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48th (South Midland) Division

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Infantry division of the British Army

South Midland Division
48th (South Midland) Division
48th (South Midland) Infantry Division
48th Infantry (Reserve) Division
Thedivisional insignia. HistorianMichael Chappell comments that starting in 1918 the white diamond "was painted on helmets ... with regimental badges superimposed" upon it.[1]
Active1908–1919
1920–1945
CountryUnited Kingdom
Branch British Army
TypeInfantry
RoleInfantry, home defence, and training
SizeDivision
Peacetime HQWarwick
EngagementsFirst World War
Second World War
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Robert Fanshawe
Sir Harold Walker
Frank Roberts
Sir Andrew Thorne
Insignia
Identification
symbol

Divisional insignia adopted following theBattle of France in 1940.[2]
Military unit

The48th (South Midland) Division was aninfantrydivision of theBritish Army. Part of theTerritorial Force (TF) and raised in 1908, the division was originally called theSouth Midland Division, and was redesignated as the 48th (South Midland) Division in 1915. During theFirst World War, the division saw service on theWestern Front before being transferred to theItalian Front in November 1917 and remaining there for the rest of the war.

Reformed in 1920 in theTerritorial Army (TA) as the48th (South Midland) Infantry Division, it saw active service in theSecond World War with theBritish Expeditionary Force (BEF) inBelgium andFrance before beingevacuated from Dunkirk to the United Kingdom. It was converted into a training reserve division in December 1942, remaining in the United Kingdom in that status for the rest of the war. Disbanded after the war, the division was not reformed again. In bothworld wars, the division raised a second line reserve formation; the61st (2nd South Midland) Division in the First World War, and61st Division in the Second World War.

Formation

[edit]

In 1901, following lessons learned from theSecond Boer War anddiplomatic clashes with the growingGerman Empire, theUnited Kingdom sought to reform theBritish Army so it would be able to engage in European affairs if required. This task fell toSecretary of State for War,Richard Haldane who implemented several policies known as theHaldane Reforms. As part of these reforms, theTerritorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 created a newTerritorial Force by merging the existingYeomanry andVolunteer Force in 1908.[3] This resulted in the creation of 14 Territorial Divisions, including the South Midland Division.[4][5]

As part of the legislation, the territorials were only liable to serve within the United Kingdom.[4] Haldane envisioned that the territorials would take over the defence of the country against what was perceived as a very real threat of invasion, which would allow the regular army to be deployed aboard. In addition, Haldane saw the territorials as a source of reinforcements for the regular army. Six months following mobilisation, during which time the troops would have come up to an acceptable training standard, Haldane was confident that up to a quarter of the men would opt to go and fight abroad.[4][6][7]

Recruiting poster for the South Midland DivisionalCyclist Company.

The 1910 edition of theHazell's Annual reported that, in 1909, "The South Midland Division ... had 13 units up to or over establishment, and the others very little below it."[8] The following year, the Territorial Force as a whole peaked at a strength of 276,000 men; 26,000 men short of the peacetime establishment set by Haldane's reforms. However, between 1910 and 1914, the overall strength of the force had declined to 250,000, 52,000 short of the peacetime establishment.[4] In peacetime, the divisionalheadquarters was in theOld Barracks inWarwick.[9][10]

First World War

[edit]

1914

[edit]
Officers of the 1st Buckinghamshire Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, atChelmsford, Essex, 1914.

On the outbreak of theFirst World War in the summer of 1914, the division composed theWarwickshire Brigade, theGloucester and Worcester Brigade and theSouth Midland Brigade. In August 1914, the South Midland Division departed for its annual summer training camp. The Warwickshire Brigade, for example, departed forRhyl in NorthernWales.[11]

Following the declaration of war, the division was mobilised and moved south to take up defensive positions along the southern coast.[12][13] Due to German-invasion scares, the division-numbering 6,000 men-moved toEssex. While there was no invasion, the division remained in the area on defensive duties and to continue training.[14][15]

During the opening weeks of the war, as the Territorials were not required to be deployed overseas, the troops were asked to volunteer. By the end of August, more than 70 battalions across the TF had volunteered, with the number rising higher as the year progressed.[16]

1915–1918

[edit]

In March 1915, with the threat of a German invasion having subsided, the South Midland Division was dispatched to France with the Territorials who had volunteered for overseas service.[17]

Lieutenant Baxter's platoon, C Company, 1/7th Battalion, Worcestershire Regiment, resting in a cornfield near Lavieville, France, September 1916.

