2nd Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
2nd Anti-Aircraft Brigade was an air defence formation of the British Army during World War II, seeing active service in the Battle of France and the North African and Italian campaigns.
Origin
During the 1930s the development of airpower led the British Army to expand its anti-aircraft defences. 2nd Anti-Aircraft Group was formed at Lichfield on 1 October 1936 as part of Northern Command. Initially it comprised the two senior Royal Artillery AA gun 'brigades'. Brigadier Edward Chadwick, MC, former Commanding Officer of 1st AA Bde was brought back from commanding the Mediterranean Air Defence Group in Egypt to lead the new Group, which was composed as follows:- 1st AA Bde
- * 1, 2, 17 AA Batteries, 4 Machine Gun Battery
- 2nd AA Bde
- * 4, 5, 6 AA Batteries, 2 MG Battery
World War II
Phoney War
The prewar planning for the BEF had envisaged two AA brigades, one for forward defence and one guarding the bases and lines of communication, but this was quickly expanded, new headquarters were created and the Regular Army AA units were supplemented by part-time units of the Territorial Army that had been mobilised for war service under Anti-Aircraft Command. The order to mobilise was received by 2 AA Bde HQ on 1 September and the advance party disembarked at Nantes on 5 September, followed by the main body aboard SS Manxman on 11 September. 1st and 2nd AA Regiments crossed to France the following day. 2 AA Bde HQ remained at Nantes throughout September organising disembarkation of searchlight units and awaiting the arrival of its signals, workshop and transport companies. 1st AA Regiment moved up to the forward area on 8 October, where it joined another brigade, as did 2nd AA Rgt. By November, 2 AA Bde HQ was established at Beauval, Somme, with the following units under command:- 60th AA Rgt – 24 x 3-inch guns
- 210 Bty of 73rd AA Rgt – 8 x semi-mobile 3-inch guns
- 51st LAA Rgt – 12 x Bofors 40 mm guns, 48 x Light machine guns
- 1st Searchlight Battalion, Royal Engineers – 96 x searchlights
- 2 AA Bde Signals, Royal Corps of Signals
- 2 AA Bde Workshop, Royal Army Ordnance Corps
- 2 AA Bde Company, Royal Army Service Corps
Battle of France
The so-called Phoney War was a monotonous period of watching and training. It ended on 10 May 1940 with the German invasion of the Low Countries, and surprise attacks on RAF airfields in France.Order of Battle 10 May 1940
At this point 2 AA Bde's dispositions were as follows:- 2nd AA Rgt
- * 6, 21 AA Btys – 16 x 3.7-inch defending Arras airfield
- 60th AA Rgt
- * 168 AA Bty – 4 x 3-inch at each of Abbeville and Poix airfields
- * 169 AA Bty – 4 x 3-inch at each of Vitry and Seclin airfields
- * 194 AA Bty – 4 x 3-inch at each of Amiens–Glisy and Rosieres-en-Santerre airfields
- * 210/73 AA Bty – 6 x 3-inch at Mons-en-Chaussee, 2 x 3-inch at Péronne Civil Airport
- 51st LAA Rgt
- * 151 LAA Bty – 4 x Bofors at each of Abbeville, Poix and Amiens Glisy
- * 152 LAA Bty – 4 x Bofors at Mons-en-Chaussee, 8 x AA LMGs at each of Rosieres and Vitry
- * 153 LAA Bty – 4 x Bofors at Vitry, 4 x Bofors and 8 x AA LMGs at Seclin
- 58th LAA Rgt
- * 172 LAA Bty – 4 x Vickers Mk VIII 2-pounders at each of Pont-à-Vendin, Lomme and Comines
- * 173 LAA Bty – 4 x 2-pounders at each of Douai and Dechy
Guns of 2 AA Bde were in action from the beginning: 151 LAA Bty at Abbeville airfield claimed a number of hits and suffered a few casualties as the first air raids began on 10 May. As the campaign developed, the BEF followed the pre-arranged Plan D and advanced into Belgium to take up defences along the Dyle. 2 AA Brigade's role was to defend the Air Component's airfields in its rear. Brigade HQ had moved up to Anzin-Saint-Aubin near Arras by 14 May, and GHQ gave it an AA Operations Room to control AA engagements. Arras was badly bombed on the night of 14/15 May. Afterwards, three GL Mk I gun-laying radar stations were moved to 2 AA Rgt there and the S/L allocation was increased to introduce a S/L Illuminated Zone round the town and airfield.
