Gunners from the Sky: 1st Air Landing Light Regiment in Italy and at Arnhem, 1942–44
By Paul Chrystal and David Chrystal
()
About this ebook
The authors recount set their father’s experiences in context by describing the formation of the unit and the many months of training in England. Their involvement in the Italian campaign, where Eric served with E Troop, 3 Battery, is then recounted, detailing their actions at Rionero, Foggia and Campobasso, where Eric was wounded. It then moves on to describe 1st Air Landing Light Regiment’s preparation for and involvement in Operation Market (the Airborne half of Market Garden). This very detailed account of the fighting highlights the regiment’s pivotal (but often neglected) role near Arnhem bridge. Here, after nine days of intense combat, Eric was among the many captured and held until the end of the war. The inclusion of Eric’s own eyewitness testimony lends a very personal touch to this excellent account of the regiment’s experience of combat and life in the PoW camps.
Paul Chrystal
Paul Chrystal is the author of some seventy books published over the last decade, including recent publications such as Wars and Battles of the Roman Republic, Roman Military Disasters and Women and War in Ancient Greece and Rome. He is a regular contributor to history magazines, local and national newspapers and has appeared on BBC Radio 4, BBC World Service and on BBC local radio throughout Yorkshire and in Teesside and Manchester. He writes extensively for several Pen & Sword military history series including ‘Cold War 1945–1991’, ‘A History of Terror’ and ‘Military Legacy’ (of British cities).
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Gunners from the Sky - Paul Chrystal
Gunners from the Sky
‘If in the years to come, you meet a man who says
I was at Arnhem
, raise your hat and buy him a drink.’
War correspondent Alan Wood, Daily Express, September 1944
‘The World would lose if such [a man] as you should vanish unrecorded’, adapted from Romney’s Remorse, Alfred Lord Tennyson
for Rachael, Lyndsey, Kerry, Michael and Rebecca
Gunners from the Sky
1st Air Landing Light Regiment in Italy and at Arnhem, 1942–44
Paul and Major (retired) David Chrystal
First published in Great Britain in 2023 by
Pen & Sword Military
An imprint of Pen & Sword Books Limited
Yorkshire – Philadelphia
Copyright © Paul and David Chrystal 2023
ISBN 978 1 39908 808 4
ePUB ISBN 978 1 39908 809 1
KINDLE 978 1 39908 809 1
The rights of Paul and David Chrystal to be identified as Authors of this Work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Contents
About the Authors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Maps
Glossary
Chapter 1 The History of Airborne Warfare
Chapter 2 The 1st Air Landing Light Regiment RA
Chapter 3 14283058 Gunner Eric Chrystal
Chapter 4 The 1st Air Landing Light Regiment’s Italian Campaign
Chapter 5 Wounded and Recovery in Malta
Chapter 6 Operation MARKET GARDEN: The Plan
Chapter 7 The 1st Airborne Division
Chapter 8 The Royal Artillery at Arnhem
Chapter 9 The 1st Air Landing Light Regiment’s Battle of Arnhem
Chapter 10 A Week in Oosterbeek September 1944 , the Account of the Battle by Sergeant George Nattrass
Chapter 11 Day 1: Sunday, 17 September
Chapter 12 Day 2: Monday, 18 September
Chapter 13 Day 3: Tuesday, 19 September
Chapter 14 Day 4: Wednesday, 20 September
Chapter 15 Day 5: Thursday, 21 September
Chapter 16 Day 6: Friday, 22 September
Chapter 17 Day 7: Saturday, 23 September
Chapter 18 Day 8: Sunday, 24 September
Chapter 19 Day 9: Monday, 25 September
Chapter 20 Operation BERLIN
Chapter 21 The Fallout from the Failure
Chapter 22 Prisoner of War: Stalag XII-A Limburg, Stalag IV-B Mühlberg and Stalag IV-A Hohenstein and Zwickau
Chapter 23 Epilogue: Back to Boston, PTSD and Reprisals
Appendix I: 3rd Air Landing Light Battery, E Troop
Appendix II: Other Airborne at Arnhem apart from the 1st Airborne Division
Appendix III: Arnhem Order of Battle
Appendix IV: Arnhem Town
Appendix V: Theirs is the Glory
Appendix VI: Allied Firepower at Arnhem
Appendix VII: How Much is a Dutch Bridge Worth?
