First Name: | Austin | Last Name: | BRETON | |
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Date of Death: | 25/09/1915 | Lived/Born In: | Brixton | |
Rank: | Gunner | Unit: | Royal Field Artillery B Battery 48 Brigade | |
Memorial Site: | Loos Memorial, France | |||
Current Information:Enlisted-Woolwich The Royal Artillery During the First World War some 800,000 British and Allied men served in the artillery, of whom nearly 50,000 were killed. They were a vital component of the army, used for a number of purposes but primarily to destroy the enemy’s defences before the infantry attacked. The artillery brigade was the equivalent of an infantry battalion with a complement of over 800 officers and men whereas the artillery battery numbered about 200 personnel. Within the ranks there were gunners and bombardiers, drivers, signallers and telephonists. At the beginning of the war when things were much more fluid, artillery batteries could find themselves in the front line of the action but as the war progressed and trench warfare became the norm, the batteries were placed behind the line and in the case of the Royal Garrison Artillery, which employed the big, heavy guns, often many miles back from the line. However this did not mean safety. The enemy would use spotter planes and other methods to determine the positions of the guns and these would then be targeted by their own artillery. When this happened there was little escape for the gunners. They had to keep firing their own guns regardless of what might be happening around them and there were many a direct hit on their emplacements, killing and injuring whole gun crews. Others would act as spotters which meant going forward to the front line and signalling back to the guns necessary changes in target and other vital information. Once in position, artillery brigades tended not to move much so whilst the infantry could be relieved at regular intervals and move back to safe positions, the men of the artillery stayed where they were for much longer periods of time. Second attack on Bellewarde With the aim of diverting German troops away from Loos when the British attack went in there on 25th September 1915, there were three subsidiary attacks by the British, the largest being the Second attack on Bellewaarde in the Ypres salient by 3rd Division and 14th Division. 48 Brigade of the Royal Field Artillery was part of 14th Division. |
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