However, the German Army's rapid breakthrough in the Ardennes soon threatened the BEF's flank. On 17 May, as the situation worsened, 2 AA Bde's forward units were ordered to withdraw, while others prepared for ground defence of their airfields and established roadblocks on the main roads. 210 AA Battery and its accompanying S/L Trps were re-positioned at Conteville and Crécy airfields as Péronne fell on 18 May.
By the night of 18/19 May enemy columns were approaching Arras. 60th AA Regiment was sent to Béthune, while the rest of the brigade was initially ordered cooperate in the defence of Arras. The CO of 60th AA Rgt was ordered to assume command if 2 AA Bde HQ was cut off, and the brigade's staff captain was sent away with the main body of the HQ. Later the brigade was ordered to withdraw towards Hazebrouck. Its RASC lorries took as many rations as possible from the abandoned stores, but came under fire from Panzers as they withdrew. Clearly, the enemy had almost surrounded Arras, and on 21 May as the brigade continued its retreat, the BEF counter-attacked in the Battle of Arras.
Brigade HQ was re-established at Renescure, outside Saint-Omer. Meanwhile, 2nd AA Rgt and 58th LAA Rgt had been redeployed to defend Hazebrouck and the Channel ports of Boulogne, Calais and Dunkirk, while 60th AA Rgt, and 51 LAA Rgt were disposed around Saint-Omer and Merville, inland of Dunkirk; most of these units had S/L detachments with them. As well as AA defence, the brigade had to organise its troops to defend the Canal de l'Aa. The RAF's fighter squadrons were withdrawing from France, and 2 AA Bde was allowed to withdraw all its units from Abbeville, Conteville and Crécy airfields along with the RAF ground crews. The static 2-pounders had to be abandoned and there was a shortage of towing vehicles for the semi-mobile 3-inch guns, so 60th AA Rgt and 2nd S/L Rgt lent their lorries. 210 AA Battery and its accompanying S/L Trps were ordered west to Rouen to join 3 AA Bde, but they found that 2nd Panzer Division was already in Abbeville, and they had to disable their guns and fight a rearguard action to get back to Boulogne and then to Dunkirk.
Order of Battle 22 May 1940
On 22 May the brigade reorganised into ad hoc groups under regimental commanders:- 'Huntforce' – Merville airfield
- * RHQ 60th AA Rgt
- * 169 AA Bty
- * 1 Trp 194 AA Bty
- * 151 LAA Bty
- 'Hammondforce' – Saint-Omer and Clairmarais
- * RHQ 51st LAA Rgt
- * 168 AA Bty
- * 194 AA Bty
- * 155 LAA Bty from 52nd LAA Rgt
- 'Forbesforce' – Hazebrouck
- * 21 AA Bty
- * 152 LAA Bty
- * 1 Trp 1 Independent LAA Bty
- * 1 Trp 173 LAA Bty
- * 3 and 4 S/L Btys of 1st S/L Rgt
- 2nd S/L Rgt less 1 Btys – Point de Jour
- * 5 S/L Bty with Huntforce
By now, rear area troops were being evacuated back to the UK and German forces were advancing on the Channel ports from the south. Early on 23 May, a Troop of 2nd AA Rgt at Boulogne lost all its guns, but destroyed two tanks of 2nd Panzer Division. The evacuation from Boulogne went on steadily through the day, and most of the garrison were taken off by Royal Navy destroyers during the night of 23/24 May. 172 LAA Battery of 58th LAA Rgt and the detachments of 2nd AA Rgt and of 1st and 2nd S/L Rgts in Calais were less lucky, for having fought alongside the garrison until the evening of 26 May they were forced to surrender.
