1st Anti-Aircraft Group (United Kingdom)
1st Anti-Aircraft Group was a formation created by the British Army's Anti-Aircraft Command in 1942 to control anti-aircraft units defending London against Luftwaffe attacks during World War II. It continued this role into the Cold War until disbandment in 1955.
World War II
1 AA Group was formed on 1 October 1942 when Lieutenant-General Sir Frederick 'Tim' Pile, Commander-in-Chief of Anti-Aircraft Command, scrapped its previous conventional structure of Corps and Divisions. Each of the new AA Groups was commanded by a major-general and controlled a number of AA Brigades and support units. The new group boundaries were aligned with the Fighter Groups of the Royal Air Force.1 AA Group's area of responsibility covered the London Inner Artillery Zone formerly controlled by 1 AA Division, and later included the 'Thames North' and 'Thames South' defences either side of the Thames Estuary from the former 6 AA Division. This tightly defined area was almost surrounded by 2 AA Group covering South East England, and together the two groups mirrored No. 11 Group RAF.
The first General Officer Commanding of 1 AA Group was Maj-Gen Erroll Tremlett, who had previously commanded 10 AA Division. A former first-class cricketer, Tremlett had distinguished himself earlier in the war when he commanded 54th Light AA Regiment defending the mole during the Dunkirk evacuation.
closed in 1934, used as the headquarters of the London Inner Artillery Zone AA defences during World War II.
Order of Battle 1943–44
When they were first established there was much interchange of the units allocated to 1 and 2 AA Groups, but from early 1943 1 AA Group had the following order of battle :- 26 AA Brigade
- * 111 Heavy AA Regiment, Royal Artillery – to 21st Army Group by August 1943
- * 132 HAA Regiment, RA – to 2 AA Gp July 1944
- * 137 HAA Regiment, RA
- * 156 HAA Regiment, RA
- 48 AA Brigade
- * 117 HAA Regiment, RA – from Orkney and Shetland Defences October 1943; to 2 AA Gp May 1944
- * 141 HAA Regiment, RA – to 7 AA Gp December 1943
- * 155 HAA Regiment, RA
- * 160 HAA Regiment, RA – from 2 AA Gp by March 1944
- * 163 HAA Regiment, RA
- * 164 HAA Regiment, RA – left October 1943
- 49 AA Brigade
- * 141 Light AA Regiment, RA – to Gibraltar August 1943
- * 26 Searchlight Regiment, RA
- * 80 S/L Regiment, RA – from 4 AA Gp by April 1944
- * 1 AA 'Z' Regiment, RA
- * 6 AA 'Z' Regiment, RA – to 37 AA Bde August 1943
- * 14 AA 'Z' Regiment, RA – to 4 AA Gp April 1943
- * 19 AA 'Z' Regiment, RA
- 301 Gun Operations Room, Stanmore
- 601 GOR, Brompton Road
- 1 AA Group School, Chelmsford
- 1 AA Group Practice Camp
- 1 AA Group Mixed Signal Unit, Royal Corps of Signals, Uxbridge
- * 1 Mixed Signal Company
- ** 1 AA Command Mixed Signal Office Section
- ** 1 AA Group Mixed Signal Office Section
- ** 26 AA Bde Mixed Signal Office Section
- ** 48 AA Bde Mixed Signal Office Section
- ** 49 AA Bde Mixed Signal Office Section
- ** 4 AA Line Maintenance Section
- * 2 Mixed Signal Company
- ** 301 GOR Mixed Signal Section
- ** 601 GOR Mixed Signal Section
- ** 5 AA Line Maintenance Section
- HQ 1 AA Group Royal Army Service Corps
- * 900, 902, 907 AA Transport Companies
- * 919, 921 AA Transport Companies – joined November 1943
- 1 AA Group Royal Army Medical Corps Company
- 1 AA Group Royal Army Ordnance Corps
- 10 AA Workshop Battalion, Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers
- * 1, 6 AA Workshop Companies
- * 1 AA Group Radio Maintenance Company – later divided into 101 and 102 Radio Maintenance Detachments; joined by 105 Detachment June 1944
By August 1943 the Group had taken over control of two further AA brigades, with the associated signal units:
- 28 AA Bde – 'Thames South'
- * 148 HAA Rgt
- * 159 HAA Rgt – to 4 AA Gp October 1943
- * 169 HAA Rgt – from 4 AA Gp October 1943
- * 132 LAA Rgt
- * 12 AA 'Z' Rgt – disbanded November 1943
- * 328 GOR, Fort Luton
- 37 AA Bde – 'Thames North'
- * 121 HAA Rgt – to 21st Army Group by September 1943
- * 136 HAA Rgt – to 2 AA Gp August 1943
- * 167 HAA Rgt – to 4 AA Gp by September 1943; returned May 1944
- * 184 HAA Rgt – new unit joined by September 1943
- * 137 LAA Rgt – from 3 AA Gp December 1943
- * 6 AA 'Z' Rgt – from 49 AA Bde August 1943; to 26 AA Bde August 1944
- * 329 GOR, Vange
- 3 Mixed Signal Co
- * 28 AA Bde Mixed Signal Office Section
- * 328 GOR Mixed Signal Section
- * 37 AA Bde Mixed Signal Office Section
- * 329 GOR Mixed Signal Section
