the opening of the Battle of Arras on 9 April This time there were many more guns available and the artillery plan was much more carefully worked out After the preliminary bombardment howitzers laid a standing barrage on the German trenches at Zero hour while the 60 pounders swept and searched in depth to catch machine gunners and moving infantry As the attacking infantry reached their second objective the Blue Line their field guns moved up in support and the 60 pounder batteries moved forward into the vacated positions On VII Corps front the attack was partially successful but infantry artillery communication was still limited and follow up attacks over succeeding days suffered from hastily prepared artillery plans 41 42 Later war edit After the Arras offensive the 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was rested from 15 to 30 May It then joined XVII Corps Heavy Artillery on 8 June being assigned to 35th HAG from 18 June then 22nd HAG from 9 July and then moved to 45th HAG in Fourth Army from 28 August At the time Fourth Army was on the Flanders Coast waiting to exploit a breakthrough from the Ypres Salient that never came 30 40 The battery was withdrawn from the line on 7 November and was then resting moving and training until 16 December By now HAG allocations were becoming more fixed From 28 December 1917 until the Armistice 1 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was in 81st HAG which became 81st Mixed Brigade RGA on 1 February 1918 30 40 The German Army opened its Spring Offensive on 21 March 1918 against Third and Fifth Armies At the end of the first day 81st Bde was sent up to reinforce Third Army During the Great Retreat of March and early April the artillery did their best to support rearguards until a new line was stabilised 43 81st Brigade was transferred from Third Army to First Army on 1 May and remained with it until the Armistice with Germany 30 40 44 After the German offensive was held the Allies went over to the attack themselves during the summer of 1918 the Hundred Days Offensive By now British attacks were supported by massive artillery concentrations When XXII Corps attacked on 24 October at the Battle of the Selle its two divisions were supported by no fewer than eight RGA heavy brigades including the 81st Half of the heavies were used for counter battery tasks the rest for the bombardment and barrage 45 46 When the BEF demobilised in 1919 the battery was placed in suspended animation 18 2 1st Lowland City of Edinburgh Heavy Battery edit 2 1st Lowland Heavy Battery was raised at Edinburgh before the end of 1914 The 2nd Lowland Division later numbered the 65th 2nd Lowland Division slowly assembled in early 1915 hampered by lack of equipment for training By August 1915 it had concentrated around Bridge of Allan with 2 1st Lowland Hvy Bty training alongside its 1st Line parent at Stirling In November the division moved into winter quarters with the heavy battery at Buddon 19 21 Western Front edit In May 1916 the 2 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was sent to join the BEF disembarking at Le Havre on 30 May It joined VI Corps Heavy Artillery in Third Army near Arras on 1 June and was assigned to 8th HAG on 10 June 26 The battery was brought up to six guns on 31 July 1916 when it was joined by a section from the newly arrived 149th Hvy Bty 8th HAG was not involved in the Gommecourt attack and spent the rest of 1916 in routine trench warfare under Third Army 19 30 40 Like the 1 1st Battery the 2 1st also with 60 pounders was moved from one HAG to another On 25 November 1916 it was transferred to 35th HAG on 17 December to 65th then two days later to 54th returning to 35th on 8 January 1917 then to 39th on 11 February all within Third Army Like its parent unit 2 1st Lowland Hvy Bty in 39th HAG fired in support of VII Corps in the Arras offensive see above 30 After Arras 2 1st Lowland Hvy Bty moved back to 35th HAG on 30 May to 58th on 9 June and then on 16 June it returned to 39th HAG On 5 October it moved to 92nd HAG in Fifth Army which was engaged in the final stages of the Battle of Passchendaele Conditions for the gunners in this battle were appalling with immense labour being required to position guns and gun platforms in thick mud on a bare slope without any cover Exhausted artillery units were having to be rotated After the battle ended 2 1st Lowland Hvy Bty was rested from 18 December 30 40 47 nbsp A 60 pounder gun being moved up in 1918 On 5 January 