As the German net round Dunkirk tightened, the AA units moved back towards the port. On 24 May Brig Chadwick and 2 AA Bde HQ was given control of all AA gun defences in Dunkirk, and two days later the decision was made to evacuate the isolated BEF through that port.
The brigade still had 60th AA Rgt and 51st LAA Rgt under its command, and was joined by 85th AA Rgt, which had been withdrawn from Belgium with two batteries of 3.7-inch guns. 85th AA Rgt took the eastern sector, with 174 Bty at Téteghem and 175 Bty at Leffrinckoucke, while the 3-inch guns of 60th AA Rgt were disposed in a dual AA/Anti-tank role at the bridges across the Colme Canal south of Dunkirk. 51st LAA Regiment deployed its Bofors guns to cover the road, rail and canal entrances to Bergues. Brigade HQ was near Rosendaël in the suburbs. Dunkirk was heavily bombed and machine-gunned from 24 May onwards, but only 28 rounds of 3.7-inch ammunition were available until more arrived by sea on 26 May and again on 31 May. The AA guns were ordered to remain in action while the BEF passed through them, until forced to withdraw themselves after direct contact with enemy ground forces.
From 26 May non-essential AA personnel were sent off for embarkation, and heavy equipment such as transport and the secret GL radar sets was destroyed. Casualties among the AA gunners increased as the Luftwaffe bombed the town constantly. By 28 May Bde HQ and most of its units were on the beaches. Part of 173/58 LAA Bty had already been at Dunkirk for several days and its guns were the first in action on the beach. 'A' Troop of 151/51 LAA Bty was still at Cassel on 29 May where it was attacked by tanks and aircraft: one gun was hit and another had to be abandoned. The remaining two crews were never heard of again and only one Non-Commissioned Officer and 22 men eventually got out through Dunkirk. The last three guns of 'B' Trp had been constantly in action at Bray-Dunes, where one gun was destroyed by a direct hit. It was joined by 152/51 LAA Bty at Dunkirk Docks, and both were in continuous action from 21 to 25 May, bringing down a number of aircraft but losing two battery commanders. By 27 May the battery had expended all its ammunition, destroyed its guns and made for the evacuation beaches. 53rd LAA Rgt reached the beachhead on 28 May with 16 Bofors guns still serviceable: 157 and 159 Btys were placed under 2 AA Bde on the beach and 158 Bty went to La Panne, where all three were in action against low-flying attacks on 30 and 31 May, claiming 9 'kills'. Ammunition was running low, but 157 Bty salvaged boxes that had been dumped in a dyke. 54th LAA Rgt had also made its way back from Belgium, and its guns were in action on Dunkirk Mole itself, protecting the embarkation of many of the troops.
The brigade was ordered to destroy its remaining guns and instruments and prepare for evacuation, which was carried out gradually by thinning out the gun crews. 51st and 53rd LAA Regiments remained in action until near the end, eventually embarking on 1 June.
