1151794 Gunner John Alexander PARNHAM, Royal Artillery

Discussion in 'Royal Artillery' started by researchingreg, Jul 3, 2020.

  1. researchingreg

    researchingreg Well-Known Member

    John Parnham enlisted in the R.A. when he was 17 years old on 30 Jan 1943 and served until demob 3 June 1948. I have found his Royal Artillery Tracer Card and I have tried to find out about his war service from it. But I don't understand the references e.g. 173 F Regt. As he joined so young I don't know whether he was in action in the War. Can anybody help me out?

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  2. 4jonboy

    4jonboy Daughter of a 56 Recce

    173 Field Regiment?

    Lesley
     
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  3. Rothy

    Rothy Well-Known Member

    Hello,

    It seems that John Parnham may well have served in action - in North West Europe in 1944-1945. This might be presumed from his service with the 1st Mountain Regiment, R.A., as listed on the tracer card. Prior to this, he served with what appears to be the 173rd Field Regiment, R.A.

    It seems that John Parnham was posted to the 173rd Field Regiment, R.A. from 7th March 1944, with a brief spell at the Royal Artillery Depot in May 1944. On 29th June 1944, he was posted to the 1st Mountain Regiment, R.A. He served with this unit until he was posted to a reinforcement draft on 28th October 1945 and sent to India.

    Steve
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    The 173rd Field Regiment, R.A. reformed at Park Villa, Alford on 20th July 1943, with the 138th, 156th, 157th and 158th Batteries, the Regimental Headquarters having previously disbanded at Grimsthorpe Castle, Bourne on 28th March 1943.

    The Regiment served with the 76th Infantry Division between 16th November 1943 and 31st August 1944. The Division was a reserve division and served in the United Kingdom until disbandment of the divisional headquarters on 1st September 1944.

    The 1st Mountain Regiment, R.A. was attached to the 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division from 7th July 1942 until 21st March 1945. Until June 1944, the Division was organised and trained as a mountain warfare formation. In August and September 1944 it trained in airlanding operations, whereby it would be delivered to the area of operations by transport aircraft. The Division was never employed in this role, however, and on 15th October 1944 arrived in the North West Europe Theatre where it fought as an infantry division. The Division took part in the operation to clear the Scheldt estuary in October and November 1944 and the in Rhineland and Rhine crossing battles of 1945.

    The 1st Mountain Regiment was involved in the landings to capture Flushing in November 1944 and during the winter campaign in N.W. Europe, the regiment operated in the counter mortar role. For the Rhine Crossings, the 1st Mountain Regiment was attached to the 1st Commando Brigade. A brief account of the Regiment’s time with the Commandos has been accessed at the Commando Veteran’s Archive and follows below:

    An adapted version of an account written recently by Geoff Tudor for the Royal Artillery Journal of how 1 Commando Brigade and the 1st Mountain Regiment RA came together in March 1945. Geoff is author of ?Hoofprints in the Clouds ? Jeep Tracks in the Mud? (ISBN 978-1906206-32-1)

    From Mountain Artillery to Commando Artillery

    The Story of 1st Mountain Regt. R.A., 1945

    For two and a half years the regiment formed part of 52 (Lowland) Division, training in Scotland for mountain warfare. In the summer of 1944 - at very short notice - they swapped mules for jeeps and -stood by in Lincolnshire for an air-landing role in the Arnhem operation. An assault mission at Flushing in November was followed by an anti-mortar role during the winter campaign of 1944-45. Then the regiment became 'Commando Artillery' for the Rhine Crossing and the remaining battles of the war in Germany

    Coming Together

    1st Mountain Regiment and 1 Commando Brigade first came together in the final stages of Operation Veritable, the battle for the territory between the Rhine and the Maas. Both formations were in a sense 'spare numbers'. The mountain gunners were surplus to 52 Div's three field regiments - hence the counter-mortar role. The commandos had been diverted from employment in the Far East because of the Ardennes crisis: once in the battle, with infantry in short supply, a series of tasks was found for them. So it came about that mountain gunners found themselves supporting commandos, as the Regimental History describes:

    The road from Afferdon to Well, about ten miles south, was cratered every hundred yards, and the craters and road verges mined with A.P .mines and booby traps. In spite of these difficulties the sappers, who suffered several casualties in doing so, cleared and repaired the road for traffic in a remarkably short time. The guns had to be brought up, across country, which necessitated a good deal of manhandling.