Appendix VIII: German Forces at Arnhem
Appendix IX: Some of the PoW Camps Where the Arnhem Captured Were Sent
Notes
Bibliography
Plates
3 Battery Command Post and 3 Battery Flag. (Courtesy of Gavin Frankland: relative of Gunner F.V. Brown, F Troop, 3 Battery)
About the Authors
Paul Chrystal is the author of a number of books on conflict and military history including the best-selling British Army of the Rhine: The BAOR 1945‒1993 (2018), Northern Ireland – The Troubles: From the Provos to the Det 1968‒1998 (2018), Women at War in the Classical World (2016), Roman Military Disasters (2015), War in Greek Mythology (2020) and Rome: Republic into Empire: The Civil Wars of the First Century BCE (2019), all published by Pen & Sword. He is also the author of A History of Britain in 100 Objects (2022), Wars and Battles of the Roman Republic (2015) and Wars and Battles of Ancient Greece (2018). His Bioterrorism and Biological Warfare: Disease as a Weapon of War was published in July 2023. See his full list at www.paulchrystal.com
Major (retired) David Chrystal followed his father into the army and served for more than thirty years in the Royal Corps of Signals, rising from signaller to major, during which time he was awarded the British Empire Medal and was Mentioned in Dispatches (1980). He had postings in BAOR, Cyprus (RSM 9 Signal Regiment), southern Italy/Bosnia (attached to 4 Squadron RAF as Ground Liaison Officer) and Northern Ireland.
Acknowledgements
No book is the work of one man or woman, and this one certainly isn’t. The following have been invaluable sources of information: Regimental History of The 1st Air Landing Light Regiment and Robert Woollacott’s Winged Gunners (Quote Publishers, Harare, Zimbabwe, 1994)¹ which cover the history of the 1st Air Landing Light Regiment; both are long out of print. Arnhem Bridge: Target Mike One published by R.N. Sigmond (Renkum, NL, 17 September 2015) and authored by David Truesdale, Martijn Cornelisson and Bob Gerritson is a splendid book in many ways; Gunner Eric Chrystal is mentioned and photographed in this and in Woollacott.² Then there is The Gunners at Arnhem (1999), privately published by Captain Peter William Wilkinson MC, another Arnhem veteran. Paradata, through Ben Hill, ParaData Manager, Airborne Assault, IWM Duxford, Cambridgeshire provided a number of photos of the regiment in action, and the Pegasus Archive through Mark Hickman who provided the 1st Air Landing regimental diaries. Both have also been invaluable, as has the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand; Ian Baxter, Sophie ter Horst, Wybo Boersma of the Hartenstein Airborne Museum in Oosterbeek and Robert Voskuil. Roy Gledhill helped with information on the PoW camps and Colin Shearer sent me a scan of his grandfather’s permit for a night out in Tunis: 14301423 Gunner Shearer. G. Shannyn Johnson, Image Reproduction Technician and Annie Lavergne at the Canadian War Museum, Ottawa helped with the fine artwork showing the regiment in Italy on page 3 of the plate section.
Thanks too to Janis McCreadie (my cousin and Eric’s niece) for providing useful early history and some rare family photos; Peter Lawson and Jürgen Peters for translating those image captions that were originally in German. Some interesting propaganda here: Peter’s father-in-law, Les Fuller, fought with the 3rd Battalion Parachute Regiment at Arnhem where he lost his right arm. A fellow paratrooper lost his left arm in the same battle; fortuitously their daughters got to know each other and for many years bought the two veterans one pair of gloves between them each Christmas.
