135th Australian Heavy Anti-Aircraft Battery
From Our Contribution
[[File:]] | |
Brief History
Originally raised as the 5th Anti-Aircraft Battery (Militia) in Perth during March 1940. The militia members were called to full time service in March 1941 and the unit, now known as 5th Australian Anti-Aircraft Battery, manned positions at Skinner Street, Buckland Hill and Scotsman Hill o provide cover for the port of Fremantle. By June additional sites were manned at East Fremantle Oval and North Fremantle. In July the Skinner Street and Scotsman Hill sites had been transferred to the 29th Anti-Aircraft Battery, allowing the 5th Anti-Aircraft Battery to take control of 417th HAA Gun Station on Rottnest Island; the 419th HAA Gun Station at Buckland Hill; 421st HAA Gun Station at East Fremantle Oval and 422nd HAA Gun Station at North Fremantle. During November some of the unit's personnel were used to form "X" AA Battery which was then sent to Exmouth to establish AA positions and then hand them to Victorian AA unit, before returning to Fremantle to join the rest of the battery as it prepared to move to Darwin in January 1943, minus the 417 and 419 AA Gun Stations which transferred to the 29th Australian Anti-Aircraft Battery.
In Darwin the unit began by providing protection to the Hughes and Strauss airfields south of Darwin. It was in February 1944 that the unit was restructured as the 135th Australian Heavy Anti-Aircraft Battery with 'A' and 'B' Troops which in May moved to protect Long airfield before returning to the Hughes sites in July. With reduced enemy activity, anti-aircraft units were concentrated before moving to Wallgrove in December with personnel gradually dispersing before the unit was formally disbanded in May 1945.
Unit Personnel
Notes
Content has come from The Unit Guide - Volume 3 - The Australian Army 1939-1945, pages 3.253 & 3.254 - Graham R McKenzie-Smith - Big Sky Publishing - 2018