North Scottish Royal Garrison Artillery


The North Scottish Royal Garrison Artillery and its successors were Scottish part-time coast defence units of the British Army from 1908 to 1961. Although the unit saw no active service, it supplied trained gunners to siege batteries engaged on the Western Front during World War I.

Origin

When the Territorial Force was created from the old Volunteer Force under the Haldane Reforms of 1908, a new 'defended ports' artillery unit was formed with its headquarters at Broughty Ferry in Forfarshire near the City of Dundee on the north bank of the Firth of Tay. It was formed in the Royal Garrison Artillery with personnel drawn from four former Volunteer units: 1st Aberdeenshire RGA, 1st Fifeshire RGA, 1st Forfarshire RGA and 1st Highland RGA. The new unit consisted of three companies, rising to four by the outbreak of World War I in 1914:
North Scottish RGA

Mobilisation

On the outbreak of war the North Scottish RGA mobilised in Scottish Coast Defences under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel R.H. Adamson, TD. Shortly afterwards TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service and on 15 August 1914, the War Office issued instructions to separate those men who had signed up 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. In this way duplicate companies and batteries were created, releasing the 1st Line units to be sent overseas.
By October 1914, the campaign on the Western Front was bogging down into Trench warfare and there was an urgent need for batteries of Siege artillery to be sent to France. The WO decided that the TF coastal gunners were well enough trained to take over many of the duties in the coastal defences, releasing Regular RGA gunners for service in the field, and 1st line RGA companies that had volunteered for overseas service had been authorised to increase their strength by 50 per cent.
Although complete defended ports units never left the UK, they did supply drafts of trained gunners to RGA units serving overseas. They also provided cadres to form complete new units for front line service. Two of the siege batteries formed in 1915–16 had cadres provided by the North Scottish RGA, while a number of others formed later in the Tay Defences may have included trained men from the unit among the recruits, although the Army Council Instructions did not specifically order this.
Under Army Council Instruction 686 of April 1917, the coastal defence companies of the RGA were reorganised. The North Scottish RGA had six companies serving in the Aberdeen and Tay Garrison and one in the Forth Garrison, was reduced to just three, which were to be kept up to strength with Regular recruits.
The Scottish Coastal Defences never saw action during the war. By April 1918 the Aberdeen and Tay defences under No 22 Coastal Fire Command consisted of:
67th Siege Battery was formed under War Office Instruction 144 of October 1915 from one company of the North Scottish RGA. The battery went out to the Western Front on 18 March 1916 manning four 8-inch howitzers. At this time batteries were switched between Heavy Artillery Groups as required. 67th Siege Bty was with 21st HAG by the middle of June.

Somme

21st Heavy Artillery Group was with Fourth Army preparing for that summer's 'Big Push'. It was one of the groups assigned to XV Corps facing the Fricourt Salient, a position of considerable strength in the German line. The bombardment programme was to extend over five days, U, V, W, X and Y, before the assault was launched on Z day. It began on 24 June, but on several days the weather was too bad for good air or ground observation and the programme was extended by two days. When the infantry launched their assault at 07.30 on Z Day, XV Corps made better progress than most other parts of the front, capturing Mametz and Fricourt. It could have pushed forward on 2 July if its neighbouring formations had not already suffered disaster, but opposition stiffened as the day went on.
on the Somme, July 1916.
XV Corps continued fighting throughout the Somme Offensive, including the battles for High Wood, Delville Wood, Flers and the Transloy Ridges until the middle of October. 67th Siege Bty was transferred to 3rd HAG on 2 December. It was then taken out of the line for rest on 16 January 1917.

Arras

The battery joined VI Corps' Heavy Artillery in Third Army on 2 February 1917, employed in digging positions while their guns were not in action. It was assigned to 10th HAG supporting VI Corps in the forthcoming Battle of Arras. There were many more guns available for this attack and the artillery plan was much more carefully worked out than previous operations. VI Corps' attack on 9 April was relatively successful. However, the follow-up over succeeding days was less successful, the guns having to be moved forward through mud and destruction, and the later bombardments were rushed and less effective.

