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Royal Artillery

The Royal Regiment of Artillery, commonly referred to as the Royal Artillery (RA) and colloquially known as "The Gunners", is one of two[b] regiments that make up the artillery arm of the British Army. The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises thirteen Regular Army regiments, the King's Troop Royal Horse Artillery and five Army Reserve regiments.[4]

Royal Regiment of Artillery
Badge of the Royal Regiment of Artillery
Active1716–present
Allegiance United Kingdom
Branch British Army
RoleArtillery
Size13 Regular regiments
5 Reserve regiments
Garrison/HQLarkhill Garrison
Motto(s)Ubique Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt[a]
ColoursThe guns are regarded as the regimental colours
MarchBritish Grenadiers / Voice Of The Guns (Quick); The Royal Artillery Slow March colloquially known as The Duchess of Kent (Slow); The Keel Row (Trot); "Bonnie Dundee" (Canter)
Commanders
Master Gunner, St James's ParkLieutenant General Sir Andrew Gregory KBE CB
Insignia
Tactical recognition flash

History

Formation to 1799

Artillery was used by the English army as early as the Battle of Crécy in 1346, while Henry VIII established it as a semi-permanent function in the 16th century.[5] Until the early 18th century, the majority of British regiments were raised for specific campaigns and disbanded on completion.[6] An exception were gunners based at the Tower of London, Portsmouth and other forts around Britain, who were controlled by the Ordnance Office and stored and maintained equipment and provided personnel for field artillery 'traynes' that were organised as needed.[7]

These personnel, responsible in peacetime for maintaining the forts with their garrison artillery (or coastal artillery), were the first regular artillerymen, organised in 1540 under the Master-General and Board of Ordnance, but paid directly by the Exchequer. Aside from the Master Gunner of England, the detachments in each fort formed a District Establishment that included a Captain of Fort, a Master-Gunner or Chief-Gunner, and a number of other ranks, including Gunners, Gunner's Mates, Quarter-Gunners, and Matroses. Their numbers were extremely small; as late as 1720, the total establishment for the whole of Britain was 41 master gunners and 178 gunner assistants.[8] The regular artillerymen of the District Establishments were responsible for upkeep of the fort and maintenance of equipment, and would be brought up to strength in wartime with untrained personnel drafted in from the British Army or the Militia. The post of Captain of Fort was replaced (at least in England, if not in its colonies) with that of Governor following the Restoration. The coastal artillery was not part of the Royal Artillery as formed in 1716 with its two marching companies. The two coastal artillery companies at Gibraltar and Menorca were absorbed into the Royal Artillery in 1722, when the Royal Artillery assumed responsibility for regular coastal artillery outside of Britain. Although the Royal Artillery increasingly involved itself with the coastal artillery in Britain, also, the District Establishments remained independent until February 1771, when the Royal Artillery formed eight Invalid Companies (made up of personnel no longer fit for expeditionary service) into which they were absorbed (although the District Establishments would still rely on drafts of sailors, British Army soldiers, Militia infantrymen, or Volunteers to bring the batteries up to wartime strength until the formation of Militia Artillery and Volunteer Artillery in the 1850s).[9]

During the 18th century, the British regular military forces, including the Board of Ordnance's military corp (the Royal Artillery, Royal Engineers and later the Royal Sappers and Miners) and the British Army (composed mostly of infantry and cavalry) became increasingly professional (various reserve, or local, forces also existed, including: the Militia, or old Constitutional Force, normally made up of infantry units; the mounted Yeomanry; and Volunteer units of various types, normally raised only during wartime), particularly in the fields of artillery and engineering; Britain lagged behind others in this area, with Vauban establishing the French Corps royal des ingénieurs militaires as far back as 1690.[10] When Marlborough was restored as Master-General of the Ordnance in 1714, he initiated a series of reforms, which included splitting the existing Ordnance Service into artillery and sappers or engineers.[11]

This was approved and two permanent companies of field artillery were established in 1716, each 100 men strong; this became the "Royal Artillery" in 1720.[5] These were increased to four companies and on 1 April 1722 grouped with independent artillery units at Gibraltar and Menorca to form the Royal Regiment of Artillery; the first commander was Colonel Albert Borgard, a Dane who served in the British army since 1698.[5]

 
Royal Horse Artillery units, Hyde Park, 1804

A cadet company was formed at the Royal Military Academy or RMA Woolwich in 1741; this trained artillery and engineering officers for the regiment, the East India Company and the Royal Irish Artillery.[5] In 1757, it split into two battalions, each of twelve companies; by 1780, it contained 32 companies in four battalions, two "invalid companies" used solely for garrison duties and the Royal Artillery Band, with a total strength of 5,241 men and officers.[12]

Originally based in the Royal Arsenal, beginning in 1770 the regiment was rehoused in the Royal Artillery Barracks on Woolwich Common.[13] A major innovation in 1793 was the establishment of the Royal Horse Artillery, designed to provide mobile fire support for cavalry units.[5] The same year saw the foundation of the Corps of Royal Artillery Drivers to provide transport for the artillery.[14]

Fixed Coastal Artillery batteries were generally manned in peacetime by a handful of Royal Artillery personnel primarily responsible for maintenance, who were reinforced in wartime by drafts of infantrymen from the British Army or the Militia, or by temporarily-raised Volunteer Artillery corps. This was to remain the case through the Naploeonic Wars.[15]

1800–1899

 
Royal Artillery Officers uniform, 1825
 
64 Pounder Rifled Muzzle-Loader (RML) gun on Moncrieff disappearing mount, at Scaur Hill Fort, Bermuda

The regiment was involved in all major campaigns of the Napoleonic Wars; in 1804, naval artillery was transferred to the Royal Marine Artillery, while the Royal Irish Artillery lost its separate status in 1810 after the 1800 Union. This period also saw development of the Congreve rocket; based on an existing Indian design, these were the first solid-fuel projectiles used by the British army and two rocket troops were established in 1814. Their use in the War of 1812 is referenced in the line "rocket's red glare" which appears in the Star-Spangled Banner.[16]

After Waterloo in 1815, Europe was at peace until the 1853 Crimean War.[17]

 
This brass plaque installed inside Christ Church, Mhow is in memory of Major General William Heape Kay of the Royal Artillery who began his Indian service at Mhow in 1896 and subsequently died in an accident there in 1929

The Militia, which had been a paper tiger since the end of the Napoleonic Wars, was re-organised under the Militia Act of 1852 in response to the threat of invasion by France, changing it from a conscripted force to one made up of volunteers who engaged for terms of service. The force continued to be a reserve tasked with home defence, embodied for annual training, and for the duration of wars or emergencies.[18][19] The Militia had been principally an infantry force to this date,[18] but Militia Artillery units were added from this point, and some existing Militia Infantry regiments were converted to coastal artillery.[18] The role of the Militia Artillery was to man coastal defences and fortifications in wartime, relieving the Royal Artillery (RA) for active service.[20]

