98th Field Regiment (Surrey & Sussex Yeomanry Queen Mary's) Battle of France The regiment mobilised at
Worthing under Lt-Col G.A. Ledingham,
MC,
TD, who had been the commanding officer (CO) since 1937, and it joined
I Corps of the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in France by 27 September 1939. Its guns were First World War-era vintage
18-pounders, some handed over by
1st and
2nd Regiments Royal Horse Artillery who were receiving more modern guns, and 98th also took over vehicles from its sister regiment, 144th. On 10 May 1940, the
Phoney War ended with the
German invasion of the Low Countries, so the BEF followed the pre-arranged
Plan D and advanced into Belgium to take up defences along the
River Dyle. 98th (S&SY) Field Rgt was with I Corps on the Dyle Line by 15 May 1940. However, the
Panzers of the
''Wehrmacht's'' 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. The regiment was with I Corps on the Escaut Line by 21 May 1940. By now the enemy was in the BEF's rear. To hold the line of the Aire Canal north of
Saint-Omer the BEF organised a scratch force of rear elements ('Polforce'), and on 22 May 392 Bty was hastily sent to join the defenders on the Canal Line. The battery only had seven 18-pounders, so each was sent to cover one of the bridges against the advancing
1st Panzer Division: •
Hazebrouck: 15 minutes after digging in, the gun stopped an enemy column, knocking out the lead vehicles. It was then attacked by 11 tanks, putting one (possibly two) out of action before the gun crew were all wounded and the ammunition limber blown up. The gun was withdrawn with its wounded detachment. •
Arques:
Sappers were blowing up the bridge when the gun arrived. Advancing enemy troops were firing on and nearing the gun position when it was relieved by the
12th Royal Lancers and withdrawn. •
Renescure: The gun destroyed enemy-held houses across the bridge and remained in action until late afternoon. One enemy tank was destroyed but mortar fire on the gun position forced a withdrawal; as the gun was being limbered up the tractor was hit and the position overrun. •
Wardrecques: The gun supported a party of French infantry, destroying houses opposite and silencing a machine gun, but heavy fire drove the French back and although the gun remained in action it was destroyed by a direct hit shortly afterwards. •
Blaringhem: The gun covered French and British troops. A morning attack was repulsed with the destruction of an enemy tank and two troop carriers. During another attack the gun fired 130 rounds before the enemy closed in. A shell broke the limber connection and the gun had to be abandoned. •
Wittes: This gun was in position during the night of 22/23 May. Nothing further was heard of it and the detachment was captured. •
Saint-Momelin: Here the bridge was held for three days with the help of gunners of
51st (Lowland) Heavy Rgt armed with a few rifles and
Bren guns. The gun destroyed enemy-held houses and mortar positions across the canal and being well dug in it survived all retaliation and repulsed all attempts to cross. The gunners had the satisfaction of intercepting a German radio message that said 'Bridge at Momelin strongly held, try elsewhere'. The defenders at St Momelin were relieved by French troops on 25 May. The RA regimental historian wrote: 'Seldom have two troops of field guns done so much to hold off an armoured division for so long. The delay they caused was vital and saved many Allied lives'. 98th (S&SY) Field Rgt attached itself to 44th (HC) Division, but got caught in a traffic jam at
Saint-Jans-Cappel on 29 May and the gunners were forced to destroy and abandon their guns and vehicles before proceeding on foot to the beaches for evacuation. By July the rest of the regiment was manning tradesmen's vans and an old
Rolls-Royce car, first at
Hall Green,
Birmingham, then
Ince Blundell,
Lancashire, (where the Sussex detachments rejoined), and in October at
Huyton, Lancashire. Detachments of gunners were sent out to man roadblocks and static guns. Part of 391 Bty was at
Barford in the outer defences of Birmingham with
Hotchkiss 6-pounders, the rest at
Tarvin on airfield defence. 392 Battery was in detachments from
Maryport to
Speke with weapons ranging from obsolete 6-pounders to 1913-vintage
13-pounders. At the beginning of May 1942 the regiment came under direct
War Office control preparatory to proceeding overseas.
North Africa 98th (S&SY) Field Regiment landed in
Egypt where on 19 September 1942 it joined
10th Armoured Division in
Eighth Army. It was equipped with 24 x 25-pounders with
Stuart light tanks as observation posts (OPs). On the second night of the
Second Battle of El Alamein (24/25 October), 10th Armoured Division advanced with strong artillery support from its own regiments and several others, but the tanks could not keep up with the
barrage and struggled up to Miteirya Ridge. On 27/28 October the division's lorried infantry brigade attacked the 'Woodcock' and 'Snipe' objectives, but because of the confusion on the objectives the artillery plan had to be very simple, and communication between brigade HQ and the guns broke down. The infantry took serious casualties and dug in short of their objectives. 10th Armoured Division was withdrawn into reserve, but after the battle it took part in the pursuit to
Mersa Matruh. After Matruh, 10th Armoured Division withdrew to the
Nile Delta, and on 29 December 98th (S&SY) Fd Rgt came under
Middle East Forces. In Egypt it re-equipped with
M7 Priest 105mm
self-propelled (SP) guns.