- * 15 AA Line Maintenance Section
Baby Blitz
The Luftwaffe carried out few bombing raids on London during 1943, preferring to concentrate on 'hit and run' attacks by Fighter-bombers against coastal targets. However, in January 1944 it resumed night raids on London, which became known as the 'Baby Blitz'. These raids employed new faster bombers with sophisticated 'pathfinder' techniques and radar jamming. For example, on the night of 21 January 200 hostile aircraft were plotted approaching the South Coast in two waves, which intermingled with returning aircraft of RAF Bomber Command. This caused problems of identification and restrictions on fire, but the guns of 2 AA Group and then 1 AA Group engaged as the raiders approached London. Only one-fifth of the raiders reached the city, the remainder turning away to bomb open country. AA guns brought down eight aircraft and RAF Night fighters with S/L assistance also had successes. At the end of January London Docks received a 130-strong raid dropping flares and incendiaries as they had in the London Blitz of 1940–41: about one-third reached their target and five were shot down. February began with a 75-strong raid, of which only 12 reached the IAZ and four were shot down. On 13 February only six out of 115 bombers reached London. The climax came with five raids in the week 18–25 February varying from 100 to 140 in strength. These met intense AA fire from the Thames Estuary onwards and fewer than half made it to central London: the AA score was 13 shot down while the night fighters and S/Ls added 15, with another shared. Facing these casualty rates, the Luftwaffe switched to targets away from London until 24 March, when a 100-strong raid on London lost four aircraft, and finally on 18 April a raid of 125 aircraft lost 14 shot down and only 30 reached the IAZ. Although much damage was caused in London, the rising efficiency of the HAA guns and radar made the enemy's losses unsustainable.By February 1944, 1 AA Gp was responsible for the AA Operations Room at Brompton Road and the following GORs:
- 301 Stanmore
- 320 Hastings
- 329 Vange
- 330 Chelmsford
Operation Diver
AA Command had been steadily losing men and units to the build-up of 21st Army Group for the planned Allied invasion of Europe. In April 1944, while the Baby Blitz was still under way, it was ordered to deploy much of its strength to defend the Overlord concentration areas and embarkation ports. In addition, it was preparing for the anticipated arrival of V-1 flying bombs, codenamed 'Divers'. In the event, the first of these did not arrive over England until a week after the D Day landings had begun, and AA units were able to redeploy from their Overlord sites to begin Operation Diver. However, early results of AA fire by 1 and 2 AA Groups against the small, fast, low-flying missiles were disappointing. Even shooting down those that reached the IAZ caused significant damage, so a ban was imposed on fire in this area.At the end of June Pile ordered a change in AA Command's tactics: instead of deploying mobile 3.7-inch guns in the Diver Belt, the most up-to-date power-controlled static guns, radars and predictors would be used, which involved a massive redeployment of guns uprooted from all over Britain and emplaced on temporary 'Pile Platforms'. The task was made bigger by the decision to move the Diver Belts to the coast itself, giving the guns a free fire zone out to sea. On 16 July 1 AA Group was ordered to form a 'Diver Box' of gun defences across the Thames Estuary, forward of a line from Chelmsford in Essex to Chatham, Kent. The removal of so many guns, and the silencing of those remaining in the IAZ, led Londoners to believe that the city was being defended by the RAF alone.
As 21st Army Group began to overrun the V-1 launching sites in Northern France, the Luftwaffe turned to launching the missiles from aircraft over the North Sea, and 1 AA Group's Diver Box was heavily engaged. It was equipped with 136 Mark IIC 3.7-inch guns with No 10 Predictors and SCR-584 radar, 210 Bofors guns, and two Z Batteries of mobile nine-rocket launchers manned by a converted S/L regiment. The HAA guns began using the proximity VT fuze with great success. A number of the guns were mounted on the Maunsell Forts in the Thames Estuary. In addition there were 400 20mm guns provided by the RAF Regiment and the Royal Navy. To control these guns the Box was divided into four sectors under 37, 49, 56 and 68 AA Brigades.
