, detailing his service with the Bombay Horse Artillery and the Royal Sussex Militia Artillery. The
Royal Sussex Militia Artillery was raised in April 1853 by transferring 206 volunteers from the
Royal Sussex Light Infantry Militia. The first commandant was
Lieutenant-Colonel George Kirwan Carr Lloyd, a former
captain in the
Rifle Brigade. The
Colonel-in-Chief was
Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond KG, who had been Colonel of the Royal Sussex Militia since 1819. Several of the other early officers were retired from the British or
East India Company's armies, or prominent personages in the county, including Captains
Sir James Sibbald David Scott, 3rd Baronet, and the Hon. William E. Sackville-West, son of
Earl De La Warr. The unit's
Major was William Augustus St Clair, formerly of the
Bombay Horse Artillery, who succeeded at Lt-Col Commandant on 2 May 1861. The new corps' headquarters was established at
Lewes, the county town of
East Sussex, until November 1883 when it moved to
Eastbourne. In the Mobilisation Scheme developed in the 1870s, the Royal Sussex Militia Artillery's war station was at
Newhaven, East Sussex. From 1899 the Militia artillery formally became part of the
Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA), and when the RGA abolished the divisional structure the Eastbourne unit took the title of
Sussex RGA (M) on 1 January 1902. ==Embodiments==