Sicily and Italy 98th (S&SY) Field Regiment rejoined Eighth Army for the
Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky) in July 1943. The landings began on 10 July. On 13 July a Commando and paratroop attack (
Operation Fustian) had seized Primosole Bridge over the Simeto river and prevented its demolition, but had been unable to retain possession of the bridge. Early on 15 July the SP guns of 98th (S&SY) and 24th Fd Rgts were brought up to support
50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division and
4th Armoured Brigade in their renewed attempts to gain a bridgehead. Aided by a heavy barrage, three battalions of the
Durham Light Infantry (DLI) forced their way across. The regiment came into action again on 17 July, together with six other field and medium regiments, in support of an attack on the Fossa Bottaceto, south of
Catania, by 6th and 9th Bns DLI and the tanks of
3rd County of London Yeomanry (Sharpshooters). The guns fired a concentration for 30 minutes before Zero (which was at 01.00), then barrages and concentrations as required. The operation bogged down in close country and an attempt to restart it the next night broke down when the artillery was directed to fire on the Bottaceto itself, while German troops were still in position in front of it. After Sicily had been secured, Eighth Army moved to the invasion of mainland Italy, crossing the
Strait of Messina to land around
Reggio di Calabria on 3 September (
Operation Baytown). From Reggio, 98th (S&SY) Fd Rgt moved to
Taranto where in October it embarked in
Landing Ships, Tank for a four-day voyage round the 'heel' of Italy to
Manfredonia, from where it advanced to
Foggia. By November, Eighth Army faced the Germans'
Bernhardt Line. An assault crossing of the
River Sangro on 28 November by V Corps was supported by massive artillery fire, the field regiments (98th (S&SY) being attached to
78th Division for the operation) firing over 600 rounds per gun in the first three days. On 9 December
1st Canadian Division joined the battle round the
Moro River, with 98th (S&SY) Fd Rgt among the units firing in support. By January 1944 the regiment had been switched to the other side of Italy to join in
X Corps' assault crossing of the Garigliano. The operation began on the night of 17/18 January with 98th (S&SY) Fd Rgt firing in support of 5th Division after the infantry had made a silent crossing. The opening of the 1944 Allied spring offensive in Italy saw 98th (S&SY) Fd Rgt assigned to
8th Indian Division to force a crossing of the
River Gari as part of
Operation Diadem. The attack began at 23.45 on the night of 11/12 May, with every gun employed in counter-battery bombardment from 23.00 to 23.40. The field guns concentrated on the
Nebelwerfer mortar positions and then fired a creeping barrage for the infantry advancing at a rate of in six minutes. The leading battalions of 8th Indian Division crossed without much difficulty, covered by mist in the river valley, but aroused by the preliminary bombardment the Germans brought down their arranged defensive fire. The infantry were pinned down and dug in, while the barrage rolled away from them beyond the German positions. By morning they had won a small bridgehead, bridges were being built and the first armour crossed before nightfall. After the fall of Rome on 4 June, the Allies pressed the German forces back to the
Gothic Line, where the advance bogged down again.
North West Europe In the winter of 1944–45 a number of units and formations were transferred from the Italian Front to
21st Army Group fighting in
North West Europe. 98th (S&SY) Field Regiment was one of those sent in March 1945, and was re-equipped with
Sexton 25-pounder SP guns. The regiment served in the Netherlands and in April 1945 it moved to
Lübeck in Germany with the occupation forces.
Demobilisation began in October 1945 and the regiment passed into suspended animation in June 1946.
144th Field Regiment (Surrey & Sussex Yeomanry Queen Mary's) ::''See main article
144th Field Regiment (Surrey & Sussex Yeomanry Queen Mary's)'' The 144th Field Regiment remained in the United Kingdom in the early war years as part of Home Forces, attached to
4th Division after its return from the Dunkirk evacuation. In November 1940 they were sent to
Egypt and then attached to the
5th Indian Division seeing service in the
Sudan,
Abyssinia and
Eritrea it was at
Keru Gorge that 390 Battery were charged by about 60 Eritrean cavalry, almost certainly the last cavalry charge on the British Army. The regiment returned to Egypt with the division before being attached to the
70th Infantry Division during the
Siege of Tobruk in September 1941. After being withdrawn from Tobruk they were briefly attached to the
4th Indian Division in early 1942 and the
British 1st Armoured Division in February to April 1942. In May 1942 they were sent to
Iraq with the
10th Army attached to the
17th Indian Infantry Brigade and then to
31st Indian Armoured Division. They remained with this formation until the end of the war serving in
Syria,
Persia, Egypt,
Palestine and
Lebanon. ==Postwar==