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- 88th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

88th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery



   88th Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery was a territorial unit raised at White City, London in April 1939. It was initially made up of 281st, 282nd and 283rd Batteries. The unit was re-designated 88th Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment in June 1940. They saw action in Home Defence, in North Africa, Sicily and Italy.

 


If you can provide any additional information, especially on actions and locations at specific dates, please add it here.



Those known to have served with

88th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

  • Paxton Arthur Sydney. L/Bmdr.
  • West Thomas. L/Bmbdr. (d.28th Oct 1943)

The 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 88th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery from other sources.



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Want to know more about 88th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery?


There are:0 items tagged 88th Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery available in our Library

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


L/Bmbdr. Thomas West 253rd Bty. 81st HAA Regiment Royal Artillery (d.28th Oct 1943)

Thomas West was the son of my great-grandmother Clara and her first husband William, who was declared missing presumed dead on the 20th of November 1917 during the first world war.
Emma Bryer



L/Bmdr. Arthur Sydney Paxton 282 Bty. 88th HAA Regiment Royal Artillery

282 Bty., 88th HAA at Enfield

Arthur Paxton in North Africa with his pal Bunty

Arthur Paxton and pals in North Africa

Arthur Paxton, North Africa 1942

My late father, Arthur Paxton, signed up in the Territorial Army in March 1939. He was called up for service in August 1939 with the Royal Artillery, 88th HAA Regiment, 282nd Battery. He was initially stationed at White City. From the regiment’s diaries I know he was stationed around London including Enfield, Epping Forest, and Mill Hill.

In July 1941, Batteries 281, 282, and 283 were deployed to the Middle East. They arrived at Port Tewfik in Egypt on 23rd of July 1941. The 282nd Battery consisted of 11 officers and 346 ordinary ranks. Batteries 281 and 283 were a similar size. They were deployed in the Suez area, tasked with defending the Port of Alexandria and the Suez Canal. In October 1941 they were moved to defend the desert landing grounds in preparation for Operation Crusader in the Western Desert. This operation lasted until January 1942, when Rommel counter-attacked. In May 1942, my dad’s regiment was moved to Tobruk, where the 282nd Battery suffered major losses in June.

My father was listed as missing at Tobruk on 20th of June 1942 and is then listed as a POW captured in Cyrenaica. From Tobruk he was taken to Italy, and there is a WO telegram dated September 1942 confirming he was a POW in Italian hands. He is listed as a POW but with no camp allocated, which leads me to believe that he was in a work camp.

We have a family story that when Italy surrendered, my dad was being taken from Italy to Germany and the train he was being transported on was bombed by allied aircraft and he and many others escaped. This could be the Bridge at Allerona, but I can find no corroborating evidence for this. He then hid in the mountains, begging and stealing food from the local farmers. He was recaptured as he was trying to make his way back to Allied lines.

I know that he next turned up at the main prisoner transit camp at Mantova, before being transported by train through the Brenner Pass to Germany. He was initially held during August 1944 at POW camp VII-A before being transferred to Stalag XI-A at Altengrabow in Saxony. Stalag XI-A was liberated by the Americans, and my father was repatriated in May 1945. His POW number was 135310.

I have my father's military service record and the ICRC POW record, but neither gives me any detail as to where my father was held during the 2 years he was a prisoner in Italy. I would love to find out more about my father's time in Italy if anyone can help me.

Michael Paxton









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