- Source: 44th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 44th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 44th Brigade
- 15th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 4th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 1st Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 39th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 2nd Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 44th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 35th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
- 40th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom)
44th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (44 AA Bde) was an air defence formation of Britain's Territorial Army (TA). Formed in 1938, it was responsible for protecting Manchester and later the Isle of Wight during the Second World War. It was reformed postwar under a new title, and continued until 1955.
Origin
With the expansion of Britain's Anti-Aircraft (AA) defences in the late 1930s, new formations were created to command the growing number of Royal Artillery (RA) and Royal Engineers (RE) AA gun and searchlight (S/L) units. 44th AA Brigade was raised on 29 September 1938 at Manchester. It formed part of 4th AA Division, which was responsible for defending North West England. The first brigade commander (appointed 22 October 1938) was Brigadier Gerald Rickards, DSO, MC.
Mobilisation
At the time the brigade was formed, the TA's AA units were in a state of mobilisation because of the Munich crisis, although they were soon stood down. In February 1939 the TA's AA defences came under the control of a new Anti-Aircraft Command. In June, as international tensions grew in the run-up to the Second World War, a partial mobilisation of AA Command was begun in a process known as 'couverture', whereby each unit did a month's tour of duty in rotation to man selected AA gun and searchlight positions. AA Command mobilised fully on 24 August, ahead of the official declaration of war on 3 September.
= Order of Battle 1939–40
=The composition of the brigade upon mobilisation in August 1939 was as follows:
65th (The Manchester Regiment) Anti-Aircraft Regiment, RA (TA) – Heavy AA (HAA) unit formed at Hulme in 1936 by conversion of 6th/7th Battalion Manchester Regiment
HQ, 181st, 182nd, 183rd and 192nd AA Batteries, RA
81st Anti-Aircraft Regiment, RA (TA) – HAA unit formed at Stockport and Stalybridge in 1938 by conversion of 60th (6th Cheshire and Shropshire) Medium Brigade, RA
HQ, 253, 254, 255 (Cheshire) AA Batteries, RA
80th Independent Light Anti-Aircraft Battery, RA – new Light AA (LAA) unit
39th (The Lancashire Fusiliers) Anti-Aircraft Battalion, RE (TA) – Searchlight (S/L) unit formed at Salford in 1936 by conversion of 7th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers
HQ, 354th, 355th, 356th and 357th AA Companies, RE
62nd (The Loyals) Searchlight Regiment, RA (TA) – S/L unit formed at Preston (later Lytham) in 1936 by conversion of 4th Bn The Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire)
HQ, 435th, 436th and 437th S/L Btys, RA
71st (East Lancashire) Searchlight Regiment, RA (TA) – new S/L unit raised in Manchester in 1938
HQ, 462nd, 463rd and 464th S/L Btys, RA
44th AA Brigade Company, Royal Army Service Corps (RASC) (TA)
Phoney War
When the code word to mobilise was issued on 24 August, 65th AA Rgt was returning from a practice camp at Burrowhead in Scotland and went straight to its war stations. 39th S/L Bn and one battery of 62nd S/L Bn had transport standing by and were able to return immediately from their couverture deployment with 2 AA Division in East Yorkshire to man their war stations. 81st AA Regiment manned two HAA battery sites and also deployed Lewis guns as LAA cover for the Vital Point (VP) of the Metropolitan-Vickers factory at Trafford Park. 80th LAA Bty and 71st S/L Rgt also manned VPs. By midnight the brigade was disposed as follows:
HAA guns
65th AA Rgt
181 Bty – 2 x 3-inch
183 Bty – 4 x static 3.7-inch
196 Bty – 2 x 3-inch
81st AA Rgt
253 Bty – 2 x 3-inch
254 Bty – 4 x 3-inch
LAA guns
80th LAA Bty – 1 x Bofors 40 mm gun and 12 x Lewis guns at Kearsley Power Station
81st HAA Rgt – 15 x Lewis guns at Metropolitan-Vickers
71st S/L Rgt – 8 x Lewis guns at the Clayton Aniline Company
S/Ls
71st S/L Rgt – 4 x lights
In the next 24 hours more HAA gun sites were reported ready for action, around 60 S/Ls were deployed and the number of Lewis guns at VPs was increased, with 39th S/L Bttn guarding the Manchester Ship Canal, Salford docks and Barton Power Station. In addition, the women of the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) companies were taking over their duties with the regiments.