Bernard Nock, curator, owner and display coordinator of the Military Wireless Museum, Kidderminster was kind enough to provide images of the 22 and 68 radio sets, as well as a copy of an unpublished manuscript written by Bombardier Leo Hall of 3 Battery, E Troop, 1st Air Landing Light Regiment written in August 1996; it reveals fascinating detail relating his experience and assessment of communications at Arnhem: https://www.qsl.net/g4bxd. John Howes was extraordinarily helpful in going to the trouble of checking Gunner Chrystal’s PoW records at The National Archives, Kew. He also sent me a copy of (then Sergeant) Eric Chrystal’s Mention in Dispatches in the London Gazette, 7 February 1958. Bob Gerritsen and Bob Hilton (ex-assistant curator at Duxford) were equally generous in providing copies of my father’s correspondence with Bob Woollacott and a rare image of members of 3 Battery. Graham Francis was kind enough to send me various casualty lists, German record cards available in file WO416 at The National Archives and PoW liberation forms relating to Mühlberg. Finally, Gavin Frankland was kind enough to send me details of his relative’s death when his glider crashed crossing the Dutch coast. Gunner F.V. Brown, F Troop, 3 Battery, tragically died in the crash of glider 518. Gavin is the first family member to visit the grave.
While every reasonable effort has been made to trace copyright holders of other material, the publisher welcomes any information relating to copyright that clarifies the copyright ownership of any unattributed material and will endeavour to include corrections in reprints or new editions.
Introduction
This is the story of the 1st Air Landing Light Regiment RA and its role in the Italian campaign and at the Battle of Arnhem. It is also the story of one of its soldiers: 14283058 Gunner Eric Wright Chrystal, a career soldier for almost thirty years who saw action in the Italian campaign where he was seriously wounded and in the Battle of Arnhem where he was taken prisoner of war. Later he served with the Royal Artillery in the dusty and disease-ridden Egyptian Canal Zone and in Cyprus where he was Mentioned in Dispatches for saving a comrade’s life under fire. He also served in the unforgiving mountains and wadis of Aden, and with the BAOR in 24 Missile Regiment at Paderborn, equipped with nuclear-capability missiles.
It is with the Italian campaign and the Battle of Arnhem that we are concerned here: the book provides detailed context and background to both conflicts, interpolating Gunner Chrystal’s early combat days with E Troop, 3 Battery, 1st Air Landing Light Regiment at Rionero, Foggia and Campobasso, southern Italy, where he was wounded and evacuated to Malta. It then goes on to trace his and the 1st Air Landing Light Regiment’s pivotal (but often confused or glossed over) role at the Rhine bridge at Arnhem where he was eventually taken prisoner of war and herded off to PoW camps at Limburg, Stalag IV-B Mühlberg and Zwickau in south-east Germany.
Eric’s fascinating story provides the human experience of, and the human touch to, two important chapters in modern British military history. Despite the combat experience he gained in southern Italy, when he woke up on that Sunday morning in mid-September 1944 he could have had no idea of, and could never have been prepared for, the cauldron into which he was about to glide noiselessly. For the next four to five days he would be subjected to nothing but unrelenting noise, and he and his comrades would see nothing but terrifying destruction, death and mutilation.
Maps
Glossary
The British Army:
Army Group: The largest military command deployed by the British army, comprising a general or field marshal with two or more armies and containing 400,000–600,000 troops.
Army: A military command controlling several subordinate corps, plus a lieutenant general with supporting forces, amounting to 100,000–200,000 troops.
Corps: A military command controlling two or more divisions, as well as other lieutenant general supporting forces, amounting to 50,000–100,000 troops.
Division: The standard 1944 British army formation, an infantry or armoured major general division containing 10,000–20,000 personnel.
Brigade: A formation that contains several battalions or regiments amounting to brigadier 3,000–6,000 personnel, which exists either independently or else forms part of a division.
Regiment: A unit typically of armoured or artillery forces amounting to 500–900 soldiers under a lieutenant colonel, equating in status and size to an infantry battalion.
Battalion: A unit usually comprising 500–900 soldiers (such as an infantry lieutenant colonel engineer or signals battalion).