1918 2 1st Lowland Hvy Bty joined the mixed calibre 93rd HAG 93rd Mixed Brigade RGA from 1 February and remained with this brigade for the rest of the war 93rd Brigade was at the time with Fourth Army but on 14 March it transferred to Fifth Army just in time to be caught up in the Spring Offensive and Great Retreat 30 40 93rd Brigade moved to Fourth Army for the Battle of Amiens on 8 August 1918 supporting the Australian Corps in a barrage that was so thick and accurate that all the Australians Phase 1 objectives were secured by 07 00 and scarcely a German shell fell after 05 40 The Australians continued to advance rapidly sometimes running into their own barrage in their eagerness 40 48 49 The advance continued in a succession of bounds through the Hundred Days Offensive By early October the Australians were taken out of the line for rest handing their artillery including 93rd Bde over to the II US Corps for the Battle of Cambrai in which the Americans advanced up to the River Selle 50 51 By the time of the Battle of the Selle see above II US Corps was about to be withdrawn for rest and 93rd Bde was assigned to IX Corps Reserve The heavy batteries were well forward so that they could shell the Germans lines of retreat across the Sambre 93rd Brigade was part of the massive artillery support for IX Corps attack on 23 October After the Battle of the Sambre the campaign continued as a pursuit until the Armistice in which the heavy artillery could only play a limited part 52 53 54 When the BEF demobilised in 1919 the battery was disbanded 18 Interwar edit nbsp Dalmeny Street drill hall todayWhen the TF was reconstituted as the Territorial Army in 1920 1 the Lowland City of Edinburgh Hvy Bty formed the basis of a new 2nd Lowland Medium Brigade RGA quickly renumbered as the 57th Lowland Medium Brigade RGA It consisted of one battery derived from the Lowland City of Edinburgh Hvy Bty the others being converted from the 6th and 8th Battalions of the Royal Scots 9 18 55 56 HQ at 6 Wemyss Place Edinburgh 225th City of Edinburgh Medium Bty at Drill Hall 124 McDonald Road Edinburgh from Lowland Hy Bty RGA 226th City of Edinburgh Medium Bty Howitzers at Drill Hall Dalmeny Street Leith from 6th Bn Royal Scots 227th Haddingtonshire Medium Bty Howitzers at Drill Hall Dalmeny Street Leith from 8th Bn Royal Scots 228th Peeblesshire and Midlothian Medium Bty Howitzers at High Street Dunbar from 8th Bn Royal Scots The Leith and Dunbar Drill Halls had previously belonged to the 7th Battalion Royal Scots 9 20 The CO Lt Col J B Cameron DSO TD and senior major E G Thompson MC of the new brigade were prewar officers of the 1st Lowland City of Edinburgh Hvy Bty Affiliated to it were the cadet corps of North Berwick Haddington and Tranent Industrial School 9 The brigade served as Army Troops in 52nd Lowland Divisional Area of Scottish Command 57 In 1924 the RGA was subsumed into the RA and in 1938 RA brigades were redesignated as regiments 18 56 World War II editMobilisation edit When the TA was doubled in size after the Munich Crisis of 1938 the regiment split into two 18 55 56 58 57th Lowland Medium Rgt Regimental HQ 225 and 226 City of Edinburgh Btys at Edinburgh 66th Medium Rgt RHQ and 227 Haddingtonshire Bty at Prestonpans 228 Peeblesshire and Midlothian Bty at LeithShortly after the outbreak of war on 14 September 1939 57th Lowland Medium Rgt was converted to the heavy artillery role at Leith initially being designated 2nd Heavy Regiment then 51st Lowland Heavy Regiment It had A B C and D Heavy Batteries 18 59 60 51st Lowland Heavy Regiment edit Battle of France edit At this time heavy regiments consisted of four 4 gun batteries which in the 51st were designated A B C and D 61 c 51st Lowland Hvy Rgt would have been equipped with 6 inch guns one Bty and 9 2 inch howitzers three batteries both of World War I vintage 63 d In November 1939 the newly converted regiment deployed to join the British Expeditionary Force in France under Lt Col D McDowell who had been CO since 1936 9 66 68 61 On 10 May 1940 the Phoney War ended with the German invasion of the Low Countries and the BEF followed the pre arranged Plan D and advanced into Belgium to take up defences along the River Dyle It was largely in position by 15 May and subject to German probing attacks 69 However the Panzers of the Wehrmacht s Army Group A had broken through the Ardennes and threatened the BEF s flank so on 16 May it began to withdraw to the River Escaut 70 On 17 May a gap