Mobilisation On the outbreak of war 31 AA Bde was based at
York and was mobilised to defend West Yorkshire, with the following order of battle: • 66th (Leeds Rifles) AA Regt RA –
as above •
96th AA Regt RA –
HAA unit formed in 1939 • HQ and 294 Btys at
Castleford • 186 Bty at Oulton from 66 AA Regt • 287 Bty at
Pontefract • 295 and 296 Btys at
Halifax • 43rd (5 DOW) AA Bn RE –
as above •
49th (West Yorkshire Regiment) AA Bn RE –
Searchlight unit formed at Bradford in 1937 by conversion of 6th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment • HQ, 395, 396, 397, 398 Coys at
Bradford • 31st Anti-Aircraft Brigade Company
Royal Army Service Corps On 23 September 1939, responsibility for the
Humber Gun Zone (including 30 HAA guns manned by
62nd (Northumbrian) and
91st HAA Rgts) was transferred to 31 AA Bde from
39 AA Bde but reverted to 39 AA Bde and 2 AA Division in May 1940. During the
Phoney War period, AA Command was desperate for men and equipment to meet its huge commitments. When the War Office released the first intakes of
Militiamen to the Command in early 1940, most were found to be in low physical categories and without training. 31 AA Bde reported that out of 1000 recruits sent for duty, '50 had to be discharged immediately because of serious medical defects, another 20 were judged to be mentally deficient and a further 18 were unfit to do any manual labour such as lifting ammunition'. Fitness and training was greatly improved by the time Britain's AA defences were seriously tested during the
Battle of Britain and
Blitz. In 1940, RA regiments equipped with 3-inch or 3.7-inch AA guns were designated Heavy Anti-Aircraft (HAA) to distinguish them from the new Light Anti-Aircraft (LAA) regiments, and RE AA battalions were transferred to the RA and designated Searchlight regiments.
Battle of Britain and Blitz During
The Blitz, 31 AA Bde remained responsible for AA defence of the West Yorkshire towns and cities, and was transferred to a new
10th AA Division (covering Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire) on 1 November 1940. At this period it was composed of LAA and S/L units, but HAA units rejoined later.
Order of Battle 1940–41 31 AA Brigade's composition during the Blitz was as follows: •
87th HAA Rgt –
joined by May 1941; operationally under 7 AA Div; left brigade June 1941; later to Eighth Army • 278, 279, 280 HAA Btys •
38th LAA Rgt (part) –
to 2 AA Division by May 1941 • 51, 124, 125, 230 LAA Btys •
71st LAA Rgt –
raised January 1941 • 210, 211, 216 LAA Btys • 43rd (DoW) S/L Rgt • 370, 371, 372, 373 S/L Btys • 49th (West Yorkshire Regiment) S/L Rgt • 395, 496, 397, 398 S/L Btys •
54th (1/5th Bn Durham Light Infantry) S/L Rgt • 411, 412, 413, 547 S/L Btys
Mid-War The Blitz is held to have ended in mid-May 1941, but periodic raids continued against the industrial towns of Northern England. On 28 April 1942 the
Luftwaffe carried out one of its so-called
Baedeker raids very accurately on York. On 30 September 1942 the AA Divisions and Corps were dissolved and a new
5 AA Group assumed responsibility for North-East England, including 31 AA Bde. Newly formed AA units joined the brigade, the HAA units increasingly being 'mixed' ones into which women of the
Auxiliary Territorial Service were integrated. At the same time, experienced units were posted away for service overseas.