    The dash with which the guns were brought forward in the advance to Well inspired among the commandos a respect which quickly became affection. Ahead lay the task of assaulting many great rivers: in this task the Brigade demanded the continuing support of the regiment they came to look upon as 'Our Gunners'. The two units worked, together from February until May - from the operations on the Maas to the storming of the Elbe and the advance to the Baltic. During that time, wrote Hilary St. George Saunders in The Green Beret, 'the bonds of friendship, forged in battle, were hoops of steel.'

    Operation Plunder - the Rhine Crossing

    It was 10 March when, protected from air strikes by fog and heavy drizzle, the last of the German defenders crossed to the east bank and the Rhine bridges were blown. Just thirteen days later the river was stormed. Montgomery has been accused of being dilatory and over-cautious, but this was a massive feat of organisation. A million and a half men had been deployed, with all their vehicles and supplies. By D-Day 250,000 tons of ammunition and other material had been lifted to dumps close to the battlefield. General Simpson's 9th American Army was to cross on an 11-mile front south of Wesel: Dempsey's 2nd British Army on a 12 mile front stretching northwards from Wesel to Rees. Key to the whole operation was Wesel itself, a vital communication centre for road and rail and the boundary between British and American sectors. Its capture was the responsibility of 7th Armoured Division for whom a quick success was imperative: the task was given to 1 Commando Brigade, with the mountain gunners in support.

    The Commando role at Wesel: Artillery 'the Core of the Plan'.

    An opposed river crossing against prepared. positions is lone of the 'most hazardous of military operations - in January 1944 the American 36th Division lost over 1,000 men in a disastrous attempt to storm the, Rapido River in Italy. The Rapido was only 50 feet across, whereas the Rhine at Wesel was a formidable obstacle: over 400 yards wide, its stream ran at about 5 knots, and flood dykes (bunds) rose to a height of fifteen to twenty feet. Brigadier Mills-Roberts decided to repeat the 'Heights of Abraham' infiltration technique developed so successfully in Normandy. He later explained his battle plan in his Five Rivers Report:

    Any form of frontal assault was-considered out of the question.- Surprise and speed must be the keynote of the attack. Therefore it was decided to cross at the most unpromising place, Grav Insel, a mud flat which was practically an island some four thousand yards west of Wesel. Once ashore and the bridgehead established, then the route into Wesel must be the most improbable and unsuspected ... ln order to complete the deception of the enemy no trace of the force must be found in the bridgehead area after daylight. The whole force must disappear into Wesel, leaving the enemy in complete ignorance as to the strength of the force or its whereabouts.

    Once again his commandos would follow a 3" wide track of white minefield tape: moving in Indian file at the double the whole brigade could" pass a given point in 20 minutes. Arriving in Wesel on the heels of an R.A.F. raid, they would seize just the northern and north-western sectors. It was a town of 24,000 people, large enough to swallow up several brigades, so no attempt would be made to clear the whole area. Their mission would be to seize a redoubt, .and then hold it against all counter-attacks, until reinforced from across the river and by the two airborne divisions that would land beyond Wesel on the, following day .. In this way the German prepared positions along the waterfront would be outflanked: -It would be the commandos who would be occupying known positions protected by artillery fire plans, the Germans who would be attacking over open ground. The threat from enemy tank attacks was reckoned to be small, and it would be difficult to move anti-tank guns along their approach router Brigadier Mills-Roberts described the support plan:

    It was therefore decided to rely on the rubble of Wesel, a liberal issue of captured panzer-fausts, and artillery support to deal with any enemy armour. In this last connection the Brigade was fortunate enough to have under command the 1st Mountain Regt. RA. The officers and signallers of this regiment had been specially trained to carry their heavy No 22 sets for long distances and maintain communications on the move. The excellence of artillery communications in this and in subsequent operations proved a decisive factor. It was vital that they should be excellent, for the artillery was the core of the plan, and a vast number of guns were controlled by the O.Ps.

    This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at 22/10/2012 11:56:02
     
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  4. researchingreg

    researchingreg Well-Known Member

    Thanks very much for this information everybody.
     

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