Home Defence
On arrival in England the AA troops were sent to various AA training camps to reform. 2 AA Brigade HQ was re-established at Perranporth in Cornwall on 14 June. It had nothing to command, but on 27 June it was ordered to Tunbridge Wells in Kent to take over from 'N' Mobile AA Bde. This was a temporary formation organised to support the field army in the event of invasion of Southern England. Under the command of Brig D.J.R. Richards of 49 AA Bde, it could call on the following units of AA Command :- 250 and 251 Btys of 80th AA Rgt – 3.7-inch guns at Portsmouth
- 235 Bty of 89th AA Rgt – 3.7-inch guns at Allhallows, Kent
- 284 Bty of 90th AA Rgt – 3-inch guns at Littlehampton
- 31 LAA Bty of 11th LAA Rgt
Order of Battle, August 1940
At the end of August the brigade's composition was as follows:- RHQ 6th HAA Rgt
- * 12/6 HAA Bty
- * 251/80 HAA Bty
- * 260/84 HAA Bty
- * 152/51 LAA Bty
- 2 AA Bde Signals, RCS
- 2 AA Bde Company, RASC
Egypt
On 5 October 1940 the brigade was warned that it was earmarked for overseas service in tropical kit and was ordered to mobilise by 5 November. Brigade HQ accompanied by its RAOC Workshop moved to Paignton and Brigadier Edward Wilson, MC, from 37 AA Bde took over command on 11 November. On 15 November Bde HQ entrained for Liverpool and sailed on 17 November. After travelling via Freetown and Durban it arrived at Suez and detrained at Giza on 31 December. On 1 January it set up office in the Semiramis Hotel in Cairo and on 8 January 9th and 74th HAA Rgts came under command.The brigade's task was to build up the permanent defences at the harbours of Alexandria, Port Said and Suez, along the Suez Canal, and to defend the landing grounds and supply dumps formed in the desert to support Western Desert Force. The intention was to have an integrated joint-service control and reporting system on the Air Defence of Great Britain model that had proved successful during the Battle of Britain. Together with early warning radar and an RAF sector operations room, the AA Defence Commander in each major defended area would have a Gun Operations Room. Unfortunately, little of the necessary equipment was available. AA gun positions were still without gun-laying radar and there was an acute shortage of Bofors guns, so that even the most important vital points were allocated no more than two or three each.
Order of Battle, January 1941
The brigade HQ took control of all AA and coast defence artillery units in No 1 Line of Communication District in the Nile Delta under British Troops Egypt, but a number of sub-units were detached elsewhere. At the end of January the AA troops in the Delta were as follows:- 9th HAA Rgt
- *24, 26 HAA Btys, 5 LAA Bty at Alexandria
- * 25 HAA Bty at Port Sudan
- * 28 HAA Bty at Haifa
- 74th HAA Rgt on the Canal and at Suez
- * 230, 231, 232 HAA Btys, 6 LAA Bty
- 15th LAA Rgt
- * 41 LAA Bty in the Sudan
- * 42 LAA Bty
- * 129 LAA Bty in Crete
- 5 LAA Bty Royal Malta Artillery
- S/L Dets of 37 & 38 LAA Btys of 13th LAA Rgt
Slowly the AA manpower and equipment shortages were addressed. 27th S/L Rgt took over the S/L provision, though two of its own batteries were detached to Crete and Tobruk. Improved GL Mk II radar arrived for HAA batteries, but this had technical difficulties, so 2 AA Bde retained barrage fire as the prime method of defending the harbour at Alexandria. The GL sets were used to plot an accurate course and height for an incoming raid, and this was then projected forward to intersect with one of the pre-arranged barrage lines; gun sites then fired on this line. In mid-June 1941 there were heavy bombing raids on Alexandria and Port Said. The batteries of 2 AA Bde were supplemented by a Royal Marines Mobile Naval Base Defence Organisation, bringing the armament state at Alexandria up to 40 x 3.7-inch, 24 x Bofors, and 9 x 150 cm S/Ls. The mixture of predicted shoots and barrages proved effective in keeping the harbour in action, though there was damage in the town and a mass exodus of inhabitants.
2 AA Brigade's attention now switched to defending the Suez Canal and the harbours of Port Said and Suez at either end, which were vital to the flow of supplies and reinforcements to the Western Desert. Apart from bombing the ports, Axis aircraft could interdict the canal by dropping Parachute mines. Defending against this was an obvious role for S/Ls and LAA guns, but the numbers required for complete coverage were excessive. The compromise plan involved siting single S/Ls on either side of the canal at intervals, with additional rows on the flanks spaced at 5-6000-yard intervals. Thus illumination was restricted to a belt along the length of the canal. Fighter aircraft were to provide the main defence, but the problem of intercepting low-level raids led to the deployment of single Bofors guns spaced at intervals of about yards on the banks of the narrow stretches of the canal. By October 1941, the Suez Canal defences had absorbed 72 HAA and 96 LAA guns, and 66 S/Ls.