opened up between the BEF and the Belgian Army and a battery of 51sth L Hvy Rgt was among the artillery reinforcements thrown into this gap along the River Dendre where there was fierce fighting 71 After leaving rearguards on the Dendre the BEF occupied the Escaut line on 21 May but by now the enemy was in its rear To hold the line of the Aire Canal north of Saint Omer the BEF organised a scratch force of rear elements Polforce including 51st L Hvy Rgt to defend the crossings The bridge at Saint Momelin was held for three days against 1st Panzer Division by one gun of 98th Surrey amp Sussex Yeomanry Field Rgt and the gunners of 51st L Hvy Rgt acting as infantry equipped with nothing more than rifles and a few Bren guns e They had the satisfaction of intercepting a German radio message that said Bridge at Momelin strongly held try elsewhere The defenders at St Momelin were relieved by French troops on 25 May and fell back into the pocket round Dunkirk from which the BEF was preparing evacuation Operation Dynamo 72 73 74 Home defence edit All the BEF s heavy equipment such as artillery had to be disabled and left behind in France and this could only be slowly replaced By the Autumn of 1940 51st L Hvy Rgt with its attached Royal Corps of Signals section had joined Western Command facing the possibility of German invasion by sea and air The available heavy guns were sited within range of likely landing places 67 75 76 77 78 The regiment moved to Eastern Command in March 1941 and gained a Light Aid Detachment LAD of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers 79 80 81 82 83 84 On 11 March 1942 the regiment s four batteries were redesignated P Q R and S and on 1 January 1943 they were numbered as 1 2 4 and 6 Heavy Btys 60 The anticipated invasion never came and the field force in the UK began to prepare for offensive action once more One innovation was the Army Group Royal Artillery AGRA a powerful artillery brigade usually comprising one heavy three medium and one field regiment which could be rapidly moved about the battlefield and had the punch to destroy enemy artillery 85 86 87 51st L Hvy Rgt together with its attached signal section and LAD was assigned to 4 AGRA formed in May 1943 as part of Second Army 61 88 89 By now the RA s heavy regiments were equipped with two batteries of 7 2 inch howitzers and two of US made 155mm Long Tom guns 63 86 North West Europe edit nbsp 7 2 inch howitzer of 51st Lowland Heavy Regiment in France 2 September 1944 nbsp 7 2 inch howitzer firing 2 September 1944 51st Lowland Heavy Rgt landed in Normandy with 4 AGRA in June 1944 shortly after D Day 61 89 86 90 On 8 and 9 July the guns of 4 AGRA were part of the massive artillery support for I Corps attack on Caen Operation Charnwood 89 91 After the breakout from the Normandy beachhead I Corps was tasked with clearing the port of Le Havre on 10 September Operation Astonia again supported by 4 AGRA engaged in counter battery CB fire 89 92 93 94 By now I Corps was operating under the command of First Canadian Army advancing into the southern Netherlands 95 At the end of October 51st L Hvy Rgt was detached from 4 AGRA to support II Canadian Corps in its attack on Walcheren Operation Infatuate It returned to 4 AGRA in I Corps on 4 November and deployed around Etten Leur with a section of 7 2s west of Breda directing harassing fire HF against German movements on the Moerdijk bridges From 5 to 8 November the regiment was engaged in CB and HF tasks around the Maas French Meuse estuary 2 and 6 Btys expending 800 rounds on CB tasks on 6 November alone On 11 November the regiment moved establishing RHQ at De Rips with 1 and 2 Btys 7 2 inch on 11th Armoured Division s front east of Deurne 4 and 6 Btys 155mm on 3rd Division s front between Oploo and Overloon The gunners then spent the next few days preparing gun positions From 15 to 24 November 1 and 2 Btys supported 11th Armd Division and 15th Scottish Division in their attack towards the Mass though there was only a little CB and counter mortar CM fire On 25 and 27 November 4 Bty carried out shoots against a German strongpoint at Kasteel directed by air observation post AOP aircraft On 28 and 29 November 4 and 6 Btys carried out small CB programmes but 1 and 2 Btys were now out of range 62 nbsp RA gunners load a US 155mm Long Tom gun On 1 December the regiment moved back into Belgium to join XXX Corps During late December the corps was diverted south to strengthen the northern side of the Bulge