The Royal Artillery (and also of the Royal Engineers, Royal Sappers and Miners, the Commissariat Department, and various barracks, ordnance stores, and transport departments) was transferred to the British Army when the Board of Ordnance was abolished in 1855 (the administrative branches of the Board were absorbed by the War Office)[21] and the War Office School of Gunnery established in Shoeburyness in 1859.[5] When the British East India Company was dissolved in 1862, its artillery function was absorbed by the Royal Artillery, giving it a total strength of 29 horse batteries, 73 field batteries and 88 heavy batteries.[5] Military expenditure estimates for 1872 list the regimental strength as a total of 34,943 men and officers, including those in India.[22]

Although the Militia and the Volunteer Force remained separate forces,[23] during the latter half of the Nineteenth Century they were re-organised through a succession of reforms, and increasingly integrated with the British Army.[24] In 1882, the Militia Artillery units lost their individual identities, becoming numbered brigades organised within Royal Artillery territorial divisions (two brigades of horse artillery, four brigades of field artillery and eleven territorial divisions of garrison artillery).[18][25] In 1889 the number of divisions was reduced to three, and the Militia Artillery brigades were renamed again, mostly regaining some variation of their original territorial names.[18][25]

Prior to 1882, each Militia Artillery unit in the United Kingdom wore a unique badge. Between 1882 and 1889, Militia Artillery brigades wore a divisional badge based on that of the Royal Artillery, except that the lower scroll and upper scroll, which on the Royal Artillery badge were inscribed "Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt" and "Ubique" (which indicated the regular Royal Artillery, like the Royal Engineers, served everywhere), were respectively inscribed with the name of the territorial division name (by example, North Irish Division) and left blank or covered in a spray of laurel (as the Militia and Volunteer Force were both home defence forces, the members of which could not be sent abroad on expedition without their consents).[18] From 1889 to 1902, the lower scroll was inscribed with the name of the unit (by example, Antrim Artillery) and the upper scroll left blank or covered in a spray of laurel. Grenade badges, whether worn as a collar badge or elsewhere, lacked the scroll inscribed "Ubique" that was part of the regular Royal Artillery version.[18] Militia Artillery units were made up of Militia officers and other ranks, with a Permanent Staff made up of seconded Royal Artillery officers and senior other ranks, including a single officer acting as both Commandant and Adjutant (where a suitably qualified Militia officer was unavailable to serve as Commandant), or only as Adjutant where the Commandant was a Militia officer.[18]

Units from the Royal Engineers and Royal Artillery were in Australia, even after Federation.[26]

1900 to present day

 
Royal Artillery repository exercises, 1844
 
Soldiers of the Bermuda Contingent of the Royal Garrison Artillery in a Casualty Clearing Station in July, 1916

On 1 July 1899, the Royal Artillery was divided into three groups: the Royal Horse Artillery of 21 batteries and the Royal Field Artillery of 95 batteries composed one group, while the coastal defence, mountain, siege and heavy batteries were split off into another group named the Royal Garrison Artillery of 91 companies.[5] The third group continued to be titled simply Royal Artillery, and was responsible for ammunition storage and supply. Which branch a gunner belonged to was indicated by metal shoulder titles (R.A., R.F.A., R.H.A., or R.G.A.). The RFA and RHA also dressed as mounted men, whereas the RGA dressed like foot soldiers. In 1920 the rank of Bombardier was instituted in the Royal Artillery.[5]

Following the separation of the regular garrison companies into the Royal Garrison Artillery in 1899, the Militia Artillery units were re-titled accordingly in 1902 (by example, The Antrim Royal Garrison Artillery (Militia), which would usually be rendered Antrim R.G.A (M)). The badge adopted was the same as that of the regular Royal Regiment of Artillery, from that point including the "ubique" and "Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt" scrolls, with a letter "M" fixed at the bottom of the gun badge, and on the body of the grenade on the grenade badge (also with the "ubique" scroll), whether worn on the collar or on a cap. Alternately, Ubique was replaced on scrolls with the name of the city, county or colony for which the unit was named.[18]

When the Volunteer Force and the Yeomanry in the United Kingdom (including the Volunteer Artillery) were merged to create the Territorial Force in 1908, the Militia was re-designated the Special Reserve.[18] At the same time, plans were made to convert all of the Royal Garrison Artillery (Militia) units to Special Reserve Royal Field Artillery, but all Home units other than The Antrim Royal Garrison Artillery (Militia) (converted in 1956 to 74 (Antrim Artillery) Engineer Regiment (V)) were instead disbanded in 1909[18] (although Militia Artillery units remained in some of the colonies, and these were not re-designated as Special Reserve; The most notable of these was the Bermuda Militia Artillery, which, like the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps, formed part of the garrison of the important Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda where the regular Royal Artillery had first posted a company in 1794, following the French Revolution).[27][28][29] The remainder of the Special Reserve was re-designated as the Militia again after the First World War and permanently suspended. The Territorial Force was renamed the Territorial Army.[30]

 
The 27th Field Brigade of the Royal Artillery was stationed at Mhow and created a memorial to their men, installed inside Christ Church, Mhow

The division of the Royal Regiment of Artillery lasted until 1924, when the RFA, RHA, and RGA amalgamated once more to become one regiment.[5] In 1938, RA Brigades were renamed regiments. During the World War II there were over 1 million men serving in 960 gunner regiments.[31] In 1947 the Riding Troop RHA was renamed the King's Troop Royal Horse Artillery[32] and, in 1951, the title of the regiment's colonel-in-chief became Captain General.[5] When The Queen first visited the Troop after her accession, it was expected that it would become "The Queen's Troop", but Her Majesty announced that in honour of her father's decision it would remain "The King's Troop".[33]

 
BL 8-inch Howitzer Mk 1 – 5 8 in (200 mm) howitzers of the 39th Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery, in action near Fricourt in World War I.