Order of Battle, June 1941
In June 1941 the brigade attained the following strength:- 74th HAA Rgt
- 68th HAA Rgt
- 89th HAA Rgt
- 15th LAA Rgt
- 25th LAA Rgt
- 27th S/L Rgt
Order of Battle, October 1941
In October 1941, 2 AA Bde had the following dispositions:- Brigade HQ: Moascar
- Alexandria
- * HQ AA Defences, Alexandria
- * GOR Alexandria
- * GOR Aboukir
- * 9th HAA Rgt, less 1 Bty – 16 x 3.7-inch
- * 277/68 HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 283/88 HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 5 Royal Marine HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 38/13 LAA Bty, less 1 Trp – 8 x Bofors
- * 22 RM LAA Bty – 12 x Bofrs
- * Trp 155/52 LAA Bty – 4 x Bofors
- * Trp 390/27 S/L Bty – 8 x 150 cm
- Port Said and Port Fuad
- * AA Sector Operations Room, Port Said
- * AA Sector Operations Room, Fayid
- * 74th HAA Rgt – 24 x 3.7-inch
- *305/27 S/L Rgt – 24 x S/L
- Suez and Shallufa
- * 88th HAA Rgt – 24 x 3.7-inch
- * 205/89 HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 5 Australian HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 100/52 LAA Bty – 12 x Bofors
- * 9 Australian LAA Bty – 12 x Bofors
- * 81/25 LAA Bty – 12 x Boforsm
- * Trps of 1, 38/13, 41/15 LAA Btys – 12 x Bofors
- * 390/27 S/L Bty less 1 Trp – 18 x S/L
- Suez Canal
- * 200/69 HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 37/13 LAA Bty – 12 x Bofors
- * 42/15 LAA Bty – 12 x Bofors
- * 41/15 LAA Bty less 1 Trp – 8 x Bofors
- * 155/52 LAA Bty less 1 Trp – 8 x Bofors
- * Trp 23 RM LAA Bty - 4 x Bofors
- * 1 LAA Bty less 1 Trp – 8 x Bofors
- * 304/27 S/L Bty – 24 x S/L
Alamein
Order of Battle, October 1942
For this new mobile role, 2 AA Bde had the following organisation:- 69th HAA Rgt
- * 61, 199 HAA Btys – 16 x 3.7-inch
- 2nd LAA Rgt
- * 6, 155 LAA Btys – 48 x Bofors
- 21 AA Bde Co, RASC
- 2 AA Bde Workshop, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
- 2 LAA Regt Workshop Sec, REME
- 101 AA Defence HQ – remaining btys
Order of Battle, January 1943
At Tripoli in January 1943, supporting XXX Corps 2 AA Bde had the following composition:- 9th HAA Rgt
- * 24, 25, 26 HAA Btys – 24 x 3.7
- 94th HAA Rgt
- * 261, 291, 292 HAA Btys – 24 x 3.7
- 40th LAA Rgt – on loan from 51st Division
- * 105, 140, 268 LAA Btys – 35 x Bofors
- 53rd LAA Rgt
- * 157, 158, 159 LAA Btys – 36 x Bofors
- 166/56, 167/56 LAA Btys – detached from 8th Armoured Division
- 274/52 LAA Bty – 12 x Bofors
- 306/27 S/L Bty – 24 x S/Ls
- 2 AA Bde Signals – joined Tripoli Signals
Order of Battle, May 1943
When the North African Campaign ended in May 1943, 2 AA Bde was responsible for AA Defence Area Tripolitania with the following composition:- 9th HAA Rgt
- 69th HAA Rgt
- 93rd HAA Rgt
- 2nd LAA Rgt
- 30th LAA Rgt
- 38th LAA Rgt
- 83/25 LAA Bty
- 274/52 LAA Bty
- 306/27 S/L Bty
- Two AAORs
Sicily
Italy
