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Vision
The SA Army Artillery Formation
shall be the world leader with a balanced, affordable and technologically
advanced capability, capable of executing its tasks effectively and
efficiently.
Mission
The SA Army Artillery Formation,
as the center of excellence of the SA Army, plans, prepares and provides
combat ready artillery regiments, batteries, teams and individuals,
supported to the 1st line (command) and 2nd line (control) to the Chief of
the SA National Defence Force.
History
Motto
UBIQUE - Everywhere
The traditional motto of artillery is UBIQUE
(Everywhere). This relates to the fact that it
has been deployed all over the world and to its
ability to provide fire in depth over a wide
front.
Employment
The SA Army Artillery Formation accepts the
following as being the principles to which its
functioning and employment should conform:
- Concentration of firepower
- Offensive action
- Surprise
- Flexibility
- Simplicity
- Maintenance of morale and discipline
- Manoeuvrability
- Economic employment of effort, means and
manpower
- Intelligence
- Cooperation
- Logistic Support
- Maintenance of reserves at all levels
- Security
- Safety
Guiding Principles
The SA Army Artillery Formation requires, in
addition, that the following guiding principles
be adhered to in the performance of
artillery-related tasks:
- Sense of urgency
- Simultaneous action
- The independent act
Artillery Traditions
The Artillery is very rich in traditions.
Here are some of our proud traditions:
Introduction
- Tradition is born of many things. It
usually consists of tales, beliefs or
practices handed down from generation to
generation.
- Regiments are like families. As men come
and go, so customs are handed down,
sometimes odd customs which might now seem
almost meaningless, but which made sense
when they originated. These traditions hold
a unit together and instill in it a pride
and esprit de corps
unique to the unit.
- Gunners are particularly fortunate in
having almost world-wide tradition to weld
them into a unique body of men - men who are
proud to be known as gunners. The
forerunners of today's gunners were not
soldiers in the accepted sense and, for well
over a century, by virtue of its origin and
characteristics, the artillery developed as
something of a distinct entity - almost a
separate force. Consequently, its members
have always felt themselves somewhat
superior to the ordinary soldier.
- These traditions have led gunners to
develop a justifiable sense of superiority
over the ages, for they serve the Gun, which
bears the title of
Ultima Ratio Regum - the last
argument of kings and which provides
firepower far beyond the capacity of all
other weapons.
The Bore
In 1739, an innovation made it possible to
cast a gun in a single solid mass and bore the
chamber afterwards (hence the term "bore").
The Piece
Early cannon had no special carriages. A
Scottish Act of Parliament in 1456, for
instance, speaks of "Carts of War" for conveying
light artillery. Guns were known collectively as
ordnance, and cannons were thus individually
called pieces of ordnance hence the word "piece"
as applied to the gun today.
Spiking the Guns
When all efforts to prevent guns from being
captured by the enemy failed, such guns were
spiked. Spiking is an artillery term dating back
many years and it refers to the old method of
driving a spike or wedge into the touch-hole or
vent so that the gun could not be fired,
rendering it completely useless to the enemy.
Naming of Guns
- Guns were originally named after various
kinds of monsters, according to their size
and individual features. Mortars, used
extensively by the artillery, were named
after the German "meerthier", meaning "sea
beast".
- In Germany, heavy guns (bombards) gave
way as early as 1385 to lighter ones mounted
on wood and supported by a fork or hook,
hence the name "HakenbUsche", corrupted by
the English to "Hackbutt", "Hagbush" and
finally "Harquebus". The piece was later
improved by the fitting of a stock, and the
whole weapon was reduced in scale and made
small enough to be carried by hand. Thus the
rifle was in fact developed from the gun
although the reverse might commonly be
supposed.
- The name "Howitzer", derived from the
German "Haubitze", came into use in about
1750 and provides another example of the
process described above.
Bombardier
The rank of Bombardier is exclusively an
artillery rank. It was created in 1686, and
holders of this rank worked directly under the
fire-workers, performing specialised duty with
mortars. Until 1920 the word "Corporal" denoted
the artillery rank between Sergeant and
Bombardier.
First Permanent Force
Artillery
Henry VII, King of England (1485 - 1509), was
keenly interested in artillery and formed the
first permanent force of gunners when he
appointed a "Master Gunner" and twelve paid
"Gunners" at the Tower of London. It was their
duty to look after equipment and to train
partly-paid civilians in the art of gunnery.
When artillery was required for a campaign, it
was organised as a "trayne" to which certain
pieces of ordnance were allotted, together with
"Master Gunners", "Mates" and Mattrosses", the
latter being "Gunners" Assistants. Wherever the
"trayne" went, it was followed by wagons
carrying all the equipment and comforts of life,
including camp followers. The phrase "Son of a
Gun", originally a term of abuse, is supposed to
have sprung from this practice.