Squadron: Typically a sub-unit of an armoured or recce regiment that equates in major status and size to an infantry company.
Company: A small sub-unit of a battalion. A typical infantry company could, under a major, contain around 150–180 soldiers.
Battery: Major in command of a small sub-unit, usually of artillery, that forms part of a battalion.
Unit: A small military grouping that ranges in size from a section (of ten soldiers) up to a battalion or regiment (500–900 personnel).
Formation: A large military grouping that ranges in size from a brigade up to an army group.
Other Terms:
Bailey bridge: A bridge of varying span and carrying capacity that could be speedily erected manually by unskilled labour.
BC: Battery commander.
Bdr: Bombardier.
Broad-front strategy: The Allied army groups advancing as a single entity at similar speeds.
BSM: Battery sergeant major.
coup de main: A small force seizing an objective using speed and surprise.
CP: Command post.
DS: Dressing station.
DZ: Dropping zone for parachutists.
FOO: Forward Observation Officer.
FOURA: Forward Observation Officer Unit, RA.
GPO: Gun Position Officer.
LZ: Landing zone for gliders.
Mike Target: Target engaged by a regiment of guns.
MO: Medical Officer.
Narrow-front strategy: A single army group being given the resources required to advance more quickly and further than other army groups.
OCTU: Officer Cadet Training Unit.
OP: Observation post where gunners observe and engage enemy targets.
OR: Other rank.
PIAT: Projector Infantry Anti-Tank (= bazooka).
PTSD: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
RAMC: Royal Army Medical Corps.
RAP: Regimental aid post.
RE: Royal Engineers.
RHQ: Regimental Headquarters.
RMO: Regimental medical officer.
SP: Self-propelled gun, usually on caterpillar tracks.
Stonk: A heavy concentration of artillery fire.
TSM: Troop sergeant major.
Uncle Target: Divisional target.
Chapter One
The History of Airborne Warfare
¹
‘Five thousand balloons, capable of raising two men each, could not cost more than five ships of the line; where is the Prince who can afford so to cover his country with troops for its defence, as that 10,000 men descending from the clouds, might not, in many places, do an infinite deal of mischief before a force could be brought together to repel them?’
Benjamin Franklin, 16 January 1784 to Monsieur Le
Dr. Ingenhauss, Médecin de sa Majesté Imperiale à
Vienne en Autriche; written from France at a time when
Franklin was serving with the American diplomatic mission.
Going to war by air rather than by land or by sea was an idea first hit upon by Benjamin Franklin who had balloons in mind as the mode of transportation, but it was the Russians in 1936 who brought that fantastic notion right up to date when parachutes formed part of the equation. General Wavell watched a demonstration of a drop by the Soviet army involving 1,500 parachute troops. Two years later they repeated the exercise with machine guns and light artillery. Frighteningly, for all the other armies watching, when they had landed these troops were ready to do battle within eight minutes. Surprise, then, was the watchword. The Germans were quick to react when General Kurt Student was tasked with commanding a new air-landing corps. By July 1939 a 1,000-strong battalion landed by parachute on a landing zone: by the time war was declared this had become the 7th Fliegerdivision comprising two parachute and nine glider-borne battalions. In May 1940 these troops spearheaded the blitzkrieg invasions of France, Belgium and the Netherlands. For example, parachute troops took the Belgian fortress of Ében-Émael on the Lower Meuse while 4,000 parachutists were dropped in the Netherlands supported by air-landing infantry. Winston Churchill, newly appointed as prime minister, had seen enough. On 22 June 1940 a memorandum was sent off to General Sir Hastings Ismay of the Cabinet War Secretariat saying ‘We ought to have a corps of at least 5,000 parachute troops.’
