61st Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery
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| 61st Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, RA | |
|---|---|
Royal Artillery cap badge | |
| Active | 1 November 1940 – 1 August 1944 |
| Country | |
| Branch | |
| Role | Air Defence |
| Size | Regiment |
| Part of | 1st Armoured Division |
| Engagements | Battle of Gazala |
61st Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment was an air defence unit of Britain's Royal Artillery formed during the Second World War. Its component Territorial Army batteries, both from London, had already seen action in the Battle of France before the regiment was formed in 1940. It went on to serve with armoured formations in the Western Desert Campaign, including the Battle of Gazala. It was broken up in the Middle East in 1944 to provide infantry reinforcements for the Italian Campaign.
Battle of France
101st Light Anti-Aircraft/Anti-Tank Regiment, Royal Artillery, had been formed in February 1940 based on the regimental headquarters (RHQ) and two batteries from 60th (Royal Welch Fusiliers) Anti-Tank Regiment, Royal Artillery, together with two light anti-aircraft (LAA) batteries: 43 Bty from 11th (City of London Yeomanry) and 44 Bty from 12th (Finsbury Rifles) LAA Regiments. (The two LAA batteries were permitted to retain their original subtitles.) This composite unit, the first of its kind, was part of 1st Support Group (1st Sp Gp) in 1st Armoured Division, which was preparing to join the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in France. The LAA units had been formed with old Lewis guns as AA Light machine guns, but were being re-equipped with Bofors 40 mm guns.[1][2][3][4][5]
1st Armoured Division was ordered to France on 11 May when the Phoney War ended with the German invasion of the Low Countries. It began landing at Cherbourg and Le Havre on 15 May and was immediately ordered to advance and hold the crossings over the River Somme. It soon discovered that the Germans were already on the Somme and were rapidly closing on the Seine. 101st LAA/AT Regiment (with 20 2-pounder A/T guns and 96 Lewis guns, its Bofors guns not having arrived) was then ordered to seize the crossings over the Seine and hold them until the armour arrived (the infantry of 1st Sp Gp had been diverted to the defence of Calais and were not available).[5][6][7][8][9][10]
Unsuccessful attempts by 1st Armoured and 51st (Highland) Division under French command to break through to the encircled BEF at Dunkirk led to fighting round Abbeville on 27–28 May. By early June the BEF had been evacuated, but fighting continued. On 4 June 1 Sp Gp provided flank protection for another attempt by 51st (H) Division to destroy the German bridgeheads at Abbeville, but the Germans had had two weeks to dig in, and the attack failed.[11] Next day the Germans renewed their offensive, surrounding and capturing 51st (H) Division at St Valery-en-Caux, while 1st Sp Gp was 'out on a limb' facing German Panzer divisions and was driven back across the Seine. An operation began to evacuate the considerable numbers of British forces left in France from the western ports (Operation Aerial). The survivors of 1st Sp Gp were shipped out of Cherbourg on 16 June.[5][12][13]
