On 22 August, as the Allied breakout from the Normandy beachhead got under way, A Troop was withdrawn from its sites and attached to
71st Light AA Regiment for the drive to the
Seine. On 26 August the troop deployed its lights at
Vernon, to defend the bridges under construction where
43rd (Wessex) Division had made an assault crossing of the river the previous day. On 4 September the rest of the battery arrived at Vernon. However, 21st Army Group was now advancing rapidly across northern France, and A Troop moved up via
Amiens and
Douai while the rest of the battery deployed round
Rouen on 10 September. By 14 September the battery was in
Brussels and on 21 September it completed a 320-mile advance, with several moonlight and AA deployments along the way, including supporting the canal crossing at
Joe's Bridge. A Troop reached
Nijmegen to deploy for AA defence of the vital bridges shortly after their capture in
Operation Market Garden, the rest of the battery guarding bridges further back. The Nijmegen bridge defences were shelled and mortared as well as attacked by low-level bombers – 16 raids on 26 September and nine more the following day. A Troop was assigned to AA defence north and south of the river, as well as illuminating the river, where German
Frogmen succeeded in damaging the bridges. During the winter of 1944–45, while A Troop experimented with using SLC radar to direct LAA guns, the rest of 474 S/L Bty was frequently deployed in detachments to provide movement light to various formations – for example, for laying or lifting minefields, bridgebuilding, or fighting patrols. A major deployment was with
VIII Corps for
Operation Veritable in the
Reichswald. However, unlike some other batteries engaged in the same work, its official designation was not changed from 'Searchlight' to 'Moonlight', and at the
Rhine crossing (
Operation Plunder) it reverted to the AA role, forming part of 100 AA Bde supporting
XII Corps. ==Germany==