The enthusiasm for the
Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of Rifle, Artillery and Engineer Volunteer Corps in towns up and down the United Kingdom, composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular
British Army in time of need. The city of
Inverness had already raised the Inverness Rifles (later the 1st (Inverness Highland) Volunteer Battalion,
Cameron Highlanders) when a meeting at the Trades Hall on 15 November 1859 led to the raising of the
Inverness Artisan Rifles consisting entirely of carpenters and other tradesmen. Soon afterwards it was decided that this should become the
Inverness Artisan Artillery Volunteers, and in January 1860 its services were accepted as the
1st Inverness-shire Artillery Volunteer Corps (AVC). The first officers' commissions were issued on 4 February 1860. A second AVC was formed at the same time, but they soon consolidated as a single corps of two
batteries; 3rd and 4th Batteries were formed on 4 May, a 5th in December 1864 and the 6th in January 1865. By 1863, the small AVCs of the neighbouring shires began to be attached to the 1st Inverness for drill and administrative purposes: • 1st Inverness-shire AVC – six batteries by 1865 • 2nd Inverness-shire AVC – to 1st Inverness 1860 •
1st (Helmsdale) Sutherland AVC – formed 26 April 1860; transferred to
1st Caithness Artillery Volunteers 1867 •
2nd (Golspie) Sutherland AVC – formed 1862; transferred to 1st Caithness 1867 • 1st
Nairn AVC – formed 10 April 1860, 2nd Battery 6 October 1860 • 1st (
Stornoway)
Ross-shire AVC – formed 16 February 1860; joined from 1st Caithness 1867 • 2nd (
Lochcarron) Ross–shire AVC – formed 21 August 1866 •
1st (Lossiemouth) Elgin AVC – formed 16 March 1860 •
2nd (Burghead) Elgin AVC – formed 16 October 1872 The Volunteers were consolidated into larger units in May 1880, when the Admin Brigade became the
1st Inverness-shire (Inverness, Cromarty, Nairn, Ross and Elgin) Artillery Volunteers with the following organisation: On 1 February 1890, the unit was redesignated the
Highland Artillery Volunteers with the '(Inverness, Cromarty, Nairn, Ross and Elgin)' subtitle restored the following year.
Training The corps had a drill hall with stores, gun-sheds
etc at Inverness. It carried out its training and gun-practice at camp, and used the rifle range of the 1st Volunteer Battalion of the Cameron Highlanders at
Longman, Inverness. Each of the five outlying companies had a carbine range. In 1894, No 1 Position Battery won the Queen's Cup at the Scottish National Artillery Association's camp at
Barry Buddon. On 1 June 1899, all the volunteer artillery units became part of the
Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA) and with the abolition of the RA's divisional organisation on 1 January 1902, the unit became the
Highland RGA (Volunteers). During the
Second Boer War, some 500 men from the unit volunteered for active service, but only 28 were accepted. ==Territorial Force==