- 46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery during the Great War -
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46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
XLVI Brigade, Royal Field Artillery, served as Divisional Artillery with 14th (Light) Division. 14th (Light) Division was formed as part of Kitchener's First New Army and after training they proceeded to France. They fought in the The Action of Hooge, being the first division to be attacked by flamethrowers. They were in action in The Second Attack on Bellewaarde. In 1916 they were on the Somme seeing action in The Battle of Delville Wood and The Battle of Flers-Courcelette. In 1917 they fought in The German retreat to the Hindenburg Line, The First and Third Battle of the Scarpe at Arras, The Battle of Langemark and The First and Second Battle of Passchendaele. In 1918 they returned to the Somme and were in action during The Battle of St Quentin and The Battle of the Avre, suffering very heavy casualties with almost 6,000 men of the Division killed or injured, 46th and 47th Brigades RFA lost all their guns. The Division was withdrawn from the front line and were engaged building a new defensive line to the rear. On the 26th of April, the infantry battalions were reduced to a training cadre and on the 17th of June the Division returned to England for re-establishment. They returned to France in the first week of July and joined Second Army, seeing action at Ypres 1918 and in the final advance in Flanders
18th Feb 1915 Training
27th May 1915 On the Move
16th Jun 1915 Demonstration
21st Jun 1915 Orders to Attack
22nd of June 1915 Attacks ordered
23rd September 1915 Order
23rd Sep 1915 Orders
25th Sep 1915 In Action
25th Sep 1915 Attack Made
25th Sep 1915 Attack Made
1st Feb 1916 Misty
1st Feb 1916 Shelling
2nd Feb 1916 Bombardment
2nd Feb 1916 Artillery Active
2nd Mar 1916 Objective Captured
7th Jan 1917 Reorganisation
11th of April 1917 Reliefs
24th of April 1917 OrdersIf you can provide any additional information, please add it here.
Want to know more about 46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery?
There are:5248 items tagged 46th 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
46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
during the Great War 1914-1918.
- Burke George. Dvr. (d.2nd Jul 1915)
- Mahony Cornelius. Gnr.
- Roach Cyrus Owen. FarrierQMS. (d.23rd Aug 1915)
- Robison William Alexander. Sgt. (d.25th September 1915)
- Searle MM.. William. Sgt. (d.3rd Nov 1916)
- Spencer MM.. Percy. Dvr. (d.8th Sep 1916)
- Waterman Alfred. Gnr. (d.17th Sep 1916)
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 46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery from other sources.
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1205985Gnr. Alfred Waterman 46th Bde. C Battery. Royal Field Artillery (d.17th Sep 1916)
Alfred Waterman died of wounds on the 17th of September 1916 and is buried in the Dartmouth British Cemetery in France. He enlisted in January 1915, trained in Leeds and later was to join C Battery. He was married Nellie in Southend, Essex, sometime in June 1915 and was sent to France in October 1915, he died of wounds on Sunday 17/09/1916.s flynn
259060Gnr. Cornelius Mahony 46th Brigade, A Battery Royal Field Artilery
My great-grandfather, Cornelius Mahony, served in WW1 and was taken POW. He served with 46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery and was probably captured in France. It would appear that he was moved at least once during his time as POW. He returned to the UK on the 29th of November 1918. He returned to Hull on the S.S Porto.Cerys Mahony
249784Sgt. William Alexander Robison 46th Brigade Royal Field Artillery (d.25th September 1915)
William Robison served with 46th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery.David McKerrow
221094FarrierQMS. Cyrus Owen Roach Royal Field Artillery (d.23rd Aug 1915)
Cyrus Roach served during Anglo Boer War and was apparently serving in India for 10yrs. He received the Royal Humane Society Medal for bravery for saving the life of a pallbearer on the Brahmaputra River. However this has been told through family members but cannot find evidence of this. His original Headstone at Bodmin has been replaced with CWWGC which apparently was put on after the death of Cyrus Owens' spouse Naomi Edith Ethel Maud Roach and the Original headstone was not put back, but it has been told to me by my father that there were a lot of decorations on the original headstone. Unfortunately a lot of photos and information have been burnt and I only have snippets told to me by surviving relatives.Cyrus Owen apparently was a Farrier Quarter Master Sergeant who also was a Veterinary Surgeon or what we now today would call Animal Husbandry. He served with the 17th Battery Royal Field Artillery during WW1 and died at Ayot Exeter on the 23rd August 1915. From the photo he was with C Battery (Farriers), 46th Brigade, RFA
Christopher Roach
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