Mobilisation Units of the East Lancashire Division had been on their annual training when war came: on 3 August they were recalled to their drill halls and at 17.30 next day the order to mobilise was received. The men were
billeted close to their drill halls while the mobilisation process went on. On 10 August, TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service. The infantry brigades of the East Lancashire Division volunteered by 12 August and soon 90 per cent of the division had signed up. On 15 August 1914, the
War Office issued instructions to separate those men who had opted for Home Service only, and form these into reserve units. On 31 August, the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service. The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original, but distinguished by a '2/' prefix and would absorb the flood of volunteers coming forwards. In this way duplicate batteries, brigades and divisions were created, mirroring those TF formations being sent overseas.
1/III East Lancashire Brigade Egypt On 20 August the East Lancashire Division moved into camps around Bolton,
Bury and
Rochdale, and on 5 September it received orders to go to
Egypt to complete its training and relieve
Regular units from the garrison for service on the
Western Front. It embarked on a convoy of troopships from
Southampton on 10 September, and landed at
Alexandria on 25 September, the first complete TF division to go overseas. 1/III East Lancs Bde was commanded by Lt-Col Walker. Some units moved into the
Suez Canal defences in October before war broke out with
Turkey on 5 November. 1/III East Lancs Bde was sent to the Canal Zone on 20 January 1915 and its guns were concealed among trees on the west bank, with 1/18th Bty at Ferry Post,
Ismailia, 1/19th at Serapeum West and 1/20th at El Ferdan. The Turks reconnoitred these positions on 2 February and 1/20th Bty at El Ferdan claimed the distinction of being the first battery of the division (and probably the first in the TF) to fire upon an enemy. 1/19th Battery under
Major B.P. Dobson was also in action against skirmishing Turkish camel troops. In the early hours of 3 February the Turks attempted a crossing of the canal. 1/19th Battery hauled a 15-pdr through a wood to the canal bank and fired point-blank into the iron pontoons that the Turks were trying to launch. Another gun was hauled to a hill behind the wood and found good targets among the enemy approaching the canal. 1/18th Battery fired on enemy positions at ranges of to . The brigade's casualties were only five men wounded, four of these in 1/19th Bty. The Turks did not press home their attack and retired after
Indian infantry counter-attacked. The brigade then resumed training.
Gallipoli On 1 May the division began embarking for the
Gallipoli campaign. Only 24 of the division's guns were taken in the first lift; 1/III East Lancs Bde contributed 1/18th Bty. The guns began landing on 9 May at
Cape Helles, where an assault landing had been carried out on 25 April and the division's infantry had already been in action for three days. The beachhead was so congested that only a few guns of
1/I East Lancs Bde got ashore while 1/18th Bty and the rest of the artillery was ordered to return to Egypt. The battery did not finally reach the peninsula until 27 July. On 7 August the division was called upon to make a diversionary attack against
Krithia Vineyard to cover a new landing further up the coast. The bombardment, with British, French and naval guns contributing, began at 08.10 and increased in intensity at 09.00. Although the fire was accurate, the Turkish trenches suffered little damage. The infantry went forward at 09.40, wearing tin triangles on their backs so that the artillery observation posts (OPs) could track their progress. The attack was partially successful, the vineyard being captured, but casualties were heavy. However, the Turks had been pinned while the main attacks went ahead, and they in turn suffered heavy casualties in their counter-attacks. After a short period in reserve, 42nd (EL) Division spent the following months engaged in
Trench warfare, suffering from sickness, and then from bad weather as winter set in. 1/19th and 1/20th Batteries arrived at Helles on 24 September, but the BAC remained in Egypt.
