Renewed enthusiasm for the
Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of many Rifle, Artillery and Engineer Volunteer Corps composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular
British Army in time of need. A public meeting on 29 December 1859 resolved to raise a volunteer company in Orkney, and a further meeting in early January 1860 decided that it should be an artillery volunteer corps (AVC). The
1st Orkney Artillery Volunteer Corps (OAV) was accepted for service by the
War Office on 12 March 1860, and over 50 volunteers gathered at Kirkwall that month, when John Heddle of Melsetter was chosen as
Captain. A battery with two
32-pounder guns was erected at Cromwell's Fort in the charge of the
Sergeant-instructor. Over the following years the gunners practised gun drill and target firing with the heavy guns from the fort and musketry with carbines at a range on Mount Road. The first headquarters (HQ) was an office in Broad Street, then a wooden building on the Kirk Green until that was replaced by a purpose-built drill hall on reclaimed land on the shore of the Peerie Sea. Other AVCs followed across the islands, and from 1863 they were all administered by the
1st Administrative Brigade, Caithness Artillery Volunteers: • 1st (Kirkwall) OAV • 2nd (Sanday) OAV – formed at
Scar House on the
Isle of Sanday, 23 June 1863 under Capt James Scarth • 3rd (Shapinsay) OAV – formed at
Balfour on
Shapinsay Island 10 July 1863 under Capt David Balfour, with a battery at Fort Eleanor • 4th (Stromness) OAV – formed at
Stromness, Mainland, 23 June 1863 under Capt John Stanger of Ness • 5th (Stronsay) OAV – formed at
Stronsay Island 17 August 1865 under Capt Peter A. Calder • 6th (Holm) OAV – formed at
Holm, Mainland, 28 November 1866 under Capt Alex. Sutherland Graeme • 7th (Firth) OAV – formed at
Firth, Mainland, 31 October 1868; disbanded 1877 • 8th (Evie) OAV – formed at
Evie, Mainland, 25 June 1870 under Capt Joseph R. Holmes; renumbered 7th in 1877 • 9th (Rousay) OAV – formed at the
Isle of Rousay 30 December 1874 under Capt John Macrae; renumbered 8th in 1877, moved to Kirkwall 1886 • 10th (Birsay) OAV – formed at
Birsay, Mainland, 2 March 1877 under Capt William J. Isbister; renumbered 9th in 1877 Some 70 volunteers were raised for a corps at
South Ronaldsay and drills commenced, but no officer candidates came forward and the unit was abandoned. Once a fifth OAV had been raised there were moves for Orkney to have its own brigade, and Capt David Balfour of the 3rd (Shapinsay) OAV was appointed
Lieutenant-Colonel of a new
1st Administrative Brigade, Orkney Artillery Volunteers on 15 March 1867 with Capt Alex Bain of the 1st (Kirkwall) OAV as
Major. Volunteer corps were consolidated into larger units in 1880, when the 1st Admin Brigade became simply the
1st Orkney Artillery Volunteers, with the individual corps as numbered companies. On 1 April 1882 all AVCs were affiliated to a territorial garrison division of the
Royal Artillery (RA), the
Scottish Division in the case of the 1st Orkney, moving to the
Southern Division when the numbers were reduced on 1 July 1889. By 1894 No 6 Company was at Holm and Fort Alexander, No 9 at Birsay and Douby. The unit had its headquarters and drill hall at Kirkwall, and each battery had its own drill hall, armoury, sergeant-instructor's cottage, practice battery of two guns (four at Kirkwall) and a carbine range. The practice batteries were re-armed with old
64-pounder RML guns, so serious training on modern guns was carried out at the annual camp. From 1 June 1899 all artillery volunteers became part of the
Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA), and when the RA abolished its divisional structure on 1 January 1902 the unit was redesignated the
1st Orkney Royal Garrison Artillery (Volunteers). ==Territorial Force==