On 1 November the brigade was reorganised, with 39th and 71st S/L Rgts transferring to the command of 53rd Light AA Bde covering the Mersey area, followed shortly afterwards by 62nd S/L Rgt. Simultaneously, 21st (69, 136 & 143 Btys at Liverpool) and its newly formed offshoot 41st (133, 134 & 135 Btys) LAA Rgts transferred from 53rd LAA Bde and took over command of the LAA batteries manning VPs in 44 AA Bde's area, (42, 82 and 129 Btys), while 80th LAA Bty ceased to be an independent unit and came under 21st LAA Rgt. The commander of 44th AA Bde was named AA Defence Commander (AADC) for the Manchester Gun Zone. New VPs taken over by the brigade included ICI's Lostock Gralam works and Crewe Junction (136 LAA Bty), Baxter's respirator factory at Leyland (133 LAA Bty), Royal Ordnance Factory, Chorley, (133 & 135 LAA Btys), Carlisle Junction (134 LAA Bty) and de Havilland's Lostock works (181 AA Bty, later 253 AA Bty).
Despite a number of alerts, there were no enemy air raids in the brigade's area for some time. In November, the brigade received 4.5-inch HAA guns to re-equip three of its four-gun HAA sites, and 436 S/L Bty relieved 134 LAA Bty so that it could be sent to train on the Vickers MkVIII 'pom-pom' gun. In June 1940 the AA regiments were redesignated 'HAA' to distinguish them from the growing number of LAA units, while in August all the RE AA battalions and infantry battalions converted to S/L duties became Searchlight Regiments of the RA.
Battle of Britain and Blitz
Most of the air raids in 4 AA Division's area during the Battle of Britain were in the West Midlands or over the Mersey. A few bombs fell on Manchester and Crewe on 27/28 August, and across East Lancashire the following night. Night raids increased during the autumn as the Battle of Britain was followed by the Blitz. 65th (Manchester Regiment) HAA Rgt moved to the Orkney & Shetland Defence Force (OSDEF) in the first week of October 1940, being replaced by 70th (3rd West Lancashire) HAA Rgt from 33 (Western) AA Bde.
Some examples of Gun-laying Mk I radar began to arrive for the HAA batteries, Bofors 40 mm guns appeared in increasing numbers for the LAA regiments, and the AA divisions formed units equipped with Z Battery rocket projectiles. In November 1940 the expansion of AA Command led to the creation of new AA Divisions. 44 AA Brigade remained in 4 AA Division and was responsible for Manchester and the surrounding area, including the shipyards of Barrow-in-Furness, but Brigadier Rickards was promoted to command the new 12 AA Division from 15 November. He was succeeded in command of 44 AA Bde by Lt-Col Erroll Tremlett, a former first-class cricketer who had distinguished himself commanding 54th (Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders) LAA Rgt at the Dunkirk evacuation, where his guns had defended the Mole and protected the embarkation of many of the troops.
= Manchester Blitz
=The cities of NW England were heavily bombed during the winter of 1940–41 (the Liverpool Blitz and Manchester Blitz). On the night of 21/22 November the Manchester guns engaged raiders on their way to and from Liverpool, and on the following two nights it was Manchester's turn to be hit. Raids on Manchester peaked at Christmas. The Royal Artillery's historian considered that during these attacks on British cities 'the actions fought [by the AA batteries] were as violent, dangerous and prolonged as any in the field'. 'On an HAA 4.5-inch position of 44th AA Brigade in Manchester, the power rammer on one gun failed. One Gunner loaded 127 of the [86 pounds (39 kg)] rounds himself in eleven hours of action, despite injuries to his fingers'.
