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.
1/III London Brigade In August 1915 the
36th (Ulster) 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 (four per battery) 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 (Welsh) 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 (1/2nd London) Division. By then, 1st London Division (now numbered
56th (1/1st 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 (3rd London) 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 (Lahore) 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 (282 Bde) and the batteries were lettered A, B, C and D (R). Shortly afterwards, the brigade sent D (R) Bty to CCLXXIII (
IV London (Howitzer) Bde) in exchange for a
New Army howitzer battery raised in
Camberwell that had come from
33rd Divisional Artillery; this became D (H) 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 (the
Battle of the Somme) 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 ('Peltart'), comprising five batteries of 18-pounders (A/CCLXXX and C/CCLXXXIII in addition to his own three) and one of 4.5 howitzers (D/CCLXXX, of which two howitzers were at the call of the counter-battery group). 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 (the
Battle of Gommecourt) 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 (the
Battle of Morval) 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 (500 (H) Bty). In January 1917 it was permanently replaced as A by B/CXXVI (from
37th Division), while a section of D (H)/CXXVI (also from 37th Division) brought D (H) up to six guns, giving the brigade the following organisation: • A Battery: B/CXXVI from 37th Division (6 x 18-pounders) • B Battery: Original 8th London Battery plus half of 7th (6 x 18-pounders) • C Battery: Original 9th London Battery plus half of 7th (6 x 18-pounders) • D (H) Battery: former C (H)/CLXVII from 33rd Division plus 1 section of D (H)/CXXVI from 37th Division (6 x 4.5-inch howitzers) After the reorganisation CCLXXXII Brigade left 56th Division on 23 January 1917 and became an Army Brigade, available to be attached to any formation requiring additional artillery support. In fact it stayed with 56th Division until 6 March, when it transferred within
XI Corps to
49th (West Riding) Division. However, on 29 March the brigade transferred to
I Corps for the forthcoming
Arras Offensive.
Vimy Ridge I Corps was to attack
Vimy Ridge alongside the
Canadian Corps, both supported by a mass of guns, for which ammunition had been stockpiled for months. Although CCLXXXII Bde was officially attached to
24th Division, that formation was in reserve for the first day of the offensive, and all the artillery in the corps was pooled. The 4.5-inch howitzers were used for wire-cutting for two days before the attack, then at Zero hour (05.30) on 9 April, two thirds of the field guns laid down a
Creeping barrage of shrapnel, smoke, and high explosive to protect the advancing infantry. The barrage was fired at a rate of three rounds per gun per minute, and advanced at a rate of in three minutes (the 'creeper' had been practised twice in the days preceding the attack, confusing the enemy as to its timing). While the 4.5s concentrated on strongpoints, a standing barrage of the remaining 18-pdrs was fired on each objective, pinning the enemy and protecting the British infantry while they prepared for the next bound. When the infantry reached their Phase 2 objective (the Blue Line) the field gun batteries began moving forward, allowing the heavy guns to move up to occupy their vacated positions. Portable bridges were provided so that the field guns could cross the trench lines. The artillery ensured that I Corps' attack was a brilliant success. By the evening of 11 April the Germans only retained one small foothold at the north end of the ridge, the Bois en Hache. Next morning a pre-dawn attack was put in against the wood by two battalions of 24th Division, covered by a barrage fired by CCLXXXII and two other RFA brigades. The leading companies of the 2nd Battalion
Leinster Regiment and 9th Bn
Sussex Regiment crept out into No man's land at 04.35, before the barrage opened at 05.00. They were slowed by mud and blinding snow, but when the barrage lifted at 05.10 they entered the German front line trench, taking some prisoners. As the weather cleared after dawn, the battalions pressed on down towards the second line. Only some parties entered this trench where they repulsed some counter-attacks, but by now the first objective had been secured and the leading companies were withdrawn to this defence line. The Germans had been driven from the edge of the ridge, and their defences were now completely dominated from above. Fighting in the southern sector (the
Battle of Arras) continued into May, but I Corps was not involved. CCLXXXII Brigade supported 24th Division and the
46th (North Midland) Division until mid-May when it went for rest.
Third Ypres Immediately after Messines, CCLXXXII Bde moved to the northern part of the
Ypres Salient under
Fifth Army, joining
II Corps on 12 June, then
XVIII Corps on 22 June. Until 17 July the brigade was not actually in the line, but the gunners were engaged in building gun positions for the forthcoming Flanders Offensive, or
Third Battle of Ypres. From 1 July the brigade was attached to
51st (Highland) Division, which was given a role in the initial attack. The British artillery here had fewer advantages than at Messines: the
Ypres Salient was cramped and overlooked from Pilckem Ridge in front, and the massed batteries suffered badly from German
counter-battery (CB) fire during the 18-day preparatory bombardment. When the infantry attacked on 31 July (the
Battle of Pilckem Ridge) the field guns fired the usual creeping and standing barrages on a greater scale than ever before. On XVIII Corps' front the infantry managed to get across the ridge and down to the Steenbeke stream beyond, while the artillery broke up a serious German counter-attack in the early afternoon. Some of the field batteries moved forward to join others that had remained silent and hidden close to the start-line. But it began to rain, and soon proved almost impossible for the exhausted gunners to get their guns forward through the devastation and mud, and further progress was halted that evening. Preparations for the continuation of the offensive were hampered by bad weather and the undiminished strength of the German artillery on the
Gheluvelt plateau in front. 51st (Highland) Division was relieved by
11th (Northern) Division on 8 August, and a fresh attack was made on XVIII Corps' front as part of the
Battle of Langemarck on 16 August. Artillery support was good, and the corps captured some ground, though 11th Division was held up by a group of fortified farms, but the attack was disastrous in other areas. Follow-up attacks on 22 and 27 August only made a few hundred yards.
