Mobilisation The TA was doubled in size after the
Munich Crisis, and most regiments split to form duplicates. Part of the reorganisation was that field regiments changed from four six-gun batteries to an establishment of two batteries, each of three four-gun
troops. For 76th (Highland) Fd Rgt this resulted in the following organisation from 25 May 1939:
76th (Highland) Field Regiment • RHQ at Dundee • 302 (Fife) Field Bty at Leven • 303 (City of Dundee) Field Bty at Dundee
127th (Highland) Field Regiment • RHQ at Leven • 301 (Angus) Field Bty at Arbroath • 304 (City of Dundee) Field Bty at Dundee
76th (Highland) Field Regiment On the outbreak of war 76th (Highland) Field Rgt mobilised in 51st (H) Division under the command of Lt-Col J.S.C. Sharp, still equipped with its First World War-era 18-pounders and 4.5-inch howitzer, though now on pneumatic tyres and towed by gun tractors. On 1 October 1939 it moved to
Ewshot and started to train hard, though many equipment problems were reported. It left Aldershot and landed at Le Havre on 31 January to join the new
British Expeditionary Force (BEF), deploying at
Avelin near
Lille. On 5 March the regiment exchanged with a field regiment of
3rd Division, and remained with this Regular Army formation for the rest of the war.
Battle of France The
Battle of France began on 10 May with the German invasion of the Low Countries. The BEF responded by executing the pre-arranged
Plan D, advancing into Belgium to take up defences along the
River Dyle. 76th Field Rgt, now commanded by Lt-Col W.E. Vaudry, left on 12 May for its assigned position at
Diegem on the north west outskirts of
Brussels, arriving to a great reception from the Belgians. At dawn the following day the regiment deployed at Berthem to cover
Louvain, with RHQ at Eegenhoven. The heavily wooded position was difficult to occupy, but 303 Battery with 4.5-inch howitzers straddled the road running east from Berthem, while 302 Bty with its 18-pdrs was south of the main Louvain–Maline road. The Observation Posts (OPs) were with
9th Infantry Brigade on the line of the Dyle Canal. On the afternoon of 14 May the regiment did great damage to German units closing up to the Dyle. At one point the regiment fired 200 rpg in 1.5 hours. The
''Wehrmacht's'' Army Group B had been ordered to break through quickly between Louvain and
Namur, but the artillery concentrations caused the leading troops to draw back. In the evening they began a series of attacks on 3rd Division's positions. During 15 May the regiment came under air attack, and there were several casualties in RHQ and 302 Bty. However, the
Panzers of
Army Group A had broken through the
Ardennes and threatened the BEF's flank, so on 16 May it began to withdraw to the
River Escaut. For 76th Field Rgt firing continued throughout the day, with some of the Troops taking up alternate positions at Ste Veronique in the evening, but with B and E Trps still in forward positions. At 17.00 on 17 May the regiment was ordered to pull out and retire to Vondelin, about west of Brussels. It was a difficult night move along roads packed with refugees and under bombing, but at dawn the regiment deployed in good positions in support of 9th Bde on the
River Dendre. After the rearguard (
4th Division) passed through, the regiment fired defensive tasks. Its next move, under air attack, was back to the
Escaut Canal line, where it deployed to support
7th Guards Brigade. By 22 May the bulk of the BEF was cut off from the south and began to withdraw into a 'pocket' round
Dunkirk from which it was preparing to evacuate (
Operation Dynamo). On 28 May the regiment was ordered to move as soon as possible to
Oostduinkerke on the Belgian coast where there had been an enemy breakthrough. It went into action near
Coxyde, putting rifle parties on the canal near
Westvleteren. They were ready by the morning, and from 13.00 on 29 May they were engaged in an infantry fight while the guns fired over open sights. That night the 'riflemen' joined the newly arrived South Lancashires in a counter-attack that restored the situation somewhat. The regimental historian comments that 'undoubtedly these Gunners save d a potentially critical situation by their rapid action'. The regiment remained in action during 30 May, firing all day and receiving many casualties from shelling and bombing. At 15.00 on 31 May Lt-Col Vaudrey was ordered to destroy all equipment and move to the beaches for embarkation that night. The regiment lost further casualties from enemy shellfire while marching along the beach to
Bray-Dunes. Other parties got away from
La Panne[ in small boats but sustained casualties after they had transferred to the Isle of Wight ferry
Gracie Fields when she was sunk 40 minutes after sailing for England.
