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29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery

British Army commando artillery regiment

29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery

British Army commando artillery regiment

FieldValue
unit_name29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery
imageGuns on the Citadel, Plymouth (5027).jpg
captionGuns of 29 Commando Regiment at the Royal Citadel, Plymouth
dates1947 – Present
allegianceUnited Kingdom
branch
roleField artillery
size5 Batteries
430 personnel
command_structureUK Commando Force
current_commanderLieutenant Colonel Mark Alexander Alford Dornan RA
garrisonRoyal Citadel, Plymouth
nickname*The Commando gunners*
equipmentL118 Light Gun
battles

430 personnel

  • Operation Vantage
  • Falklands War
    • Mount Kent Skirmish
    • Battle of Wireless Ridge
    • Battle of Goose Green 29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery is the Commando-trained unit of the British Army's Royal Artillery, based in Plymouth. The regiment is under the operational control of the UK Commando Force, to which it provides artillery support and gunnery observation.

History

The regiment was established in 1947 by the redesignation of the 25th Field Regiment. In 1951, it was renamed as the 29th Medium Regiment Royal Artillery and was based at Brancepeth Camp in Durham.

In June 1961, Abd al-Karim Qasim's Iraqi Republic announced its intention to annex newly-independent Kuwait, and a British military force was hurriedly sent to the kingdom in Operation Vantage. Regimental Headquarters (RHQ), 79 (Kirkee) and 145 (Maiwand) batteries of 29 Field Regiment were flown without their guns to Kuwait City. 25-Pounder guns and 3-tonner lorries arrived a few days later by sea from the strategic reserve at Aden. The regiment moved up close to the border with Iraq and established gun positions and observation posts (OPs). The threatened invasion did not happen, and in October the British force was relieved by the Arab League. 29 Field Regiment moved back to Aden to await sea transport to Plymouth.

29 Commando Regiment Memorial on Plymouth Hoe.

In 1962, the regiment re-roled and became 29 Commando Light Regiment, Royal Artillery. At that time, each battery consisted of four 105mm pack howitzers (Italian Mountain Gun).

In the 1970s, batteries from the regiment completed operational tours in Northern Ireland.

During the 1982 Falklands War, 29 Commando Regiment accompanied the Royal Marines, providing much needed close support with their L118 Light Guns.

In 1996, the honorary Freedom of the City of Plymouth was conferred on the regiment, with the unanimous support of Plymouth City Council.

The regiment conducted numerous operational tours in Afghanistan to provide artillery support during operations against Al Qaeda and Taliban militants. A war memorial to the fallen of 29 Commando Regiment in post-1945 conflicts was unveiled on Plymouth Hoe on 16 January 2011; It features a Commando dagger made from shells used in the Afghanistan conflict.

Organisation

The present regiment consists of a HQ battery, three gun batteries, a Naval Gunfire Support Forward Observation battery and an attached Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers workshop, which includes a Royal Logistic Corps stores section. The gun batteries are equipped with six L118 105mm light guns and three OPs each. The batteries are as follows:

  • 7 (Sphinx) Battery Royal Artillery – Commando trained L118 gun battery based at the Royal Citadel, Plymouth
  • 8 (Alma) Commando Battery Royal Artillery – Commando trained L118 gun battery based at the Royal Citadel, Plymouth
  • 23 (Gibraltar 1779–1783) Commando Battery Royal Artillery – Headquarters Commando Battery, and Radar Troop, for 29 Commando Regiment based at the Royal Citadel, Plymouth
  • 79 (Kirkee) Commando Battery Royal Artillery – is a Commando trained GBAD battery based at the Royal Citadel, Plymouth
  • 148 (Meiktila) Battery Royal Artillery – Naval Gunfire Support Forward Observation (NGSFO) battery based at RM Poole. Tasked to direct naval gunfire support from Royal Navy ships, air strikes from Royal Navy and Royal Air Force aircraft and artillery fire from the regiment's gun batteries, when landed in support of UK Commando Force. The battery is attached to Surveillance Reconnaissance Squadron (SRS) 30 Commando Information Exploitation Group
  • 29 Commando Regiment Workshop Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers – Workshop main HQ is based at the Royal Citadel, Plymouth, with battery fitter sections permanently attached to, and based with, each battery.
  • 289 Commando Battery (TA) Royal Artillery – Commando Trained L118 gun battery based at East Ham London. (Disbanded 1999)

References

References

  1. "Army – Question for Ministry of Defence".
  2. "29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery". British Army.
  3. J.B.M. Frederick, ''Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978'', Vol II, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-009-X, p. 947.
  4. "29th Regiment RA". British Army units 1945 on.
  5. In 1957, it was deployed to [[Cyprus]] on internal security duties, and spent three years at Karlaos Camp, near [[Famagusta]]. By now it had reverted to a field regiment, at one point loaning its [[Ordnance QF 25-pounder
  6. (3 April 1973). "3 April 1973 → Written Answers (Commons) → DEFENCE". [[Hansard.
  7. Fairhall, David. (21 May 1982). "Why British invasion will be risky affair". The [[Sydney Morning Herald]].
  8. (1 Feb 1996). "House of Commons Hansard Debates for 1 Feb 1996 (pt 18)". Hansard, UK Parliament.
  9. Gall, Carlotta. (6 May 2002). "From Hilltop Perch, British Troops Watch for Holdouts". [[The New York Times]].
  10. . ["Memorial - 29 Commando Regt Royal Artillery"](https://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/62417). *Imperial War Museums*.
  11. "29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery: Batteries". Ministry of Defence.
  12. "29 Commando Royal Artillery". Army.Mod.UK.
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