H-22 carrying a V-1 flying bomb.
Success rates for AA Command began to rise during this second Diver deployment: from a 9 per cent success rate in July, the average rose to over 50 per cent. On one day 68 missiles were destroyed out of 96 plotted. The weekly total of missiles reaching London fell from a peak of 362 in July to 100, then down to 10 in September. A further redeployment of guns from the South Coast through London to the East Coast was ordered on 21 September. 3 AA Group HQ was brought from Bristol to take over command of the London IAZ, and a new 9 AA Group took over East Anglia, leaving 1 AA Group to concentrate on the Diver Box and the Thames/Medway and Dover defences. The second phase of V-1 attacks ended in mid-January 1945. AA Command's success rate in this phase was impressive: out of a total of 492 V-1 targets, 320 were shot down, and only 13 reached London.
Order of Battle late 1944
From mid-October 1944, 1 AA Group had the following order of battle:- 5 AA Bde
- * 1 HAA rgt; 3 LAA rgts
- 26 AA Bde
- * 4 HAA rgts; 1 AA area mixed rgt
- 28 AA Bde
- * 2 HAA rgts; 2 LAA rgts
- 37 AA Brigade
- * 4 HAA rgts; 3 LAA rgts
- 40 AA Bde
- * 4 HAA rgts; 2 LAA rgts
- 48 AA Brigade
- * 2 HAA rgts
- 49 AA Brigade
- * 2 S/L rgts; 2 AA area mixed rgts
- 56 AA Brigade
- * 6 S/L rgts
- 57 AA Brigade
- * 2 HAA rgts; 3 LAA rgts
- 102 AA Brigade
- * 1 HAA rgt; 4 LAA rgts
Order of Battle 1945
From mid-December, when the worst of the V-1 threat to London had receded and AA Command was being forced to supply manpower to 21st Army Group fighting in NW Europe, 1 AA Group had the following reduced order of battle:- 26 AA Bde
- * 119 HAA Rgt – from 9 AA Gp March 1945
- * 135 HAA Rgt – from 6 AA Gp by February 1945
- * 153 HAA Rgt
- * 156 HAA Rgt
- * 157 HAA Rgt – to 9 AA Gp by February 1945
- * 162 HAA Rgt
- * 163 HAA Rgt – to 48 AA Bde December 1944
- * 171 HAA Rgt – to 48 AA Bde December 1944
- * 6 AA Area Mixed Rgt
- 48 AA Bde
- * 130 HAA Rgt
- * 160 HAA Rgt
- 49 AA Bde
- * 26 S/L Rgt
- * 64 S/L Rgt – converted into 639 Infantry Rgt, RA, for 21st Army Group January 1945
- * 93 S/L Rgt – from 2 AA Gp by February 1945
- * 1 AA Area Mixed Rgt – to 26 AA Bde by February 1945
- * 19 AA Area Mixed Rgt – to 26 AA Bde by February 1945
- 601 GOR
- 1 AA Group HAA Training Centre – formed April 1945
- 5 Area AA Maintenance Rgt – formed April 1945
- HQ 1 AA Group Signal Unit
- * 1 & 2 Signal Cos
- HQ 1 AA Group RASC
- * 195, 900, 902 AA Transport Cos
- 1 AA Group RAMC Co
- 1 AA Group RAOC
- HQ 10 AA Workshop Bn, REME
- * 1, 3, 15 AA Workshop Cos
- * 37 'R' Installation Det
- * 101, 105 Radio Maintenance Dets
- AA Command Research Workshop
- AA Command Physical Training Pool
- AA Command Staff Duties School
- AA Command School of Technical Instruction
Cold War
1 AA Group was commanded in 1946–47 by Maj-Gen William Revell-Smith, who had been Major-General AA of 21st Army Group during the.When the Regular Army and Territorial Army were reorganised for postwar needs in 1947, 1 AA Group was given responsibility for London, the Thames and Medway, Harwich and Dover.