Home Defence The survivors of 76th (H) Fd Rgt concentrated at
Glastonbury where it collected eight
18/25-pounder guns and then moved to
Chichester for anti-invasion duties in mid-June 1940. Later it deployed with 302 Bty on
Cissbury Ring near
Worthing and 303 Bty at Steepdown Hill near
Lancing College. 3rd Division was then pulled back from the
Sussex coast to act as a counter-attack division in case of invasion and on 10 July the regiment went to Winchcomb in
Savernake Forest. By the end of the year 76th was at
Dorchester. Units returned from Dunkirk were progressively brought back up to strength and re-equipped. Eventually all the field regiments were equipped with
25-pounders with
Quad gun tractors. One of the lessons learned from the
Battle of France was that the two-battery organisation did not work: field regiments were intended to support an infantry brigade of three battalions. As a result, they were reorganised into three 8-gun batteries, but it was not until late 1940 that the RA had enough trained battery staffs to carry out the reorganisation. 76th (H) Field Rgt accordingly formed 454 Fd Bty on 25 February 1941 when the regiment was stationed at
Dewlish in
Dorset. The division was chosen to spearhead the assault landings on
Sword Beach and was given specialist training and equipment. 76th (H) Field Rgt became a self-propelled (SP) regiment operating US-built
M7 Priest SP guns equipped with the
105 mm howitzer, with
M4 Sherman tanks as armoured OPs.
D-Day The Normandy landings were launched on
D Day, 6 June 1944. 76th (H) Field Rgt's Priests were aboard
Landing craft tanks (LCTs), from which they gave support fire during the run-in to the shore, then landed shortly after the assault troops of
8th Brigade. Of the 18 LCTs taking in 3rd Division's three SP field regiments, six were damaged by enemy fire, five by beach obstacles and three by
mines; two of these were total wrecks. There were significant casualties among the SP guns and crews. 3rd Division's advance was slowed by congestion on the beaches and by enemy strongpoints. Artillery support and two attacks were required to overcome the strongpoint codenamed 'Hillman', and the division failed in its bid to take
Caen in the first day. The field guns helped to drive off a tank attack by
21st Panzer Division. Over the following days the Germans attempted to drive in the bridgehead over the
Orne Canal that had been seized by British airborne troops on D-Day. The most serious attack came on 9 June, when 3rd Division's field guns fired 'devastatingly accurate pre-arranged defensive fire' (DF) tasks across the Orne that broke up the attack. For the rest of June 3 Division slowly inched forward towards Caen, capturing the Chateau de la Londe after a two-day battle. It then took part in
Operation Charnwood to capture Caen, which was preceded by air and naval bombardment before the full artillery barrage opened at 04.20 on 8 July. The infantry followed the barrage and made good progress, and by the end of the day 3rd Division was pushing along the Orne towards the city centre. The operation was completed the following day. For
Operation Goodwood the division crossed the Orne and attacked along the left flank of the main armoured thrust. The infantry attacked behind their barrage at 07.45, and it took all day to work through the villages on the left flank. Attempts to advance on the following day failed. In early August 3 Division was shifted west to support
11th Armoured Division's thrust towards
Mont Pinçon in
Operation Bluecoat. Shortly afterwards, 21st Army Group broke out of the Normandy bridgehead and began driving across Northern France and Belgium before pausing at the Albert Canal. 3rd Division played a minor role on the flank of
Operation Market Garden (the attempt to seize bridges as far as the Lower Rhine). It then endured the low-level winter fighting of 1944–45. 3rd Division then held the line of the
Rhine while the rest of XXX Corps pulled back to organise and train for the assault crossing
Operation Plunder. On the evening of 23 March all the guns in XXX Corps fired a four-hour programme in support of 51st (H) Division's assault (
see below), then switched to support
15th (Scottish) Division's later assault. 3rd Division later crossed the Rhine and took part in the advance across North Germany, capturing
Lingen and cutting the
Bremen–
Delmenhorst road
en route to the city of Bremen, which fell after five days' stiff fighting on 27 April. The fighting ended on 5 May after the
German surrender at Lüneburg Heath. 76th (Highland) Field Regiment was placed in suspended animation in
British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) on 31 December 1946. 127th Field Rgt usually supported the division's
153 Brigade. 127th Field Rgt formed its third battery, 490 Fd Bty, on 1 March 1941 when the regiment was stationed at
Oldmeldrum. It was authorised to use its parent's 'Highland' subtitle on 17 February 1942. On the second night of the battle, 51st (H) Division's guns fired a similar succession of CB tasks, concentrations and then a barrage to support