The Royal Horse Artillery, which has separate traditions, uniforms and insignia, still retains a distinct identity within the regiment.[5]

Before World War II, Royal Artillery recruits were required to be at least 5 feet 4 inches (1.63 m) tall. Men in mechanised units had to be at least 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m) tall. They initially enlisted for six years with the colours and a further six years with the reserve or four years and eight years. They trained at the Royal Artillery Depot in Woolwich.[34]

From its beginnings, the Royal Artillery has been based at Woolwich, in south-east London. In 2003 it was decided to move the headquarters to Larkhill on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire (the RA's training ground, where the Royal School of Artillery has been based since 1915). In 2012, however, the King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery was relocated to Woolwich from their former headquarters in St John's Wood.[35]

The Royal Artillery today

The Royal Artillery is equipped with a variety of equipment and performs a wide range of roles, including:

The Captain General of the regiment is King Charles III. The post was previously known as Colonel-in-Chief until King George VI expressed the desire to be known as Captain General. The head of the regiment is the Master Gunner, St. James's Park.

The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises both Regular (full-time) and Reserve (part-time) units. The Royal Regiment of Artillery is unusual in that it has sub-units that often move between regiments, or are placed into suspended animation. See List of Royal Artillery Batteries.

Regular Army

The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises one ceremonial troop and 13 Regular Army regiments, and are designated by a number and the name Royal Artillery (RA) or Royal Horse Artillery (RHA):
Regular regiments of the Royal Horse Artillery

Regular regiments of the Royal Artillery

Army Reserve

Equipment

Air defence

The Royal Artillery utilises two air defence weapons:

Close support artillery

The Royal Artillery field the following close support/offensive support weapons:

Intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance (ISTAR)

  • MAMBA (mobile artillery monitoring battlefield array) uses radar to track enemy mortar and artillery shells out to a range of 40 km. It can be used to predict the point of impact, thereby giving a number of seconds warning, but is usually deployed to trace the point of origin of mortar/artillery rounds and then provide correction for counter-battery fire. It is operated by 5th Regiment RA.
  • ASP (advanced sound-ranging program) is an acoustic triangulation system that used a series of sensor posts (microphones) to triangulate the point of origin and point of impact of enemy mortars and artillery. It is operated by 5th Regiment RA.
  • Thales Watchkeeper WK450 (UAV) is operated by 47 Regiment Royal Artillery.
  • Desert Hawk III UAV – the DH3 is a hand-launched UAV. It is operated by 32 Regiment Royal Artillery.

Ceremonial

List of obsolete weapon and equipment

 
St. David's Battery, Bermuda in 1942, completed in 1910 with two 9.2" and two 6" coastal artillery guns

Surface-to-air missiles

Unmanned aerial vehicles

Nuclear weapons 1950s–1990s

Surface-to-surface tactical ballistic missiles

Nuclear capable artillery

Nuclear artillery shells

Colonel Commandants

The Royal Artillery, due to its large size, has 11 Colonel Commandants and a Master Gunner concurrently. As of June 2021, these are:[44]

  • Lieutenant General Sir Andrew Gregory, KBE, CB (also Master Gunner, St James's Park)
  • Lieutenant General Richard Nugee, CB, CVO, CBE
  • Lieutenant General Stuart Skeates, CBE
  • Major General Neil Marshall, OBE
  • Major General Robert Weighill, CBE
  • Major General William Bramble, CBE
  • Major General Jeremy Bennett, CBE
  • Brigadier Ian Harrison, CBE
  • Brigadier Colin Tadier, CBE[45]
  • Colonel Barry Jenkins
  • Vacant

Order of precedence

Royal Horse Artillery
Royal Artillery
 
Gunners of the 78th Field Regiment, Royal Artillery make use of two sunshades from a cafe to keep the rain off while making a brew, Anzio, Italy, 27 February 1944.

In the British Army Order of Precedence, the Household Cavalry is always listed first and always parades at the extreme right of the line. However, when the Royal Horse Artillery is on parade with its guns it will replace the Household Cavalry at the extreme right of the line.[46]

Museum

The Regimental museum, "Firepower" located in the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich closed in 2017.

Affiliations

The Royal Artillery have a traditional rivalry with the Royal Engineers (the Sappers).[47]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Everywhere That Right And Glory Lead"; in Latin fas implies "sacred duty")[1]
  2. ^ The Honourable Artillery Company, a Regiment in its own right, also provides equipment and crews in support of 7 (Para) RHA[2][3]