After the remaining Axis forces evacuated Sicily, Eighth Army regrouped to invade mainland Italy. The opening phase was Operation Baytown, an assault crossing of the Strait of Messina by XIII Corps supported by 2 AA Bde. Brigade HQ began reconnoitring sites to cover the operation on 18 August, the day after Messina fell, and sent forward two batteries of 51st HAA and two of 74th LAA Rgts for the first deployment. 298 HAA Battery of 97th HAA Rgt also went forward to support XIII Corps in the medium artillery role. The crossing was to be made with a variety of landing craft and these required AA protection as did the assembly and embarkation points and supply dumps. 2 AA Brigade left 298/97 HAA Bty and two LAA batteries, 13/40 and one from 2nd Canadian LAA Rgt, to defend these areas, and embarked with 51st and the rest of 97th HAA Rgts, 53rd and 74th LAA Rgts to deploy on the Italian side.For the three beach 'bricks', 2 AA Bde allotted 1 batteries of 97th HAA Rgt and 158/53 LAA Bty, a total of 12 x 3.7-inch and 18 x Bofors guns. After an extensive bombardment, XIII Corps began landing during the night of 2/3 September. There was little serious ground resistance, but enemy aircraft were active and the beaches were dive-bombed. The landing programme went smoothly, the AA batteries reached the town of Reggio Calabria on 4 September and by 5 September the brigade was fully deployed:
Order of Battle, September 1943
- Reggio
- * 242/51 HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * 186/74 and Canadian LAA Bty – 16 x Bofors
- Beaches
- * 299/97 and 319/97 HAA Btys – 16 x 3.7-inch
- * 53rd LAA Rgt – 54 x Bofors
- Airfield
- * 152/51 and 153/51 HAA Btys – 16 x 3.7-inch
- * 225/74 LAA Bty – 18 x Bofors
- * 150 AAOR, 6 x GL radar, 1 x Local Warning radar
- * Smoke units
- Messina
- * 298/97 HAA Bty – 8 x 3.7-inch
- * Canadian LAA Bty – 18 x Bofors
2 AA Brigade reached Foggia and the port of Bari by 30 September, where it was joined by 88th HAA Rgt, 47th and 117th LAA Rgts. 62 AA Brigade HQ arrived on 2 October and took over responsibility for Bari, but 2 AA Bde remained at Foggia for another two weeks, with 1st Airlanding LAA Rgt from 1st Airborne Division temporarily under command to boost the low-level defences.
On 27 October the brigade moved forward to a fresh set of landing-grounds and a railhead in support of 1st Canadian Division. Brigadier McIntyre was an enthusiast for using the versatile 3.7-inch HAA guns for ground support tasks, and two batteries of 51st HAA Rgt were allotted to the Canadians in this role while the rest of the brigade was split up into small packets at airfields and on Corps tasks. The crossing of the Sangro and Biferno rivers involved long artillery fire programmes at the end of November, for which 51st HAA was assigned to 6th Army Group Royal Artillery, after which it switched to protecting the assembly and bridgehead areas for the actual assault. During the winter of 1943–44, when Eighth Army faced the German Winter Line, McIntyre disposed two-thirds of his HAA guns in the forward area, the rest at landing grounds as far back as Foggia, and he rotated batteries between the tasks. For 'Operation Kishan', carried out by 10th Infantry Brigade in May 1944, 84th and 88th HAA Rgts deployed 44 guns and fired 9881 rounds in bombardment and harassing fire in one week. In one occasion, three Troops of 84th HAA broke up a concentration of 300 German troops forming up for an attack. When the Adriatic coast campaign began moving again in May 1944, 2 AA Bde moved up with V Corps and in July it reached Ancona.