Egypt again 42nd (EL) Division was then sent from Mudros back to Egypt, the bulk of the RFA embarking on 14 January in a storm. The division concentrated at Mena Camp on 22 January before moving into southern sector of the Suez Canal defences. Once back in Egypt 1/III East Lancs Bde was reunited with its BAC and on 27 February 1916 was rearmed with modern
18-pounder guns handed over by
29th Division as it left for the Western Front. On 31 May 1916 1/III East Lancs Bde was numbered
CCXII (212) Brigade, RFA, and the batteries were designated A, B and C. The canal defences were now situated east of the waterway, with a string of self-contained posts, each garrisoned by an infantry battalion and an artillery battery. The division did much of the construction and then trained in the desert, the gunners carrying out field firing with their new guns. The gun wheels were fitted with 'ped-rails' to assist movement across soft sand, for which 12 rather than 6 horses were harnessed to gun-carriages and limbers. In late July the division was ordered north, where a Turkish force was advancing on the defences. On 30 July mobile columns were ordered forward, and one of these was formed by
127th (Manchester) Brigade accompanied by A Bty of CCXII Bde, which moved up to Hill 70. The Turkish force was defeated at the
Battle of Romani near
Pelusium on 4–5 August, after which 127th Bde set off in pursuit. The men and horses suffered badly from lack of water, A Bty struggling to keep up with the advance, but it finally came into action and the retreating Turks lost heavily. The division then returned to the Romani and Pelusium area by 15 August, the bulk of the artillery and ammunition columns at
Kantara and Ballah, but with A/CCXII Bty at Romani. For the next few months the division was part of the
Desert Column covering the extension of the railway and water pipeline into the
Sinai Desert to permit the
Egyptian Expeditionary Force to mount an offensive into
Palestine. The head of the Desert Column reached
El Arish, near the Palestine frontier, on 22 December. On 25 December 1916 CCXII Bde was redesignated
CCXI (211) Brigade, exchanging numbers with the former 1/II East Lancs (Manchester Artillery) Bde, which was broken up shortly afterwards. At the same time the Bolton brigade was reorganised: C Bty was split between A and B to bring them up to six guns each and A (Howitzer) Bty joined from CCXIII Bde (formerly 1/1st Cumberland (H) Bty in
IV East Lancashire Howitzer Brigade (The Cumberland Artillery)) and became C (H) Bty, equipped with
4.5-inch howitzers. On 10 February 1917 C (H) Bty was redesignated D (H), and B/CCXII Bty joined as C Bty.
France and Flanders On 7 March trains from Marseille brought CCXI Bde to 42nd (EL) Lancashire Division's concentration point at
Pont-Remy, near
Abbeville. The Divisional Ammunition Column (DAC) had been left in Egypt (becoming the DAC for
74th (Yeomanry) Division) and on arrival in France, the BACs were abolished (this had been done long before in divisions on the Western Front) to reform a new 42nd DAC, to which CCXI BAC contributed No 2 Section, the rest of the men joining the batteries. The batteries drew their guns from the ordnance store and began training. An advance party from Egypt had already served some time in the line attached to units of
1st Division for familiarisation. From 8 April 42nd (EL) division moved into the line around
Épehy in the
Somme sector, which had just been abandoned by the Germans as they withdrew to the
Hindenburg Line. It began taking over a sector from
48th (South Midland) Division, and CCXI Bde's batteries were attached to that formation for familiarisation. A considerable amount of work had to be done to repair the roads and prepare new positions. The artillery also supported small attacks to capture Hindenburg Line outposts, such as one on The Knoll and Guillemont Farm on 24 April, when Lt-Col Walker had tactical command of his own C Bty and one from 48th (SM) Division. 42nd DA then relieved
20th (Light) Division's artillery at
Havrincourt Wood on 23 May. • A Bty (1/18th Lancashire Bty + half 1/20th Lancashire Bty) – 6 × 18-pdr • B Bty (1/19th Lancashire Bty + half 1/20th Lancashire Bty) – 6 × 18-pdr • C Bty (1/17th Lancashire Bty + half 1/16th Lancashire Bty) – 6 × 18-pdr • D (H) Bty (1/1st Cumberland (H) Bty + section C (H)/CCXCVIII Bty) – 6 × 4.5-inch On 8 July 42nd (EL) Division was relieved by
58th (2/1st London) Division but the artillery remained at Havrincourt to support the newcomers, and later
9th (Scottish) Division when it took over the sector from the 58th. Its role was to fire concentrations into the enemy's rear areas at night, particularly on roads, patrol paths and where reliefs were suspected of being carried out, and to engage enemy batteries by day. Single guns were posted in camouflaged to carry out this fire, to avoid retaliation on battery positions; the brigade established seven of these, known as 'pirates'. After the infantry of 42nd (EL) Division had completed their rest period the division was sent to the