On 13 May 1915 the division was numbered, becoming the 48th (South Midland) Division and the brigades in the division were also numbered, the Warwickshire Brigade became the 143rd (Warwickshire) Brigade, the Gloucester and Worcester Brigade became the 144th (Gloucester and Worcester) Infantry Brigade and the South Midland Brigade became the 145th (South Midland) Infantry Brigade.[18]

GeneralThe Earl of Cavan, commanding the British forces in Italy, inspecting men of the 48th Division, Granezza,Asiago, September, 1918.

The members of the division who did not, or were not able to, volunteer for overseas service, were transferred to newly created second line units intended for home defence. These second line units were eventually formed into the61st (2nd South Midland) Division and, following the passing of theMilitary Service Act 1916, deployed to France in May 1916.[19][20]

The division, now commanded by Major GeneralRobert Fanshawe, who would command for just over three years, took part in theBattle of the Somme in 1916, theBattle of Pozières and theBattle of Passchendaele (also known as the Third Battle of Ypres) in the following year.[21]

In November 1917, the division was sent to theItalian front, where it remained until the end of the war. It fought theBattle of the Piave River (15–16 June 1918) and theBattle of Vittorio Veneto from October to November.[21]

48th (South Midland) Division (1914–1918)[21][22][9]

143rd (Warwickshire) Brigade

144th (Gloucester and Worcester) Brigade

145th (South Midland) Brigade

Mounted Troops

48th (South Midland) Divisional Artillery

48th (South Midland) Divisional Engineers[24]

  • 474th (1/1st South Midland) Field Company (left 4 December 1914, rejoined 1 May 1915)
  • 475th (1/2nd South Midland) Field Company
  • 1/1st West Lancashire Field Company (attached 18–28 April 1915)
  • 7th Field Company (joined 29 April 1915, left 17 June 1915)
  • 477th (2/1st South Midland) Field Company (joined 10 June 1915)
  • 48th (South Midland) Divisional Signal Company[25]

Pioneers

Machine Gun Units

  • 251st Machine Gun Company (joined 16 November 1917, moved to 48th Battalion, Machine Gun Corps on 22 March 1918)
  • 48th Battalion,Machine Gun Corps (formed 22 March 1918 with 143rd, 144th, 145th and 251st Companies)

Medical and Veterinary

  • 1/1st South Midland Field Ambulance,Royal Army Medical Corps
  • 1/2nd South Midland Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps
  • 1/3rd South Midland Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps
  • 1st South Midland Mobile Veterinary SectionArmy Veterinary Corps
  • 48th (1/1st South Midland) Sanitary Section, Royal Army Medical Corps (formed 21 February 1915, left for III Corps 4 April 1917)
  • 48th (1/1st South Midland) Ambulance Workshop (joined in concentration area, absorbed in Divisional Supply Column on 4 April 1916)

Divisional Train,Army Service Corps

  • 459th (Divisional Headquarters) Company, ASC
  • 460th (Warwickshire Brigade) Company, ASC
  • 461st (Gloucester and Worcester Brigade) Company, ASC
  • 462nd (South Midland Brigade) Company, ASC

Others

  • 242nd Divisional Employment Company (formed 16 June 1917)

Interwar

[edit]

After the war, the 48th Divisional Signal Company was posted toIran as part ofNorperforce.[26]The division was disbanded in June 1919, along with the rest of the Territorial Force. However, the Territorial Force was reformed in 1920 as theTerritorial Army (TA) and the 48th Division was reconstituted as the 48th (South Midland) Infantry Division.

