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- 29th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery during the Great War -


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World War 1 One ww1 wwII greatwar great 1914 1918 first battalion regiment

29th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery



   XXIX Brigade, Royal Field Artillery, made up of 125th, 126th and 127th Batteries, served as Divisional Artillery with 4th Division. The Division was held back from the original British Expeditionary Force by a last minute decision to defend England against a possible German landing. The fate of the BEF in France and the lack of any move by the Enemy to cross the channel, reversed this decision and they proceeded to France in late August. They were in action at the The Battle of the Marne, The Battle of the Aisne and at The Battle of Messines in 1914. In 1915 they were in action in The Second Battle of Ypres. On the 21st of May 1916, 128th (Howitzer) Battery transferred to 29th Brigade RFA from 30th (Howitzer) Brigade RFA. In 1916 they were in action during the Battles of the Somme. In 1917 they were at Arras, in action during the The First and Third Battles of the Scarpe, before heading north for the Third Battle of Ypres, where they fought in The Battle of Polygon Wood, The Battle of Broodseinde, The Battle of Poelcapelle and The First Battle of Passchendaele. In 1918 they were in action on The Somme, then returned to Flanders fighting in the Defence of Hinges Ridge during The Battle of Hazebrouck and in The Battle of Bethune, The Advance in Flanders The Second Battles of Arras, the Battles of the Hindenburg Line and the Final Advance in Picardy.

18th Aug 1914 Concentration

19th Aug 1914 Concentration

26th August 1914 In Action

26th Aug 1914 Shellfire

27th Aug 1914 Enemy Advance

27th August 1914 On the Move

30th Aug 1914 Rear Guard

30th of August 1914 A Hot March

30th Aug 1914 On the March

31st Aug 1914 Rear Guard

31st August 1914 Continued withdrawals

31st Aug 1914 On the March

1st Sep 1914 Rear Guard

1st Sep 1914 On the March

2nd Sep 1914 Rear Guard

2nd Sep 1914 On the March

3rd Sep 1914 Rear Guard

3rd of September 1914 Across the Marne

3rd Sep 1914 On the March

4th Sep 1914 Rear Guard

5th Sep 1914 Rear Guard

6th Sep 1914 Advance Guard

6th Sep 1914 On the March

7th Sep 1914 Advance Guard

8th Sep 1914 Advance Guard

9th September 1914 Battle of Marne

9th Sep 1914 Bridging

10th September 1914 Battle of Marne

10th of September 1914 Marching

17th September 1914 

30th Oct 1914 Under Shellfire

5th December 1914 Quiet

9th December 1914 Uniforms

19th Dec 1914 British attack

19th Dec 1914 Attack Made

3rd of March 1915 Enemy Fire Silenced  location map

2nd of April 1915 Quiet Day  location map

2nd of February 1916 Moving to the Trenches  location map

7th of February 1916 New Sector  location map

8th of February 1916 Shelling  location map

9th of February 1916 Villages Shelled  location map

10th of February 1916 Shelling and Bombs  location map

11th of February 1916 Shelling  location map

12th of February 1916 A Line Rearrangement  location map

13th of February 1916 German Trenches Shelled  location map

16th of February 1916 Collapsing Trenches  location map

19th of February 1916 Under Heavy Fire  location map

21st of February 1916 Active German Patrols  location map

23rd of February 1916 Weather Turns  location map

24th of February 1916 Snowy Weather  location map

25th of February 1916 Heavy Snow and a German Patrol  location map

26th of February 1916 A Store Burns  location map

27th of February 1916 36th Divisional Artillery Arrive

5th of March 1916 Relief Completed  location map

1st July 1916 Bombardment  location map

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Want to know more about 29th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery?


There are:5285 items tagged 29th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Great War.




Those known to have served with

29th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery

during the Great War 1914-1918.

  • Earnshaw Wilfred Gilbert. Dvr. (d.10th February 1917)
  • Fenny George William. 2nd Lt.
  • Wilson Joseph Harold. A/Sgt.

All names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of 29th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery from other sources.


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      World War 1 One ww1 wwII greatwar great battalion regiment artillery
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244686

Dvr. Wilfred Gilbert Earnshaw 29th Brigade, 30th Battery Royal Field Artillery (d.10th February 1917)

My husband was told as a child he was named after a relative who died in the First World War, but until now we have been unable to find him. Now through my research I have been able to tell him about his Great Uncle Wilfred Earnshaw who is buried at the Bray Military Cemetery, Bray-sur-Somme, died of wounds on 10th of February 1917. Through the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website we have found his grave location, and plan to visit it next year.

