General Dan Pienaar Artillery Regiment Explained

Unit Name:Free State Artillery Corps
Vrystaatse Artillerie Regiment
General Dan Pienaar Artillery Regiment
Dates:1854 to present
Allegiance:
Branch:
    Type:Reserve Artillery
    Command Structure:South African Army Artillery Formation
    Army Conventional Reserve
    Garrison:Kroonstad
    Motto:Aequo Animo Ac Virtute " Power gives peace of mind"
    Battle Honours:
    • Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902
    • Tobruk
    • El-Alamein
    • South-West Africa
    Commander1 Label:Officer Commanding
    Identification Symbol:Bursting grenade with seven flames
    Identification Symbol Label:Collar Badge
    Identification Symbol 2:Oxford Blue
    Identification Symbol 2 Label:Beret Colour
    Identification Symbol 3 Label:Artillery Battery Emblems
    Identification Symbol 4 Label:Artillery Beret Bar circa 1992
    Identification Symbol 5:GDPR
    Identification Symbol 5 Label:Abbreviation

    The General Dan Pienaar Artillery Regiment (formerly the Vrystaatse Artillerie Regiment) is a reserve artillery regiment of the South African Army.

    History

    Origin

    The First Regiment

    In 1854 the Free-State became an independent Republic. The British forces withdrew, leaving behind four 9-pounder garrison guns in the Queen's Fort in Bloemfontein. This was for many years the only ordnance the Free State Republic had.

    The Free State Artillery Corps was subsequently founded in 1864 on a request by President Johannes Henricus Brand and housed in Queen's Fort.

    Anglo Boer War

    By the outbreak of the Anglo-Boer War, the corps was commanded by Major Richard Friedrich Wilhelm Albrecht. The unit (in 1898 some 160 men, 24 cannons of various calibers) served on the Western front, Natal front and into the Guerrilla phase of the War. The unit played a major role in every major battle of the war where Free State forces fought.

    The Second Regiment

    In 1922, 3 Permanent Battery was formed. This unit was split up on 1 July 1926 into two units namely 4 Burgher Battery and 5 Burgher Battery.

    In 1932 these two were renamed 1 Oranje-Vrystaat Veldartillerie and 2 Oranje Vrystaat Veldartillerie.

    World War 2

    On 1 February 1940 these units were joined as 12th Field Battery and saw service in Egypt. They took heavy casualties at Tobruk and El-Alamein.

    On 18 April 1946 the unit was renamed 6 Field Artillery Regiment.

    Post WW 2

    Vrystaatse Artillerie Regiment was based at Tempe, Bloemfontein, but relocated to Kroonstad in 2007.[1] The relocation coincided with the revitalization of the unit through the joining of Army Territorial Reserve members with the closing of the Commandos.

    Name Change

    In August 2019, 52 Reserve Force units had their names changed to reflect the diverse military history of South Africa.[2] The Vrystaatse Artillerie Regiment became the General Dan Pienaar Artillery Regiment, and have 3 years to design and implement new regimental insignia.[3]

    The current honorific is a remembrance of Major General Dan Pienaar, who served in both World Wars and was more known as commander of the 1st South African Infantry Division, which served the Allied forces and was part of the victorious forces that took part in the Second Battle of El Alamein (October 1942).

    Battle honours

    Officers Commanding

    RSM

    2007–Present MWO H.Beyers

    Freedom of the city

    Bloemfontein

    2012 Ladysmith

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. http://gunners.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/The-Gunner-book1-1.pdf
    2. News: New Reserve Force unit names. defenceWeb. 7 August 2019. 9 January 2021.
    3. News: Renaming process has resulted in an Army structure that truly represents SA. 16 August 2019. IOL. 8 January 2020.