Mobilisation The East Anglian Division had begun its annual training on 27 July 1914 and by 3 August the divisional artillery had concentrated at the
Redesdale training area in
Northumberland. When the order to mobilise was given on 4 August, the units returned to their headquarters. The division then concentrated around
Brentwood, Essex, the 1st Northamptonshire Battery having the furthest to travel arrived on 12 August. On 20 August the division moved to
Chelmsford and formed part of the coast defences of the UK until the following May. Meanwhile, the formation of duplicate or 2nd Line TF units from Home Service men and recruits had been authorised on 1 September, and towards the end of 1914 the 2nd East Anglian Division came into existence at Peterborough. The original (1st Line) Northampton Battery became the 1/1st, and its 2nd Line became the 2/1st Northampton Battery. Later a 3rd Line or Depot unit was formed.
1/1 Northamptonshire Battery The 1st East Anglian Division was employed on coast defence until May 1915, when it was concentrated at St Albans preparatory to going overseas as the
54th (East Anglian) Division. However, when the infantry departed for the
Gallipoli Campaign, the divisional artillery was left behind. In August it joined the 2nd Line at
Thetford in
Norfolk and
Brandon, Suffolk, rearmed with modern
18-pounder guns and handed over its obsolete 15-pounders to the 2nd Line batteries. In October 1915, the 1/1st Northamptonshre Battery carried out a march through its recruiting area, visiting Peterborough,
Oundle,
Kettering, Stamford and
Huntingdon. The training march allowed the men to visit their families, and publicised the need for fresh recruits.
France and Egypt On 17 November 1915 the 54th Divisional Artillery embarked for France, where it joined
33rd Division, a '
Kitchener's Army' division whose artillery were still under training. After a month on the
Western Front, during which parties of officers and men had been attached for training to other divisions in the Front Line, 54th Divisional Artillery was warned that it was to be transferred to Egypt to rejoin its parent division, which had been withdrawn from Gallipoli. Embarkation began at
Marseille on 30 January 1916 and disembarkation was completed at
Alexandria by 14 February. The divisional artillery rejoined 54th Division at Mena Camp near
Cairo and in April moved into No 1 (Southern) Section of the
Suez Canal defences. On 29 May 1916 the IV East Anglian Brigade was renumbered CCLXXIII (273) Brigade RFA and its batteries became A, B and C. It was renumbered again on 29 December, becoming CCLXX (270), and was reorganised into six-gun batteries. C (1/1st Northamptonshire) Battery was joined by half of B (1/2nd Hertfordshire) Battery and became B Battery.
Gaza The infantry battalions of 54th Division were slowly brought back up to strength with drafts from home during 1916, and by mid-January 1917 the whole division had assembled at Moascar in preparation for the
British invasion of Sinai. After crossing the Wilderness, the division took part in the
First Battle of Gaza (26–7 March), where B/270 Bty found great difficulty crossing the Wadi Guzze, and then breaking up Turkish counter-attacks on the second day. Sergeant Barker won a
Distinguished Conduct Medal (DCM) after being wounded but refusing to leave his gun. During the
Second Battle of Gaza (17–19 April) the brigade was not required to fire a shot on the first days. On 19 April it joined in the
barrage 10 minutes before H-Hour but the preliminary bombardment had failed to neutralise Turkish artillery and machine guns, and 54th Division's infantry suffered heavy casualties. On 14/15 and 20/21 July, 270th Bde gave covering fire for major raids on the Turkish lines. A six-day preliminary bombardment for the
Third Battle of Gaza began on 27 October, with B/270 Bty attached to
271 (II East Anglian) Bde in No 3 Group supporting
161st (Essex) Brigade. On X-Day (2 November), 161st Bde attacked along the coast behind a creeping barrage laid down by No 3 Group. In preparation for the final capture of Gaza B/270 Bty moved forward after dark on 5 November and spent the following day registering for a new fire programme on 7 November that began two hours before dawn and led to the Turkish evacuation of the town. On 24 November the Turks counter-attacked the pursuing
ANZAC Mounted Division, which was supported by A and C/270 Btys. B/270 Battery was hurried up from the rear to join in, but arrived after the action had ended. The brigade remained in support of the
New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade, with B/270 Bty dug in under Turkish fire and suffering a steady trickle of casualties until the
Surrender of Jerusalem on 9 December.