During theinterwar period, theBritish Army envisioned that, during future conflicts, the Territorial Army would be used as the basis for future expansion so as to avoid raising a newKitchener's Army. However, as the 1920s and 1930s wore on, theBritish Government prioritised funding for the regular army over the territorials, allowing recruitment and equipment levels to languish.[27]Baron Templemore, as part of aHouse of Lords debate on the Territorial Army, stated that the division - on 1 October 1924 - mustered 338 officers and 7,721 other ranks.[28] Historian David French highlights that "by April 1937 the Territorial Army had reached less than 80 per cent of its shrunken peacetime establishment" and "Its value as an immediate reserve was, therefore, limited."[27] Edward Smalley comments that "48th Divisional Signals operated on an improvised organizational structure" for most of the 1930s, due to being below 50 per cent strength. He further highlights how the TA, and the division in particular, "never kept pace with technological developments." In 1937, the division was operating just two radio sets on a full-time basis and had to borrow additional units from the3rd Infantry Division for annual training camps.[29]

Second World War

[edit]
An officer briefs hissection leaders during anexercise in the snow by men of the 1/7th Battalion,Royal Warwickshire Regiment, between Douai and Orchies, France, 26 January 1940.

On the outbreak of theSecond World War, the 48th Division was mobilised in early September 1939, under the command ofMajor GeneralFrank Roberts, who had won theVictoria Cross (VC) in the Great War. After spending a few months in England training the division, now commanded by Major GeneralSir Andrew Thorne after Roberts' retirement in December, landed in France in early January 1940[30] and became part of theBritish Expeditionary Force (BEF), the first complete division of the TA to do so. The division came under command ofLieutenant GeneralSir John Dill'sI Corps. Soon after their arrival, the 48th Division exchanged some of its units with the Regular divisions. For example, in the143rd Brigade, the5th Battalion,Northamptonshire Regiment was exchanged with the 1st Battalion,Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, a Regular Army unit, and transferred to the11th Infantry Brigade, of the4th Infantry Division. This was official policy within the BEF and was, in theory, intended to strengthen the inexperienced Territorial divisions with experienced Regulars.[31]

France and Dunkirk

[edit]

When theGermans invaded France and the Low Countries on 10 May 1940, the BEF moved forward to occupy pre-planned positions in Belgium, but the rapid German breakthrough into France caused it toretreat towards Dunkirk.

On 23 May, 48th Division was pulled out to form a new defence line along the canal betweenSaint-Omer and the coast. Lord Gort's BEF story describes the distinguished and heroic defence by General Thorne, commanding the 48th Division and the delaying actions of his 145th Brigade atCassel andHazebrouck and 144th Brigade at Wormhoudt, saying that "it was their defence on the western side of the corridor in the closing stages that allowed so many of their comrades to pass into safety". The 48th and 44th Divisions withstood repeated attacks along the 20 mile frontage. On 28 May when the front began to crumble all around them, they were ordered to continue to hold for a few more hours. The garrison from 145 Brigade at Hazebrouck was overrun but some elements at Cassel and 144 Brigade at Wormhoudt withdrew that night. The remnants of 44th division and 48th Division were attached to 1st Corps and the last to leave the beaches on 30 May.[32]

During the same time frame the 48th divisional CRA (Commander, Royal Artillery),BrigadierEdward Lawson, was sent with 'X Force' of artillery, machine guns and infantry ahead of the division to occupy the chosen positions.[33] However, the unexpected surrender of Belgian forces on 27 May 1940 led to a gap appearing between 48th Division in action around Saint-Omer and the coast atNieuwpoort. UntilII Corps could arrive to plug this gap, Lawson was responsible for what theOfficial History calls 'the most dangerously exposed part of the bridgehead'.[34] He was ordered by the commander of the Dunkirk perimeter, theIII Corps commanderLieutenant-GeneralRonald Adam, to improvise a defence line along the canal and prevent the Germans breaking through to the vital beaches east of Dunkirk where much of the BEF was waiting to be evacuated. At 11.00 on 28 May, advanced German troops reached the canal line, but Lawson seized on the Territorial gunners of the53rd (London) Medium Regiment, RA who were marching towards Dunkirk having fired off all their ammunition and destroyed their guns. Together with detachments of Regular gunners from both the 2nd Medium and 1st Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiments, and sappers from 7th Field Company,Royal Engineers, they fought as infantry to hold the line. They came under heavy mortar and machine gun fire, and the Germans seized abridgehead at Nieuwpoort, but all subsequent attacks that day were repulsed. Brigadier Lawson's scratch force was relieved next day and thenevacuated to Britain.[34][35][36][37][38]