This led to the prosaically-named Central Landing Establishment at Manchester’s Ringway Airport ‘for the development of parachute and glider techniques’. It was the men of No. 2 Commando who were selected for this, but it was not long before the unit comprised 500 trained parachutists and was rebranded the much more exciting 11th Special Air Service Battalion. The Tragino Aqueduct near Naples had the misfortune of being the first target selected to receive the attention of thirty-eight men of the 11th SAS in February 1941 in what became known as Operation COLOSSUS. After intense training in the UK the volunteers, known as X Troop, moved to an advanced operating base in Malta.²
Events moved rapidly for these airborne pioneers: September 1941 saw them re-designated the 1st Parachute Battalion and reinforced with the 2nd and 3rd Parachute battalions to form the 1st Parachute Brigade. Later the 4th Parachute Battalion was added. The 1st Air Landing Brigade came next from four battalions of the 31st Independent Infantry Brigade Group converted to glider-borne infantry. These two new brigades became the Airborne Division under General F.A.M. Browning with supporting arms including artillery. March 1942 saw them move to Bulford Camp. To fly the gliders the Glider Pilot Regiment was set up as part of the Army Air Corps to fly Hotspurs, and later Horsas and Hamilcars. The 1st Parachute Brigade was then joined by the 2nd Parachute Brigade made up of the existing 4th Parachute Battalion plus the 7th Battalion Cameron Highlanders and the 10th Battalion Royal Welch Fusiliers. The 50th Indian Parachute Brigade was also formed and came on board.
At a time when things were going badly, to say the least, and morale was low, the Bruneval Raid, Operation BITING, in February 1942, changed everything. The British were anxious to learn more about German radar. A raid against the radar station at Bruneval near Le Havre was proposed. The Bruneval Raid became the Parachute Regiment’s first battle honour.
‘C’ Company 2nd Parachute Battalion under Major J.D. Frost was selected to be dropped at night by the RAF to capture and hold the Bruneval station, while Flight Sergeant C.W. Cox, an RAF technician, dismantled the radar set there. Cox, with his radar parts, was then taken to a nearby beach to be evacuated at dawn by the Royal Navy.
Despite the presence of a German naval patrol operating nearby, the raid was a complete success, capturing not only the vital radar equipment but also two German radar technicians. Apart from raising morale, it reaffirmed Churchill’s belief in the role to be played by airborne forces and by radar.³
Airborne operations followed in Algeria and Tunisia, Sicily and southern Italy, by which time the 1st Air Landing Light Regiment had joined to provide field artillery support for the Airborne Division and the 1st Air Landing Brigade. With the creation of the 6th Airborne Division, the Airborne Division was rebadged as the 1st Airborne Division. The 6th Airborne, of course, went on to acquit itself in the Normandy landings and after, while the 1st Airborne was, most frustratingly for them, held in reserve in the east of England. Their time, however, was to come in a small town in the Netherlands, as we shall see.
Chapter Two
The 1st Air Landing Light Regiment RA
The 1st Air Landing Light Regiment was an airborne forces unit of the British army’s Royal Artillery during the Second World War, raised in 1943 and attached to the 1st Airborne Division. It was the largest single artillery unit in the division. Its first taste of action came with the Allied landings in Italy at Taranto as part of Operation SLAPSTICK in the invasion of Italy. It remained in post after the withdrawal of the division to support other elements of the British Eighth Army in the Italian campaign until the end of 1943. In early 1944 the regiment returned to England and rejoined the 1st Airborne Division, training for its participation in various cancelled operations and, ultimately, in the September 1944 Operation MARKET GARDEN. During the Battle of Arnhem the three batteries of the regiment either took up position at the bridge (the OP party of 3 Battery) or formed a defensive ring around Oosterbeek; most of 3 Battery plus 1 and 2 Batteries.
In May 1945 the regiment participated in Operation DOOMSDAY ‒ the repatriation of the German occupation army in Norway ‒ after which the 1st Air Landing Light Regiment returned to England and was disbanded in December 1945.
