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Harbor Defenses of Argentia and St. John's

Coordinates: 47°35′10″N 52°41′31″W / 47.58611°N 52.69194°W / 47.58611; -52.69194
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Harbor Defenses of Argentia & St. John's
Part of Harbor Defense Command
Avalon Peninsula in Dominion of Newfoundland
Coastal artillery battery at Fort Amherst
Coordinates47°35′10″N 52°41′31″W / 47.58611°N 52.69194°W / 47.58611; -52.69194
TypeCoastal Artillery
Site information
OwnerDepartment of War
Operator United States Army
1941 (1941) – 1945 (1945)
Site history
Built1941
Built by United States Army
In use1941 (1941) – 1945 (1945)
Battles/warsBattle of the Atlantic
Garrison information
GarrisonFort Pepperrell
US Army Coast Artillery Corps
Newfoundland Base Command
Occupants24th Coast Artillery
52nd Coast Artillery
53rd Coast Artillery
62nd Coast Artillery
422d Signal Battalion

The Harbor Defenses of Argentia and St. John's was a United States Army Coast Artillery Corps harbor defense command in World War II.[1] It was part of Newfoundland Base Command, established as a result of the 1940 Destroyers for Bases Agreement with the United Kingdom. It coordinated the US Army coast defenses of Naval Station Argentia and the port of St. John's, Newfoundland from January 1941 to 8 September 1945. These included coast artillery at Fort McAndrew in Argentia and Fort Pepperrell in St. John's.[2][3]

History

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On 15 January 1941, Newfoundland Base Command was activated on board the United States Army troop transport ship USAT Edmund B. Alexander at the New York Port of Embarkation. The ship departed for Argentia and St. John's on the 20th, arriving at Argentia on the 25th to drop off troops and construction personnel, and soon docking in St. John's as a barracks ship until May 1941, when housing for the garrison was finished.[4][5] The ship brought troops of the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, Battery A of the 57th Coast Artillery (Tractor Drawn) (TD) Regiment with four mobile 155 mm guns, and Battery B of the 62nd Coast Artillery (Anti-aircraft) (AA) Regiment.[6][7] It appears the 155 mm gun battery may have been split with two guns each at Argentia and St. John's; their presence at St. John's prior to 1942 is uncertain. It is likely the other units were split also. Although the harbor defense command was reportedly activated with the arrival of the 155 mm gun battery, it was on a small scale initially.[1] On 27 March 1941 the United States officially signed the Lend-Lease agreement which gave possession of the site for Fort Pepperrell (initially Camp Alexander) near St. John's; construction work began in earnest on 15 April.[8] The Naval Operating Base at Naval Station Argentia was commissioned on 15 July 1941; the adjacent Naval Air Station (NAS) Argentia was commissioned 28 August 1941.

On 20 July 1941 the 155 mm gun battery was redesignated[9] as Battery A, 53rd Coast Artillery (TD) Regiment, and on 1 August 1941 (some sources[which?] 1942) the AA battery was redesignated as Battery A, 421st CA (AA) Battalion (Separate).[10] At some time the remainder of the 421st probably arrived in Newfoundland.[according to whom?] On 14 April 1942 a second AA battalion, the 422nd CA (AA) (Composite) arrived in Newfoundland. On 11 November 1943 the CA (AA) battalions were redesignated as Antiaircraft Artillery (AAA) Battalions (Composite). Both battalions returned to the United States in January 1944.[11]

During 1941 two Lend-Lease 10-inch M1888 disappearing guns were emplaced at Fort Cape Spear near St. John's; these were manned by Canadian forces. Another pair of 10-inch guns were at Phillip's Head to guard Botwood in northern Newfoundland.[3] These were supplemented by at least two Canadian-manned QF 4.7-inch B Mark IV* guns at Fort Amherst; these were former field guns converted to fixed mountings. On 1 May 1941 part of Battery D, 52nd Coast Artillery (Railway) Regiment arrived at Fort Pepperrell with two 8-inch M1888 railway guns, initially emplaced at Signal Hill. At some point in 1942-43 they moved to Red Cliff.[12][13]

In the summer of 1941, USS Prairie (AD-15) deployed to Argentia to house flag headquarters for the base.