formed by the German Ardennes Offensive and by early January 1945 51st L Hvy Rgt was with 9 AGRA in XII Corps in the southern Netherlands supporting 7th Armoured and 52nd Lowland Divisions with CB and HF missions 62 96 97 Once the Ardennes crisis was passed Second Army began planning Operation Blackcock to clear the Roer Triangle The regiment was split up with the 7 2 inch howitzers of 1 Bty west of Sittard attached to 13th Medium Rgt in 3 AGRA supporting 7th Armd Division while 4 Bty was attached to 43rd Wessex Division for CM tasks 51st L Heavy Rgt supplied 9 AGRA s liaison representatives at these two divisional HQs The bulk of the regiment moved to Gangelt and began the artillery preparation for Blackcock on 15 January During this bombardment 4 Bty fired on dug in tanks near Berberen On 20 January the regiment shifted its positions so that the 155mm guns could reach targets across the River Ruhr The fire tasks were completed and 4 Bty reverted to regimental control by 23 January The regiment moved to harbour at Loon op Zand 1 3 February except 2 Bty which was under 68th 4th West Lancashire Medium Rgt supporting the Canadians 62 For Operation Veritable the clearance of the Klever Reichswald 51st L Hvy Rgt less one 155mm battery reverted to 4 AGRA which was assigned to XXX Corps to support 51st Highland Division The batteries moved into hides near Beers ahead of the operation 98 62 The assembly of heavy guns and ammunition in forward areas for this offensive along inadequate roads was a major achievement The concentration of artillery fire was the greatest employed by the British Army so far in the war 99 100 The guns opened fire at H Hour 10 30 on 8 February 62 XXX Corps commander Lt Gen Sir Brian Horrocks later recalled that The noise was appalling and the sight was awe inspiring All across the front shells were exploding It soon became clear that the enemy was completely bemused as a result of our colossal bombardment their resistance was slight 101 The infantry followed the artillery fire closely at the risk of incurring casualties from friendly fire and overran the German forward positions However the battle slowed down into a series of short range night and dawn attacks through flooded country from one island village to another behind a barrage it was a slog in which only two things mattered training and guns Slowly and bitterly we advanced through the mud supported by our superb artillery 102 The British artillery prevented the Germans from assembling effective counter attack forces 103 51st L Heavy Rgt fired in support of 51st H Division 15th S Division and 32nd Guards Brigade over succeeding days shifting its position to near Gennep on 15 February 62 Veritable ground on until 10 March but succeeded in clearing the ground west of the Rhine 104 The Rhine crossing Operation Plunder involved an even greater concentration of artillery 4 AGRA was once again supporting XXX Corps The artillery opened fire at 17 00 on 23 March with CB fire to neutralise the 150 enemy guns that had been identified on the corps front and that night the infantry crossings began By 28 March Second Army had broken out of its Rhine bridgehead and was pursuing the enemy across North Germany 105 106 107 In early April 51st L Hvy Rgt returned to the Netherlands to come under the command of 1st Canadian AGRA near Bemmel From 12 to 17 April the regiment supported 49th West Riding Division s assault crossing of the River Ijssel and clearance of the enemy pocket at Arnhem On the last day of this action 1 Bty supported the Independent Belgian Brigade by firing on an enemy held factory The battery commander personally established the OP and after 10 ranging shots the battery fired 20 rounds for effect of which 12 were direct hits 62 The regiment moved to the Otterloo area where there was little firing apart from night HF tasks though 4 Bty sent a fighting patrol on foot to comb nearby woods for Germans On 23 April the regiment fired on two hostile batteries but the fighting was coming to an end 62 Victory in Europe Day was declared on 8 May The regiment was placed in suspended animation on 10 April 1946 18 55 60 66th Lowland Medium Regiment edit Home Defence edit 66th Medium Regiment was not deployed to France with the BEF and thus avoided the evacuation from Dunkirk During the invasion summer of 1940 and up to the end of 1941 it formed the medium artillery component of V Corps in southern England 78 79 80 76 108 At the beginning of the war medium