References

  1. ^ "No. 18952". The London Gazette. 10 July 1832. p. 1583.
  2. ^ "Honourable Artillery Company - British Army Website". Army.mod.uk. from the original on 25 December 2017. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  3. ^ "Reservists pair with Airborne gunners - British Army Website". British Army. 27 September 2016. from the original on 12 November 2017. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  4. ^ "The British Army - Regiments". www.army.mod.uk. from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Home page". The Garrison Artillery Volunteers. from the original on 1 January 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  6. ^ Chandler David, Beckett Ian (1996). The Oxford History Of The British Army (2002 ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-19-280311-5.
  7. ^ Hogg, Brigadier O.F.G. (1963). The Royal Arsenal. Oxford University Press. pp. 302–344.
  8. ^ Duncan, Francis (1872). History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Volume I (1879 ed.). John Murray. p. 435.
  9. ^ Maurice-Jones, Colonel K. W. (1959). History of Coast Artillery in the British Army. London: Royal Artillery Institution.
  10. ^ Mousnier, Roland (1979). The Institutions of France Under the Absolute Monarchy, 1598-1789. University of Chicago Press. pp. 577–578. ISBN 978-0226543277.
  11. ^ Latcham, Paul (2004). "Armstrong, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/659. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Journals of the House of Commons, Volume 37; November 1778 to August 1780. HMSO. 1803. p. 487.
  13. ^ Saint, Andrew, Guillery, Peter (2012). Survey of London; Woolwich Volume 48 (PDF). Yale University Press. pp. 26–28. ISBN 978-0300187229. (PDF) from the original on 26 March 2019. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  14. ^ "Royal Artillery Drivers, 1812". National Army Museum. from the original on 6 October 2019. Retrieved 10 October 2019.
  15. ^ History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army, by Colonel KW Maurice-Jones, DSO, RA. Royal Artillery Institution. 1959
  16. ^ Stearn, Roger (2008). "Congreve, Sir William, second baronet". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/6070. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  17. ^ "Peaceful war: was the 19th century a time of relative peace?". History Extra. 9 February 2010. from the original on 10 January 2021. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k The Militia Artillery 1852-1909, by Norman EH Litchfield. The Sherwood Press (Nottingham) Ltd. 1987
  19. ^ Militia, Yeomanry and Volunteer Forces of The East Riding 1689 - 1908, by RWS Norfolk, OBE, TD, DL. EY Local History Series : No. 19. East Yorkshire Local Historical Society, 1965
  20. ^ Dunlop, Colonel John K. (1938). The Development of the British Army 1899–1914. London: Methuen. pp. 42–45.
  21. ^ Porter, Whitworth (1889). History of The Corps of Royal Engineers. Vol. II. London: Longmans, Green, and Co. from the original on 20 September 2022. Retrieved 19 September 2022.
  22. ^ Duncan, Francis (1872). History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Volume I (1879 ed.). John Murray. p. 2.
  23. ^ "Civilian soldiers | National Army Museum". www.nam.ac.uk. from the original on 28 February 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  24. ^ Militia Lists and Musters 1757 1876: A Directory of holdings in the British Isles", by Jeremy Gibson and Mervyn Medlycott. Fourth Edition. Federation of Family Historical Societies (Publications) Ltd, Bury, Lancashire. 2000. First published 1989. ISBN 1 86006 123 0
  25. ^ a b Stoneman, Robert James (2014). "The Reformed British Militia, c.1852-1908. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis" (PDF). University of Kent. p. 59. (PDF) from the original on 31 May 2020. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  26. ^ "Our history". Australian Army. from the original on 2 August 2021. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  27. ^ Royal Bermuda Regiment: 50 Years Strong, an official history of the Royal Bermuda Regiment by Tony McWilliam. National Museum of Bermuda Press, ISBN 9781927750971
  28. ^ History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army, by Colonel KW Maurice-Jones, DSO, RA. Royal Artillery Institution, 1959.
  29. ^ "History". Royal Bermuda Regiment. from the original on 11 January 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  30. ^ "Debate on the bill in the House of Lords". Hansard. 10 August 1921. from the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  31. ^ "Royal Artillery". www.army.mod.uk. from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  32. ^ Obituary of Brigadier J. A. Norman, The Times, March 1994; Trooping The Colour For The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Paramount Magazine, 20 September 2011
  33. ^ "King's Troop: A modern history of 1945 to 2012". Ham & High. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  34. ^ War Office, His Majesty's Army, 1938
  35. ^ King's Troop moves to its 'spiritual home' in Woolwich 26 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine at BBC News, 7 February 2012. Accessed 8 February 2012
  36. ^ "3 Regiment Royal Horse Artillery | The British Army".
  37. ^ "National Reserve Headquarters Royal Artillery". Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  38. ^ "Letter from Brigadier Mead". 1st Artillery Brigade and Headquarters South West. from the original on 1 September 2020. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  39. ^ "7th Air Defence Group". www.army.mod.uk. from the original on 4 August 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  40. ^ "Sky Sabre weapons system - a Freedom of Information request to Ministry of Defence". WhatDoTheyKnow. 4 October 2020. from the original on 8 September 2021. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  41. ^ "3 Regiment Royal Horse Artillery".
  42. ^ . Think Defence. 7 April 2014. Archived from the original on 25 November 2020. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  43. ^ "British Army announces new artillery deal with Sweden". GOV.UK. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  44. ^ "Information regarding the appointment of all Honorary Colonels in the British Army" (PDF). p. 3. (PDF) from the original on 29 June 2021. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  45. ^ "No. 62921". The London Gazette (Supplement). 18 February 2020. p. 2968.
  46. ^ "Royal Artillery". British Army units 1945 on. from the original on 6 April 2014. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  47. ^ "Royal Regiment of Artillery/Corps of Royal Engineers". Hansard. 4 July 2016. from the original on 27 January 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2020.

Further reading

  • Graham, C A L (1939). The Story of the Royal Regiment of Artillery. RA Institution, Woolwich.
  • Watson, Mike (April 2019). A Concise History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery. Larkhill SP4 8QT: The Royal Artillery Association.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)