Jaffa and Majdal Yaba During the
Battle of Jaffa (21–22 December), B/270 Bty carried out a pre-dawn bombardment of 'Bald Hill' supporting the attack of
2/11th Battalion, the London Regiment, and then followed up 'galloping in best R.H.A. (
Royal Horse Artillery) fashion, to be in at the death if necessary'. During the night of 11/12 March 1918 the 54th Division formed up for an
attack on Majdal Yaba. There was no preliminary bombardment: after moving into position, B/270 Bty would fire the first round to warn the rest of the divisional artillery to open fire. However, the battery's intended position was inaccessible, and it had to find an alternative in the dark before Zero Hour. The battery then followed the advance of
162nd (East Midland) Brigade, 'leap-frogging' forward by sections to ensure that some guns were always available. 54th Division then took up defensive positions, which entailed B/270 Bty dragging its guns up a rocky slope to reach its position. Its rock
sangars came under regular counter-battery fire and aerial bombing. On 9 April, 270 Bde's guns supported
75th Division's attack on Three Bushes Hill (the
Battle of Berukin).
Jordan Valley The
German spring offensive on the
Western Front led to a prolonged lull in operations in Palestine. 54th Division was warned of a move to France that was later cancelled. On 1 August, B/270 Bty was detached to join an
ad hoc group from 54th Divisional Artillery sent to relieve the RHA of the
Desert Mounted Corps in the
British occupation of the Jordan ValleyJordan Valley. After a long and difficult march, the six 18-pounders of B/270 replaced two four-gun batteries of RHA
13-pounders. During this month-long deployment the battery had 36 men evacuated to hospital suffering from
Malaria. On return to 54th Division the battery was struck with a fever and had another 58 men in hospital, reducing it to less than half strength when it rejoined 270th Bde on 11 September.
Megiddo The
Battle of Megiddo opened on 19 September with the
Battle of Sharon. B/270 Battery's task was to fire
smoke shells for an hour to create a screen in front of 54th Division's assault battalions, and then switch to
High Explosive and
shrapnel. Once the timed barrage was complete, the battery had to advance in the open under enemy shellfire to a new position from which it was able to shell two
tepes holding up the attack. Corporal Runciman, the signaller in the battery commander's observation post, was awarded a DCM for standing up under heavy fire and signalling by flag to the gun positions. Despite the fire, the battery suffered no casualties in this action. The division was then taken out of the line and concentrated at
Haifa, where it was engaged in repairing communications for the rapidly advancing army. It next moved to
Beirut, where it was concentrating when the
Armistice of Mudros was signed with Turkey and hostilities ended on 31 October. In late November 1918 the division was ordered to return to Egypt, the artillery proceeding by sea and arriving in mid-December. Demobilisation began in January 1919, and the TF units were slowly reduced to
cadres. In March and April, when its guns had been handed in and about one-third of its men had left, 54th Divisional Artillery was converted into an
ad hoc cavalry regiment to act as mounted police during disturbances in Cairo, and men of B/270 Bty were scattered over five different posts. Demobilisation recommenced in May and was completed in June.
2/1 Northamptonshire Battery Training for the 2nd Line artillery was hindered by the shortage of equipment, and several months passed before guns, horses and harness were received. Even then, only obsolete French 90 mm guns were available for training. Early in 1915 the
2nd East Anglian Division (which was numbered 69th in August 1915) concentrated round Thetford, where it formed part of
First Army in
Central Force. The divisional artillery was distributed around
Cambridge,
Tuddenham and
Brandon. In November the divisional artillery took over the 15-pounder guns released by its 1st Line. It continued to use up 15-pounder ammunition for training even after being fully equipped with 18-pounders in January 1916. In May 1916, the 2/IV East Anglian Brigade was numbered CCCXLVIII Bde RFA, in which 2/1st Northampton became C Battery, and the following month he division was transferred to
Northern Command and moved to
Harrogate in
North Yorkshire. In the summer of 1917 the divisional artillery moved into camp at
Welbeck in Nottinghamshire (with practice camps on
Salisbury Plain) until winter set in, when they moved into winter quarters around
Doncaster and
Darlington. The division's role throughout the war was to train drafts of reinforcements for units serving overseas. By the end of 1917 the 2nd Line infantry battalions had been replaced by training units, and from 1 January 1918 the division lost its 'East Anglian' title. The artillery remained around Darlington (later
Middlesbrough) and Doncaster. The brigade was ordered to disband on 1 November 1918, before the
Armistice with Germany, and disbandment was completed before the end of January 1919. ==Interwar==