- 123 Brigade, Royal Field Artillery during the Great War -
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123 Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
123rd Brigade, Royal Field Artillery served with 37th Division on the Western Front during the Great War.
22nd July 1915 Advance Party
28th July 1915 On the Move
28th July 1915 On the Move
29th July 1915 On the Move
29th Jul 1915 On the Move
29th July 1915 On the Move
30th Jul 1915 On the Move
31st Jul 1915 On the Move
1st Aug 1915 In Billets
1st Aug 1915 On the Move
3rd Aug 1915 In Billets
4th Aug 1915 On the March
4th Aug 1915 On the Move
5th Aug 1915 On the Move
5th Aug 1915 Orders
5th Aug 1915 Training Instruction
5th Aug 1915 Billets
8th Aug 1915 Training
29th Dec 1915 Quiet
4th June 1916 Shelling
1st Jul 1916 Trench Raid
1st July 1916 Smoke
2nd July 1916 Reliefs
3rd July 1916 Shelling
4th July 1916 Reliefs
5th July 1916 Orders
6th July 1916 Moves
7th July 1916 Moves
8th July 1916 Moves
9th July 1916 Orders
12th July 1916 Quiet
13th Sep 1916 Orders
15th Sep 1916 Artillery Moves
16th Sep 1916 Orders Received
17th Sep 1916 Reliefs
30th November 1916 Left Group operational Order No. 1.
30th November 1916 Issued with Left Group Operation Order No.1.
16th of December 1916 Enemy Very Quiet
23rd of December 1916 Artillery Relief
28th of December 1916 Artillery Continue Shelling
31st of January 1917 Two Patrols Dispersed
2nd February 1917 Reliefs
9th April 1917 37th Divison move up at Arras 13th Battalion, Rifle Brigade with 37th Division were in reserve initially at the launch of the Battle of Arras. After initial success the 37th moved up through the lines to continue the attack. This was the area of the Brown Line and having reached here, the 37th Division was brought up through the other Divisions in order to carry the attack into Monchy. This was supposed to have happened on the evening of 9 April, but a sudden turn in the weather made advancing much more difficult. It was so cold that men would freeze to death during the night. That evening the 37th continued the attack in the face of snow past Feuchy Chapel reaching an area known as Orange Hill to the south-east of Monchy
10th April 1917 Attack Made It was only on the night of 10 April that the 37th Division including 13th Battalion, Rifle Brigade and its six supporting tanks were in a position to consider mounting an attack on Monchy. The attack was delivered with the 11th Brigade on the left facing Monchy and the 112th on their right advancing towards La Bergère crossroads (where you will see the Windmill CWGC Cemetery and turn left towards Monchy). Standing up on this hill by the monument you get an immediate understanding as to why the village was so important and why the Germans had spent such a long time fortifying it (The Newfoundland Caribou is erected on top of a German bunker). The attack got off to a bad start. At 0500 hours on a freezing cold morning the infantry and tanks set off across the snow, but the artillery was late in getting into position and when they did eventually open their bombardment they began by shelling the advancing troops who had not been warned of any postponement. Amongst the numerous casualties of this friendly fire was one of the tanks. By 0900 hours though, Monchy was in British hands. The Germans launched a number of counter-attacks but these were driven off. The village remained in Allied hands until it was abandoned during the German Spring offensive of 1918. Monchy was finally retaken again by the Canadians on 26th of August 1918 over three days and at remarkably little cost in terms of casualties, General Allenby's 3rd Army had made remarkable gains.
10th Apr 1917 Attack Made
10th April 1917 Situation
11th Apr 1917 Village Taken
11th Apr 1917 Attack Made
12th Apr 1917 Reliefs
6th May 1917 In Action
14th May 1917 New Position
30th of June 1917 Another Move
1st Jul 1917 Shelling
1st Jul 1917 At Rest
2nd Jul 1917 Posting
3rd Jul 1917 On the March
29th Jul 1917 Reliefs
27th Mar 1918 Reliefs
5th Apr 1918 Attack Made
22nd of August 1918 A New Objective
3rd of September 1918 Enemy Withdraws
4th of September 1918 Divisional Relief
1st of October 1918 Division Relieved
13th of October 1918 Attack Repulsed
23rd of October 1918 Heavy Bombardment
11th of November 1918 Armistice and a ReportIf you can provide any additional information, please add it here.
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123 Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
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219814Gnr. John Gough B Battery, 123 Brigade Royal Field Artillery (d.4th May 1917)
John Gough was the elder brother of my Nan. He served with the Royal Field Artillery, B Battery, 123 Brigade. He died on May 4th 1917 and is buried at the Bucquoy Road cemetery, Ficheaux, Pas de Calais. I can find no details regarding his death, other than his medal card which simply states dead. His CWGC commemoration says died of wounds, but I have no other details. Clearly the Brigade were involved in the battle for Arras, and it was obviously a busy time. However, even the brigade war diary is not completed for the month of May.I would be delighted if anyone can cast light on his death or those of the RFA in this early part of the battle. His Sister, my Nan lived to the ripe old age of 101, but said very little about him. She was deeply hurt at his death and remembered his birthday until her own death.
Michael Davies
217490Capt. Robert Burnside Carter MC. Royal Army Medical Corps
Robert Burnside Carter left Sydney on 22 March 1915 to join the Royal Army Medical Corps in England with several other young Australian doctors. His brother, Lieutenant Colonel Herbert Gordon Carter also served in the First World War with the Australian Imperial Force. A doctor by profession, Carter was made a temporary Lieutenant on 23rd March 1915.Sometime after its formation in September 1915, he was transferred to the Royal Field Artillery of the 123rd Brigade of the British Army as its regimental medical officer. Along with the 122nd and 124th Brigades, the 123rd Brigade was part of the 41st Division, a new division formed at the beginning of the war that was deployed to France in May 1916. The division participated in the Battles of the Somme (1916), the Battle of Messines (1917), the Battles of Ypres (1917), the First Battles of the Somme (1918), the Battles of the Lys (1918), and the final advance in Flanders (1918). Robert Carter's award of the Military Cross was published in the London Gazette on 3 June 1919.
s flynn
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