batteries were equipped with eight World War I 60 pounders or 6 inch howitzers From 1941 however these were progressively replaced by 4 5 inch and 5 5 inch medium guns 64 65 63 66th Medium Rgt moved to Eastern Command in December 1941 and gained a signal section and LAD 80 81 82 83 During this period it trained alongside 3rd Division 18 On 17 February 1942 66th Medium Rgt was authorised to use its parent regiment s Lowland subtitle 18 56 The regiment left Eastern Command in December 1942 and came under direct WO control preparatory to embarking for overseas service By mid February it had sailed for the Middle East 83 Sicily and Italy edit On arrival in Egypt the regiment joined 6 AGRA formed in May 1943 at Almaza Shortly afterwards it came under Eighth Army which at that time was planning for the Allied invasion of Sicily Operation Husky 108 109 66th L Medium Rgt landed in Sicily with one battery of 4 5 inch guns and one of 5 5s It came into action on 17 July together with six field regiments in support of an attack on the Fossa Bottaceto south of Catania by 6th and 9th Bns Durham Light Infantry and the tanks of 3rd County of London Yeomanry Sharpshooters The guns fired a concentration for 30 minutes before Zero which was at 01 00 then barrages and concentrations as required The operation bogged down in close country and an attempt to restart it the next night broke down when the artillery was directed to fire on the Bottaceto itself while German troops were still in position in front of it 110 After Sicily had been secured Eighth Army moved to the invasion of mainland Italy with 6 AGRA supporting XIII Corps tasked with crossing the Strait of Messina to land around Reggio di Calabria on 3 September Operation Baytown The assembled guns fired vast amounts of ammunition without reply and the assault troops met little opposition on the lightly held shore 108 111 By November the Allies had advanced to the German Winter Line 66th L Medium Rgt with 6 AGRA supported V Corps in the Battle of the Sangro For three days from 29 November the guns helped 78th and 8th Indian Divisions to break into the Bernhardt Line the 5 5s firing over 350 rounds per gun and the 4 5s over 327 despite there being only one road up which to supply this ammunition In the first half of December during the Moro River Campaign 2nd New Zealand Division supported by 6 AGRA and 66th L Medium Rgt made sustained but unsuccessful attempts to take the hilltop town of Orsogna 112 After the long winter stalemate round Monte Cassino the Allied forces were reorganised for a spring offensive in 1944 Additional AOP aircraft were allocated and 6 AGRA benefited from Rover David a cab rank system for direct fighter bomber support that could be called down on fleeting targets 113 Once Rome had fallen in June 6 AGRA was with XIII Corps in the pursuit to the Trasimene Line and the advance on Florence During four days of preparation for 2nd New Zealand Division to assault the Arezzo position 10 14 July the guns fired on enemy artillery batteries to cover the lull The attack was an anti climax the terrain offering more resistance than the enemy but the steep nature of the ground made accurate artillery support difficult and there was heavier fighting on 15 July before the Germans broke contact and retreated In the subsequent advance to the Gothic Line the AGRAs were decentralised across the wide front with medium regiments assigned to individual divisions 114 6 AGRA continued with XIII Corps when that formation fought under Fifth US Army to breach the Gothic Line in September 1944 115 When 78th Division came back into the line in October taking over positions in the Santerno Valley 66th L Medium Rgt was directly attached to it though the precarious bridges across the Santero made the relief and subsequent supply a very slow business 116 6 AGRA remained in XIII Corps for the victorious Spring 1945 offensive in Italy Operation Grapeshot 117 The regiment passed into suspended animation on 21 March 1946 18 56 Postwar editWhen the TA was reconstituted on 1 January 1947 the 51st Heavy Rgt reformed at Edinburgh as 357th Lothians Medium Regiment Royal Artillery while 66th Medium Rgt was formally disbanded The new regiment formed part of 85 Field AGRA It changed its Lothians subtitle to Lowland on 12 December 1955 when it had the following organisation 18 55 56 59 60 118 119 120 RHQ P City of Edinburgh Bty Q Lothian BtyWhen the Coast Artillery branch of the RA was abolished in 1956 357th