1st Armoured Division's attack. On the night of 25/26 October 51st (H) Division made progress towards its own objective as the 'dog-fight' phase continued. The 'break-out' phase began on the night of 1/2 November with Operation Supercharge, preceded by another powerful barrage. In the early hours of 4 November 51st (H) Division broke through to the Rahman Track, and the
Axis forces began to retreat. 51st (H) Division then took part in the pursuit to
El Agheila and
Tripoli in January 1943. 491 Field Bty claimed that four of its guns were the first Eighth Army guns in the deserted city, having used all of the regiment's available petrol to get there. The regiment took part in the victory parade in the city. By 25 February it was past
Medenine in
Tunisia and facing the
Mareth Line. The Axis force made a spoiling attack on 6 March (the
Battle of Medenine) but there was plenty of warning and the advance was easily repulsed. 51st (H) Division had already moved most of its artillery south in waiting for the attack, leaving three Troops to move and fire between various positions to simulate the whole divisional artillery remaining in its old positions. 127th Fd Rgt fired one full regimental task against a group of Axis infantry but was otherwise hardly engaged. Thereafter it was on harassing fire (HF) tasks. The
Battle of the Mareth Line began on the night of 16/17 March when 51st (H) Division took the outpost line against negligible opposition, though the Forward Observation Officers (FOOs) of 127th Fd Rgt going forward with the
sappers came under heavy shellfire. The main attack followed on 20/21 March with another massive night barrage, 127th Fd Rgt's guns firing an average of 430 rounds each. But little progress was made over the Wadi Zigzaou for the first two days and the line held until it was outflanked by other forces in the south. The Axis defence collapsed on 28 March and the following day 51st (H) Division was on its way to
Gabès. The next Axis defence line was along
Wadi Akarit. The barrage for 51st (H) Division's assault began at 04.15 on 6 April, followed by four other barrages over five hours, one involving a difficult change of direction, and the division's attack, in the words of the
Official History, 'went like clockwork'. Axis troops then began counter-attacks and the Highlanders had to fight hard to hold their gains. The pursuit was resumed the following day, through
Sfax. By 22 April the regiment was in action near
Enfidaville, with the OPs in the hills. This lasted until the fall of
Tunis and the end of the campaign on 15 May.
Sicily 127th Field Rgt then rested at
Bougie in
Algeria and trained for the
Allied landings in Sicily (Operation Husky). The regiment's advanced party sailed from Sfax harbour on 8 July and landed from the second
Landing Ship, Tank, near
Pachino four hours after the assault infantry on 10 July. The division was moving forward by nightfall, with the objectives of
Palazzolo Acreide and
Vizzini, which it reached by the night of 14/15 July. 127th Field Rgt described a 'fierce fight' at Vizzini and suffered some casualties, but the division continued with scarcely a pause towards the
Dittaino river. On 17 July the division deployed to cross the Dittaino and attempt to capture
Paternò. It achieved a bridgehead but further advance was checked, so on the night of 20/21 July the division sent a composite force of infantry and armour against the main enemy defences at
Gerbini Airfield, supported by 127th Fd Rgt and other artillery. Although the attack succeeded, fierce counter-attacks by the
Hermann Goring Division drove the Highlanders out the following morning, after which 51st (H) Division was put onto the defensive. Further counter-attacks and heavy shelling on 23/24 July led to more casualties for the regiment. 51st (H) Division's artillery joined in XXX Corps' artillery preparation for operations against
Adrano (the
battles round Etna). This began at 23.50 on 31 July with 220 rpg while 51st (H) took bridgeheads over the Dittaino. Paternò fell on 4 August,
Biancavilla on 6 August, and another 250 rpg programme was fired from midnight on 6/7 August. The division began a 'sidestep' on 12 August and the guns came into action north of
Zafferana the following night. By now the Axis forces were evacuating Sicily, which was completed on 17 August. 51st (H) Division did not take part in the subsequent
Italian Campaign, having been earmarked for Operation Overlord. However, its guns did assist in the massive bombardment covering the assault crossing of the
Strait of Messina on 3 September (
Operation Baytown). One gun of E Troop, 127th Fd Rgt, fired a test round on the evening of 2 September, claiming to be the first British field gun to drop a round on mainland Italy during the war, and OP parties did cross with the assault troops to direct the fire. The regiment embarked aboard the
SS Argentina bound for the UK on 9 November and disembarked at
Liverpool on 27 November. It then went into training at
Beaconsfield and
Long Melford.
