After the
British Expeditionary Force was
evacuated from Dunkirk and the UK was threatened with invasion, a crash programme of installing coastal artillery batteries was implemented in the summer of 1940. Later, as the Home Defence strategy developed, the Royal Artillery formed a number of 'Defence Batteries' to deploy around the coastline for general beach defence. These were not part of the fixed defences of the RA's Coast Artillery branch covering the ports (although it had long been the practice for
garrison artillery units to be equipped with a handful of mobile guns, in addition to their primary fixed guns, for similar usage), nor were they included in the field forces under
Commander-in-Chief, Home Forces, but equipped with whatever old direct-fire guns were available they freed up scarce field artillery from semi-static beach defence for the mobile counter-attack forces. Most of these batteries were formed on 1 September 1940. The batteries would have been formed around a
cadre of gunners from existing units. For example,
901 (Independent) Defence Bty was commanded by an officer transferred from
135th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment, which was defending the
Norfolk coastline with a variety of obsolete guns. The 135th also supplied 64 gunners, but these were recruits who had only just joined the regiment. Most of the defence batteries were grouped into regiments on 4 October 1940: •
1st Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Chelmsford,
Essex –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 903, 904 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 905 Def Bty –
to 2nd Def Rgt 15 March 1941 •
2nd Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Saxmundham,
Norfolk • 907, 808 Def Btys • 909 Def Bty –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 905 Def Bty –
from 1st Def Rgt 15 March 1941 •
3rd Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Horsmonden,
Kent • 911 Def Bty –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 912, 913, 914 Def Btys •
4th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Eastbourne,
East Sussex –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 915 Def Bty –
independent from 15 March 1941 • 916 Def Bty –
disbanded 15 March 1941 •
5th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Steyning,
West Sussex • 917, 918 Def Btys • 919 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 •
6th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Eynsford,
Kent –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 920, 921, 922 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 •
7th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed in
Lincolnshire • 924, 927, 928 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 925, 926, 929 Dev Btys •
8th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Leven, East Riding of Yorkshire • 930, 932, 933, Def Btys • 931, 934 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 •
9th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Newcastle upon Tyne • 935 Def Bty • 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 •
10th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Mere, Wiltshire • 944, 946, 948, 950 Def Btys –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 945, 947, 949 Def Btys •
11th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Bude,
Cornwall • 951 Def Bty –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 952, 953, 954 Def Btys •
12th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Dunster,
Somerset • 955, 956 Def Btys •
13th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Hightown,
Lancashire • 957 Def Bty • 958 Def Bty –
independent from 15 March 1941 •
14th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Swansea,
South Wales • 959 Def Bty –
disbanded 12 April 1941 • 960, 961 Def Btys • 964 Def Bty –
from 15th Def Rgt 12 April 1941 •
15th Defence Regiment, Royal Artillery, formed at
Alcester,
Warwickshire –
disbanded 9 April 1941 • 962, 963, 964 Def Btys –
disbanded 9 April 1941 • 964 Def Bty –
to 14th Def Rgt 12 April 1941 •
Independent batteries: •
901 (Ind) Def Bty –
disbanded 3 March 1941 • 902, 906, 923, 942, 943 (Ind) Def Btys • 910 (Ind) Def Bty –
disbanded 15 March 1941 • 915 (Ind) Def Bty –
from 4th Def Rgt 15 March 1941 • 958 (Ind) Def Bty –
from 13th Def Rgt 15 March 1941 ==Field Force==