21st Brigade (United Kingdom) explained

Unit Name:21st Brigade
21st Infantry Brigade
Dates:1914–1918
1940
Country: United Kingdom
Type:Infantry
Size:Brigade
Command Structure:7th Division
Battles:Second Boer War
World War I
World War II
Notable Commanders:Maj-Gen Bruce Hamilton
Brig J.C.O. Marriott

21st Brigade (21st Bde) was an infantry formation of the British Army first organised in the Second Boer War, when it took part in Ian Hamilton's March from Bloemfontein to Pretoria. Reformed in World War I it served under the command of first 7th Division and then 30th Division, fighting in most of the major battles on the Western Front from the First Battle of Ypres to the Armistice. It was briefly re-raised in the Sudan early in World War II before being transferred to the Indian Army.

Second Boer War

British Army brigades had traditionally been ad hoc formations known by the name of their commander or numbered as an integral part of a division. However, units deployed to the Second Boer War in 1899 were organised into sequentially numbered brigades that were frequently reassigned between divisions. 21st Brigade was formed in South Africa in April 1900 under the command of Major-General Bruce Hamilton. Bruce Hamilton (described as a 'superb fighting general') had begun the war a substantive Major and Brevet Colonel serving as Assistant Adjutant General of 2nd Division, and had been wounded in the action at Venter's Spruit on 20 January.[1] His new brigade comprised three Regular infantry battalions together with the famous City Imperial Volunteers (CIV), recently arrived from Britain.

Order of Battle 1900

The composition of 21st Bde in April–June 1900 was as follows:

Bloemfontein to Pretoria

21st Brigade began operations as part of Lord Roberts' force and was then assigned to Lieutenant-General Ian Hamilton's Winburg Column. This force operated on Lord Roberts' right flank during the advance into the Orange Free State.

Hamilton's Column left Bloemfontein on 22 April and took part in the following general actions in a march of over 450miles in 45 days:

Guerrilla warfare

After Diamond Hill and the occupation of Pretoria and Johannesburg the war resolved into a lengthy guerrilla campaign conducted on the British side by ad hoc columns, often mounted. The CIV and Derbyshires left 21st Bde on convoy work, but the other units participated in the battle of Retiefs Nek (24 July) and the capture of the main Orange Free State force at the Brandwater Basin (30 July). Having covered 1200miles since 28 April, 21st Bde began a new 80miles march on 28 August. Its task was first to relieve a surrounded force of MI and Imperial Yeomanry, during which it captured Commandant Olivier and his force, then to rescue a force of Royal Marine Light Infantry and Yeomanry, to rout Commandant Fourie's force on 4 September. Thereafter its units continued to participate individually in the efforts to catch Christiaan de Wet and the other Boer forces still at large – Bruce Hamilton still had the Sussex and Cameron Highlanders with him during the autumn campaign – but the brigade organisation had disappeared.[1] [3] [4] [5]

World War I

It was assigned to the 7th Division and later to 30th Division, serving on the Western Front during World War I.

Order of battle

The composition of the brigade was:[6]

On reorganisation in July 1918:

World War II

The brigade was reformed in World War II. The brigade Headquarters were formed in the Sudan on 24 July 1940, commanded by Brigadier J.C.O. Marriott and, as in World War I, consisting of three Regular Army battalions. However, with the arrival of the 5th Indian Infantry Division, which at the time consisted only of two brigades, the brigade was transferred to the Indian Army establishment and subsequently, on 12 October 1940, redesignated as the 29th Indian Infantry Brigade and the battalions were posted to the other two brigades of 5th Indian Division, the 2nd West Yorkshire Regiment to the 9th Indian Infantry Brigade and 1st Essex Regiment to 10th Indian Infantry Brigade.[7]

Order of battle

References

Bibliography

External sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Royal Sussex Regiment . Anglo Boer War.
  2. Web site: Royal Field Artillery - 76th Battery . Anglo Boer War.
  3. Web site: Sherwood Foresters . Anglo Boer War.
  4. Web site: Camerons . Anglo Boer War.
  5. Web site: City Imperial Volunteers . Anglo Boer War.
  6. Web site: 7th Division . The Long Long Trail . 20 January 2012.
  7. Web site: 5th Indian Division (1941-42) . 27 August 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150923221141/http://www.britishmilitaryhistory.co.uk/webeasycms/hold/uploads/bmh_document_pdf/5_Indian_Division__1941_42_.pdf . 23 September 2015 . dead.