48th (South Midland) Infantry Division (1939–40)

143rd Infantry Brigade[39]

  • 1/7th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment[40]
  • 8th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment[40]
  • 5th Battalion,Northamptonshire Regiment(until 29 January 1940)[40]
  • 1st Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (from 29 January 1940)[40]
  • 143rd Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company[40]

144th Infantry Brigade[39]

145th Infantry Brigade[39]

  • 4th Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry[42]
  • 1st Buckinghamshire Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry[42]
  • 4th Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment (until 5 February 1940)[42]
  • 2nd Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment (from 5 February 1940)[42]
  • 145th Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company[42]

Divisional Troops

Home defence and training

[edit]

The 48th Division, much depleted in numbers, completed its return to the United Kingdom on 1 June. The division, commanded from 18 June by Major GeneralRoderic Petre, was subsequently posted toWestern Command,Southern Command, andVIII Corps and began training in preparation to repelOperation Sea Lion, the German invasion of England, which proved abortive.[43]

During the war, the divisions of the British Army were divided between "Higher Establishment" and "Lower Establishment" formations. The former were intended for deployment overseas for field operations, whereas the latter were strictly for home defence in a static role.[45][46] During November 1941, the division was placed on the "Lower Establishment" and assigned toI Corps District, commanded by Lieutenant GeneralHenry Willcox.[43]

Men of the 1/7th Battalion,Royal Warwickshire Regiment, digging in with entrenching tools during training at Horncastle, 15 April 1942.

During the winter of 1942–43, the British Army overhauled its training of recruits. The 48th was one of three divisions that were changed from "Lower Establishment" units to "Reserve Divisions".[47] On 20 December, the division was renamed the48th Infantry (Reserve) Division, becoming a training formation in the process. This reorganisation took place during 1943 and the division held this training role for the remainder of the war.[43][47][48] These three divisions were supplemented by a fourth training formation (the80th Infantry (Reserve) Division), which was raised on 1 January 1943.[49] The 48th Infantry (Reserve) Division was assigned toNorthern Command[48] Soldiers who had completed their corps training were sent to these training divisions.[50][c] The soldiers were given five weeks of additional training at thesection,platoon andcompany level, before undertaking a final three-dayexercise. Troops would then be ready to be sent overseas to join other formations.[50] Training was handled in this manner to relieve the "Higher Establishment" divisions from being milked for replacements for other units and to allow them to intensively train without having to cope with recruits.[48] During this period, from 17 October 1942 until 30 September 1943, the10th Tank Brigade was assigned to the division for the holding and training of reinforcements to armoured units.[51] On 7 November 1943, the145th Infantry Brigade was disbanded.[42]

On 30 June 1944, the 48th Infantry (Reserve) Division, along with the other training divisions (the76th,77th, and the 80th), had a combined total of 22,355 men. Of this number, only 1,100 were immediately available as replacements for the21st Army Group, at the time ofOperation Overlord and the Battle of Normandy.[52][d] The remaining 21,255 men were considered ineligible for service abroad due to a variety of reasons, ranging from medical, not being considered fully fit or insufficiently trained. Over the following six months, up to 75 per cent of these men were deployed to reinforce the 21st Army Group, following the completion of their training and having met the required fitness levels.[54] In 2007, Stephen Hart wrote that, by September, the 21st Army Group "had bledHome Forces dry of draftable riflemen", due to the losses suffered in the Battle of Normandy, leaving the army in Britain (with the exception of the52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division) with just "young lads, old men and the unfit".[55]