Menin Road Ridge CCLXXXII Brigade stayed with XVIII Corps during the next comparative lull in the fighting, as 51st and 11th Divisions alternated in the line. 51st (Highland) was in the line for the
Battle of the Menin Road Ridge on 20 September. There were significant casualties among the massed field batteries from CB fire in the days preceding the attack, but practice barrages were fired, and numerous trench raids were supported by the guns. Field gun barrages were fired at night to isolate German gun positions and prevent them resupplying. On the day of the attack the creeping barrage consisted of five belts of fire, the rearmost ('A', nearest the attacking infantry) being fired by half the 18-pdrs, of which one-third of the batteries were 'superimposed' so that they could be redirected to fire at targets of opportunity without leaving a gap in the barrage. The 'B' barrage line ahead was provided by the 4.5s and the rest of the 18-pdrs. It was impressed on the infantry that they were to follow the barrage closely, and despite the muddy conditions the attack was a great success. The gunners were then able to break up German counter-attacks, even though they were close to exhaustion.
Polygon Wood 11th (Northern) Division came back into the line and was engaged on the periphery of the next major attack, the
Battle of Polygon Wood on 26 September. CCLXXXII Brigade was then rested from 27 September to 17 October, missing several more attacks through the autumn, before returning to XVIII Corps with
58th (2/1st London) Division for the
Second Battle of Passchendaele (26 October). The infantry were held up by knee-deep mud and fell behind the barrage. On XVIII Corps' front the attack was a complete failure, as was another on 30 October. On 2 November II Corps took over this section of the front, and CCLXXXII Bde formed part of 'Left Group' under the Commander, RA, of 58th Division as the troops consolidated the gains that had been made, then under
18th (Eastern) Division when the 58th was relieved. CCLXXXII Brigade itself went for much-needed rest on 22 November, but on 3 December it was sent to reinforce
VII Corps in Third Army, which was at the end of desperate fighting against German counter-attacks at
Cambrai. It was assigned to
21st Division until 3 December when it went into GHQ Reserve.
German Spring Offensive The brigade spent the winter alternating between VII Corps (21st,
39th and
16th (Irish) Divisions) and GHQ Reserve. It came back into action with 21st Division when the
German spring offensive was launched on 21 March 1918. The division managed to hold the Germans at
Épehy, but was forced out next day. On 23 March the brigade supported 39th Division, brought up from reserve to help the shattered 16th Division. The two divisions fought on as they retired towards the
River Somme, the field brigades withdrawing to new positions from time to time as they covered the infantry, inflicting serious casualties on the Germans. At one point German infantry appeared while the British infantry were falling back through CCLXXXII Bde's guns, and heavy German shellfire was poured onto the battery positions. The batteries lost 11 guns to direct hits but caused heavy casualties firing over open sights as the gun teams galloped forwards. The remainder of the guns were got away, except one in a concealed flank position: the crew waited until the German column was only away before opening fire with three rounds of shrapnel, 'with terrifying effect', before galloping away with the gun. 39th Division and the remaining guns then crossed the Somme before the bridges were blown up.
Rosières For the next two days the British fought to
defend the Somme Crossings. The batteries took full advantage of the many opportunities offered in engaging the advancing enemy with observed fire, firing an average of 3000 rounds each on 24 March, and continued firing during the night. The Germans were less visible on 25 March, but all possible crossing places were kept under constant fire overnight. However, the line of the Somme had been turned by the Germans and the retreat was resumed, with covering fire from the field guns. The Germans made a major effort on 27 March (the
Battle of Rosières). The brigade was still supporting 39th Division on 27 March, but could only contribute one battery; even with the addition of
XLVI Bde of
14th (Light) Division,
39th Divisional Artillery could only assemble 53 guns. The artillery engaged the attackers with observed and barrage fire, but the right flank having been pushed back, some of the guns had to retire again, after inflicting considerable losses to the enemy over open sights. Several successful local counter-attacks were made during the afternoon with artillery support. During 27 March the brigade was transferred to the battered
20th (Light) Division, officially in XVIII Corps (though that Corps HQ ceased to function that night and
XIX Corps had taken over that part of the front from VII and XVIII Corps). 20th Division was forced back by another German effort on 31 March, but fresher units and formations were arriving, and the German advance was halted on 4 April. CCLXXXII Brigade was withdrawn on 5 April for two weeks' rest and refit with
V Corps. The brigade went back into the line with
38th (Welsh) and
63rd (Royal Naval) Divisions from 21 April, then with
2nd Australian Division from 27 April to 6 May. It was then transferred to
III Corps in the Somme sector, which was now a quiet part of the front. It supported 47th (1/2nd London) and 58th (2/1st London) Divisions as they were rotated in the line. The brigade then made a three-day move north to join XI Corps in
First Army, arriving on 22 May to support 16th (Irish),
61st (2nd South Midland) and
5th Divisions in turn before going into corps reserve on 19 June. It returned to 5th Division on 25 June for the action of La Becque fought on 28 June. This small offensive operation by XI Corps was carried out without a preliminary bombardment; the barrage started at Zero-hour, creeping at in four minutes, and the infantry followed closely behind with the bayonet. They easily took their objective away, and two German counter-attacks were crushed by the artillery. s firing an 18-pounder, August 1918.