Order of Battle 1947
The 10 Year Plan for AA defence drawn up in 1947 laid down the following order of battle for 1 AA Group:- 1 AA Brigade, Edenbridge, Kent
- * 30 LAA Rgt – converted to HAA September 1948; to British Army of the Rhine March 1951
- * 90 LAA Rgt – disbanded September 1948
- * 95 HAA Rgt – became 65 HAA Rgt September 1948
- * 1 & 9 Fire Control Troops
- 6 AA Brigade, Brentwood, Essex
- * 57 HAA Rgt
- * 100 HAA Rgt – disbanded September 1948
- * 107 HAA Rgt – disbanded July 1947
- * 30 FC Trp
- 7 AA Brigade, Orsett
- * 85 LAA Rgt – disbanded September 1948
- * 89 HAA Rgt – disbanded July 1948
- * 99 HAA Rgt – disbanded October 1948
- * 8 FC Trp
- 11 AA Brigade, Shoeburyness
- * 63 HAA Rgt
- * 75 HAA Rgt
- * 98 HAA Rgt – disbanded August 1948
- * 6 & 7 FC Trps
- 15 AA Brigade, Woolwich
- * 101 HAA Rgt – disbanded June 1948
- * 102 HAA Rgt – disbanded October 1948
- * 103 HAA Rgt – disbanded September 1948
- 52 AA Brigade, Chingford
- * 459 HAA Rgt, Walthamstow
- * 512 LAA Rgt, Pentonville
- * 568 S/L Rgt, St Pancras, London
- * 52 FC Trp
- 53 AA Brigade, Dover
- * 259 HAA Rgt, Shorncliffe
- * 489 HAA Rgt, Ramsgate
- * 516 LAA Rgt, Sittingbourne
- * 53 FC Trp
- 54 AA Brigade, Gillingham, Kent
- * 455 HAA Rgt, Tunbridge Wells
- * 458 HAA Rgt, Sidcup
- * 564 LAA/SL Rgt, Gillingham
- * 608 HAA Rgt, Bexleyheath
- * 54 FC Trp
- 55 AA Brigade, Barking, London
- * 482 HAA Rgt, Barking
- * 517 LAA Rgt, Dagenham
- * 530 LAA Rgt, Colchester
- * 563 SL Rgt, Whipps Cross
- * 599 HAA Rgt, Chingford
- * 600 HAA Rgt, East Ham
- * 55 FC Trp
- 63 AA Brigade, London NW1
- * 461 HAA Rgt, Finchley
- * 484 HAA Rgt, Willesden
- * 490 HAA Rgt, Southgate, London
- * 609 HAA Rgt, Tottenham
- * 63 FC Trp
- 64 AA Brigade, Clapham
- * 451 HAA Rgt, Chelsea, London
- * 497 HAA Rgt, Hammersmith
- * 499 HAA Rgt, Kensington
- * 562 S/L Rgt, Streatham
- * 570 LAA Rgt, Dulwich
- * 64 FC Trp
- 67 AA Brigade, Shepherds Bush
- * 452 HAA Rgt, Acton, London
- * 453 HAA Rgt, Shepherd's Bush
- * 454 HAA Rgt, Putney
- * 488 HAA Rgt, White City, London
- * 607 S/L Rgt, Twickenham
- * 67 FC Trp
- 75 AA Brigade, London SE3
- * 2 LAA Rgt, Finsbury
- * 460 HAA Rgt, Catford
- * 566 LAA Rgt, Sutton, London
- * 567 S/L Rgt, Shoreditch
- * 569 S/L Rgt, Blackheath, London
- * 75 FC Trp
- 82 AA Brigade, Heston
- * 479 HAA Rgt, Barnet
- * 571 LAA/SL Rgt, Edgware
- * 593 HAA Rgt, Harrow, London
- * 595 LAA Rgt, Kingsbury, London
- * 604 S/L Rgt, Wembley
- * 610 LAA Rgt, Cowley, London
- * 82 FC Trp
- 106 AA Brigade, Kingston upon Thames
- * 536 LAA Rgt, Chertsey
- * 565 LAA/SL Rgt, Kingston
- * 598 LAA Rgt, Croydon
- * 605 HAA Rgt, Brighton
- * 641 HAA Rgt, Worthing
- * 106 FC Trp
- 11 AA Signal Rgt, RCS, Kensington
- * 1 AA Group Signal Sqn
- 1 AA Group Transport Column, RASC, White City
- * 902 Company, White City
- * 903 Company, Mile End Road
- * 917 Company – to South Transport Column 1951
- * 919 Company, Barking
- * 927 Company, Norwich
- * 1932 Company, Stanford-le-Hope
- 1 AA Group Transport Column, RASC, Wandsworth
- * 900 Company, Wandsworth
- * 901 Company, Richmond upon Thames
- * 921 Company, Plumstead
- * 1933 Company
- 1 AA Group Ordnance Company, RAOC
- 6 AA Workshop Battalion, REME