Due to the decreased need for such a formation, the division was disbanded after the war on 1 November 1945.[56]

48th (South Midland) Infantry Division (1941–45)

143rd Infantry Brigade[39]

144th Infantry Brigade[39]

145th Infantry Brigade (until 6 November 1943)[39]

  • 4th Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (until 2 November 1943)[42]
  • 1st Buckinghamshire Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (until 12 December 1942)[42]
  • 145th Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company (until 11 February 1940)[42]
  • 2nd Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment (until 10 December 1942)[42]
  • 6th Battalion,King's Own Royal Regiment (Lancaster) (from 12 December 1942 until 6 November 1943)[42]
  • 5th Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers (from 3 January 1943 until 6 November 1943)[42]

10th Tank Brigade (from 17 October 1942 until 30 September 1943)[51]

Main article:10th Tank Brigade

Divisional Troops

Postwar

[edit]

The division was not reformed in the Territorial Army in 1947. In 1961 the division became a district headquarters as48th (South Midland) Division/District,[62][63] and it was disbanded on the reduction of the TA into theTerritorial and Army Volunteer Reserve on 1 April 1967, when many individual TA units lost their identities.[64] The district headquarters itself formed the core of the structure for the creation ofWest Midlands District underHQ UK Land Forces in 1972.[65]

General officer commanding

[edit]
See also:General officer commanding

Commanders included:

AppointedGeneral officer commanding
April 1908Brigadier-GeneralHerbert Raitt[66]
September 1911Major-GeneralAlexander Thorneycroft[66]
1 July 1912Major-GeneralJohn Keir[67]
27 July 1914Major-GeneralEdward Graham[67]
5 August 1914Major-GeneralHenry Heath (sick, 7 May 1915)[67]
7 May 1915Brigadier-General W. K. McClintock (acting)[67]
31 May 1915Major-GeneralSir Robert Fanshawe[67]
20 June 1918Brigadier-General J Steele(acting)[67]
4 July 1918Major-General SirHarold Walker[67]
April 1923Major-General SirPercy Radcliffe[66]
April 1926Major-GeneralThomas Tait Pitman[66]
April 1930Major-GeneralIvo Vesey[66]
June 1931Major-GeneralCuthbert Fuller[66]
June 1935Major-GeneralStephen Butler[66]
June 1939Major-GeneralFrank Crowther Roberts[66]
8 October 1939BrigadierHonorable Edward Lawson (acting)[43]
23 October 1939Major-GeneralAndrew Thorne[43]
7 June 1940Brigadier James Muirhead (acting)[43]
18 June 1940Major-GeneralRoderic Loraine Petre[43]
8 October 1941Major-GeneralArthur Grassett[43]
14 November 1941Brigadier James Muirhead (acting)[43]
7 December 1941Major-GeneralHayman Hayman-Joyce[43]
29 August 1943BrigadierPhilip Bowden-Smith (acting)[43]
3 September 1943Brigadier William Leslie Dibben (acting)[43]
6 September 1943Major-GeneralHoratio Berney-Ficklin[43]
29 March 1944 (until 1946)Major-GeneralWilliam Bradshaw[43]
February 1961Major-GeneralJohn Worsley[66]
March 1963Major-GeneralJohn Willoughby[66]
April 1965 (until April 1967)Major-GeneralPeter Gillett[66]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
Footnotes
  1. ^abc1/8thWarwicks, 1/8thWorcs and 1/5thGlosters left the division on 11 and 12 September 1918 and proceeded to theBEF on theWestern Front where they joined75th Brigade,25th Division.[21]
  2. ^The divisional artillery was originally organised as 9 batteries of four15 pounders and 2 batteries of four5" howitzers. By January 1917, it had been re-armed with modern weapons and reorganised with 6 batteries of six18 pounders and 2 batteries of six4.5" howitzers.[21]
  3. ^Having entered military service, a recruit was assigned to theGeneral Service Corps. They would then undertake six weeks training at a Primary Training Centre and take aptitude and intelligence tests. The recruit would then be posted to a Corps Training Centre specialising in the arm of the service they were joining. For those who would be joining the infantry, corps training involved a further sixteen week course. For more specialised roles, such as signallers, it could be up to thirty weeks.[50]
  4. ^The war establishment—the paper strength—of a "Higher Establishment" infantry division in 1944 was 18,347 men.[53]
Citations
  1. ^Chappell 1986, p. 24.
  2. ^"Badge, formation, 48th (South Midland) Infantry Division".Imperial War Museum. Retrieved14 November 2015.
  3. ^Perry 1988, pp. 4–6.
  4. ^abcdPerry 1988, p. 6.
  5. ^FitzM. Stacke 2013, p. xxviii.
  6. ^Beckett 1991, p. 215.
  7. ^Hall 2011, p. 20.
  8. ^Hall 1910, p. 213.
  9. ^abConrad, Mark (1996)."The British Army, 1914". Retrieved18 November 2015.
  10. ^Westlake, Ray (2011).The Territorials, 1908–1914: A Guide for Military and Family Historians. Pen & Sword.ISBN 978-1848843608.
  11. ^Williams, Robert David (1 November 1999)."A social and military history of the 1/8th Battalion, The Royal warwickshre Regiment, in the Great War"(PDF). University of Birmingham. p. 46. Retrieved11 December 2025.
  12. ^Carter 2011, pp. 26, 30.
  13. ^Harris & Whippy 2008, p. 8.
  14. ^Mitchinson 2008, p. 209.
  15. ^Swan 2015, p. 23.
  16. ^Simkins 2007, pp. 43–46.
  17. ^FitzM. Stacke 2013, p. 67.
  18. ^"The Royal Warwickshire Regiment 1914-1918".50megs.com. Retrieved26 June 2015.
  19. ^FitzM. Stacke 2013, p. 46.
  20. ^Ogle 1993, p. 8.
  21. ^abcdefBecke 1936, pp. 77–83.
  22. ^Baker, Chris."The 48th (South Midland) Division in 1914-1918". The Long, Long Trail. Retrieved19 November 2015.
  23. ^Farndale, p. 94.
  24. ^Rinaldi, Richard A."Royal Engineers, World War I"(PDF). Orbat.com. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 24 January 2014.
  25. ^Lord & Watson, p. 159.
  26. ^Haldane.
  27. ^abFrench 2001, p. 53.
  28. ^"THE TERRITORIAL FORCE: HL Deb 22 July 1925 vol 62 cc243-66".Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 22 July 1925. Retrieved14 November 2015.
  29. ^Smalley 2015, pp. 88–89.
  30. ^Joslen 2003, pp. 77–78.
  31. ^Palmer, Rob (22 January 2012)."48th (South Midland) Infantry Division (1939)"(PDF). British Military History. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved19 November 2015.
  32. ^Lord Gort's Story of the BEF, Evening Dispatch 17 October 1941 p.3 accessed 31 June 2023
  33. ^Ellis,France & Flanders, Ch. VIII[1].
  34. ^abEllis,France & Flanders, Ch. IX[2].
  35. ^Butler & Bradford, pp. 158–9.
  36. ^Bryant, pp. 144–5, 149.
  37. ^Richards.
  38. ^Chronology at 53rd Regt website.
  39. ^abcdefJoslen 2003, p. 76.
  40. ^abcdefghijklmnopqJoslen 2003, p. 328.
  41. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstJoslen 2003, p. 329.
  42. ^abcdefghijklJoslen 2003, p. 330.
  43. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavJoslen 2003, p. 77.
  44. ^TNA WO 167/505
  45. ^Perry 1988, p. 65.
  46. ^French 2001, p. 188.
  47. ^abPerry 1988, p. 66.
  48. ^abcForty 2013, Reserve Divisions.
  49. ^Joslen 2003, p. 103.
  50. ^abcFrench 2001, p. 68.
  51. ^abcdeJoslen 2003, p. 198.
  52. ^Hart 2007, p. 52.
  53. ^Joslen 2003, pp. 130–131.
  54. ^Hart 2007, pp. 48–51.
  55. ^Hart 2007, pp. 49–50.
  56. ^"Territorial Army: HC Deb 27 November 1945 vol 416 cc1248-9W".Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 27 November 1945. Retrieved19 July 2015.
  57. ^abJoslen 2003, pp. 77, 608.
  58. ^Daniell, pp. 288–9.
  59. ^Frederick, pp. 11, 111.
  60. ^Kemsley, Riesco & Chamberlin, pp. 1–4.
  61. ^80th Reconnaissance Regiment at The Reconnaissance Corps website.
  62. ^MOD."148 (West Midlands) Brigade - History of the Brigade". Archived fromthe original on 12 October 2012. Retrieved18 April 2013.
  63. ^T F Mills (26 May 2006)."West Midland District".regiments.org. Archived fromthe original on 16 August 2007.
  64. ^Watson & Rinaldi, p. 289.
  65. ^Paxton, J. (1972).The Statesman's Year-Book 1972-73: The Encyclopaedia for the Businessman-of-The-World. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 104.ISBN 978-0-230-27101-2.
  66. ^abcdefghijkMackie 2015, p. 207.
  67. ^abcdefgBecke 1936, p. 77.