Ypres

67th Siege Bty transferred to Fifth Army in the Ypres Salient in 19 May. It was then made up to six howitzers and was joined in by personnel from newly-arrived 318th Siege Bty. On 29 June the expanded battery joined 99th HAG in Second Army as Second and Fifth Armies prepared for the forthcoming Third Ypres Offensive. Second Army's role was to provide flank support, but as the campaign bogged down it took over direction of the battle in September. The Battles of the Menin Road, Polygon Wood and Broodseinde were highly successful because of the weight of artillery brought to bear on German positions. But as the offensive continued with the Poelcappelle and First and Second Battles of Passchendaele, the tables were turned: British batteries were clearly observable from the Passchendaele Ridge and were subjected to CB fire, while their own guns sank into the mud and became difficult to aim and fire.

Later war

67th Siege Bty was rested from 23 December to 15 January 1918. On 1 February 1918 the HAGs were converted into permanent RGA brigades. 67th Siege Bty remained with 62nd Brigade with Third Army until the Armistice. Part of Third Army was engaged in the desperate fighting of the German Spring Offensive, but overall it was not obliged to retreat as far or to abandon as many heavy guns as Fifth Army further south. The German offensive had been halted on Third Army's front by 5 April.
Third Army joined in the Allies' victorious Hundred Days Offensive with the Battle of Albert on 23/24 August when it swept across the old Somme battlefields. By the end of August 62nd Bde RGA was with XVII Corps, attacking the Drocourt-Quéant Switch Line on 2 September. The advance was well-prepared by the heavy artillery and the attack was a major success
Third Army continued its advance through the Hindenburg Line positions and across the Canal du Nord. On 8 October 62nd Bde supported XVII Corps in encircling Cambrai and compelling its evacuation by the enemy. On 12 October XVII Corps probed forwards towards the River Selle. The 8th Battalion Queen's Royal Regiment went forward supported by 62nd Bde and patrols from the Queen's managed to cross the river by the one remaining girder of a blown bridge. Third Army resumed its attack on 20 October to clear the remaining area west of the Selle. No preliminary barrage was fired, the infantry attacking at 02.00 under a full moon to achieve surprise, supported by 62nd Bde.
The last set-piece attack was the Battle of the Sambre. Zero hour for Third Army was 05.30 on 4 November, and XVII Corps attacked with complete success – some units advancing beyond their objectives – supported by 62nd Bde and many other guns, some of which had to move forward during the morning to bring down fire on the further objectives in the afternoon.
By now the offensive had turned into a pursuit, and many of the heavy batteries had to be left behind. Fighting was ended on 11 November by the Armistice with Germany. Demobilisation began early in 1919 and war-formed units were progressively disbanded by the middle of the year.

109th Siege Battery, RGA

109th Siege Battery, RGA, was formed at Dover on 14 February 1916. A cadre of three officers and 78 other ranks was sent from the North Scottish RGA to form the basis of the new battery. Although the Army Council Instruction specified that the establishment of this batch of new batteries would be those for 6-inch guns, 8-inch or 9.2-inch howitzers, when 109th Siege Bty went overseas it was equipped with four 6-inch howitzers. It was apparently never raised to the 6-gun establishment that most batteries achieved in 1917.
The battery went out to the Western Front on 7 June 1916 and joined 30th HAG with Fourth Army in time for the Battle of the Somme. It moved to 57th HAG on 15 February 1917, then when 57th moved to First Army, 109th Siege Bty moved to 62nd HAG and remained with Fourth Army. At this time, Fourth Army was following the German retirement to the Hindenburg Line and gun sites and ammunition dumps had to be laboriously relocated. Later, Fourth Army spent the summer months on the Flanders coast, waiting to cooperate with a breakthrough at the Ypres Salient that never came. 109th Siege Bty moved to 28th HAG on 19 May, to 27th HAG on 30 June, 44th HAG on 8 August, then to 81st HAG on 29 September and then to 72nd HAG with Third Army. 72nd HAG moved to Second Army in the Ypres Salient on 9 November, but the Third Ypres Offensive was just petering out, and soon afterwards Second Army HQ moved to the Italian Front and Fourth Army HQ took over. 109th Siege Bty moved to 47th HAG on 18 December and remained with it until the Armistice.
47th Brigade, RGA, was defined as an '8-inch Howitzer' brigade, but that was the largest equipment; three out of its four batteries, including 109th, were armed with 6-inch howitzers. 47th Brigade was transferred from Fourth to Fifth Army on 14 March 1918, and was therefore caught up in the German Spring Offensive and the 'Great Retreat'. It moved back to Fourth Army's command on 1 May.
The battery took part in Fourth Army's advances during the Hundred Days Offensive. By the Battle of the Selle on 17 October the 6-inch howitzer batteries of 47th Bde were supporting XIII Corps, with vigorous CB work and concentrations on important localities. XIII Corps' follow-up attack on 23 October was accompanied by equally powerful support, even though poor weather on the preceding days limited air observation and spotting of enemy batteries.
XIII Corps halted its pursuit on 9 November and only light forces maintained touch with the retreating Germans until the Armistice. 109th Siege Battery was disbanded after the end of the war.