On 7 December 1941 the United States entered World War II following the attack on Pearl Harbor. Construction ramped up at US facilities in Newfoundland; for coast defense batteries this was primarily at Argentia. The major effort at this time was the construction of Battery 281 and Battery 282 at Fort McAndrew from January through October 1942. These batteries had two 6-inch guns each, on shielded long-range carriages with reinforced concrete and earth bunkers housing magazines and fire control equipment.[14]

Two indicator loop stations for magnetic detection of submarines were established in Newfoundland; a US Navy-manned station at Argentia (Station 1X)[15] and a Royal Canadian Navy-manned station at St. John's.[16]

On 14 February 1942 the 1st Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment was activated in Newfoundland, joining the 3rd Battalion; the remainder of the regiment arrived on 6 July 1942. The 2nd Battalion moved to Greenland at some point soon afterward, and the regiment departed Newfoundland in September 1943.[17] On 16 February 1942 the 8-inch and 155 mm batteries were redesignated as elements of the 24th Coast Artillery Regiment, which became the primary coast artillery unit in Newfoundland through October 1944 at least, and possibly to the end of hostilities. The regimental headquarters and two additional batteries arrived at Fort McAndrew on 25 March 1942.[18][19]

Coastal artillery sites

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By the end of 1942 the US-manned coast defense gun batteries in Newfoundland were as follows:[2][14][20]

Name No. of guns Gun type Carriage type Location
Battery 155 – Manuels 2 Canon de 155 mm GPF Panama mount 47°31′52″N 52°57′24″W / 47.53120°N 52.95673°W / 47.53120; -52.95673 (Manuels)
Battery 155 – Middle Cove 2 Canon de 155 mm GPF Panama mount 47°39′06″N 52°41′29″W / 47.65163°N 52.69126°W / 47.65163; -52.69126 (Middle Cove)
Battery 281 2 6-inch gun M1905 shielded barbette 47°17′26″N 53°58′46″W / 47.290422°N 53.979326°W / 47.290422; -53.979326 (Battery 281)
Battery 282 2 6-inch gun M1905 shielded barbette 47°16′25″N 53°59′22″W / 47.273682°N 53.989544°W / 47.273682; -53.989544 (Battery 282)
Battery 954 2 6-inch/50-caliber gun (Navy Mark 8) pedestal 47°16′43″N 54°00′08″W / 47.278580°N 54.002147°W / 47.278580; -54.002147 (Battery 954)
Battery 604 2 6"/50 caliber gun (Navy Mark 8) pedestal 47°18′51″N 54°00′16″W / 47.314169°N 54.004531°W / 47.314169; -54.004531 (Battery 604)
Battery 955 2 3-inch gun M1903 pedestal 47°19′21″N 53°56′59″W / 47.322600°N 53.949842°W / 47.322600; -53.949842 (Battery 955)
Bell Island Battery 2 QF 4.7-inch Mk I – IV naval gun Central Pivot Mounts Mark I. 47°37′49″N 52°55′36″W / 47.63039°N 52.9267°W / 47.63039; -52.9267 (Bell Island)
Cape Spear Battery 2 8-inch M1888 railway guns railway 47°31′21″N 52°37′22″W / 47.52257°N 52.62277°W / 47.52257; -52.62277 (Cape Spear)
Chain Rock AMTB Battery 2 75 mm gun M2–M6 pedestal 47°34′03″N 52°41′15″W / 47.56759°N 52.68753°W / 47.56759; -52.68753 (Chain Rock AMTB)
Anti-Motor Torpedo Boat Battery (AMTB) Roche Point 4 90 mm gun 2 fixed, 2 mobile 47°19′02″N 53°58′41″W / 47.317214°N 53.977933°W / 47.317214; -53.977933 (AMTB Roche Point)
AMTB Ship Harbour Point 4 90 mm gun 2 fixed, 2 mobile 47°21′09″N 53°55′36″W / 47.352451°N 53.926576°W / 47.352451; -53.926576 (AMTB Ship Harbour Point)
Fort Amherst 2 Casemated QF 4.7-inch gun pedestal 47°33′49″N 52°40′48″W / 47.5636°N 52.67987°W / 47.5636; -52.67987 (Fort Amherst)
Fort Chain Rock 2 75mm gun pedestal 47°34′03″N 52°41′16″W / 47.5675°N 52.68769°W / 47.5675; -52.68769 (Fort Chain Rock)
Lewisporte Battery 2 75mm gun pedestal 49°14′40″N 55°03′17″W / 49.244565°N 55.054635°W / 49.244565; -55.054635 (Lewisporte)
Phillip's Head Battery 2 Casemated 4.7" QF gun pedestal 49°13′29″N 55°18′06″W / 49.224601°N 55.301536°W / 49.224601; -55.301536 (Phillip's Head)
Red Cliff Battery 2 8-inch M1888 railway gun railway 47°38′48″N 52°39′41″W / 47.646611°N 52.661472°W / 47.646611; -52.661472 (Red Cliff)
Signal Hill Battery 2 8-inch M1888 railway gun railway 47°34′15″N 52°40′52″W / 47.57087°N 52.68113°W / 47.57087; -52.68113 (Signal Hill)
T8503 2 Canon de 155 mm GPF Panama mount 48°31′53″N 58°33′26″W / 48.5314°N 58.55717°W / 48.5314; -58.55717 (Bell Island)
Battery AMTB - Black Point 2 90 mm gun M1/M2/M3 pedestal 47°11′40″N 54°02′25″W / 47.19458°N 54.04035°W / 47.19458; -54.04035 (Black Point)
Blackhead Battery 2 A two-gun dummy (decoy) battery 47°31′52″N 52°38′34″W / 47.531067°N 52.642834°W / 47.531067; -52.642834 (Blackhead)
Wiseman's Cove Battery 2 8-inch M1888 railway gun railway 49°13′52″N 55°13′41″W / 49.231094°N 55.228066°W / 49.231094; -55.228066 (Wiseman's Cove)