Order of Battle 1941–43 During this period the brigade was composed as follows (temporary attachments omitted): •
12th HAA Rgt –
from War Office (WO) Reserve August 1942' • 4, 18, 203, 249 HAA Btys •
128th HAA Rgt –
from 62 AA Bde August 1942; to 2 AA Group November 1942' • 287, 309, 407, 436 HAA Btys •
182nd (Mixed) HAA Rgt – ''new regiment formed October 1942; • 372, 373, 374, 375 LAA Btys •
142nd LAA Rgt – ''new regiment formed October 1942; • 318, 323, 567 S/L Btys •
41st (5th North Staffordshire Regiment) S/L Rgt –
from 57 AA Bde May 1943 • 363, 364, 365 S/L Btys •
42nd (Robin Hoods, Sherwood Foresters) S/L Rgt –
from 57 AA Bde May 1943 • 366, 367, 368, 569 S/L Btys • 43rd S/L Rgt –
to 32 (Midland) AA Bde March 1943 • 370, 372, 373 S/L Btys • 371 S/L Bty –
to 60th S/L Rgt January 1942 • 49th S/L Rgt • 395, 396, 398 S/L Btys • 397 S/L Bty –
to 63rd S/L Rgt January 1942 • 54th (1/5th DLI) S/L Rgt • 411, 412, 413 S/L Btys • 547 S/L Bty –
to 51st (Highland) S/L Rgt January 1942 • 17 AA 'Z' Regiment – ''new regiment equipped with
Z Battery rocket projectiles formed October 1942; • 41st (5NSR) S/L Rgt –
as above • 42nd (Robin Hoods) S/L Rgt • 366, 367, 368 S/L Btys • 369 S/L Boy –
disbanded February 1944 • 49th (WYR) S/L Rgt –
as above • 54th (1/5th DLI) S/L Rgt –
as above North West Europe Early in 1944, 31 AA Bde under the command of Brigadier E. Coley was earmarked for overseas service with
21st Army Group in
Operation Overlord. Between training, field force AA units were loaned back to AA Command, and 31 AA Bde retained its responsibilities under 5 AA Group. At the time the brigade was headquartered at
Tadcaster, later at nearby
Newton Kyme, in
North Yorkshire as part of 5 AA Group with the following searchlight units under command: • 41st (5NSR) S/L Rgt • 42nd (Robin Hoods) S/L Rgt • 54th (1/5th Bn DLI) Searchlight Regiment, Royal Artillery –
as above •
64th (Essex Regiment) S/L Rgt, later replaced by
58th (Middlesex) S/L Rgt –
both remained in the UK and converted to garrison units The regiments re-equipped their AA LMG sections with twin
Browning machine guns and carried out 'Bullseye' exercises over North East England with the
Night fighters of
No. 264 Squadron RAF. On 15 April, 41 S/L Rgt received orders to mobilise for overseas service, followed on 1 June by 31 Bde HQ and 42 and 58 S/L Rgts. 31 Brigade HQ moved to its concentration area at
Addlestone in
Surrey and came under the orders of 21st Army Group on 21 June (D + 15). However, embarkation would not follow for several months, during which the HQ staff had to undergo three weeks of Battle Training at
Perranporth in Cornwall, and then run S/L training in
Wiltshire.
No. 85 Group RAF was responsible for night-fighter cover of the beachhead and bases in Normandy, and was keen to have searchlight assistance in the same way as
Fighter Command had in the UK. A detailed plan was made in advance to have a belt of S/L positions deployed from
Caen to the
Cherbourg peninsula. This required nine S/L batteries of 24 lights, spaced at 6000 yard intervals, six rows deep. Each battery area was to have an orbit beacon, around which up to four fighters would be positioned at varying heights. These would be allocated by fighter controllers, and the S/Ls would assist by illuminating targets and indicating raid approaches, while area boundaries would be marked by vertical S/Ls. Six S/L regiments were specially trained for this work under 31 and 50 AA Bdes. In practice, most of this was never implemented, liaison with the
US Army units around Cherbourg having proved problematical. In the end, only 41 S/L Regt and the
Royal Corps of Signals section of 42 S/L Rgt deployed along the western part of the layout planned by 85 Group, and came under US command. Later they deployed along the River
Seine The Brigade HQ finally landed at
Arromanches on 2 October, and was not allocated an operational role. The brigade proceeded to
Brussels, where it was given the task of setting up a practice camp for training operators on the new Mk VIII
centimetric Searchlight Control (SLC or 'Elsie') radar. It was also ordered to begin trials on SLC radar for tracking enemy mortar fire. 41 S/L regiment had been detached from the brigade and was employed in the 'Anti-Diver' role against
V-1 flying bombs heading towards
Antwerp, while 42 S/L Rgt was under US command in Antwerp itself, and 54 S/L Rgt was still training in England. This meant that apart from its Signals and
Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers sections, the only troops under the brigade's command were a detachment of 41 S/L Rgt personnel attached for the counter-mortar trials. On 18 November a premature explosion while firing a captured German
81 mm mortar killed 5 men (including 3 from 41 S/L) and wounded four men of 41 S/L. Lieutenant Gilbert Rabbetts of 41 S/L 'acted with great gallantry, rapidly removing wounded to hospital, though himself badly wounded' and was later awarded the
MBE. Early in 1945, in preparation for the forthcoming offensive in the
Klever Reichswald (
Operation Veritable), 31 AA Bde carried out experiments in Belgium to optimise 'artificial moonlight' techniques whereby S/L units provided lighting for night movement of ground troops, for floodlighting their objectives and for dazzling the defenders. HQ 31 AA Bde remained with
Second Army until the end of the war in Europe. In April 1945 it was commanding the occupation troops and coast defences of the
Friesland area, with
64 (Northumbrian) HAA Regt (recently returned from supporting operations on the Yugoslav coast) under command as infantry. ==Postwar==