Ypres Salient where the
Third Ypres Offensive was under way. CCXI Brigade marched back to
Péronne on 25 August, where it entrained for Godeswersvelde and then marched to
Watou. On 29 August it took over positions at
Potijze Chateau east of Ypres. Here Lt-Col Walker assumed command of the Right Subgroup, comprising both brigades of 42nd DA and 14th Australian Field Artillery Bde. The salient was packed with guns and the 18-pdrs stood almost wheel to wheel in mud just behind the front line infantry, with the 4.5s in groups, also close to the front line. The subgroup was engaged in a continuous bombardment of German positions south of Zevenkote. On 6 September
125th (Lancashire Fusiliers) Brigade carried out a limited operation behind a
Creeping barrage to capture strongpoints around Borry Farm. This failed, though the guns drove off German counter-attacks. Casualties were heavy on the gun positions from enemy
counter-battery (CB) fire and among the drivers bringing ammunition up shell-swept roads at night. On 7 September
Gunner S. Hardcastle of B Bty left cover to rescue a wounded comrade under heavy shelling, and three days later he ran across to extinguish a fire in an adjacent battery's ammunition dump. The division was withdrawn to the Flanders coast on 20 September, but once again 42nd DA remained in the line, supporting
V Corps's successful attack at the
Battle of the Menin Road Ridge on 20 September, then moving up onto Frezenberg Ridge on 25 September to prepare for next day's
Battle of Polygon Wood. The artillery engagements were intense, and it was not unusual for a battery to fire 5000 rounds in a day. The gunners suffered heavy casualties from
gas shelling: during September CCXI Bde suffered casualties of 2 officers and 7 other ranks (ORs) killed, 3 officers and 40 ORs wounded, and 4 officers and 76 ORs gassed, including Lt-Col Walker who was gassed and evacuated on 9 September. Lieutenant-Col E.J. Inches arrived on 18 September to take over command. CCXI Brigade was relieved in the line over the nights of 28/29 and 29/30 September and marched to join the infantry of 42nd (EL) Division in the line near
Nieuport on the Flanders Coast. On the nights of 2/3 and 3/4 October relieved
CCCXXXI Bde (formerly 2/II East Lancs Bde) of
66th (2nd East Lancashire) Division. Earlier in the year British troops had been concentrated here for a planned thrust up the coast, but with the Ypres offensive bogged down this operation had been abandoned. However, German artillery and aircraft were very active, shelling and bombing the British gun positions and canal crossings. When
Major-General Arthur Solly-Flood took command of the division in October he instituted an improved system of retaliatory fire, known as 'Punishment Fire'. When the Germans began a heavy bombardment while the division was being relieved by French troops on 19 November, the Punishment Fire silenced the German guns in 20 minutes. After marching south, the division went into the line in the
La Bassée sector on 29 November. It remained here during the winter, carrying out normal trench duty. 42nd DA saw considerably more action than the rest of the division, and the Punishment Fire system was regularly used. The targets most likely to inconvenience the enemy were carefully
registered so that when the intensity of German shelling increased, Punishment Fire could be brought down employing everything from 18-pdrs to
15-inch howitzers. The biggest
trench raid carried out by the division was on 11 February 1918 opposite
Festubert where the raiders were protected by a
Box barrage. The division was relieved on 15 February, but as usual 42nd DA stayed in place for a few days longer before coming out of the line for training near
Chocques.
Spring Offensive 42nd (EL) Division was in GHQ Reserve when the
German Spring Offensive (Operation Michael) was launched on 21 March. Warning orders were immediately issued and on 23 March the division began moving south to the Somme sector. The infantry went by motor buses and arrived at
Adinfer Wood ahead of the artillery and transport, which did not catch up for another two days through the crowded roads. The infantry deployed on the night of 24/25 March and were engaged in bitter fighting throughout 25 March (the
First Battle of Bapaume). 42nd DA began arriving at noon, with CCXI Bde opening fire as soon as it got within extreme range, laying down a barrage near Logeast Wood. At nightfall the infantry were still holding the line they had taken up the previous night, but were now stretched very thinly, with both flanks 'in the air'. The artillery was ordered back to positions south of
Ablainzevelle, and a few hours later to the Essarts Valley. The roads behind the front were now completely choked with retreating vehicles, and the artillery drivers bringing up ammunition suffered heavy casualties. 42nd (EL) Division's role was to screen the exhausted divisions behind them. During 26 March 42nd DA helped stop German attacks in front of
Bucquoy, with CCXI Bde shelling the long enemy columns marching into