External links

  • Royal Regiment of Artillery

royal, artillery, royal, regiment, artillery, commonly, referred, colloquially, known, gunners, regiments, that, make, artillery, british, army, royal, regiment, artillery, comprises, thirteen, regular, army, regiments, king, troop, royal, horse, artillery, fi. The Royal Regiment of Artillery commonly referred to as the Royal Artillery RA and colloquially known as The Gunners is one of two b regiments that make up the artillery arm of the British Army The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises thirteen Regular Army regiments the King s Troop Royal Horse Artillery and five Army Reserve regiments 4 Royal Regiment of ArtilleryBadge of the Royal Regiment of ArtilleryActive1716 presentAllegiance United KingdomBranch British ArmyRoleArtillerySize13 Regular regiments5 Reserve regimentsGarrison HQLarkhill GarrisonMotto s Ubique Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt a ColoursThe guns are regarded as the regimental coloursMarchBritish Grenadiers Voice Of The Guns Quick The Royal Artillery Slow March colloquially known as The Duchess of Kent Slow The Keel Row Trot Bonnie Dundee Canter CommandersMaster Gunner St James s ParkLieutenant General Sir Andrew Gregory KBE CBInsigniaTactical recognition flash The Royal Arsenal and the Royal Military Academy ca 1770 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation to 1799 1 2 1800 1899 1 3 1900 to present day 2 The Royal Artillery today 2 1 Regular Army 2 2 Army Reserve 3 Equipment 3 1 Air defence 3 2 Close support artillery 3 3 Intelligence surveillance target acquisition and reconnaissance ISTAR 3 4 Ceremonial 4 List of obsolete weapon and equipment 4 1 Surface to air missiles 4 2 Unmanned aerial vehicles 5 Nuclear weapons 1950s 1990s 5 1 Surface to surface tactical ballistic missiles 5 2 Nuclear capable artillery 5 3 Nuclear artillery shells 6 Colonel Commandants 7 Order of precedence 8 Museum 9 Affiliations 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditFormation to 1799 Edit Artillery was used by the English army as early as the Battle of Crecy in 1346 while Henry VIII established it as a semi permanent function in the 16th century 5 Until the early 18th century the majority of British regiments were raised for specific campaigns and disbanded on completion 6 An exception were gunners based at the Tower of London Portsmouth and other forts around Britain who were controlled by the Ordnance Office and stored and maintained equipment and provided personnel for field artillery traynes that were organised as needed 7 These personnel responsible in peacetime for maintaining the forts with their garrison artillery or coastal artillery were the first regular artillerymen organised in 1540 under the Master General and Board of Ordnance but paid directly by the Exchequer Aside from the Master Gunner of England the detachments in each fort formed a District Establishment that included a Captain of Fort a Master Gunner or Chief Gunner and a number of other ranks including Gunners Gunner s Mates Quarter Gunners and Matroses Their numbers were extremely small as late as 1720 the total establishment for the whole of Britain was 41 master gunners and 178 gunner assistants 8 The regular artillerymen of the District Establishments were responsible for upkeep of the fort and maintenance of equipment and would be brought up to strength in wartime with untrained personnel drafted in from the British Army or the Militia The post of Captain of Fort was replaced at least in England if not in its colonies with that of Governor following the Restoration The coastal artillery was not part of the Royal Artillery as formed in 1716 with its two marching companies The two coastal artillery companies at Gibraltar and Menorca were absorbed into the Royal Artillery in 1722 when the Royal Artillery assumed responsibility for regular coastal artillery outside of Britain Although the Royal Artillery increasingly involved itself with the coastal artillery in Britain also the District Establishments remained independent until February 1771 when the Royal Artillery formed eight Invalid Companies made up of personnel no longer fit for expeditionary service into which they were absorbed although the District Establishments would still rely on drafts of sailors British Army soldiers Militia infantrymen or Volunteers to bring the batteries up to wartime strength until the formation of Militia Artillery and Volunteer Artillery in the 1850s 9 During the 18th century the British regular military forces including the Board of Ordnance s military corp the Royal Artillery Royal Engineers and later the Royal Sappers and Miners and the British Army composed mostly of infantry and cavalry became increasingly professional various reserve or local forces also existed including the Militia or old Constitutional Force normally made up of infantry units the mounted Yeomanry and Volunteer units of various types normally raised only during wartime particularly in the fields of artillery and engineering Britain lagged behind others in this area with Vauban establishing the French Corps royal des ingenieurs militaires as far back as 1690 10 When Marlborough was restored as Master General of the Ordnance in 1714 he initiated a series of reforms which included splitting the existing Ordnance Service into artillery and sappers or engineers 11 This was approved and two permanent companies of field artillery were established in 1716 each 100 men strong this became the Royal Artillery in 1720 5 These were increased to four companies and on 1 April 1722 grouped with independent artillery units at Gibraltar and Menorca to form the Royal Regiment of Artillery the first commander was Colonel Albert Borgard a Dane who served in the British army since 1698 5 Royal Horse Artillery units Hyde Park 1804 A cadet company was formed at the Royal Military Academy or RMA Woolwich in 1741 this trained artillery and engineering officers for the regiment the East India Company and the Royal Irish Artillery 5 In 1757 it split into two battalions each of twelve companies by 1780 it contained 32 companies in four battalions two invalid companies used solely for garrison duties and the Royal Artillery Band with a total strength of 5 241 men and officers 12 Originally based in the Royal Arsenal beginning in 1770 the regiment was rehoused in the Royal Artillery Barracks on Woolwich Common 13 A major innovation in 1793 was the establishment of the Royal Horse Artillery designed to provide mobile fire support for cavalry units 5 The same year saw the foundation of the Corps of Royal Artillery Drivers to provide transport for the artillery 14 Fixed Coastal Artillery batteries were generally manned in peacetime by a handful of Royal Artillery personnel primarily responsible for maintenance who were reinforced in wartime by drafts of infantrymen from the British Army or the Militia or by temporarily raised Volunteer Artillery corps This was to remain the case through the Naploeonic Wars 15 1800 1899 Edit Royal Artillery Officers uniform 1825 64 Pounder Rifled Muzzle Loader RML gun on Moncrieff disappearing mount at Scaur Hill Fort Bermuda The regiment was involved in all major campaigns of the Napoleonic Wars in 1804 naval artillery was transferred to the Royal Marine Artillery while the Royal Irish Artillery lost its separate status in 1810 after the 1800 Union This period also saw development of the Congreve rocket based on an existing Indian design these were the first solid fuel projectiles used by the British army and two rocket troops were established in 1814 Their use in the War of 1812 is referenced in the line rocket s red glare which appears in the Star Spangled Banner 16 After Waterloo in 1815 Europe was at peace until the 1853 Crimean War 17 This brass plaque installed inside Christ Church Mhow is in memory of Major General William Heape Kay of the Royal Artillery who began his Indian service at Mhow in 1896 and subsequently died in an accident there in 1929 The Militia which had been a paper tiger since the end of the Napoleonic Wars was re organised under the Militia Act of 1852 in response to the threat of invasion by France changing it from a conscripted force to one made up of volunteers who engaged for terms of service The force continued to be a reserve tasked with home defence embodied for annual training and for the duration of wars or emergencies 18 19 The Militia had been principally an infantry force to this date 18 but Militia Artillery units were added from this point