Medium Rgt absorbed 416th Clyde Mixed Coast Rgt to form 357th Lowland Light Regiment with the former coast artillery forming R Clyde Bty 18 55 118 121 The TA was reorganised on 1 May 1961 after National Service was abolished R Clyde Bty was amalgamated into the 277th Highland Field Regiment while the rest of 357th Light Rgt was amalgamated with the 278th Lowland Field Regiment to become 278th Lowland Field Regiment The City of Edinburgh Artillery 278th Field Rgt was descended from the 1st Lowland Brigade RFA to which the Edinburgh City Artillery had contributed one battery in 1908 see above 18 55 118 122 123 When the TA was reduced into the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve TAVR on 2 April 1967 278th Fd Rgt became Q City of Edinburgh Battery in a combined Lowland Regiment Royal Artillery which was disbanded in 1975 55 122 123 124 125 126 Reformation editAs a result of Army 2020 on 5 November 2014 278 Lowland Battery was formed in Livingston and shortly thereafter formed a detachment in Edinburgh completing the lineage link As part of the 105th Regiment Royal Artillery the battery was equipped with the L118 light gun 127 128 129 Uniforms and insignia editThe original uniform of the Edinburgh City Artillery was a dark blue tunic black braided with blue collar and cuffs that were later changed to scarlet and a red stripe down the trousers Officers wore black lace at first later changed to white or silver cord and then red from 1878 A Busby was worn in full dress up to 1908 and a round peakless Forage cap in undress with a different badge for each battery Most of the battery badges were a variation on the Royal Arms of Scotland The badge on the grenade shape busby plume holder and officers Sabretaches used the arms of Edinburgh above a scroll inscribed EDINBURGH CITY ARTILLERY 7 8 While training with 3rd Division in 1942 66th Lowland Medium Rgt wore a blue diamond shaped shoulder flash bearing the numeral 7 embroidered in red 18 In 1958 the sword and full dress pouch that had belonged to Sir Joseph Noel Paton was presented by his family to 278th Lowland Fd Rgt successors to 1st Lowland Brigade They were worn by the commander of P 1st City of Edinburgh Battery on every Royal saluting parade until 1967 18 Honorary Colonels editThe following served as Honorary Colonel of the unit 9 130 Sir Lewis McIver 1st Baronet appointed 2 December 1896 went to Forth RGA in 1908 Walter 8th Lord Polwarth from 8th Royal Scots in 1921 Gen Sir Reginald Wingate Bt appointed 1 February 1922 Colonel Edward Bruce 10th Earl of Elgin and Kincardine KT CMG TD appointed to 357 Med Rgt 130 Footnotes edit The Berwickshire AVCs should not be confused with the 1st Berwick on Tweed AVC which was attached to the 1st Newcastle upon Tyne Artillery Volunteers the county of Berwickshire being in Scotland but the town of Berwick upon Tweed being in England 201st Heavy Bty had been formed at Woolwich on 24 June 1916 its other sections were posted to 1 1st Lowland and 151st Darlington Hvy Btys 19 By November 1944 the regiment s batteries were designated 1 2 4 and 6 62 Ellis 64 and Farndale 65 state that the three howitzer batteries of a heavy regiment were equipped with either 9 2 inch or 8 inch howitzers Because the Regular 1st Heavy Rgt was equipped with 8 inch howitzers 66 of which 12 were captured in France 67 the 24 captured 9 2 inch howitzers must have equipped the two TA heavy regiments deployed with the BEF A heavy regiment was only issued with 53 pistols 205 rifles 10 Light machine guns and 17 anti tank rifles for about 700 men 64 65 Notes edit Beckett Grierson pp 1 12 Litchfield amp Westlake pp 1 4 Spiers pp 163 8 Beckett Appendix VIII a b c Frederick p 656 a b c d e f g Grierson pp 128 30 a b c d e f g h i Litchfield amp Westlake pp 62 5 a b c d e f g h i j k Army List various dates a b c Litchfield amp Westlake p 32 Beckett pp 178 9 Litchfield and Westlake p 6 Litchfield and Westlake pp 3 6 Dunlop Chapter 14 Spiers Chapter 10 London Gazette 20 March 1908 Frederick pp 678 684 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Litchfield pp 295 8 a b c d e Frederick pp 696 701 a b Lothians at Great War Centenary Drill Halls a b c d e Becke Pt 2a pp 111 4 a b Conrad 1914 a b 52 Div at Long Long Trail RGA TF at Regimental Warpath Becke Pt 2b p 6 a b Becke Pt 2b pp 64 5 65 Div at Long Long Trail a b c MacDonald Offensive Spirit pp 199 20 a b c MacDonald Pro Patria pp 178 9 a b c d e f g h i j Allocation of Heavy Batteries RGA The National