Patricia Earnshaw




233448

A/Sgt. Joseph Harold Wilson 29th Brigade, 143rd Bty. Royal Field Artillery

Joseph Harold Wilson - Back row on the left sitting on the wheel of an 18 Pounder Field Gun

My grandfather, Joseph Harold Wilson, served with the Royal Field Artillery and the Labour Corps throughout the First World War. He was born in Leeds in 1888, the son of Thomas and Margaret Elizabeth Wilson. He enlisted in the Royal Field Artillery about 1905 aged seventeen as a regular soldier (presumably for the standard period of twelve years). In 1911 he was with 143rd Battery, RFA stationed at Royal Artillery Barracks, Aldershot, Surrey, as a Gunner Fitter.

His medal card indicates he was a Fitter serving with 29 Brigade, RFA a unit of Britains pre-war regular army under the command of 4th Division which went to France as part of the expanded British Expeditionary Force in late August 1914. He was a lance corporal (probably at the outbreak of the war) and became a full corporal in August 1915. His medal card also indicates he was attached to the Labour Corps, presumably sometime during or after 1917, with the rank of acting sergeant. He was wounded in the leg by shrapnel in 1916 which might be why he was transferred to the Labour Corps and was eventually demobilised from the army in 1919. He received the 1914 Mons Star, British War and Victory Medals.

On the outbreak of the Second World War he rejoined the Royal Artillery with the rank of sergeant and served with the home forces until he was invalided out in 1942. He had married Ethel Georgina Barker of Hampsthwaite at Hampsthwaite Parish Church in December 1910 and had eight children, the youngest being my father. Joseph Harold died at Hampsthwaite in October 1967.

The extracts were published in the Harrogate Herald in 1915 referring to Joseph Harold:

3rd March -

Fitter Wilson, whose home is at Hampsthwaite, is "fit" and joined his depot on the 2nd March.

H Breare (Editor) letter:

Fitter Wilson, of Hampsthwaite, called in to see me on Friday. He is invalided home with a bad throat. He belongs to the artillery, and those chaps are not billeted in the towns and villages, therefore they have to get in where they can and rather further away from the comforts of civilisation. You know what the weather has been and how much there has been of it. Well, he had to sleep over an intensely rural pig sty that had not received attention for - well - ages. He has never had trouble with his throat before, but under these conditions it came, an abscess formed. He was so bad they sent him to a Manchester hospital, where he had an operation. He is nearly well now and will be returning to the Front by the time you read this. Wilson is thoroughly enthusiastic about the artillery, and remarked that if the young men at home only knew the life and conditions of the artillery branch of the service they would rush for it. No trench business. It is life. Full of excitement and satisfaction. Like the rest of the boys he was chock full of admiration and good feeling towards his commanding officer. It was with a regretful voice he told me they were losing him. He has been made a colonel. They had met with very few casualties. This he attributed to the extreme care the officer took of his men. They could and would follow him anywhere. It was nice to hear Wilson speak thus of his major, and he said it with all the enthusiasm of conviction.

"If any man tells you he wants to go back to the Front, don't you believe it; he's trying to make himself think so. Now, I wouldn't be kicked out of the artillery. I like it; but I'd rather be at home, and so would any man if circumstances permitted it".

The above is what Wilson said to me. I quite understand it. You boys have no wish to creep out of your responsibility. You are, like every other Briton; determined to see the thing successfully through. Like everybody else, you will be glad when it is over; but you are not going to say you prefer war to peace, or the battlefield to the dear home for which you are fighting. You also know that upon your success depends not only the peace and prosperity of the world, but the freedom and protection of the weak against the strong.

22nd December -

Corporal Fitter H Wilson writes:

I take the greatest of pleasure in writing you a few lines to thank you once more for your paper, which I have received regularly every week. You will see that I have been made full Corporal. I was promoted last August. Since my last letter some months ago we have had some rough times of it at Ypres and Neuve Chapelle. The last "scrap" our Division was in was at Loos, and we got a severe bending. Since then we have been moving about getting reorganised, as you will see by the change of address. We shall be going up amongst it again very shortly. Xmas is drawing close. I never thought last Xmas that I should have another one out here, and I am afraid we shall have a few more on service somewhere yet. Anyhow, the first five years will be the worst. Probably I may be home on short leave in a few weeks' time, so I will call in and tell you more then, as they are getting stricter in censoring our letters. Do you mind obliging me by thanking the people at my village for a very nice, welcome parcel I received from them, and a card enclosed. It was from the people at Hampsthwaite. I thank every one of them for their kindness to us who are doing our duty either at home or abroad or on the sea or land, or in the air, and may they all have a merry Xmas and a very prosperous New Year. Anyhow as happy as may be expected in this terrible crisis. Thanking them once more for their kindness as it shows we are not forgotten. I will close, wishing you and your paper every success, also with the old Yorkshire saying, "A merry Xmas and a prosperous New Year to you".

Joseph Harold Wilson - Second from the right holding paint tin.

Shaun L Wilson






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