= Order of Battle 1940–41
=During the winter of 1940–41, the composition of 44 AA Bde was as follows:
70th (3rd West Lancashire) HAA Rgt
211, 212, 216 HAA Btys – at Manchester
309 HAA Bty – joined by January, left by August 1941
245 HAA Bty – attached from 78th HAA Rgt November 1940
98th HAA Rgt – joined by January 1941
300, 301, 320 HAA Btys – Manchester suburbs
399 HAA Bty – joined by May 1941
106th HAA Rgt – new regiment formed August 1940; to 11 AA Division by January 1941
331 HAA Bty – at Barrow
332 HAA Bty – at Crewe
115th HAA Rgt – new regiment formed November 1940, joined by January 1941
361 HAA Bty – at Blackpool
365 HAA Bty – joined by May 1941
367 HAA Bty – at Barrow
21st LAA Rgt
69 LAA Bty – VPs at Preston
80 LAA Bty – VPs at Leyland
136 LAA Bty – VPs at Barrow
41st LAA Rgt – to 7 AA Division 1 March 1941
133 LAA Bty – VPs at Carlisle
134 LAA Bty – VPs at Maryport
143 LAA Bty – VPs at Gretna Green
54th (Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders) LAA Rgt – returned from Dunkirk; left AA Command 10 March 1941 and joined the Support Group of 9th Armoured Division
160 LAA Bty – VPs at Woodford
161 LAA Bty – VPs at Ringway, de Havilland works Lostock, Irlam Locks
162 LAA Bty – VPs at Winnington, ICI Lostock, Rolls-Royce Crewe
63rd LAA Rgt – new unit formed October 1940; to 11 AA Division by May 1941
189, 190 LAA Btys – at Preston
65th LAA Rgt – new unit formed November 1940; joined by January 1941
194 LAA By – VP at English Electric Company, Preston
195 LAA Bty – VPs at Heysham
196 LAA Bty – VPs at Blackpool
76th LAA Rgt – new unit formed February 1941; joined by May 1941
226, 227, 228 LAA Btys
4th AA 'Z' Regt – formed September 1940
108 'Z' Bty – at Barrow
122 'Z' Bty – at Accrington
135 'Z' Bty – at Manchester
Mid-War
The Blitz is generally held to have ended on 16 May 1941. By now the HAA sites had the advantage of GL Mk I* radar with an elevation finding (E/F or 'Effie') attachment to supplement searchlights. At this stage of the war, experienced units were being posted away to train for service overseas. This led to a continual turnover of units, which accelerated with the preparations for the invasion of North Africa (Operation Torch) in late 1942 and the need to transfer units to counter the Luftwaffe's Baedeker Blitz and hit-and-run attacks on the South Coast. However, newly formed units continued to join AA Command, the HAA and support units increasingly becoming 'Mixed' units, indicating that women of the ATS were fully integrated into them. Members of the Home Guard (HG) also provided manpower, particularly for 'Z' Batteries.
Brigadier Tremlett was promoted to command 10 AA Division from 14 February 1942, and was succeeded at 44 AA Bde by Brig R.E. Kane, OBE, MC.