and some existing Militia Infantry regiments were converted to coastal artillery 18 The role of the Militia Artillery was to man coastal defences and fortifications in wartime relieving the Royal Artillery RA for active service 20 The Royal Artillery and also of the Royal Engineers Royal Sappers and Miners the Commissariat Department and various barracks ordnance stores and transport departments was transferred to the British Army when the Board of Ordnance was abolished in 1855 the administrative branches of the Board were absorbed by the War Office 21 and the War Office School of Gunnery established in Shoeburyness in 1859 5 When the British East India Company was dissolved in 1862 its artillery function was absorbed by the Royal Artillery giving it a total strength of 29 horse batteries 73 field batteries and 88 heavy batteries 5 Military expenditure estimates for 1872 list the regimental strength as a total of 34 943 men and officers including those in India 22 Although the Militia and the Volunteer Force remained separate forces 23 during the latter half of the Nineteenth Century they were re organised through a succession of reforms and increasingly integrated with the British Army 24 In 1882 the Militia Artillery units lost their individual identities becoming numbered brigades organised within Royal Artillery territorial divisions two brigades of horse artillery four brigades of field artillery and eleven territorial divisions of garrison artillery 18 25 In 1889 the number of divisions was reduced to three and the Militia Artillery brigades were renamed again mostly regaining some variation of their original territorial names 18 25 Prior to 1882 each Militia Artillery unit in the United Kingdom wore a unique badge Between 1882 and 1889 Militia Artillery brigades wore a divisional badge based on that of the Royal Artillery except that the lower scroll and upper scroll which on the Royal Artillery badge were inscribed Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt and Ubique which indicated the regular Royal Artillery like the Royal Engineers served everywhere were respectively inscribed with the name of the territorial division name by example North Irish Division and left blank or covered in a spray of laurel as the Militia and Volunteer Force were both home defence forces the members of which could not be sent abroad on expedition without their consents 18 From 1889 to 1902 the lower scroll was inscribed with the name of the unit by example Antrim Artillery and the upper scroll left blank or covered in a spray of laurel Grenade badges whether worn as a collar badge or elsewhere lacked the scroll inscribed Ubique that was part of the regular Royal Artillery version 18 Militia Artillery units were made up of Militia officers and other ranks with a Permanent Staff made up of seconded Royal Artillery officers and senior other ranks including a single officer acting as both Commandant and Adjutant where a suitably qualified Militia officer was unavailable to serve as Commandant or only as Adjutant where the Commandant was a Militia officer 18 Units from the Royal Engineers and Royal Artillery were in Australia even after Federation 26 1900 to present day Edit Royal Artillery repository exercises 1844 Soldiers of the Bermuda Contingent of the Royal Garrison Artillery in a Casualty Clearing Station in July 1916 See also List of regiments of the Royal Artillery 1938 47 On 1 July 1899 the Royal Artillery was divided into three groups the Royal Horse Artillery of 21 batteries and the Royal Field Artillery of 95 batteries composed one group while the coastal defence mountain siege and heavy batteries were split off into another group named the Royal Garrison Artillery of 91 companies 5 The third group continued to be titled simply Royal Artillery and was responsible for ammunition storage and supply Which branch a gunner belonged to was indicated by metal shoulder titles R A R F A R H A or R G A The RFA and RHA also dressed as mounted men whereas the RGA dressed like foot soldiers In 1920 the rank of Bombardier was instituted in the Royal Artillery 5 Following the separation of the regular garrison companies into the Royal Garrison Artillery in 1899 the Militia Artillery units were re titled accordingly in 1902 by example The Antrim Royal Garrison Artillery Militia which would usually be rendered Antrim R G A M The badge adopted was the same as that of the regular Royal Regiment of Artillery from that point including the ubique and Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt scrolls with a letter M fixed at the bottom of the gun badge and on the body of the grenade on the grenade badge also with the ubique scroll whether worn on the collar or on a cap Alternately Ubique was replaced on scrolls with the name of the city county or colony for which the unit was named 18 When the Volunteer Force and the Yeomanry in the United Kingdom including the Volunteer Artillery were merged to create the Territorial Force in 1908 the Militia was re designated the Special Reserve 18 At the same time plans were made to convert all of the Royal Garrison Artillery Militia units to Special Reserve Royal Field Artillery but all Home units other than The Antrim Royal Garrison Artillery Militia converted in 1956 to 74 Antrim Artillery Engineer Regiment V were instead disbanded in 1909 18 although Militia Artillery units remained in some of the colonies and these were not re designated as Special Reserve The most notable of these was the Bermuda Militia Artillery which like the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps formed part of the garrison of the important Imperial fortress colony of Bermuda where the regular Royal Artillery had first posted a company in 1794 following the French Revolution 27 28 29 The remainder of the Special Reserve was re designated as the Militia again after the First World War and permanently suspended The Territorial Force was renamed the Territorial Army 30 The 27th Field Brigade of the Royal Artillery was stationed at Mhow and created a memorial to their men installed inside Christ Church Mhow The division of the Royal Regiment of Artillery lasted until 1924 when the RFA RHA and RGA amalgamated once more to become one regiment 5 In 1938 RA Brigades were renamed regiments During the World War II there were over 1 million men serving in 960 gunner regiments 31 In 1947 the Riding Troop RHA was renamed the King s Troop Royal Horse Artillery 32 and in 1951 the title of the regiment s colonel in chief became Captain General 5 When The Queen first visited the Troop after her accession it was expected that it would become The Queen s Troop but Her Majesty announced that in honour of her father s decision it would remain The King s Troop 33 BL 8 inch Howitzer Mk 1 5 8 in 200 mm howitzers of the 39th Siege Battery Royal Garrison Artillery in action near Fricourt in World War I The Royal Horse Artillery which has separate traditions uniforms and insignia still retains a distinct identity within the regiment 5 Before World War II Royal Artillery recruits were required to be at least 5 feet 4 inches 1 63 m tall Men in mechanised units had to be at least 5 feet 8 inches 1 73 m tall They initially enlisted for six years with the colours and a further six years with the reserve or four years and eight years They trained at the Royal Artillery Depot in Woolwich 34 From its beginnings the Royal Artillery has been based at Woolwich in south east London In 2003 it was decided to move the headquarters to Larkhill on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire the RA s training ground where the Royal School of Artillery has been based since 1915 In 2012 however the King s Troop Royal Horse Artillery was relocated to Woolwich from their former headquarters in St John s Wood 35 The Royal Artillery today EditThe Royal Artillery is equipped with a variety of equipment and performs a wide range of roles including Surveillance and target acquisition unmanned air systems Commando and airborne artillery Self propelled artillery Multiple launch rocket systems Air defenceThe Captain General of the regiment is King Charles III The post was previously known as Colonel in Chief until King George VI expressed the desire to be known as Captain General The head of the regiment is the Master Gunner St James s Park The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises both Regular full time and Reserve part time units The Royal Regiment of Artillery is unusual in that it has sub units that often move between regiments