Hundred Days Offensive CCLXXXII Brigade was rested from 4 to 24 July, then spent a short period with
1st Canadian Division before joining
XVII Corps on 31 July, first with 56th (1/1st London) Division, then with
15th (Scottish) Division. First Army was not involved in the early phases of the Allied
Hundred Days Offensive, which opened on 8 August, but on 24 August the brigade transferred to the Canadian Corps, which took over part of the army's front in preparation for the
Battle of the Scarpe. The Canadians' attack frontage was , backed by 14 brigades of field artillery and nine of heavy artillery. The creeping barrage began before dawn on 26 August, with the 4.5-inch howitzers firing ahead of the 18-pdrs, and the heavies ahead. The Canadian infantry advanced over the broken country behind the 'excellent' barrage, took their first objective, and then pushed on with little pause towards the second, including the valuable observation point of
Monchy-le-Preux, by 07.30. The Canadians were then ordered to exploit forwards with a fresh barrage laid on by field batteries that had followed the advance.
Drocourt-Quéant Switch The Canadian Corps kept up the pressure, breaking through the old defence lines beyond Monchy-le-Preux on 28 and 30 August, with CCLXXXII Bde contributing to the barrages, and then
storming the Drocourt-Quéant Switch Line on 2 September. For this operation CCLXXXII was one of seven AFA brigades supporting
4th Canadian Division, brought up from reserve for the attack. With the support of the barrage and tanks, all went well to begin with, but as soon as the attacking battalions reached the crest of the ridge beyond the first objective they were halted by German machine guns outside the range of the field artillery. However, with the 'D–Q' line breached, the Germans were forced to retreat that night; the following morning's follow-up attack was cancelled and First Army began a pursuit towards the
Canal du Nord.
Canal du Nord On 19 September, CCLXXXII Brigade transferred to First Army's other corps HQ,
XXII, with which it remained for the rest of the war. The strong German defensive position along the Canal du Nord required a full-scale attack, which was launched on 27 September. For this operation CCLXXXII Bde was once again supporting 56th (1/1st London) Division. While the Canadians stormed across the canal and the defensive positions beyond it, 56th Division was tasked with advancing northwards along both canal banks. For this relatively small but tricky operation the division was supported by no fewer than eight brigades of field artillery. It was delayed by the need for the engineers and pioneers had bridge the canal, but thereafter the attack went well, despite stiff opposition, and was continued under moonlight that night.
Selle First Army continued its pursuit towards the
River Selle. On 11 October 56th Division found the
Sensée Canal strongly held, but an attack by two companies of the
1/13th Bn Londons (Kensingtons), supported by a full three field artillery brigades, cleared
Fressies, the last German holding on the southern bank. 49th (West Riding) Division then took up the pursuit for XXII Corps and CCLXXXII Bde supported it until 19 October. The barrage planned for 12 October was cancelled when it was found that the Germans had retreated to the Selle. The brigade joined
4th Division on 19 October and supported it next day as it attacked during the
Battle of the Selle. The division crossed the river before dawn and 2nd Bn
Seaforth Highlanders pushed through
Saulzoir covered by a barrage from five field artillery brigades, including CCLXXXII; it reached the objective on the high ground beyond with little loss. On 23 October 4th Division attacked across the
Écaillon stream and through the German main line of defence towards
Quérénaing. Although some of the infantry lost the barrage the attack went well: by 10.30 the engineers had two bridges over the Ecaillon for the field artillery to cross.
Valenciennes CCLXXXIII Brigade was in corps reserve 26–28 October, then went back to 4th Division for the
Battle of Valenciennes (1 November). At Zero,
11th Brigade advanced with the support of nine field artillery brigades including CCLXXXII, and nearly reached the suburb of
Marly before two strong German counter-attacks threw them back. However, the neighbouring Canadians had crossed the
Scheldt Canal and entered
Valenciennes. German resistance was now weakening. CCLXXXII Brigade finally went into corps reserve on 3 November, where it remained until the
Armistice with Germany.
2/III London Brigade After the 1st Line divisional artillery left for France, 2/III London Bde joined
58th (2/1st London) Division at
Framlingham on 25 September with the following composition: • 2/7th County of London Battery • 2/8th County of London Battery • 2/9th County of London Battery • 2/III London Brigade Ammunition Column 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==