How did the regiment come about? As noted, in 1940, observing the successful German airborne operations in Belgium and the Netherlands and during the Battle of France, Winston Churchill was sufficiently impressed to order the War Office to look at creating a corps of 5,000 parachute troops. This led, in September 1941, to the formation of the 1st Parachute Brigade with its three parachute infantry battalions; these were complemented with airborne support including Royal Artillery troops, among them the 458th Independent Light Battery.¹
So in summer 1940 the War Office made the decision to form three horse-drawn light batteries, each made up of three troops. The New Year saw them reconfigured as the 1st Mountain Regiment with 451, 452, 453 and 454 Mountain Batteries, each with four guns apiece. In addition there were three mechanized independent light batteries ‒ 455, 456 and 457 – sporting six guns. The Mountain Batteries were specialists in mountain and Arctic warfare, while the mechanized batteries were skilled in close support of beach landings. Colonel J. Wedderburn-Maxwell RA was in charge as Director of Organisation and Training of the Light Artillery. In April 1941 the three senior light batteries relocated to Scotland to join the force known as the Marine Division, then Force 10, the Expeditionary Force and then the First Army.² It was after service on the North-West Frontier in India that the 458th Independent Light Battery, Royal Artillery was formed on 14 February 1941 from a cadre of officers and NCOs at Ashby Folville in Leicestershire from these seven batteries and other mechanized Royal Artillery light batteries already in existence. It was commanded by Major Patrick Lloyd (ex-454 Battery) – no lover of coming second best ‒ and equipped with antiquated First World War-vintage 3.7in mountain howitzers (‘screw guns’) that were designed to be broken down into eight mule loads for transport over difficult terrain.³ These howitzers were capable of firing a 20lb shell 5,899 yards and weighed 1,610lb.⁴ The original objective of this elite unit was to lend close support in amphibious assaults on beachheads; it had already acquired significant mountain experience in India on the North-West Frontier. Who could anticipate how useful this experience would turn out to be in the mountains of southern Italy in the unforgiving winter of 1943‒44? Training took place in Leicester and Scotland in combined operations and in the development of pioneering methods of air-landing.
In September 1941, the fledgling British airborne forces needed an artillery capability, so the 458th was converted into an airborne unit and in October went north to Inverary for combined operations training. A number of beach landings were carried out.⁵ In mid-December the battery removed to Newbury under the command of the 31st Independent Infantry Brigade which had recently joined the 1st Airborne Division as the 1st Air Landing Brigade under the command of Brigadier G.F. ‘Hoppy’ Hopkinson. Once assigned to the 1st Airborne Division, it assumed responsibility for providing field artillery support for the whole of the division and spent the next eleven months training for their new role, moving to Wing Barracks at Bulford Camp in January 1942.⁶
Other artillery in the division were the 1st Air Landing Anti-Tank Battery; the 283 (City of London Yeomanry) Anti-Aircraft Battery (Rough Riders), and the 2nd (Oban) Air Landing Anti-Tank Battery. September saw the creation of a Commander Royal Artillery HQ (CRAHQ), under Lieutenant Colonel C.H.P. Crawfurd, RA.
The unit was renamed the 1st Air Landing Light Battery in June 1942, and on 6 February 1943 was expanded to full regiment status commanded by Lieutenant Colonel R.W. ‘Roddy’ McLeod with Major W.F.K. ‘Sheriff ’ Thompson, second-in-command (2i/c). Thompson got his nickname while in India, and a fellow officer was nicknamed ‘the Squire’, names indicative of how they intended to keep the peace locally. Captain David John ‘Tiny’ Madden was posted in (originally from 457 Battery) to command 3 Battery until he moved on to Divisional HQ; Captain Dennis S. Munford replaced him. Lieutenant ‘Tony’ Harrison joined at Bulford and would later command E Troop, 3 Battery. Lieutenant T.A. Conlin arrived on 20 March and was posted to 3 Battery, as was Second Lieutenant Tony Driver who proved to be a major asset when adapting the new US howitzers using his engineering degree and experience in the oil industry. On 7 April Lieutenant Tudor Morgan Griffiths was posted into 3 Battery. Officers, signallers and OP assistants were now required to pass a parachute course to enable OP parties to drop with the parachute battalion they were there to support. A course in aircraft recognition was held on the Isle of Man with a four-week Motor Transport course in Rhyl.