References

[edit]
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  • Becke, Major A.F. (1937).Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2B. The 2nd-Line Territorial Force Divisions (57th–69th) with The Home-Service Divisions (71st–73rd) and 74th and 75th Divisions. London:His Majesty's Stationery Office.ISBN 1-871167-00-0.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
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  • Hart, Stephen Ashley (2007) [2000].Colossal Cracks: Montgomery's 21st Army Group in North-west Europe, 1944–45. Mechanicsburg:Stackpole Books.ISBN 978-0-811-73383-0.
  • Haldane, J. Aylmer L. Sir (2005).The insurrection in Mesopotamia, 1920. London: The Imperial War Museum in association with The Battery Press.ISBN 1904897169.OCLC 60688896.OL 22727753M. 1904897169.
  • Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1960].Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield, East Sussex: Naval and Military Press.ISBN 978-1-84342-474-1.
  • Capt Walter Kemsley & Capt Michael R. Riesco,The Scottish Lion on Patrol: Being the History of the 15th Scottish Reconnaissance Regiment, 1943–46, Bristol: White Swan Press, 1950/Revised edn (Tim Chamberlin, ed), Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2011, ISBN 978-1-39901-874-6.
  • Cliff Lord & Graham Watson,Royal Corps of Signals: Unit Histories of the Corps (1920–2001) and its Antecedents, Solihull: Helion, 2003,ISBN 1-874622-92-2.
  • Mackie, Colin (2015)."Senior Army Appointments: 1860-"(PDF). www.gulabin.com. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved19 November 2015.
  • Mitchinson, K. W. (2008).England's Last Hope: The Territorial Force, 1908-14. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.ISBN 978-0-230-57454-0.
  • Ogle, Henry (1993). Glover, Michael (ed.).The Fateful Battle Line: The Great War journals and sketches of Captain Henry Ogle. London: Leo Cooper.ISBN 0-85052-560-8.
  • Perry, Frederick William (1988).The Commonwealth Armies: Manpower and Organisation in Two World Wars. War, Armed Forces and Society. Manchester:Manchester University Press.ISBN 978-0-719-02595-2.
  • Plews, Derek A. (2024).A Brilliant Little Victory: The 48th (South Midland) Division on the Western and Italian Fronts During the First World War.Helion.ISBN 978-1804514290.
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  • Smalley, Edward (2015).The British Expeditionary Force, 1939–40. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.ISBN 978-1-137-49419-1.
  • Swan, Jonathan (2015).Chelmsford in the Great War. Your Towns and Cities in the Great War. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Books.ISBN 978-1-473-82114-9.
  • Watson, Graham E.; Rinaldi, Richard A. (2018).The Corps of Royal Engineers: Organization and Units 1889–2018. Tiger Lily Books.ISBN 978-171790180-4.

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