= Order of Battle 1941–42
=During this period the brigade was composed as follows:
58th (Kent) HAA Rgt – joined February, left to join First Army for Operation Torch May 1942
207, 208, 264 HAA Btys
434 HAA Bty – attached from 70 HAA Rgt February, left April 1942
62nd (Northumbrian) HAA Rgt – temporarily attached July 1942 while under War Office (WO) Control; later to Operation Torch
172, 173, 266 HAA Btys
70th HAA Rgt – mobilised and embarked for India February 1942
211, 212, 216 Btys
309 Bty – left by August 1941
434 Bty – new battery joined by August 1941
81st HAA Rgt – rejoined from OSDEF, June 1941; to new 70 AA Bde summer 1941'
253, 254, 255, 416 Btys
93rd HAA Rgt – from 7 AA Division July, left for Middle East August 1942
267, 288, 289, 290 HAA Btys
98th HAA Rgt – to 8 AA Division May 1942
300, 301, 320, 399 Btys
115th HAA Rgt – to OSDEF June 1941
361, 365, 367 HAA Btys
149th (Mixed) HAA Rgt – new unit formed February 1942
506, 507, 512, 581 (M) HAA Btys
151st (Mixed) HAA Rgt – new unit formed February, joined April, left July 1942
510, 511, 514, 516 (M) HAA Btys
290 HAA Bty – attached from 93rd HAA Rgt
371 HAA Bty – attached from 117th HAA Rgt
169th (Mixed) HAA Rgt – new unit formed August 1942
566, 571, 576, 578 (M) HAA Btys
21st LAA Rgt – embarked for Middle East December 1941, diverted to Far East and captured in Java March 1942
69, 80, 136 Btys
39th LAA Rgt – joined by August 1941; to 53 AA Bde autumn; rejoined December 1941; to 53 AA Bde July 1942
110, 111, 240 Btys
48 LAA Bty – attached from 42nd LAA Rgt August 1941
65th LAA Rgt – left for Malta Command 1941
194, 195, 196 Btys
76th LAA Rgt – to 70 AA Bde summer 1941
226, 227, 228 Btys
88th LAA Rgt – new unit formed October 1941, joined by February 1942
178, 289, 293 LAA Btys
477 LAA Bty – detached to 7 AA Division until May 1942
13th AA 'Z' Rgt – 4th AA 'Z' Rgt redesignated by August 1941
108, 122 'Z' Btys
135 'Z' Bty – left by February 1942
131, 184, 188 'Z' Btys – joined by February 1942
203, 204, 205 'Z' Btys – joined September 1942
44 AA Brigade Signal Office Mixed Sub-Section, Royal Corps of Signals (RCS) – part of No 2 Company, 4 AA Division Mixed Signal Unit
Later war
At the end of September 1942, AA Command disbanded the AA Corps and Divisions and replaced them with new AA Groups, whose areas of responsibility coincided with the Groups of RAF Fighter Command. 44 AA Brigade came under 4 AA Group, with its HQ at Preston, which covered NW England and N Wales and operated with No. 9 Group RAF. 4 AA Group's area was quiet throughout the following year, and in May 1943 4 AA Bde had to 'un-man' some of its VPs to provide LAA guns and crews to 5 AA Group in Eastern England, which was dealing with 'hit and run' raids by the Luftwaffe. When in September 1943 AA Command was required to release manpower to 21st Army Group forming for the planned invasion of Normandy (Operation Overlord), the group began to lose units by transfer and disbandment. On 14 January 1944, Brigadier Kane was transferred to command 45 AA Bde and was replaced by Brig J.W. Barker, TD.
