By the beginning of March 1942 143rd (M) HAA Rgt had been assigned to
5th AA Brigade in
9th AA Division, responsible for defending the area around Gloucester and
Hereford. By now the regiment had been joined by 489 (M) HAA Bty, transferred from
141st (M) HAA Rgt. However, this battery was attached to the neighbouring
8th AA Division and was transferred again to
150th (M) HAA Rgt almost immediately. Similarly, 496 (M) HAA Battery was temporarily attached to
45 AA Bde covering
Cardiff and
Newport within 9th AA Division. Although there were a number of
Luftwaffe air raids on cities in the West of England during the so-called
Baedeker Blitz of 1942, none directly affected the Gloucester area. In June there was a reorganisation of AA divisional and brigade boundaries in the West of England, and 143rd (M) HAA Rgt transferred to the command of
67 AA Bde. 474 HAA Battery joined the regiment on 29 June 1942 having left the all-male
138th HAA Rgt as a cadre and been converted into a mixed battery. 474 and 496 (M) HAA Btys then transferred to
171st (Mixed) HAA Rgt on 29 August 1942. During the autumn of 1942, 143rd (M) HAA Rgt and its two remaining batteries (494 and 495) were the only units in 67 AA Bde. The South Coast was under attack from 'hit-and-run' raids by
fighter-bombers and brigade HQ was transferred on 8 November command LAA reinforcements being sent to the area. 143rd (M) HAA Regiment and the Gloucester–
Cheltenham Gun Defence Area (GDA) then came under the command of
46 AA Bde at
Bristol. The commanding officer (CO) of 143rd undertook the duties of AA Defence Commander (AADC) for the GDA from his RHQ at
Badgeworth Court between Gloucester and Cheltenham, with a Gun Operations Room (GOR) at Gloucester. The regiment was joined by 589 (M) HAA Bty, formed at 205th HAA Training Rgt, Arborfield, on 19 August and regimented on 9 November; this battery took over gunsites at
Swindon. Two more batteries formed on 21 October 620 (M) at 206th HAA Training Rgt, Arborfield, and 621 (M) at 211th HAA Training Rgt, Oswestry, joined in January, but 621 was immediately transferred on to a new
181st (M) HAA Rgt forming at Cardiff. Apart from a raid on 17 February 1943, when about 20 enemy aircraft made a surprise attack having followed RAF bombers returning to base, there was virtually no enemy activity over 46 AA Bde's area for the whole year. The rest of the time the gunners spent waiting or training, including training detachments of the
Home Guard as relief HAA gun crews. In early 1944, however, the
Luftwaffe began a new campaign, the so-called '
Baby Blitz', that brought several raids over the West Country from February onwards. ,
Weymouth. In March 1944, 143rd (M) HAA Rgt moved to
55 AA Bde covering the
Plymouth–
Falmouth area where shipping was being gathered for the Allied invasion of Normandy (
Operation Overlord). As the Baby Blitz continued, Plymouth was attacked on 29 April,
Torquay on 28 May and Falmouth on 29 May. ==Postwar==