The new regiment moved down-market from Wing Camp to Bulford Fields Hutted Camp.⁷ Troops originating with the 458th were allocated to one of three batteries, as were those drafted in from outside the division. This elevation was facilitated by the fact that the 458th brought with it priceless experience in mountain and Arctic warfare as well as more than a passing familiarity with close support of beach landings. Warrant officers from Guards regiments were drafted in to whip the new regiment into shape.⁸ Captain D.J. Madden took over 3 Battery, and it was at this point that Gunner Eric Chrystal joined the regiment.
However, this was never going to be just another ordinary regiment. Major Lloyd and Captain John Burley ‘Dick’ Dickinson saw to that, insisting on peak fitness, speed, strength and discipline in the soldiers under his command. All ranks, including cookhouse staff, batmen and clerks, were required to be able to march 60 miles in seventy-two hours in Field Service Marching Order (FSMO) carrying weapons. Stragglers were not shot; indeed, it was permissible to assist them as long as the unit reached their destination as a whole and could then stand to attention for inspection. Then there was that run at a minimum 6 mph…the dreaded RTU (return to original unit) awaited failure. Sport was of the essence, as was PT.⁹ All officers had to be fully conversant with everything relating to gunnery: gun drill, signalling, communications and driving.
The new regiment now consisted of three batteries (1 to 3), each of two troops (A to F), with four guns allocated to each troop, making twenty-four guns in the regiment. At the same time their 3.7in howitzers were replaced by the newer and superior American 75mm pack howitzer adapted for airborne use.¹⁰ This could be broken down into six components, originally to facilitate transportation – usually by mules – over mountainous terrain. It fired a 14.7lb shell with a much better range at almost 5.5 miles, weighing in at 1,439lb. The original issue was fitted with cart wheels, quickly replaced with pneumatic tyres on 1 April and fired for the first time by the regiment on Larkhill ranges.¹¹ One battery of eight guns would support each of the Airborne Division’s three brigades. Other artillery units in the division were an independent anti-tank battery assigned to each parachute brigade.¹²
Logistics were an issue: mule transport was all very well, but the essence of airborne operations lay in surprising the enemy, and no mule on earth could do that. At some stage flying was necessary. Parachuting the guns in separate parts on individual ’chutes was out of the question, although the American airborne forces continued to do this. Imagine the confusion on the ground in reassembling the parts in the dark; that is assuming that all the parts, and the gunners, landed in the right and/or the same place. There was only one way for British airborne forces to transport artillery guns and their towing vehicles by air and that was by using gliders. The recently introduced Horsa and Hamilcar gliders and the American Wacos saved the day. For the 1st Air Landing Light Regiment the glider of choice was the Airspeed Horsa piloted by two men from the Glider Pilot Regiment.¹³ With its 88ft wingspan and a length of 67ft, the Horsa had a maximum load capacity of 15,750lb, space for the two pilots and a maximum of twenty-eight troops or two jeeps. Variations on this payload included one jeep, an artillery gun and a half-ton trailer, or one jeep with up to two trailers.¹⁴ The great drawback, however, was that there was room for only three artillerymen and the two pilots to be carried with the gun.¹⁵
Nevertheless, 12 February 1943 was a landmark day for the regiment. On that day the RAF towed two Horsa gliders loaded with a 3.7in howitzer and a ‘Blitz Buggy’ (jeep) from Netheravon, 4 miles north of Amesbury on Salisbury Plain. This was the first time that such a manoeuvre had been attempted; the regiment’s first airborne exercise, Exercise Woolwich.¹⁶
The date of 3 April was another crucial day, for that was when the regiment repeated this original flight exercise, substituting the new 75mm howitzer in the Horsa for the now obsolete mountain gun. Captain David Lindsay was in charge ‘using the Jeep, trailer, gun combination and a C-47 aircraft’, a Dakota. The pilot obliged by including in the thirty-minute test flight a good number of banks, climbs and dives. All went well with no apparent movement of the loads.¹⁷ Moreover, the new guns had the added benefit of fitting into a Horsa without having to be disassembled so