Normandy 51st (Highland) Division was in the first follow-up wave of formations in Overlord. On 2 June 1944 it embarked on
Liberty ships at
East India Docks, London, bound for Normandy and began landing on 7 June (D + 1). 127th Field Rgt landed the following day and went straight into action near
Blainville-sur-Orne on the Caen Canal supporting the
Orne bridgehead. This position was heavily shelled and the regiment pulled back to
Bénouville on 11 June. It was mainly engaged in Defensive Fire (DF) tasks: several German counter-attacks were broken up by shellfire, but the regiment's own casualties mounted steadily. On 23 June the division expanded the bridgehead by a night attack at Ste Honorine la Chardonnerette. The guns had remained silent before the attack to ensure surprise, after which the enemy's successive attempts to recover the village were stopped by artillery fire. The division supported 3rd Division's attack on the flank of Operation Goodwood (
see above). On 8 August 51st (H) Division spearheaded
II Canadian Corps' attack towards
Falaise (
Operation Totalize), preceded by a massive barrage. The attack began before dawn and by first light the break-in was going well, with a number of villages taken. After a second artillery preparation the
4th Canadian and
1st Polish Armoured Divisions passed through to continue the advance. The Canadians renewed the advance to Falaise on 14 August in
Operation Tractable, with 51st (H) Division attacking towards the Laison Valley on the left flank. RHQ of 127th Fd Rgt lost 15 vehicles to misdirected
Royal Air Force bombs. By 21 August the
Falaise Pocket had been closed and the division was advancing eastwards towards
Lisieux. 51st (H) Division then moved up to and across the
Seine for the assault on
Le Havre (
Operation Astonia). This was a major operation, with the regiment allotted 500 rpg, alongside support from medium guns and RAF bombers, which cowed the opposition. It was followed by a similar assault to take
Boulogne (
Operation Wellhit). The regiment next made a long move to the
Antwerp area at the end of September, then spent three weeks in the line at
Sint-Oedenrode.
Low Countries on 23 October 1944. The division's next offensive action was west of
's-Hertogenbosch on the night of 23 October, when 300 guns were used and the infantry took all their objectives, with follow-up advances over succeeding days through
Loon op Zand and across the Afwaterings Canal towards the
Meuse () by early November. On 14 November the division carried out an assault crossing of the
Willems Canal near
Weert accompanied by another heavy artillery barrage, then moved on to the Zig Canal and crossed that on 17 November with much less preparation. 51st (H) Division was then moved to hold 'The Island', the wet low-lying country between
Nijmegen and
Arnhem that had been captured during Operation Market Garden (
see above). In mid-December the division was pulled out of the line for rest. On 21 December 127th Fd Rgt was suddenly moved south as part of the response to the German breakthrough in the Ardennes (the
Battle of the Bulge). It was attached to
XII Corps near
Sittard covering the approaches to Antwerp, and then south of
Liège on 25 December. Reports of German troops disguised in American uniforms led to heightened security: without his identity card the regiment's CO, Lt-Col Maurice Burnett, was required by US troops to take down his trousers to check that he was not wearing German underpants. On 2 January the regiment moved to support 153 Bde and
53rd (Welsh) Division in counter-attacks. 153 Brigade attacked southwards from
Marche-en-Famenne on 9 January, and then 51st (H) Division fought its way into the flank of the 'Bulge' in winter conditions.
Rhineland Like 3rd Division, 51st (H) Division was engaged in the fighting in the Reichswald (Operation Veritable,
see above). It began at 05.00 on 8 February with a huge artillery preparation, after which 153 Bde attacked at 13.00 and were on their objectives by 23.00 that night. Over the next two days the regiment fired smoke and HE to help the brigade continue the advance through the forest. Captain Swaab acting as FOO brought down fire on Germans retreating along the
Meuse () bank from 1st Battalion
Gordon Highlanders. The slow advance continued through
Gennep on 11 February, then German counter-attacks were driven off by DF fire. The final phase of the operation for 51st (H) Division began on 18 February against
Goch, which was successfully taken after stiff fighting. The division took a leading part in the Rhine crossing (Operation Plunder,
see above). OP parties from the regiment were among the first troops across the river on the night of 23/24 March, while the guns fired throughout the night just 600 yards from the river and under frequent return fire. The division fought its way into
Rees, and 127th Fd Rgt's guns were brought over the river on 26 March, firing in support of 154 Bde and
43rd (Wessex) Division which had also crossed. The division then continued through
Isselburg and
Anholt. After a rest, the regiment moved forward on 5 April as part of 153 Brigade Group forming the divisional spearhead, and reached the
Dortmund–Ems Canal on 8 April. After a pause at the canal, the division advanced rapidly towards
Bremen against delaying actions. It reached
Delmenhorst on 20 April and closed in on the centre of Bremen. The regiment was still under fire on 3 May, but the German surrender at Lüneburg Heath ended the fighting the next day. The regiment began occupation duties at
Bevern, Lower Saxony, moving to
Verden in June, and handed in its guns at the end of July. 127th (Highland) Field Regiment was placed in suspended animation in BAOR on 1 April 1946. ==Postwar==