= Order of Battle 1942–44
=During this period the brigade was composed as follows (temporary attachments omitted):
149th (Mixed) HAA Rgt – to 6 AA Group June 1943
506, 507, 512, 581 (M) HAA Btys
376 (M) HAA Bty – attached from 131st HAA Rgt
159th (Mixed) HAA Rgt – from 1 AA Group October 1943
542, 545, 563, 614 (M) HAA Btys
167th (Mixed) HAA Rgt – from 1 AA Group September 1943
464, 562, 610, 639 (M) HAA Btys
639 (M) HAA Bty – disbanded January 1944
169th (M) HAA Rgt – to 1 AA Group October 1943
566, 571, 576, 578 (M) HAA Btys
71 West Lancashire HG HAA Bty
184th (Mixed) HAA Rgt – from 33 AA Bde June, to 1 AA Group September 1943
616, 617, 625, 627 (M) HAA Btys
88th LAA Rgt
178 LAA Bty attached to 5 AA Group May 1943
289, 293, 477 LAA Btys
449 LAA Bty – attached from 114th LAA Rgt April, to 5 AA Group May 1943
13th AA 'Z' Rgt – became Mixed November 1942
108 'Z' Bty – manned by 105 West Lancashire HG
122 (M) 'Z' Bty – partly manned by 101 County of Lancaster HG
131 'Z' Bty – left by April 1943
184 'Z' Bty – left November 1942
188 'Z' Bty – joined November 1942; left January 1943
203 (M) 'Z' Bty – partly manned by 102 County of Lancaster HG
204 (M) 'Z' Bty – partly manned by 103 County of Lancaster HG
205 (M) 'Z' Bty – partly manned by 104 County of Lancaster HG
216 (M) 'Z' Bty – joined November 1942; partly manned by 105 County of Lancaster HG
226 'Z' Bty – manned by 104 West Lancashire HG
44 AA Bde Mixed Signal Office, RCS – part of 2 Mixed Signal Company, 4 AA Group Mixed Signal Unit
842 (Semi-Mobile) Smoke Company, Pioneer Corps (PC)
4 Smoke Company, Non-Combatant Corps, PC
No 14 LAA Practice Camp – at Nethertown, Egremont
131, 132 Lancashire HG LAA Btys
B, C Lancashire HG Independent LAA Troops
Operations Overlord and Diver
In March 1944, 44 AA Bde HQ was moved from Manchester to take over the AA defences on the Isle of Wight. Here it came under the command of 6 AA Group, which had responsibility for covering the 'Overlord' embarkation ports around the Solent and Portsmouth. The brigade established its HQ at 'Broadlands', Staplers Road, Newport, and took over command of 82nd (Essex) HAA Rgt and 151st LAA Rgt from 47 AA Bde and was soon reinforced. Additional LAA guns (mainly Bofors, with a few Oerlikon 20 mm cannon) were sited singly at Yarmouth, Shanklin, Sandown and Ventnor.
Brigadier Vere Krohn, MC, TD, a former head of AA Command's technical branch, arrived from 43 AA Bde to take command on 2 May, and began redeploying the HAA sites and additional radar-controlled searchlights to tackle aircraft attempting to lay mines in the Solent. There were sporadic attacks, with 619/185, 182/136 and 438/136 HAA Btys submitting claims for 'kills' on 15, 16 and 23 May, but the Luftwaffe failed to disrupt the 'Overlord' preparations.
A week after D-Day the long-awaited attacks on London by V-1 flying bombs ('Divers') began. AA Command had prepared Operation Diver to counter these weapons, and AA guns were moved from all over the UK to strengthen 2 AA Group's 'Diver Belt' in South East England. 6 AA Group also deployed additional HAA batteries in the Solent–Portsmouth defences. The first V-1 appeared over the Isle of Wight on 26 June, and 44 AA Bde redeployed its LAA guns in an anti-Diver role, including twin Browning .50 Machine Guns from S/L sites in the west of the island. However, the V-1 launch sites in Normandy were quickly overrun, and few missiles were seen in the Solent–Portsmouth area. As 21st Army Group overran the main launch sites in the Pas-de-Calais, the Luftwaffe shifted its focus to air-launching V-1s over the North Sea during the autumn, and AA Command redeployed units from the South Coast to Eastern England in response.
44 AA Brigade 'blacked out' its searchlights on 12 November apart from those required as homing beacons for friendly aircraft, and the crews were sent to provide construction parties for the gun sites in the new 'Diver Strip'. In early December it handed over its remaining commitments to 67 AA Bde, and Brigade HQ was disbanded on 31 December 1944.