Interwar

The North Scottish RGA was placed in suspended animation in 1919 and reformed in 1920. The following year the TF was reconstituted as the Territorial Army and the unit was renamed as the North Scottish Coast Brigade, RGA; 'Coast Brigade' was changed to 'Heavy Brigade' when the RGA was subsumed into the Royal Artillery in 1924. The reformed unit had its HQ and 174 Heavy Bty at Queen Street, Broughty Ferry, and 173 Heavy Bty at Fonthill Barracks, Aberdeen, later at Wellington Street, Montrose. It formed part of the coast defence troops in 51st Divisional Area.

62nd (Scottish) Medium Brigade, RA

In 1934, the unit was converted to the role of mobile medium artillery for service in the field, as 62nd Medium Brigade, RA. It was joined by 160 Bty from the Forth Coast Bde at Edinburgh and 172 Bty from the Clyde Coast Bde at Helensburgh.
At this time medium brigades consisted of one battery of six 60-pounder guns and three of six 6-inch howitzers, all of World War I vintage but which by 1937 had been modernised with pneumatic tyres.

Fife Heavy Regiment, RA

The TA underwent expansion and reorganisation after the Munich Crisis of 1938. In the case of 62nd Med Rgt, 160 Bty returned to the Forth Coast Regiment, 172 Bty was disbanded, and 174 Bty transferred to 56th Med Rgt. Then, just before the outbreak of war in 1939, the Regimental HQ and remaining 173 Bty of 62nd Med Regiment were joined by 163 Bty at Hunter Street, Kirkcaldy, from the Forth Heavy Rgt and re-converted to the coast defence role as the Fife Heavy Regiment, RA. Regimental HQ moved across the Tay to Kirkcaldy in Fifeshire.
A 1927 report on coastal defences by the Committee of Imperial Defence had made recommendations for the defence of 15 'Class A' home ports, including the Firth of Forth, but little was done to modernise them before the outbreak of World War II. Defences for the Tay were considered in 1930, but Dundee was designated a 'Class C' port and by 1939 was being considered for removal from the list.

World War II

The TA's coast defences were mobilised on the outbreak of war in September 1939. After the Dunkirk evacuation a crash programme of coastal defence works was initiated against the invasion threat. The coastal artillery regiments were reorganised again in July 1940, and the Fife Heavy Regiment in the Forth Defences was split into two:
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At their height in September 1941, the coastal defences of the Forth comprised the following guns:
However, as the invasion threat receded, these defences were seen as absorbing excessive manpower. In 1942 507th Coast Rgt was placed in suspended animation; RHQ of 504th Coast Rgt moved to Inchcolm in the Firth of Forth.
By 1944, serious naval attacks on the United Kingdom could be discounted and the War Office began disbanding surplus coastal units and redeploying their personnel. 504th Coast Rgt was also placed in suspended animation at this time.

Postwar

When the TA was reconstituted in 1947, the two coast artillery units amalgamated again as 362nd Medium Regiment with RHQ at Montrose. The new unit was in 84 Army Group Royal Artillery. When 84 AGRA was disbanded in 1950, the regiment reorganised as 362nd Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment. This was short-lived, and in 1952 the regiment amalgamated with 886 Locating Bty as 862 Locating Bty with Battery HQ at Dundee.
There were further cuts to the TA in 1961 when the battery amalgamated with 275 and 276 Field Rgts as 400 Field Regiment, with 862 Bty forming Q Battery. After further mergers, the regiment was disbanded in 1975, but since 1986 105 Air Defence Rgt has been the designated successor unit.

Honorary Colonels

The following served as Honorary Colonel of the unit:

External sources