2nd Middlesex Artillery Volunteers


The 2nd Middlesex Artillery was a Volunteer unit of Britain's Royal Artillery. First raised in the Victorian era among Customs officers in the Port of London, it later became the 3rd London Brigade, Royal Field Artillery in the Territorial Force and saw action on the Western Front during World War I.

Origins

The enthusiasm for the Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of many Rifle, Artillery and Engineer Volunteer units composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular British Army in time of need. Often these were drawn from a single place of work. One such was the Custom House, City of London, whose employees working in the London docks formed both the 26th Middlesex Rifle Volunteer Corps and a year later the 2nd Middlesex Artillery Volunteer Corps . The first commissions to the 2nd Middlesex AVC were issued on 26 April 1861, and initially it was attached to the 26th Middlesex RVC.
Later the artillery grew to six companies and became an independent unit, moving its HQ to the Artillery Barracks in Leonard Street, off London's City Road. The artillery inventor Sir William Palliser was appointed Lieutenant-colonel in 1875, and was succeeded by the politician Lord Arthur Hill. In 1883, 1884 and 1886 the 2nd Middlesex won the Queen's Prize at the annual National Artillery Association competition held at Shoeburyness.
By 1893 the War Office Mobilisation Scheme had allocated the unit to the Thames defences. At the latter end of the 19th Century most of the Artillery Volunteers were assigned to the Royal Garrison Artillery, the unit becoming the 2nd Middlesex RGA in 1902, ranking 60th in order of precedence and attached to the Eastern Division of the RGA.

Territorial Force

Under the Haldane Reforms, the former Volunteers were subsumed into the Territorial Force in 1908. The 2nd Middlesex RGA was transferred to the Royal Field Artillery and became III London Brigade in the TF's 1st London Division with the following organisation:

Mobilisation and organisation

Annual training for 1st London Division had just started when war was declared on 4 August 1914, and the III London Brigade promptly mustered at City Road for mobilisation. The infantry of the division were soon posted away to relieve Regular Army garrisons in the Mediterranean or to supplement the British Expeditionary Force on the Western Front. By January 1915, only the artillery and other support elements remained with the division, and these were attached to the 2nd Line TF division that was being formed. Meanwhile, the artillery brigade formed its own 2nd line, the two units being designated 1/III and 2/III London Bdes.

1/III London Brigade

In August 1915 the 36th Division was being readied for service. Its infantry were largely drawn from the Ulster Volunteers and had already received weapons training before the war; the artillery however were newly raised Londoners, and the drivers were still being taught to mount and dismount from wooden horses. The 1st London Divisional Artillery were therefore attached to the Ulster Division until its own gunners were ready for active service. The London field brigades were re-equipped with 18-pounder guns and accompanied the Ulster Division to France, 1/III London Bde landing at Le Havre on 5 October 1915. It was in the front line by the middle of the month.
In December, the Ulster Division's artillery arrived from England, and the 1st London Divisional Artillery was transferred to the 38th Division, which had also arrived in France minus its own artillery. 1/III London Bde served with the Welsh Division from 11 December 1915 to 1 January 1916, when it briefly joined IV Corps Artillery and then the 47th Division. By then, 1st London Division was being reformed in France and its divisional artillery was finally able to rejoin at the end of February 1916. The 1/III London Brigade was assigned to support 169th Brigade and went into billets at Bouret-sur-Canches.
On 16 April 1916, the brigade was increased to four batteries by the addition of R Battery, formed from sections of the 93rd and 109th Regular Batteries. 93rd Battery had been part of XVIII Bde RFA in the 3rd Division, remaining in France after the division went to Mesopotamia, while 109th Bty had been part of XXIII Bde RFA in 3rd Division since the beginning of the war
In May 1916, the TF artillery brigades were numbered in sequence with the Regular RFA: 1/III London became CCLXXXII Brigade and the batteries were lettered A, B, C and D. Shortly afterwards, the brigade sent D Bty to CCLXXIII in exchange for a New Army howitzer battery raised in Camberwell that had come from 33rd Division; this became D Bty, equipped with the QF 4.5-inch howitzer.

Gommecourt

Throughout late June 1916, 56th Divisional Artillery was engaged in the preliminary bombardment for the division's attack on Gommecourt, an important diversion to the main British offensive due to begin on 1 July. 56th Divisional Artillery was divided into three groups for this task: Northern, Southern and Wire-Cutting; the CO of CCLXXXII Bde, Lt-Col A.F. Prechtel, was placed in command of the wire-cutting group, comprising five batteries of 18-pounders and one of 4.5 howitzers. Two guns of C/CCLXXXIII were concealed in an orchard almost in the British front line. The Peltart group fired almost 24,500 rounds of mainly Shrapnel shell in the days before the attack. By 28 June the Barbed wire in front of the German first and second lines was reported to be satisfactorily cut, but German working parties continued to repair it at night.
The division's attack on 1 July was a costly failure. The artillery observers watched the infantry cross No-Man's Land, clear the German front-line trench and take the initial objectives, but German artillery retaliation and counter-attacks were intense, no reinforcements could cross No-Man's Land and no further progress could be made. The wire-cutting guns were now tasked with long-range fire into the enemy's rear areas, but the guns were worn out after the long bombardment, many were out of action with broken buffer springs, and their fire was ineffective. The division was pushed back into the German front-line trench and lost very heavily. Afterwards, its commander criticised the plan, especially the long-drawn-out artillery preparation, which allowed the enemy to prepare their response.
On the night of 13 July the divisional artillery made a demonstration to help an attack made further south, and there was some raiding, but 56th Division did not make another offensive move during the weeks it remained in the Gommecourt sector. It was relieved on 20 August.

