38th (Irish) Brigade explained

Unit Name:38th (Irish) Brigade
38th (Irish) Brigade & HQ Northern Ireland
38th Infantry Brigade
Dates:1942–1947
2007–present
Country: United Kingdom
Size:Brigade
Command Structure:Regional Command
Garrison:Thiepval Barracks, Lisburn
Motto:"Ubique et Semper Fidelis"
Battles:
Current Commander:Brigadier Jamie Murray[1]
Notable Commanders:Morgan John Winthrop O'Donovan

The 38th (Irish) Brigade, is a brigade formation of the British Army that served in the Second World War. It was composed of North Irish line infantry regiments and served with distinction in the Tunisian and Italian Campaigns. Following the end of the war, the brigade was disbanded, but was reformed in sixty years later in 2007 and remains the regional formation for Northern Ireland.

Second World War

The 38th Infantry Brigade came into existence on 13 January 1942 by the re-designation of the 210th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home), a Home Defence formation organised in October 1940. The 210th Brigade had been serving in the Dorset County Division. When that division was disbanded on 24 November 1941, 210 Brigade transferred to the 1st Infantry Division. By then, all of 210 Brigade's English home defence battalions had been posted away and were replaced by the 1st Battalion, Royal Irish Fusiliers, the 6th Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers and the 2nd Battalion, London Irish Rifles. Of the three battalions, only the 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers had seen active service, fighting in the Battle of France where they were forced to retreat to Dunkirk and were subsequently evacuated to England.[2]

In June 1942, the brigade was transferred from the 1st Infantry Division to the 6th Armoured Division and it landed in North Africa with the division on 22 November 1942, as part of the British First Army. In March 1943, it exchanged with the 1st Guards Brigade and joined the 78th Battleaxe Infantry Division and fought with distinction throughout the rest of the Tunisian Campaign. In late April, the 38th (Irish) Brigade played a lead role in the capture of the German defensive positions in the mountains north of Medjez-el-Bab and the campaign ended in mid-May, with almost 250,000 Axis soldiers surrendering. The brigade were the first marching troops to enter Tunis on 8 May 1943.[3]

After a short rest, the brigade again saw action in the Allied invasion of Sicily (in particular the capture of Centuripe), and in the Italian Campaign, spearheading the British Eighth Army's advance to the Volturno Line, and later at the Battle of Monte Cassino and at Lake Trasimene. Shortly afterwards, the brigade was sent to rest in Egypt. While there, the 6th Inniskillings was disbanded and the men transferred to the 2nd Battalion, another Regular Army unit, which had arrived from 13th Brigade of the 5th Division, and the surplus men were transferred to fill gaps in the other battalions of the brigade.[4]

The rest was short-lived, however, and the brigade soon returned to Italy where it was involved in fighting north of Florence, followed later by Operation Grapeshot. During May 1945, it was (briefly) detached to both 46th Infantry and 6th Armoured Divisions and the brigade then was allotted occupation duties in Carinthia in southern Austria, before being formally disbanded in April 1947.[5] [6]

Order of battle

The 38th Brigade was constituted as follows during the war:

Commanders

The following officers commanded the 38th Brigade during the war:

Formations served under

Formations that the brigade served under included:

Twenty-first century

38th (Irish) Brigade reformed on 1 August 2007, as part of a new combined divisional / brigade structure called HQ Northern Ireland and 38th (Irish) Brigade after the disbandment of HQ Northern Ireland and has its headquarters at Thiepval Barracks in Lisburn.[7]

The 38th Brigade subsequently came under command of the 2nd Division, the regional division for Scotland, the North of England and Northern Ireland, on 1 January 2009. it was now the regional brigade responsible for administering the Army within Northern Ireland. This was the culmination of a drawdown of military headquarters in Northern Ireland, which had seen the disbandment of 3rd Infantry Brigade, 8th Infantry Brigade, 39th Infantry Brigade and 107th (Ulster) Brigade.[8]

Today the Army Reserve soldiers from the brigade have served on operations supporting the Regular Army in the Balkans, on Operation Tosca in Cyprus, on Operation Herrick in Afghanistan and Operation Telic in Iraq. At home the brigade has the key role of providing the Civil Contingency Reaction Force for Northern Ireland. The Brigade Headquarters is also regionally aligned with the Republic of Ireland as part of defence engagement.[9]

