- Source: Anti-aircraft defences of Australia during World War II
- Daftar operasi militer Perang Dunia II
- Sejarah Sarawak
- Anti-aircraft defences of Australia during World War II
- Coastal defences of Australia during World War II
- Australia in World War II
- List of aircraft of World War II
- Aircraft carrier operations during World War II
- Structure of the Australian Army during World War II
- Anti-aircraft warfare
- Australian home front during World War II
- Home front during World War II
- World War II by country
The following is a list of anti-aircraft defences of Australia during World War II. Prior to the war Australia possessed only very limited air defences. However, by late-1942 an extensive anti-aircraft defence organisation had been developed, with anti-aircraft batteries in place around all the major cities as well as the key towns in northern Australia. A total of two Heavy Anti-Aircraft (HAA) regiments, 32 static HAA batteries, 11 Light Anti-Aircraft (LAA) regiments, 16 independent LAA batteries, three anti-aircraft training regiments and one anti-aircraft training battery were formed. These units were equipped with a range of weapon systems including 3.7 inch anti-aircraft guns and 40 mm Bofors guns. In addition six American anti-aircraft battalions were stationed in Australia, operating in Fremantle, Darwin, Townsville, and Brisbane.
A number of anti-aircraft batteries were subsequently involved in dealing with the threat of Japanese air raids against northern Australia during 1942 and 1943, shooting down 29 enemy aircraft, probably destroying another 27 aircraft and damaging 32 between January 1942 and the end of 1943. Batteries in New Guinea also saw extensive action. However, as the war progressed and the threat from Japanese aircraft subsided, the manning of anti-aircraft defences in Australia was reduced to release manpower for other branches of the Army and for industry, and was increasingly taken over by Australian Women's Army Service or Volunteer Defence Corps personnel. Most batteries were disbanded between mid-1944 to late 1945.
New South Wales
Sydney AA Group
103rd HAA Regiment
108th, 110th and 111th LAA Regiments
1st, 7th, 9th, 15th, 20th and 25th AA Batteries
Newcastle AA Group
3rd, 7th and 18th AA Batteries
22nd LAA Battery
Kembla AA Group
8th AA Battery
221st LAA Battery
Victoria
Melbourne AA Group
112th LAA Regiment
10th, 11th and 30th AA Batteries
Queensland
South Queensland AA Group
2/2nd HAA Regiment
113th and 114th LAA Regiments
6th, 38th AA Batteries
North Queensland AA Group
34th, 35th, 36th and 37th AA Batteries
223rd, 224th and 226th LAA Batteries
South Australia
12th and 26th AA Batteries
Western Australia
Fremantle AA Group
2/3rd, 109th and 116th LAA Regiments
4th, 5th and 29th AA Batteries
66 SL Battery
Tasmania
13th AA Battery
Northern Territory
Darwin AA Group
2/1st LAA Regiment
2nd, 14th and 22nd AA Batteries
225th and 233rd LAA Batteries
New Guinea
Port Moresby AA Group
23rd and 32nd AA Batteries
2/4th HAA Battery
2/7th, 234th and 156th LAA Batteries
Milne Bay AA Group
33rd, 23rd (det) AA Batteries
See also
Structure of the Australian Army during World War II
Coastal defences of Australia during World War II
Notes
Footnotes
Citations