Archives TNA Kew file WO 95 5494 2 a b Farndale Western Front Annex E MacDonald Pro Patria pp 192 6 Edmonds 1916 Vol I p 460 Farndale Western Front p 148 Ward pp 34 and 45 Edmonds pp 462 4 471 3 MacDonald Pro Patria pp 258 67 345 364 8 373 6 385 392 405 MacDonald Offensive Spirit pp 426 7 432 519 20 Ward p 45 a b c d e f g h i Allocation of HA Groups TNA file WO 95 5494 1 Farndale Western Front pp 164 82 Ward pp 117 31 Farndale Western Front pp 265 71 Farndale Western Front Annex M Farndale Western Front pp 313 4 Edmonds amp Maxwell Hyslop pp 381 3 Farndale Western Front pp 211 4 Blaxland pp 167 71 Farndale Western Front p 290 Edmonds amp Maxwell Hyslop p 188 Yockelson pp 193 8 Edmonds amp Maxwell Hyslop pp 354 7 Farndale Western Front pp 307 12 Yockelson p 209 a b c d e f g Frederick pp 299 300 a b c d e f Frederick pp 723 734 737 Titles and Designations 1927 Scottish Command 3 September 1939 at Patriot Files a b Farndale Years of Defeat Annex M a b c d Frederick pp 556 7 a b c d 51 Hvy Rgt at RA 1939 45 a b c d e f g h i 51 Hvy Rgt at RA Netherlands a b c Forty pp 222 6 a b c Ellis France and Flanders Appendix I a b c Farndale Years of Defeat Annex A a b Farndale Years of Defeat p 4 a b Farndale Years of Defeat Annex E Joslen p 462 Ellis France and Flanders Chapter III Ellis France and Flanders Chapter IV Farndale Years of Defeat p 45 Farndale Years of Defeat pp 60 74 Map 16 Ellis France and Flanders Chapter VII Ellis France and Flanders Chapter VIII Farndale pp 95 6 a b Farndale Years of Defeat Annex D Collier Chapter VIII a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery 26 December 1940 TNA files WO 212 4 and WO 33 2365 a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional Units 25 March 1941 with amendments TNA files WO 212 5 and WO 33 2323 a b c Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional units 22 October 1941 with amendments TNA files WO 212 6 and WO 33 1883 a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional units 2 April 1942 TNA file WO 212 515 a b Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional Units 14 August 1942 TNA file WO 212 7 and WO 33 1927 a b c Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional Units 22 November 1942 with amendments TNA file WO 212 8 and WO 33 1962 Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional Units 18 February 1943 TNA file WO 212 9 and WO 33 1987 Buckley p 41 amp fn 60 p 309 a b c Ellis Victory in the West Vol I Appendix IV Farndale Years of Defeat p 99 Order of Battle of the Forces in the United Kingdom Part 2 21 Army Group 24 July 1943 with amendments TNA file WO 212 238 a b c d 4 AGRA at RA 1939 45 Joslen p 463 Ellis Victory in the West Vol I pp 311 5 Buckley p 193 Doherty pp 104 1 Ellis Victory in the West Vol II p 14 Ellis Victory in the West Vol II p 6 Buckley pp 260 1 Ellis Victory in the West Vol II p 190 Anon Operation Veritable Appendix A Buckley pp 270 2 Ellis Victory in the West Vol II pp 255 7 Horrocks pp 248 9 Horrocks pp 250 1 Buckley pp 272 7 Buckley p 278 Buckley pp 283 5 Ellis Victory in the West Vol II pp 285 8 297 Horrocks pp 257 8 a b c 66 Med Rgt at RA 1939 45 6 AGRA at RA 1939 45 Molony Vol V pp 104 5 Molony Vol V pp 234 238 Molony Vol V pp 489 500 Molony Vol VI Pt I pp 67 8 Jackson Vol VI Pt II pp 5 76 9 90 Jackson Vol VI Pt II p 263 Jackson Vol VI Pt II pp 390 1 Jackson Vol VI Pt III p 223 a b c Frederick p 1007 Litchfield Appendix 5 Watson TA 1947 Litchfield p 307 a b Frederick p 1000 a b 266 288 Rgts RA at British Army 1945 on Frederick p 1043 Litchfield p 294 Lowland Rgt RA at Regiments org Archived from the original on 27 December 2005 Retrieved 27 December 2005 Summary of Reserve Structure and Basing Changes page 5 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 August 2013 Retrieved 11 May 2014 Livingston based 278 Lowland Battery Royal Artillery Flag Raising RA Association www thegunners org uk Retrieved 11 July 2020 Regimental Family RA Association www thegunners org uk Retrieved 11 July 2020 a b Burke s References editAnon British Army of the Rhine Battlefield Tour Operation Veritable Germany BAOR 1947 Uckfield Naval and Military Press 2021 ISBN 978 1 78331 813 1 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 amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 39 8 Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2b The 2nd Line Territorial Force Divisions 57th 69th with the Home Service Divisions 71st 73rd and 74th and 75th Divisions London HM Stationery