The first attempt by the South African Republic to form a professional full-time artillery unit was Batterij Dingaan, which could be seen as the forerunner of the Transvaalse Staatsartillerie. The use of artillery pieces was not completely foreign to the Boers and that they had used the few that they had to great effect during some battles that occurred during the Great Trek. However, prior to the formation of Batterij Dingaan, all artillery units of the ZAR were part-time volunteers, organised under its commando system. In 1874, President Thomas Francois Burgers purchased some artillery pieces, for the intended permanent artillery corps of the ZAR, in Europe and also recruited a number of European officers in order to assist in the organisation and development of this corps, due to the lack of adequately trained and experienced artillery officers in the ZAR. The first artillery pieces purchased were 4 Krupp 6,5 cm mountain guns and one obsolete French Mitrailleuse. The unit was commanded by Captain Otto Riedell, a former Austrian artillery officer. However, after the British annexation of the ZAR on 12 April 1877, Batterij Dingaan was disbanded. The members of the battery, most of who were not citizens of the ZAR, joined the three British volunteer corps, which had been created in order to assist the garrison with the defence of Pretoria. Shortly after the British occupation of the ZAR ended in 1881, the executive council of the ZAR mandated the formation of the Artillerie Korps van de Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek. During the same year the executive council also mandated the formation of the Transvaalsche Rijdende Politie Korps. This police force was amalgamated with the artillery corps in 1882 under the name of Transvaalsche Artillerie Corps. However, this amalgamation was found to be unfeasible and the artillery and policing functions were subsequently separated again. The artillery formation was named the Staatsartillerie van de Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek and had a strictly military function and structure. Batteries of the Staatsartillerie went on to serve in the Malaboch War and the Mahoeba War.
After the Jameson Raid, the government of the ZAR decided to build a fort around the prison in Johannesburg as well as forts to defend Pretoria. In order to man these forts, the formation of a separate Vesting Artillerie was proposed. In 1898, despite some resistance to this idea, the Volksraad approved increasing the manpower of the Staatsartillerie by 100 men in order to form the Corps Vesting Artillerie. This Corps was organised as an arm of the Staatsartillerie. By 1899 the Fortress Artillery Corps had grown to a unit with 9 officers and 148 men. At this time, the Staatsartillerie was under the overall command of a lieutenant-colonel and was subdivided into several units, including:
Field Artillery Corps
Fortress Artillery Corps
Telegraphic Section
Medical Section
Military Band
With the outbreak of the Anglo-Boer War, the unit was reorganised. The Fortress Artillery was disbanded and the Military band was redesignated as Medical assistants. The main armament of the Staatsartillerie consisted of C96 Krupp 77 mm Field guns, 75mm Creusot field guns, 37mm Vickers Maxim "Pom-Pom", 120mm Krupp Howitzers and the famous 4 155mm Creusot Fortress guns or "Long Toms". The unit was divided into four divisions and sent to Natal, Mafeking, Colesberg and Kimberley. The Natal Front guns was commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel S.P.E. Trichardt, the Kimberley guns by Lieutenant Arthur Carlblom, the Mafeking guns by Captain Piet van der Merwe and the Colesberg guns by Lieutenant Willem Baay. With the collapse of the Boer offensive, the Staatsartillerie retreated to the Free State in order to halt Lord Roberts' advance on Pretoria. After the capture of Pretoria, they retreated with the Boer forces to the Eastern Transvaal. Due to lack of ammunition and the changing Boer strategy, the guns were dumped in the Krokodil River or blown up at Komatipoort. They were reorganised as a mounted infantry unit.
During the Boer War
During the Boer War, the Staatsartillerie performed stellar service. They were the first modern artillery unit to use indirect fire and the first to use their guns as fire support to the infantry. Their outstanding service led to Winston Churchill to comment " these are the finest gunners in the world....they can teach the Royal Artillery a lesson or two." It was not the Battle of Dalmanthutha where indirect was first used, – they did it first at Spioenkop and then at the Thukela Heights – six months earlier. The British then started experimenting with it during the north bank operations of the Thukela Heights. At Spioenkop, Cmdt Hendrik Prinsloo’s signaller, Louis Bothma, signalled corrections from Aloe Knoll to Maj Francois Wolmarans at Louis Botha’s HQ on Mt Alice. Wolmarans then relayed them to Lt von Wichmann and Lt Grothaus along the iNthabamnyama and to Gen Schalk Burger’s Free State Krupp between the Twin Peaks. The regiment ceased to exist at the end of the Anglo-Boer War, in 1902.
Re-emergence
More than half a century later, in 1954, a Citizen Force artillery regiment, named 9 Veldregiment was established in Pretoria. In 1960, it was renamed Transvaal Staatsartillerie, in honour of the old regiment.
In August 2019 52 units of the Reserve Force had their names to reflect the diversity of the current SANDF. This unit had its name slightly changed to the State Artillery Regiment.
Commanders
Lt Col Tinus van Antwerp
Insignia
Officers of the Staatsartillerie, 1899
Lieutenant-Colonel S.P.E. Trichardt
Major P. Erasmus
Captain I.J. Bosman
Captain J.F. Wolmarans
Lieutenant W.A. Baay
Lieutenant-Bandmaster J. Maggs
Lieutenant Mike Du Toit
Lieutenant P.C Paff
Lieutenant J.M.A Wolmarans
Lieutenant N.P. Oelofse
Lieutenant A.T. Carlblom
Lieutenant E.B.E Hoffman
Lieutenant J.L. Pretorius
Lieutenant M.J. De jager
Lieutenant-Doctor W. Laxton
Lieutenant F. Townsend
Lieutenant T. Kroon
As war progressed, more officers were appointed, and a great deal of NCO's were promoted.