330th Siege Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery

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Active12 December 1916–21 June 1919
RoleLong-range artillery
330th Siege Battery, RGA
Cap Badge of the Royal Regiment of Artillery
Active12 December 1916–21 June 1919
Country United Kingdom
Branch British Army
RoleLong-range artillery
SizeBattery
Part ofRoyal Garrison Artillery
EngagementsBattle of Passchendaele

The 330th Siege Battery (330th SB) was a long-range artillery unit of Britain's Royal Garrison Artillery raised during World War I. It saw active service on the Western Front from early 1917 to the Armistice in 1918, and was heavily engaged in the Battle of Passchendaele.

During World War I the demands of trench warfare required large quantities of heavy and siege artillery. In the British Army these guns were manned by units of the Royal Garrison Artillery (RGA). By late 1916 the flow of volunteers to 'Kitchener's Army' was long past, and new units were being formed from wartime conscripts. On 12 December 1916 20 new siege batteries to be equipped with 6-inch howitzers were raised at Prees Heath Camp in Shropshire. These were numbered 318–337.[1][2] Among the officers appointed to the new 330th Siege Bty was the artist and writer Wyndham Lewis, who documented his time with the battery as a 2nd Lieutenant. The other subalterns were a trainee solicitor, a surveyor, a schoolmaster and a bank clerk.[3]

2nd Lt Wyndham Lewis, one of the early officers of the battery.

From Prees Heath 330th SB moved to Horsham in Sussex in mid-February 1917 and then to Aldershot in March. The training consisted of gun and battery drills, plus route marches. In April it moved to the artillery camp at Lydd on the Kent coast where pre-deployment training was carried out, with live firing and instruction in building dugouts. The battery moved to Portsmouth later that month. It completed its training and was ordered to join the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) on the Western Front.[3]

Service

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References

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