The Gunner Officer
- Many years ago, officers were always
wealthy young gentlemen of nobility who were
able to purchase commissions in the
regiments of their choice.
- They could pay their way up to Captain
or even Lieutenant Colonel before the age of
twenty-one, giving the barest minimum of
attention to military duties.
- From the start, it had been the custom
to promote artillery officers from the ranks
because of the specialised knowledge
required of them. Even in the 18th century,
gunnery was a science. Gunner officers had
to be prepared for really intensive study in
order to acquire a grounding in mathematics,
ballistics, chemistry, personnel management
and horse management, as well as many other
subjects.
- As a result, the artillery tended to
attract men of a different stamp from those
of the dashing and socially conscious
cavalry and infantry regiments.
- In the social climate of those days,
artillery officers, and gunners in general,
given the cold shoulder.
- Distrust of the artillery as a body of
pampered specialists persisted until the
early 20th century. This prejudice may have
encouraged the gunner's feeling of
superiority.
Batmen or Servants
Unlike cavalry and infantry officers, the
artillery officer has always preferred to look
after himself without the help of a servant. An
order of 1740 provided that "no subaltern
officer is for the future to have a servant out
of one of the companies".
Discipline
- The dangerous nature of the early gun
power necessitated strict discipline in
order to avoid accidents, although
discipline in general has always been strict
in artillery units.
- A tradition unique to gunners is that
they never walk but run, elbows bent and
arms held against the chest.
Artillery Colours
- The gun symbolises battle. It makes a
loud noise, spews out flames, and kills men
by the score. As a sculpture in metal, it
strikes the eye with a sinister impact. All
bodies of fighting men rally upon some
object - an eagle, a banner or the colours -
which gradually starts to possess magical
and totemistic value. To carry the colours
or to die in their defence was an honour,
and to lose them was a disgrace. Gunners of
all nations invest their pride and trust in
the gun itself, upon which they rally and
which, as a point of honour, must be
prevented at all costs from falling intact
into the hands of the enemy.
- The guns are the standards or colours of
the artillery and other arms are to treat
them in the same manner as infantry colours.
Troops on guard duty should present arms
whenever a troop of manned and dressed guns
is towed past them.
- The gun is thus treated with veneration
and respect. It is cleaned, polished, oiled
and looked after with care. No effort is to
be spared in the duty of maintaining the
gun: even in the heat of battle. the gunner
will maintain it and keep it clean, for to
him the gun is the symbol of his superiority
to all other corps in the combat services.
Lanyards on the Right
Shoulder
- "Why do gunners wear lanyards on the
right shoulder and not on the left?" This is
a question often asked.
- Like all mounted corps and regiments
they used to wear their lanyards on the left
shoulder, with the jack-knife on the end
housed in the top left pocket. This
continued until a few years after the end of
the Great War (1914 - 1918).
- The Depot Royal Artillery (RA) was
formed at Woolwich in the early 1920s for
the training of recruits, a task previously
carried out in other, smaller depots.
- In command of the Depot RA was Major
General Geoffrey White, an individualist
with strong ideas about turn-out and
smartness based on practical reasoning. He
noticed that recruits unskilled in rifle
drill were apt, when ordering arms from
slope, to disarrange the lanyard as the
rifle passed down the left shoulder. This
also shifted the bandolier.
- In 1924, therefore, he ordered that the
lanyard and bandolier be worn over the right
shoulder. Gunners generally adopted the
lanyard change, and on the right they have
since remained; but, since bandoliers had to
be altered by a saddler if so worn, they
were left unchanged. It is probable that the
left shoulder was originally favored for the
wearing of such accoutrements in order that
the sword arm, also used for saluting,
should be free from encumbrances such as
lanyards and cap-lines.
Code of Conduct for
Artillery Soldiers
"The status now conferred on me, as an
Artillery Soldier, carries a special
responsibility and demands of me a special sense
of duty. I will, therefore, also be held
accountable by law and the Code of Conduct, for
the manner I carry out my duty.
I, as an Artillery Soldier, solemnly take the
following pledge:
- I will, at all times
- apply the three golden rules of the
Artillery:
- Do an independent check on all
technical work
- Think and plan in advance
- Ensure that simultaneous actions
take place
- have a sense of urgency
- protect my launcher at the risk of
my own life
- ensure that all Artillery equipment
remains serviceable and maintained
according to doctrine
- ensure that Artillery teamwork is
done professionally to enhance
comradeship and the sharing of Artillery
common goals and values
- ensure that my physical fitness is
up to standard as required for an
Artillery Soldier
- obey and apply the "SA National
Defence Force Code of Conduct"
"This is my solemn
pledge, so be it" |