Mobilisation On the outbreak of war on 3 September 1939 the regiment was responsible for the following guns: • 5 ×
9.2-inch • 6 ×
6-inch • 2 ×
4.7-inch • 4 ×
12-pounders These were controlled by:
516th (Thames & Medway) Coast Regiment Formed with A, B, C and D Btys, later organised as: • 357 Bty – joined 31 December 1940, at
Shornemead Fort; transferred to 518th (T&M) Coast Rgt by 1 April 1940 • 284 Bty – formed from part of A Bty 1 April 1941, at
Grain Fort • 285 Bty – formed from part of A Bty 1 April 1941, at Martello battery • 286 Bty – formed from B Bty 1 April 1941, at Whitehall Farm, moved to
Canvey Island by 16 March 1943 • 287 Bty – formed from C Bty 1 April 1941, at Garrison Point, moved to Grain Fort by 16 April 1943 • 288 Bty – formed from D Bty 1 April 1941, as Garrison anti-Motor Torpedo Boat battery • 220 Bty – formed 16 January 1941 by 72 Coast Training Rgt at Norton Camp, joined 30 April 1941 at Sheerness
517th (Thames & Medway) Coast Regiment Formed with A and B Btys, later organised as: • B Bty – disbanded 31 December 1940 • 332 Bty – joined 31 December 1940, at
Foulness, moved to
Bawdsey 10 February 1942 • 356 Bty – joined 31 December 1940, at
Coalhouse Fort • 419 Bty – formed 21 September 1940, joined 31 December 1940, at Shoeburyness • 167 Bty – formed from part of A Bty 1 April 1941, 6-inch battery at Canvey Island, moved to Garrison Point 16 March 1943 • 168 Bty – formed from part of A Bty 1 April 1941, 3-pounder battery at Canvey Island, moved to Scars Elbow and
St Mary's Bay by November 1941
518th (Thames & Medway) Coast Regiment Formed with A and B Btys, later organised as: • 334 Bty – joined 31 December 1940, at
Shellness, moved to No 1 Bastion 7 December 1942 • 289 Bty – formed from A Bty 1 April 1941 • 290 Bty – formed from B Bty 1 April 1941; transferred to
540th Coast Rgt 16 April 1941 • 357 Bty – joined from 516th (T&M) Rgt 15 September 1941; transferred to
524th (Lancashire & Cheshire) Coast Rgt 23 October 1941 • 109 Bty – joined from 524th (L&C) Rgt 23 October 1941, at Shornemead Fort During the summer of 1940 a number of emergency batteries of ex-
Royal Navy guns were installed, including: • Shoeburyness – 2 × 6-inch • Coalhouse Fort – 2 ×
5.5-inch • Shornemead Fort – 2 × 5.5-inch • Shellness – 2 × 6-inch By November 1940 the Thames & Medway guns comprised: • 5 × 9.2-inch • 10 × 6-inch • 4 × 5.5-inch • 3 ×
6-pounders • 2 ×
3-pounders Mid-War By September 1941, when Britain's coast defences were at their height, the Thames & Medway fixed guns were:
516th (Thames & Medway) Coast Regiment • Regimental HQ (RHQ) at Sheerness in Sheerness FC • 220, 287, 288 Btys • 284 Bty – disbanded 1 December 1941 and personnel distributed to the other batteries • 285 Bty – disbanded 15 March 1943 • 286 Bty – transferred to 517th (T&M) Rgt 16 March 1943 • 289 Bty – joined from 518th (T&M) Rgt 15 September 1941; transferred to
520th (Kent & Sussex) Coast Rgt 16 April 1943 • 334 Bty – joined from 518th (T&M) Rgt 15 September 1941 • 167 Bty – joined from 517th (T&M) Rgt 16 March 1943 • 295 Bty – joined from 520th (K&S) Rgt 16 April 1943 • No 3 Coast Observer Detachment (COD) – joined from
568th (Devon) Coast Rgt by July 1943; temporarily transferred to
521st (K&S) Coast Rgt November 1943–March 1944
517th (Thames & Medway) Coast Regiment • RHQ at Canvey in Thames FC • 168, 356, 419 Btys • 109 Bty – transferred to
War Office (WO) control 12 February 1942 and attached to Coast Artillery Training Centre • 332 Bty – transferred to
515th (Suffolk) Coast Rgt 10 February 1942 • 425 Independent Coast Bty – joined 12 February 1942, at Shornemead • 167 Bty – transferred to 516th (T&M) Rgt 16 March 1943 • 286 Bty – joined from 516th (T&M) Rgt 16 March 1943 By July 1942 Coastal Artillery Plotting Rooms had been created to coordinate the 'coast watching' radar of the CODs, with No 13 plotting room assigned to Sheerness. By the end of 1942 the threat from German attack had diminished and there was demand for trained gunners for the fighting fronts. A process of reducing the manpower in the coast defences began in 1943, but there were few organisational changes for the Thames & Medway defences closest to the enemy. On 1 April 168 and 286 Btys were transferred from 517th to 516th Coast Rgt, and 220 Bty was transferred in the opposite direction, while No 3 COD was disbanded.
Late war By the end of 1944 serious naval attacks on the coast could be discounted and the WO began reorganising surplus coastal units into garrison infantry battalions. On 3 December RHQ of 516th Coast Rgt was converted into
516th (Thames & Medway) Garrison Rgt, RA, and its batteries (167, 168, 286, 287, 288, 334, 356, 425) became independent and then transferred to 517th (T&M) Coast Rgt. By January 1945
21st Army Group operating in
North West Europe was suffering a manpower crisis, so the WO went further and converted the RA garrison regiments (and some other RA units) into infantry battalions for duties in the rear areas. 516th (T&M) Garrison Rgt was converted into
614th (Thames & Medway) Infantry Rgt, RA, comprising five batteries designated A–E. It served in Europe until after the end of the war, passing into suspended animation between 5 and 25 July 1946. On 1 June 1945, shortly after
VE Day, RHQ of 517th Coast Rgt had gone into suspended animation together with its TA batteries, while the war-formed batteries were disbanded. ==Postwar==