After a short period of refitting and re-training at Anzio in August, 2 AA Bde's units returned to the line between Arezzo and Florence in September, a journey across mountains that was unusually carried out as a single road convoy. Between September and December, as the Allied armies closed up to the Gothic Line, its units were widely distributed, some supporting XIII Corps with Fifth US Army, others with X Corps and II Polish Corps under Eighth Army. In late 1944 the Luftwaffe was suffering from such shortages of pilots, aircraft and fuel that serious air attacks were rare. At the same time the British Army was suffering a severe manpower shortage. The result was that a number of AA units were deemed surplus and were disbanded to provide reinforcements to other arms of service. 84th HAA Regiment was the unit selected from 2 AA Bde, and it was broken up in October and formally placed in 'suspended animation' in November 1944, with its drivers converted into 84th General Transport Company. Some units such as 51st HAA Rgt had already been 'diluted' by soldiers of the African Pioneer Corps to be trained as gunners to release British other ranks for other duties. Other units now retrained as infantry or in the case of LAA units re-equipped some of their Bofors batteries with 3-inch or 4.2-inch mortars for infantry support. For the first part of this period, the brigade held a section of the line as an independent formation, with two of its LAA regiments deployed as infantry. Its HAA regiments were now entirely committed to ground targets and during the battle of the Gothic Line two regiments fired over 22,000 rounds in ground support. These tasks included counter-battery, defensive fire and harassing fire shoots, but also air-burst shoots against entrenched positions, and destruction of hard targets such as buildings. The regiments suffered some casualties from retaliatory fire.
Having spent December 1944 to March 1945 facing the German Winter Line, dispersed from XIII Corps to the Adriatic coast, with occasional AA engagements, the brigade came back fully under Eighth Army command as it broke through into the Po Plain. The brigade now had a medium artillery regiment and a composite heavy battery of 7.2-inch howitzers and 155mm guns under its command, and was expanded with units from 10th Indian Division to form 'Macforce'. Initially Macforce operated under 6th AGRA, then the brigade's AAOR began to operate as an AGRA in its own right and brigade signals took responsibility for a communication hub linking Fifth Army and IV US Corps to X Corps and Macforce. In April Macforce drove down Route 9 in pursuit of the retreating Axis forces, firing in support of the Friuli and Folgore Combat Groups of the Italian Co-belligerent Army.
Order of Battle, August 1944–April 1945
The brigade had the following units under its command between August 1944 and April 1945:- 1st HAA Rgt
- 51st HAA Rgt – returned to the line after 'dilution' October 1944, less one bty at Anzio
- 84th HAA Rgt – disbanded in October 1944
- 97th HAA Rgt – left in September 1944
- 11th LAA Rgt – operating in defence, mortar and heavy machine gun roles
- 26th LAA Rgt – joined November 1944; one bty on smoke-making duty
- 51st LAA Rgt – operating in defence, mortar and heavy machine gun roles
- 52nd LAA Rgt – left in September 1944
- 53rd LAA Rgt – serving as infantry in September 1944
- 47 AAOR
- 400 S/L Bty
- 66th Medium Rgt
- One Battery 75th Heavy Rgt
- 169 Line Section, RCS
Macforce
- 2nd Battalion Loyal North Lancashire Regiment
- 4th Battalion, 11th Sikhs
- Jodhpur Sardar Infantry
- Lovat Scouts
- 2nd Battalion Highland Light Infantry
- 85th Mountain Rgt Group:
- * 85th Mtn Rgt – less 1 bty
- * 57th Field Rgt
- * 11th LAA Rgt – less 1 Bty
- 66th Medium Rgt
- One Trp 11th LAA Rgt
- 51st LAA Rgt – including counter-mortar organisation
The brigade was disbanded in June 1946. When the Regular Army's AA units were reorganised in 1947, 2 AA Brigade did not re-appear in the order of battle.
Commanders
The following officers commanded 2 AA Bde:- Brigadier E.W. Chadwick, MC
- Brigadier E.W.G. Wilson, MC
- Brigadier J.S. Muirhead, DSO, MC, TD
- Brigadier H.M.J. McIntyre, CBE, DSO
Footnotes