or are placed into suspended animation See List of Royal Artillery Batteries Regular Army Edit The Royal Regiment of Artillery comprises one ceremonial troop and 13 Regular Army regiments and are designated by a number and the name Royal Artillery RA or Royal Horse Artillery RHA Regular regiments of the Royal Horse Artillery Main article Royal Horse Artillery The King s Troop Royal Horse Artillery a ceremonial unit equipped with 13 pounder guns for firing salutes Now located in Woolwich Garrison London 1st Regiment Royal Horse Artillery equipped with AS90 self propelled artillery and based in Larkhill Garrison 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery The Liverpool and Manchester Gunners are equipped with L118 105mm light gun based at Albemarle Barracks outside Newcastle Upon Tyne 3 RHA are set to re role in 2023 to the Multiple Launch Rocket System MLRS 36 7th Parachute Regiment Royal Horse Artillery The Airborne Gunners are equipped with L118 105mm light gun and are currently part of 16th Air Assault Brigade based in Colchester Regular regiments of the Royal Artillery 4 Regiment Royal Artillery The North East Gunners are equipped with L118 105mm light gun at Alanbrooke Barracks in Topcliffe 5 Regiment Royal Artillery The Yorkshire Gunners are equipped with Surveillance and Target Acquisition assets and are based at Marne Barracks in Catterick North Yorkshire 12 Regiment Royal Artillery The Lancashire and Cumbrian Gunners are an air defence unit equipped with Starstreak HVM on the Self Propelled HVM Stormer and are based at Baker Barracks Thorney Island 14 Regiment Royal Artillery are the Training and Support Regiment based at Stirling Barracks in Larkhill 16 Regiment Royal Artillery The London Invicta Gunners are an air defence unit equipped with Sky Sabre and are based at Baker Barracks Thorney Island 19 Regiment Royal Artillery The Scottish Gunners are equipped with AS90 self propelled artillery and MSTAR radar at Larkhill Garrison 26 Regiment Royal Artillery The West Midland Gunners are equipped with MLRS and Exactor at Purvis Lines Larkhill Garrison 29 Commando Regiment Royal Artillery The Commando Gunners are equipped with the L118 105mm light gun and are currently part of 3 Commando Brigade Most batteries are currently based at the Royal Citadel Plymouth with one battery 148 Meiktila Battery based at RM Poole and 7 Sphinx Battery based at RM Condor Arbroath 32 Regiment Royal Artillery The Wessex Gunners are equipped with Unmanned Air Vehicles and are based in Roberts Barracks in Larkhill 47 Regiment Royal Artillery The Hampshire and Sussex Gunners are equipped with the Thales Watchkeeper WK450 and are based in Horne Barracks in Larkhill Army Reserve Edit National Reserve Headquarters Royal Artillery NRHQ RA An administrative group which oversees recruitment as well as a specialist pool of gunnery instructors naval gunfire liaison officers forward air controllers and personnel supporting formation headquarters in the Army all divisions and most brigades 37 Based at Royal Artillery Barracks Woolwich Garrison with batteries in Larkhill Garrison and Bath 101 Northumbrian Regiment Royal Artillery Equipped with MLRS Has batteries in Gateshead Blyth Newcastle Hexham South Shields Catterick and Leeds 103 Lancashire Artillery Volunteers Regiment Royal Artillery The North West Gunners Equipped with L118 light gun Has batteries in St Helens Bolton Liverpool Douglas Manchester Bulwell and Wolverhampton 104 Regiment Royal Artillery Equipped with the L118 light gun 38 Has batteries in Newport Abertillery Bristol Worcester and Plymouth 105 Regiment Royal Artillery The Scottish amp Ulster Gunners Equipped with the L118 light gun Has batteries in Edinburgh Newtownards Coleraine Glasgow Arbroath Kirkcaldy Shetland and Livingston 106 Yeomanry Regiment Royal Artillery Equipped with the Starstreak missile and are currently a part of 7th Air Defence Group with batteries in Grove Park Portsmouth and Southampton Equipment EditAir defence Edit The Royal Artillery utilises two air defence weapons Sky Sabre Operated by the 7th Air Defence Group since 2021 replacing Rapier 39 40 Starstreak HVM Starstreak HVM is a very short range air defence VSHORAD system that is a continuation of the Blowpipe and Javelin series It is operated as either a shoulder launched weapon in the lightweight multiple launcher mode or mounted on the Alvis Stormer armoured vehicle The weapon is operated by 12 Regiment RA and 106 Regiment RA Close support artillery Edit The Royal Artillery field the following close support offensive support weapons MLRS The multiple launch rocket system provides a precision fire capability out to a range of 85 km Operated by 26 Regiment Royal Artillery and 101 Northumbrian Regiment Royal Artillery with 3 Regiment Royal Horse Artillery set to re role in 2023 to the MLRS 41 AS 90 The AS 90 is a 155mm self propelled gun and is utilised by 1st Regiment RHA and 19 Regiment RA L118 light gun The light gun is a 105 mm gun It is operated by 3rd Regiment RHA until 2023 4th Regiment RA 7th Para Regiment RHA 29 Commando Regt RA as well as three Army Reserve regiments 103 Regiment RA 104 Regiment RA and 105 Regiment RA Exactor Spike NLOS A vehicle mounted high precision guided missile It is currently solely operated by 26th Regiment RA since 2020 42 BAE Bofors Archer Deal with Sweden announced on the 16th of March 2023 to replace part of the 32 AS 90 transferred to Ukraine The ownership is to be transferred before the end of March 2023 and it will be operational from April 2023 It is announced as an interim replacement before a decision is made regarding the replacement program of the AS 90 that should take place before 2030 43 Intelligence surveillance target acquisition and reconnaissance ISTAR Edit MAMBA mobile artillery monitoring battlefield array uses radar to track enemy mortar and artillery shells out to a range of 40 km It can be used to predict the point of impact thereby giving a number of seconds warning but is usually deployed to trace the point of origin of mortar artillery rounds and then provide correction for counter battery fire It is operated by 5th Regiment RA ASP advanced sound ranging program is an acoustic triangulation system that used a series of sensor posts microphones to triangulate the point of origin and point of impact of enemy mortars and artillery It is operated by 5th Regiment RA Thales Watchkeeper WK450 UAV is operated by 47 Regiment Royal Artillery Desert Hawk III UAV the DH3 is a hand launched UAV It is operated by 32 Regiment Royal Artillery Ceremonial Edit 13 pounder The King s Troop Royal Horse Artillery retains six operational First World War era QF 13 pounders for use as state saluting guns List of obsolete weapon and equipment Edit St David s Battery Bermuda in 1942 completed in 1910 with two 9 2 and two 6 coastal artillery guns Surface to air missiles Edit Blowpipe Javelin Starburst Thunderbird RapierUnmanned aerial vehicles Edit BAE Systems Phoenix operated by the 32nd Regiment Royal Artillery from 1999 to 2008 Canadair Midge Radioplane BTTNuclear weapons 1950s 1990s EditSurface to surface tactical ballistic missiles Edit Corporal In service with the 27th and 47th Guided Weapons Regiment RA from 1954 to 1966 See Project E Honest John In service with the 24th 39th 47th and 50 Missile Regiment Royal Artillery from 1960 to 1977 Lance In service with the 50 Missile Regiment Royal Artillery from 1976 to 1993 Nuclear capable artillery Edit 155 mm M109 howitzer 203 mm 8 inch M110 howitzer See Project E 203 mm 8 inch M115 howitzerNuclear artillery shells Edit W33 In service until 1992 See Project E W48Colonel Commandants EditThe Royal Artillery due to its large size has 11 Colonel Commandants and a Master Gunner concurrently As of June 2021 these are 44 Lieutenant General Sir Andrew Gregory KBE CB also Master Gunner St James s Park Lieutenant General Richard Nugee CB CVO CBE Lieutenant General Stuart Skeates CBE Major General Neil Marshall OBE Major General Robert Weighill CBE Major General William Bramble CBE Major General Jeremy Bennett CBE Brigadier Ian Harrison CBE Brigadier Colin Tadier CBE 45 Colonel Barry Jenkins VacantOrder of precedence EditRoyal Horse Artillery Preceded byHousehold Cavalry Order of Precedence Succeeded byRoyal Armoured CorpsRoyal Artillery Preceded byRoyal Armoured Corps Order of Precedence Succeeded byCorps of Royal Engineers Gunners of the 78th Field Regiment Royal Artillery make use of two sunshades from a cafe to keep the rain off while making a brew Anzio Italy 27 February 1944 