Current organisation

Under the Army 2020 programme, 38th (Irish) Brigade moved from 2nd Division to 1st (United Kingdom) Division and was reorganised into an infantry brigade with three units: Royal Scots Borderers, 1st Battalion Royal Regiment of Scotland, 2nd Battalion The Rifles, and 7th Battalion, The Rifles all in the light infantry role.[10]

However, under the Army 2020 Refine, the brigade was completely reorganised. The following changes occurred: Royal Scots Borderers, 1st Battalion Royal Regiment of Scotland moved to the Specialised Infantry Group; 1st Battalion, Royal Anglian Regiment joined from 7th Infantry Brigade as Light Mechanised Infantry; 7th Battalion, The Rifles joined 20th Armoured Infantry Brigade; and the 8th Battalion, The Rifles was formed and joined the brigade in 2018 as light infantry.[11]

Under the 2019 Field Army reorganisations, the brigade dropped its infantry commitments with the units moving to other commands: 2nd and 8th Battalions, The Rifles joining 51st Infantry Brigade, and 1st Battalion, Royal Anglian Regiment re-joining 7th Infantry Brigade.[12]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Generals October 2019 . Mackie . Colin . 21 October 2019 . gulabin.com . Colin Mackie . 21 October 2019 . Brigadier Brigadier Jamie Murray (late Royal Gurkha Rifles): Commander, 38th (Irish) Brigade, September 2019 .
  2. Web site: 1st Battalion Royal Irish Fusiliers and the fighting retreat to Dunkirk. Wartime NI. 11 July 2020.
  3. Web site: 38 (Irish) Brigade beat off German attack, Tunisia. Royal Irish. 11 July 2020.
  4. Ford pp. 242-243
  5. http://www.irishbrigade.co.uk/ The Irish Brigade
  6. Joslen, p. 373.
  7. https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmhansrd/cm060510/wmstext/60510m0032.htm Hansard, proceedings of the British Parliament
  8. Web site: Northern Ireland (Future Garrison Structure). https://web.archive.org/web/20060623163025/https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmhansrd/cm060510/wmstext/60510m0032.htm. dead. 23 June 2006. 10 May 2006. Hansard. 19 September 2018.
  9. Web site: Information regarding British Army brigades being regionally aligned . . 2 August 2019 . assets.publishing.service.gov.uk . Ministry of Defence UK . 9 April 2020 . Responsible Organisation HQ 38th Infantry Brigade Region Republic of Ireland.
  10. Web site: Ministry. of Defence. July 2013. Transforming the British Army an Update. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20140325181706/http://data.parliament.uk/DepositedPapers/Files/DEP2014-0042/20140110-PQ01968B-SOames-A2020-Update-Glossy-U.pdf . 25 March 2014 . 31 January 2021. Parliamentary Publishments.
  11. Web site: 10 March 2017. Freedom of Information (Act) request regarding Army 2020 Refine. 17 December 2021. United Kingdom Parliamentary Publishings.
  12. News: . 31 July 2019. Army restructures to confront evolving threats. Ministry of Defence. London. 1 August 2019.
  13. Web site: 17 August 2020. Map/Maps showing the responsibilities of the British Army's Regional Commands across the United Kingdom. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200819181645/https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/672187/response/1617887/attach/3/20200813%20FOI08475%20Arbeely%20Response%20Letter%20ArmySec.pdf?cookie_passthrough=1 . 19 August 2020 . 17 August 2020. What do they know?.
  14. Web site: Queen's UOTC. 2021-11-11. www.army.mod.uk.
  15. Web site: 7 December 2021. Freedom of Information (Act) request regarding current Army Cadet Training Teams (CTTs). 9 December 2021. What do they know?. Ministry of Defence.
  16. Web site: 1st Northern Ireland Battalion Army Cadets. 2021-04-29. Army Cadets UK.
  17. Web site: 2nd (Northern Ireland) Battalion Army Cadets. 2021-04-29. Army Cadets UK.