Ginchy

After rest and training, 56th Division moved south to take over the line near Ginchy, and prepared to attack again. On 9 September it launched the Battle of Ginchy, with half the artillery putting down a stationary barrage on the successive enemy positions, the remainder firing a creeping barrage just in front of the advancing infantry. The attack went in at 16.45 in fading light, and soon fell into confusion. Further attacks in the night and at dawn established a line of sorts, and the artillery then had to respond to numerous enemy counter-attacks.

Flers-Courcellette

The Battle of Flers-Courcelette, a new set-piece attack, opened on 15 September. Preliminary bombardment started on 12 September and continued steadily until Z-day, with no discernible increase until zero hour itself. Lanes were left in the intense bombardment after zero, to allow the new tanks to pass through. Three of these were attached to 56th Division, and were intended to accompany the infantry onto their first and second objectives behind the barrage, and then move on without a creeping barrage to the third and fourth objectives. However, one tank broke down before zero hour, and the ground was so cut up by the artillery that the other tanks and infantry had difficulty getting forward. 56th Division was unable to capture Bouleaux Wood or the Quadrilateral, its final objectives. It took another attack on 25–6 September for the division to complete the capture of Bouleaux Wood and the village of Combles.

Transloy Ridges

56th Division's last action during the Somme offensive was the Battle of the Transloy Ridges, which began on 1 October. The mud was awful, supplies and ammunition could only be got forward with great difficulty, and the barrage was consequently feeble. The infantry of 56th Division were relieved on 9 October, but the artillery remained in place, covering the flank of the French forces. When relieved on 31 October, it took two days to dig some of the guns out of the mud. 56th Divisional Artillery then went into the line near Vimy, covering the 3rd Canadian Division from 7 November until 1 December.

Reorganisation

After the Somme, the BEF's field artillery was reorganised into six-gun batteries. Hence on 5 November 1916, A/CCLXXXII Bty was broken up between B and C and the following month was temporarily replaced as A Bty by a New Army howitzer battery. In January 1917 it was permanently replaced as A by B/CXXVI, while a section of D /CXXVI brought D up to six guns, giving the brigade the following organisation:
On 20 January 1917, CCLXXXII Brigade was detached from 56th Division and became an Army Field Brigade, available to be attached to any formation requiring additional artillery support. For example, at the start of the Battle of Arras on 8 April 1917, CCLXXXII AFA Bde was attached to 14th Division. Again, at the start of the Battle of Cambrai on 20 November 1917, the brigade was supporting III Corps.
By the Armistice with Germany, CCLXXXII AFA Bde was operating under the command of First Army. During the Battle of the Selle and the Battle of Valenciennes it had fired in support of successful attacks by 4th Division.

2/III London Brigade

After the 1st Line divisional artillery left for France, 2/III London Bde joined 58th Division at Framlingham on 25 September with the following composition:
The division remained in East Anglia, digging trenches, manning coastal defences, and training, until July 1916, when it moved to Salisbury Plain for final battle training. By then the artillery had received their 18-pounders, but were still organised in 4-gun batteries. The batteries of 58th Division were shuffled to produce three brigades of six-gun batteries, and 2/III London Brigade had disappeared by the time the division landed in France in January 1917.

Postwar

When the Territorial Army was reformed in 1920, two batteries of the former 3rd London Brigade were absorbed by 53rd Medium Brigade, Royal Garrison Artillery, formed from the prewar London Heavy Brigade, RGA at Offord Road, Islington. This unit adopted the foundation date and motto of the 2nd Middlesex AVC. The remaining battery of 3rd London Bde became 9th Battery at Kennington in the reformed 5th London Bde RFA Battery and 92nd. This unit served in 5th Division during World War II, in France, the Middle East, Italy, and finally in North West Europe. After the war it was reformed as 289 Parachute Regiment RHA, which was eventually reduced in size to 289th Parachute Troop, Royal Artillery, and then disbanded in 2014.

Memorial

The III London Brigade is listed on the City and County of London Troops Memorial in front of the Royal Exchange, with architectural design by Sir Aston Webb and sculpture by Alfred Drury. The left-hand figure flanking this memorial depicts a Royal Artilleryman representative of the various London Artillery units.

Honorary Colonels

The following served as Honorary Colonels of the brigade:

Citations

Online sources