In the British Army Order of Precedence the Household Cavalry is always listed first and always parades at the extreme right of the line However when the Royal Horse Artillery is on parade with its guns it will replace the Household Cavalry at the extreme right of the line 46 Museum EditThe Regimental museum Firepower located in the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich closed in 2017 Affiliations Edit Canada Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery Australia Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery New Zealand Royal Regiment of New Zealand Artillery India Regiment of Artillery Pakistan Regiment of Artillery Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Artillery Singapore Singapore Volunteer Artillery Malta Armed Forces of Malta Malaysia Rejimen Artileri Diraja Gibraltar The Royal Gibraltar Regiment South Africa South African Artillery FormationThe Royal Artillery have a traditional rivalry with the Royal Engineers the Sappers 47 See also Edit United Kingdom portal War portalList of Royal Artillery Batteries Artillery Honourable Artillery Company Royal Artillery Mounted Band Royal Artillery Band Royal Artillery Memorial Royal Artillery Barracks Royal School of Artillery Firepower The Royal Artillery Museum Bermuda Militia Artillery Royal Malta Artillery Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery Royal Regiment of Australian Artillery Royal Regiment of New Zealand Artillery Manx Regiment List of vehicles used by the British ArmyNotes Edit Everywhere That Right And Glory Lead in Latin fas implies sacred duty 1 The Honourable Artillery Company a Regiment in its own right also provides equipment and crews in support of 7 Para RHA 2 3 References Edit No 18952 The London Gazette 10 July 1832 p 1583 Honourable Artillery Company British Army Website Army mod uk Archived from the original on 25 December 2017 Retrieved 23 December 2016 Reservists pair with Airborne gunners British Army Website British Army 27 September 2016 Archived from the original on 12 November 2017 Retrieved 23 December 2016 The British Army Regiments www army mod uk Archived from the original on 23 December 2017 Retrieved 3 March 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l Home page The Garrison Artillery Volunteers Archived from the original on 1 January 2018 Retrieved 9 January 2021 Chandler David Beckett Ian 1996 The Oxford History Of The British Army 2002 ed Oxford University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 19 280311 5 Hogg Brigadier O F G 1963 The Royal Arsenal Oxford University Press pp 302 344 Duncan Francis 1872 History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Volume I 1879 ed John Murray p 435 Maurice Jones Colonel K W 1959 History of Coast Artillery in the British Army London Royal Artillery Institution Mousnier Roland 1979 The Institutions of France Under the Absolute Monarchy 1598 1789 University of Chicago Press pp 577 578 ISBN 978 0226543277 Latcham Paul 2004 Armstrong John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 659 Subscription or UK public library membership required Journals of the House of Commons Volume 37 November 1778 to August 1780 HMSO 1803 p 487 Saint Andrew Guillery Peter 2012 Survey of London Woolwich Volume 48 PDF Yale University Press pp 26 28 ISBN 978 0300187229 Archived PDF from the original on 26 March 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Royal Artillery Drivers 1812 National Army Museum Archived from the original on 6 October 2019 Retrieved 10 October 2019 History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army by Colonel KW Maurice Jones DSO RA Royal Artillery Institution 1959 Stearn Roger 2008 Congreve Sir William second baronet Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 6070 Subscription or UK public library membership required Peaceful war was the 19th century a time of relative peace History Extra 9 February 2010 Archived from the original on 10 January 2021 Retrieved 6 January 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k The Militia Artillery 1852 1909 by Norman EH Litchfield The Sherwood Press Nottingham Ltd 1987 Militia Yeomanry and Volunteer Forces of The East Riding 1689 1908 by RWS Norfolk OBE TD DL EY Local History Series No 19 East Yorkshire Local Historical Society 1965 Dunlop Colonel John K 1938 The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen pp 42 45 Porter Whitworth 1889 History of The Corps of Royal Engineers Vol II London Longmans Green and Co Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 19 September 2022 Duncan Francis 1872 History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Volume I 1879 ed John Murray p 2 Civilian soldiers National Army Museum www nam ac uk Archived from the original on 28 February 2021 Retrieved 9 January 2021 Militia Lists and Musters 1757 1876 A Directory of holdings in the British Isles by Jeremy Gibson and Mervyn Medlycott Fourth Edition Federation of Family Historical Societies Publications Ltd Bury Lancashire 2000 First published 1989 ISBN 1 86006 123 0 a b Stoneman Robert James 2014 The Reformed British Militia c 1852 1908 Doctor of Philosophy PhD thesis PDF University of Kent p 59 Archived PDF from the original on 31 May 2020 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Our history Australian Army Archived from the original on 2 August 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Royal Bermuda Regiment 50 Years Strong an official history of the Royal Bermuda Regiment by Tony McWilliam National Museum of Bermuda Press ISBN 9781927750971 History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army by Colonel KW Maurice Jones DSO RA Royal Artillery Institution 1959 History Royal Bermuda Regiment Archived from the original on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 9 January 2021 Debate on the bill in the House of Lords Hansard 10 August 1921 Archived from the original on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2020 Royal Artillery www army mod uk Archived from the original on 23 December 2017 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Obituary of Brigadier J A Norman The Times March 1994 Trooping The Colour For The King s Troop Royal Horse Artillery Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Paramount Magazine 20 September 2011 King s Troop A modern history of 1945 to 2012 Ham amp High Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2015 War Office His Majesty s Army 1938 King s Troop moves to its spiritual home in Woolwich Archived 26 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine at BBC News 7 February 2012 Accessed 8 February 2012 3 Regiment Royal Horse Artillery The British Army National Reserve Headquarters Royal Artillery Ministry of Defence Retrieved 16 March 2023 Letter from Brigadier Mead 1st Artillery Brigade and Headquarters South West Archived from the original on 1 September 2020 Retrieved 16 December 2016 7th Air Defence Group www army mod uk Archived from the original on 4 August 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2021 Sky Sabre weapons system a Freedom of Information request to Ministry of Defence WhatDoTheyKnow 4 October 2020 Archived from the original on 8 September 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2021 3 Regiment Royal Horse Artillery In Search of Exactor Think Defence 7 April 2014 Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Retrieved 23 January 2016 British Army announces new artillery deal with Sweden GOV UK Retrieved 16 March 2023 Information regarding the appointment of all Honorary Colonels in the British Army PDF p 3 Archived PDF from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 29 June 2021 No 62921 The London Gazette Supplement 18 February 2020 p 2968 Royal Artillery British Army units 1945 on Archived from the original on 6 April 2014 Retrieved 8 September 2020 Royal Regiment of Artillery Corps of Royal Engineers Hansard 4 July 2016 Archived from the original on 27 January 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 Further reading EditGraham C A L 1939 The Story of the Royal Regiment of Artillery RA Institution Woolwich Watson Mike April 2019 A Concise History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Larkhill SP4 8QT The Royal Artillery Association a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Artillery Royal Regiment of Artillery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Artillery amp oldid 1146041794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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