Unit Name: | 2nd Brigade 2nd Infantry Brigade 2 (South East) Brigade |
Dates: | 1908–2014 |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Type: | Infantry Regional |
Size: | Brigade |
Command Structure: | Support Command |
Garrison: | Shorncliffe Army Camp |
Battles: | First World War |
Notable Commanders: | Sir Edward Bulfin Sir John Dill Charles Hudson Sir Arthur Dowler Sir Richard Anderson |
2nd Infantry Brigade | |
Date: | July 1914 |
Parent: | 1st Division |
Subordinate: | 1st Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment 1st Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment 2nd Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps 2nd Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment |
2nd Infantry Brigade | |
Date: | November 1918 |
Parent: | 1st Division |
Subordinate: | 1st Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment 2nd Battalion, King's Royal Rifle Corps 2nd Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment 2nd Trench Mortar Battery |
2nd Infantry Brigade | |
Date: | September 1939 |
Parent: | 1st Infantry Division |
Subordinate: | 1st Battalion, Gordon Highlanders 1st Battalion, Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) 2nd Battalion, North Staffordshire Regiment 2nd Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company |
2nd (South East) Infantry Brigade | |
Date: | 1989 |
Parent: | South-Eastern District |
Subordinate: | 2nd Battalion, Royal Green Jackets 2nd Battalion, Wessex Regiment 5th Battalion, Royal Green Jackets 5th Battalion, Queen's Regiment 6th/7th Battalion, Queen's Regiment 69th Gurkha Independent Field Squadron |
The 2nd Infantry Brigade (later 2 (South East) Brigade) was a regional brigade of the British Army, active since before the First World War. It was the regional formation of the Army in the South East of England - the Brigade commanded and administered soldiers throughout Kent, Surrey and Sussex - but also Brunei. In December 2014 the Brigade merged with 145 (South) Brigade to form Headquarters 11th Infantry Brigade and Headquarters South East.
Following the end of the Second Boer War in 1902 the army was restructured, and the 2nd Infantry Brigade was established as part of the 1st Division in the 1st Army Corps, stationed at Aldershot Garrison.[1]
The brigade, initially commanded by Brigadier-General Edward Bulfin, served with the 1st Division during the First World War, from 1914 to 1918 and served throughout the war on the Western Front as part of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF). The brigade fought in many of the major battles of the war, first fighting at Mons where they were forced to retreat, and later the First Battle of Ypres, the Second Battle of Ypres and later the Battle of the Somme and Battle of Passchendaele, the German spring offensive and the Hundred Days Offensive.
The 2nd Brigade was constituted as follows during the war:[2]
The following officers commanded 2nd Brigade during the First World War:[3]
During the Second World War the 2nd Infantry Brigade saw active service in many of the major campaigns that the British Army fought in, from France with the BEF to Tunisia in North Africa and finally Italy and saw some extremely hard fighting at the Battle of Anzio where, during a German counterattack, the brigade was surrounded and nearly destroyed. In April 1943, during the fighting in Tunisia, Lieutenant Willward Alexander Sandys-Clarke of the 1st Battalion, Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) was posthumously awarded the brigades' only Victoria Cross (VC) of the war.
The 2nd Infantry Brigade was constituted as follows during the war:
The following officers commanded 2nd Infantry Brigade during the war:
The brigade was reformed as a regional brigade by the 1980s.[5]
In the House of Commons on 8 January 2002 the Secretary of State for Defence said that "The two light infantry brigade headquarters (52 Lowland) Brigade and 2 (South East) Brigade) are being re-roled from regional brigade headquarters to provide better command and control arrangements for the light infantry role battalions, all of which are currently deployable. Thus the reorganisation of the two brigades will not result in an increase in the number of deployable troops. The change will bring greater coherence to the way that these units prepare for operations, through improved co-ordination of training".[6]
Following broad reorganisation under the Future Army Structures, 2nd Infantry Brigade was renamed 2nd (South East) Brigade in 2007. The name was in line with its revised role as a Regional Brigade, responsible largely for Territorial Army units. The brigade became part of the United Kingdom's Support Command as the 2nd (South East) Brigade. It was not listed under the Army 2020 plan. In December 2014 the Brigade merged with 145 (South) Brigade to form Headquarters 11th Infantry Brigade and Headquarters South East.[7]