Achiet-le-Petit. On 27 March the guns broke up two impending attacks from Ablainzevelle. On 28 March the Germans continued attacking in waves from Ablainzevelle and Logeast Wood (Operation Mars, or the
First Battle of Arras of 1918), but the division held its positions; the following day was quiet and 42nd (EL) Division was relieved on the night of 29/30 March. However, there was no rest for 42nd DA, which remained in action round Essarts. The infantry returned to the line on 1/2 April. The Germans continued to shell the area, especially Essarts, where large numbers of gas shells were fired and 42nd DA suffered significant casualties. After this bombardment the German attack was renewed on 5 April (the
Battle of the Ancre). This attack was repulsed after fierce fighting and the sector became quiet apart from artillery exchanges; the division was relieved from 8 April and on 10 April CCXI Bde handed over its guns in position and marched out for rest. After a week's rest 42nd (EL) Division returned to the line near
Gommecourt, where it spent a relatively quiet summer, reorganising the old German positions from the
Battle of the Somme as up-to-date defences. The batteries were distributed in depth so that some were available in each defence zone, and the gunners were instructed in using the rifle to defend their positions. Although German artillery was active with
Mustard gas shells, there was no attack. 42nd DA remained in position while the infantry went out of the line on 7 May. When the infantry returned on 7 June the division took up a wide sector from
Hébuterne to
Auchonvillers. 42nd DA fired covering barrages for raids and regularly shelled German positions in
Serre and
Puisieux. On 4 May A and B Btys shelled
Rossignol Wood with
Thermite shells in an attempt to set it on fire and then the brigade participated in a box barrage to cover an attack by
1st New Zealand Brigade. C Bty spent a period from 19 April as a 'silent' battery, but this did not prevent it being heavily shelled on 11 May when a nearby heavy battery opened fire. 42nd DA adopted a policy of 'silent hours' to allow sound-rangers to locate active enemy batteries. 42nd (EL) division suffered badly from the
Spanish flu epidemic, and in July its frontage was reduced to match its weakened strength.
Hundred Days Through aggressive raiding, 42nd (EL) Division pushed the German outposts back several hundred yards during the summer. After the
Allies launched their counter-offensive (the
Hundred Days Offensive) at the
Battle of Amiens on 8 August, patrols from the division found the enemy preparing to withdraw on their front. 42nd DA pounded the German trenches and roads to disrupt this move, and follow-up patrols found the trenches 'obliterated' by the 4.5-inch howitzers. By 20 August the division had advanced beyond Serre and Puisieux. On 21 August it was ordered by
IV Corps to make a full-scale attack as part of the
Battle of Albert. The infantry advanced behind a creeping barrage accurately fired by the divisional artillery despite the lack of previous registration. Although for this attack 42nd (EL) Division was organised into brigade groups, with each RFA brigade integrated with the infantry brigade it was to support, in fact the whole of 42nd DA supported first 125th (Lancashire Fusiliers) against Hill 140 and the Beauregard Dovecot, then 127th (Manchester) Bde, and then switched back to 125th Bde for the second objective. Next day the Germans attempted a dawn counter-attack on the division, but this miscarried badly, the guns were brought forward, and on 23 August the 42nd renewed its advance. It assaulted the commanding ridge north of
Miraumont with the support of its own artillery and that of the
New Zealand Division, and captured it without difficulty. Over the next two days it took Miraumont itself and moved on towards
Warlencourt-Eaucourt. The 42nd became the reserve division on 25 August, but
63rd (Royal Naval) Division got into difficulties and 42nd DA was rushed up to assist, the gun teams of CCX and CCXI Bdes racing each other into position by Loupart Wood and coming into action immediately. Unfortunately two gun teams of C Bty were blown up by improvised mines laid by the Germans in the road. Lieutenant-Col Inches had returned to the UK some weeks previously, and on 22 August Lt-Col F.G. Crompton was posted from 62nd Divisional Artillery to take over command of CCXI Bde. The Germans were now back in the Hindenburg Line, and the Allies had to clear the outposts before they could tackle the main defences. CCXI Brigade fired a creeping barrage for the New Zealanders in the successful
Battle of Havrincourt on 12 September, at the end of which a German counter-attack was broken up by artillery fire. On return to 42nd (EL) Division, the artillery brigades were given several days' rest, during which CCXI Bde's horse lines were heavily bombed on the night of 15/16 September, B and C Btys losing 85 horses and mules killed, and many more injured. The division then went back into the line to prepare for the next phase of the offensive, the