Office 1937 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 39 8 Ian F W Beckett Riflemen Form A Study of the Rifle Volunteer Movement 1859 1908 Gregory Blaxland Amiens 1918 London Frederick Muller 1968 Star 1981 ISBN 0 352 30833 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 Burke s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage 100th Edn London 1953 Basil Collier History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Defence of the United Kingdom London HM Stationery Office 1957 Richard Doherty Hobart s 79th Armoured Division at War Invention Innovation and Inspiration Barnsley Pen amp Sword 2011 ISBN 978 1 84884 398 1 Col John K Dunlop The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen 1938 Brig Gen Sir James E Edmonds History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1916 Vol I London Macmillan 1932 Woking Shearer 1986 ISBN 0 946998 02 7 Brig Gen Sir James E Edmonds amp Lt Col R Maxwell Hyslop History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 Vol V 26th September 11th November The Advance to Victory London HM Stationery Office 1947 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1993 ISBN 1 870423 06 2 Major L F Ellis History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The War in France and Flanders 1939 1940 London HM Stationery Office 1954 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 Major 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 845740 58 0 Gen Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Western Front 1914 18 Woolwich Royal Artillery Institution 1986 ISBN 1 870114 00 0 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 George Forty British Army Handbook 1939 1945 Stroud Sutton 1998 ISBN 0 7509 1403 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 Maj Gen J M Grierson Records of the Scottish Volunteer Force 1859 1908 Edinburgh Blackwood 1909 Lt Gen Sir Brian Horrocks A Full Life London Collins 1960 Gen Sir William Jackson History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol VI Victory in the Mediterranean Part I June to October 1944 London HMSO 1987 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 71 8 Gen Sir William Jackson History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol VI Victory in the Mediterranean Part I I November 1944 to May 1945 London HMSO 1988 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 72 6 Joslen H F 2003 1960 Orders of Battle Second World War 1939 1945 Uckfield East Sussex Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 84342 474 1 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 Alan MacDonald Pro Patria Mori The 56th 1st London Division at Gommecourt 1st July 1916 2nd Edn West Wickham Iona Books 2008 ISBN 978 0 9558119 1 3 Alan MacDonald A Lack of Offensive Spirit The 46th North Midland Division at Gommecourt 1st July 1916 West Wickham Iona Books 2008 ISBN 978 0 9558119 0 6 Brig C J C Molony History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol V The Campaign in Sicily 1943 and the Campaign in Italy 3rd September 1943 to 31st March 1944 London HMSO 1973 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 69 6 Brig C J C Molony History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol VI Victory in the Mediterranean Part I 1st April to 4th June 1944 London HMSO 1987 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 70 X Edward M Spiers The Army and Society 1815 1914 London Longmans 1980 ISBN 0 582 48565 7 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 Maj C H Dudley Ward The Fifty Sixth Division 1st London Territorial Division 1914 1918 London John Murray 1921 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2001 ISBN 978 1 84342 111 5 Mitchell A Yockelson Borrowed Soldiers Americans under British Command 1918 Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 8061 5349 0 External sources edit Mark Conrad The British Army 1914 archive site British Army units from 1945 on Great War Centenary Drill Halls The Long Long Trail Orders of Battle at Patriot Files The Regimental Warpath 1914 1918 archive site Land Forces of Britain the Empire and Commonwealth Regiments org archive site Royal Artillery 1939 1945 Royal Artillery Units Netherlands 1944 1945 Graham Watson The Territorial Army 1947 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edinburgh City Artillery amp oldid 1182989878 51st Lowland Heavy Regiment, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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