The Anti-Motor Torpedo Boat (AMTB) batteries had four 90 mm dual-purpose guns each, two on fixed mounts and two on towed mounts.

The 24th Coast Artillery was reduced to a battalion on 23 March 1943. The unit was partially inactivated in January 1944 (HHB and one battery inactivated; one source says fully inactivated),[19] and in October 1944 the battalion was reorganized with at least one battery inactivated. If fully inactivated, possibly its functions and personnel were transferred to the harbor defense command. Its date of return to the US is unclear, and unusually it was not fully inactivated until 8 September 1945.[18][19]

Post World War II

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Following the war, it was soon determined that gun defenses were obsolete, and most guns (unusually, not the Canadian-manned guns mentioned or Batteries 281 and 282) were scrapped by the end of 1948.[21] Argentia remained a US Navy station until 1994, and Fort Pepperrell became Pepperrell Air Force Base in 1947, but was transferred to Canada as CFS St. John's in 1961.

Campaign streamers

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World War II

  • American Theater without inscription[1]

Present

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The pair of Canadian-manned 10-inch guns at Fort Cape Spear remain in place without carriages, and the pair of 4.7-inch guns at Fort Amherst are still mounted as of 2014.[22] Unusually, the four guns of Batteries 281 and 282 were never scrapped. Battery 282's pair of 6-inch guns remain in place, while Battery 281's guns and mountings were shipped to Fort Columbia in Washington state, US for display at a similar battery there in 1993.[23][24]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Stanton, p. 478
  2. ^ a b Coast defenses in Newfoundland at the Coast Defense Study Group website
  3. ^ a b Berhow, p. 225
  4. ^ Conn, pp. 384-385
  5. ^ Fort Pepperrell at FortWiki.com
  6. ^ Stanton, pp. 199, 460-461
  7. ^ Gaines, pp. 33, 38
  8. ^ Conn, pp. 385-386
  9. ^ Technically, "transferred less personnel and equipment" back to their parent unit
  10. ^ Gaines, p. 28, 38
  11. ^ Stanton, p. 498
  12. ^ Gaines, p. 26
  13. ^ Signal Hill Battery at FortWiki.com
  14. ^ a b Fort McAndrew at FortWiki.com
  15. ^ Indicator loop website
  16. ^ Indicator loops in Canada
  17. ^ Stanton, p. 199
  18. ^ a b Gaines, p. 16
  19. ^ a b c Stanton, p. 484
  20. ^ Fort Pepperrell at FortWiki.com
  21. ^ Berhow, p. 206
  22. ^ Berhow, pp. 234, 242
  23. ^ Berhow, pp. 235-236
  24. ^ List of surviving seacoast weapons at the CDSG website as of 2014 (PDF download)
  • Berhow, Mark A., ed. (2015). American Seacoast Defenses, A Reference Guide (Third ed.). McLean, Virginia: CDSG Press. ISBN 978-0-9748167-3-9.
  • Conn, Stetson; Engelman, Rose C.; Fairchild, Byron (2000) [1964], Guarding the United States and its Outposts, United States Army in World War II, Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, United States Army, archived from the original on 2007-12-25, retrieved 2018-02-07
  • Gaines, William C., Coast Artillery Organizational History, 1917-1950, Coast Defense Journal, vol. 23, issue 2, p. 16
  • Stanton, Shelby L. (1991). World War II Order of Battle. Galahad Books. ISBN 0-88365-775-9.
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