Battle of the Canal du Nord. On the night of 25/26 September the guns of all four batteries were taken into position in the north-east corner of Havrincourt Wood, the gunners occupying the gun positions the following night. The assault went in against the Hindenburg Line on 27 September, CCXI Bde firing a creeping barrage for 125th Bde. Unfortunately the 7th and 8th Lancashire Fusiliers were caught by enfilade fire from the high ground around Beaucamps and by machine guns in front that had not been suppressed by the barrage: the leading companies were practically wiped out. The brigade persisted, reaching its first objective around midday, and CCXI Bde fired another creeping barrage for it that evening, but the results were disappointing compared to the great victory achieved elsewhere. 5th Lancashire Fusiliers renewed the attack under moonlight behind a
terrifying creeping barrage: by 06.00 on 28 September they were closing on Highland Ridge, the previous day's final objective, and the enemy were withdrawing towards Welsh Ridge, which was taken later that day. For the attacks of 29–30 September the New Zealand Division passed through 42nd, and CCXI Bde fired a creeping barrage for their attack on La Vacquerie. The brigade was the first artillery to follow up the advance and found considerable difficulty in crossing the old Hindenburg Line defences onto Welsh Ridge. IV Corps had now closed up to the west bank of the
St Quentin Canal and the New Zealand Division had established a bridgehead. By 4 October there were signs of enemy withdrawals, and over the following days the brigade moved up across the
Escaut Canal, firing in support of the advancing New Zealanders (the
Second Battle of Cambrai). On 9 October the infantry of 42nd (EL) Division relieved the New Zealanders and next day the artillery followed up to
Fontaine-au-Pire. On 12 October 125th Bde took over the front including the bridgeheads that the New Zealanders had established across the
River Selle. The Germans desperately tried to retake these bridgeheads and there was hard fighting.
42nd (EL) Divisional Engineers bridged the Selle on the nights of 17–19 October, and the advance resumed at 02.00 on 20 October (the
Battle of the Selle). The barrage included incendiary shells to mark its centre and flanks for the infantry advancing in the darkness. This was so successful on CCXI Bde's front that the barrage was called off early; the guns later broke up a German attempt at a counter-attack. 125th Brigade attacked again on 23 October, with CCXI Bde providing a creeping barrage. It then moved forward to near Vertigneul in order to fire a second barrage for the New Zealanders to cross the St Georges river and capture
Beaudignies. After the Battle of the Selle 42nd (EL) Division went into reserve around
Beauvois; as usual 42nd DA remained in the line, with CCXI Bde at Beaudignies, but the line was quiet for a time. On 2 and 3 November the batteries took up positions nearer the front and next day they fired a barrage for the New Zealanders'
attack on Le Quesnoy. D Battery came under heavy fire, suffering heavy casualties and having five howitzers put out of actyon. However, the rest of the brigade moved up close to Le Quesnoy to support the New Zealanders' advance to the final objective. 42nd (EL) Division was then brought up to penetrate into the
Forêt de Mormal. CCXI Brigade was left behind, but on 9 November it moved up to
Hautmont on the
River Sambre, which the infantry had liberated the day before. The division had now lost touch with the retreating enemy. Hostilities ended on 11 November with the
Armistice with Germany and the brigade stood fast on the line it had reached. 42nd (EL) Division remained at Hautmont until 14 December, when it began moving to winter quarters near
Charleroi in Belgium, with CCXI Bde billeted in and around
Montignies-sur-Sambre.
Demobilisation got under way in January 1919 and CCXI Brigade completed the process some time after 24 March 1919.
2/III East Lancashire Brigade, RFA The 2nd Line units of the East Lancashire Division were raised in September and October 1914, with only a small nucleus of instructors to train the mass of volunteers. Training was slow because the 2nd Line artillery lacked guns, sights, horses, wagons and signal equipment. The
2nd East Lancashire Division, now numbered 66th (2nd EL) Division, began concentrating in
Kent and
Sussex in August 1915. 2/III East Lancs Bde was given four old
French De Bange 90 mm guns for training, and it was not until November and December that it received its 18-pdrs. In early 1916 the division moved into the East Coast defences, with its artillery at
Colchester. In May 1916 the brigade was numbered as
CCCXXXII (332) Brigade and the batteries were designated A, B and C. At the same time
2/IV East Lancs Bde (The Cumberland Artillery) was broken up and 2/2nd Cumberland (Howitzer) Bty joined CCCXXXII as D (H) Bty. (though another source suggests that it joined
CXLVII AFA Bde on 21 January 1918). ==Interwar==