= Order of Battle 1944
=During this period the composition of the brigade was as follows:
12th HAA Rgt – base and port defence unit from 21st Army Group June 1944
4, 18, 360 HAA Btys
82nd (Essex) HAA Rgt – to 3 AA Group May 1944
156, 228 (Edinburgh), 256 HAA Btys
193 HAA Bty – returned to 44 AA Bde area 28 June 1944
136th HAA Rgt – from 1 AA Group May; to 2 AA Group Diver Belt 17 June 1944
182, 409, 432, 468 HAA Btys
177th HAA Rgt – from 67 AA Bde May; disbanded June 1944
203, 598, 600 HAA Btys
619 (M) HAA Bty – from 185th (M) HAA Rgt; to 5 AA Group 7 October 1944
526 (M) HAA Bty – from 154th (M) HAA Rgt 6 October 1944
151st LAA Rgt – to 1 AA Group 19–24 October 1944
449, 472, 478 LAA Btys
52 LAA Bty – from 85th LAA Rgt summer; to 2 AA Group 2 September 1944
277 LAA Bty – from 83rd LAA Rgt 24 October 1944
53rd (Royal Northumberland Fusiliers) S/L Rgt – from 2 AA Group May 1944
408, 409, 410 S/L Btys
303 AA Gun Operations Room (AAGOR)
506 AA Ground Control Interception (AAGCI) station
44 AA Bde Signal Section
By October 1944, the brigade's HQ establishment was 8 officers, 7 male other ranks and 22 members of the ATS, together with a small number of attached drivers, cooks and mess orderlies (male and female). In addition, the brigade had a Mixed Signal Office Section of 5 male other ranks and 19 ATS, which was formally part of the Group signal unit.
The brigade was disbanded on 11 December 1944.
Postwar
When the TA was reconstituted in 1947, 44 AA Bde reformed at Salford, Greater Manchester as 70th AA Brigade (TA) (taking the number of a disbanded wartime formation from 4 AA Division) and forming part of 4 AA Group at Warrington. It now comprised the following units:
465th (Manchester) HAA Rgt – former 65th HAA Rgt as above
556th (East Lancashire) HAA Rgt
574th (The Lancashire Fusiliers) (Mixed) HAA Rgt at Salford – former 39th S/L Rgt as above
606th (East Lancashire) (Mixed) HAA Rgt – former 71st S/L Rgt as above
293rd (East Lancashire) LAA Rgt
70 Fire Command Troop, RA
('Mixed' indicated that members of the Women's Royal Army Corps were integrated into the unit.)
AA Command was disbanded in March 1955, and 70 AA Bde was placed in 'suspended animation' from 31 October that year. It was formally disbanded on 31 December 1957.
Commanders
Brigadier Gerald Rickards, DSO, MC, appointed 22 October 1938
Brigadier Erroll Tremlett, appointed 15 November 1940
Brigadier R.E. Kane, OBE, MC, appointed 26 February 1942
Brigadier J.W. Barker, TD, appointed 14 January 1944
Brigadier Vere Krohn, MC, TD, appointed 2 May 1944
Brigadier G.A. Appleton, OBE, by September 1944
See also
Film of Home Guard loading and firing 'Z' battery twin rocket launchers
Notes
References
Basil Collier, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Defence of the United Kingdom, London: HM Stationery Office, 1957.
Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Years of Defeat: Europe and North Africa, 1939–1941, Woolwich: Royal Artillery Institution, 1988/London: Brasseys, 1996, ISBN 1-85753-080-2.
J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol II, Wakefield, Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-009-X.
Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1960]. Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield, East Sussex: Naval and Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84342-474-1.
Norman E.H. Litchfield, The Territorial Artillery 1908–1988 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1992, ISBN 0-9508205-2-0.
Gen Sir Frederick Pile's despatch: "The Anti-Aircraft Defence of the United Kingdom from 28th July, 1939, to 15th April, 1945" London Gazette 18 December 1947
Brig N.W. Routledge, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Anti-Aircraft Artillery 1914–55, London: Royal Artillery Institution/Brassey's, 1994, ISBN 1-85753-099-3.
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 1984, London: Queen Anne Press, 1984, ISBN 0-356-10238-6.
External sources
Royal Artillery 1939–1945
British Military History
Orders of Battle at Patriot Files
British Army units from 1945 on
Graham Watson, The Territorial Army 1947