British Army
brigades had traditionally been
ad hoc formations known by the name of their commander or numbered as part of a
division. However,
Regular Army units involved in the
Second Boer War in 1899 were organised into sequentially numbered brigades that were frequently reassigned between divisions. After the disastrous
Battle of Magersfontein in December 1899, a
7th Division was assembled and sent out from the UK under
Lieutenant-General Charles Tucker with
14th and
15th Brigades under command.
Order of Battle 1900 14th Brigade was constituted as follows: • General Officer Commanding: •
Major-General Sir
Herbert Chermside – promoted to command 3rd Division March 1900 •
Brigadier-General John Maxwell • 2nd Battalion,
Norfolk Regiment – from
Fermoy, Ireland • 2nd Battalion,
Lincolnshire Regiment – from
Aldershot • 1st Battalion,
King's Own Scottish Borderers – from
Dublin, Ireland • 2nd Battalion,
Hampshire Regiment – from
Cork, Ireland • Bearer Company and Field Hospital,
Royal Army Medical Corps The battalions embarked on about 4 January 1900, the Norfolks and Hampshires aboard the SS
Assaye, the Lincolns on the SS
Goorkha, and the KOSBs on the
Goorkha and the
Braemar Castle. They arrived at
Cape Town about 23–26 January and began to move up-country. By 10 February 1900 14th Bde was at Enslin, while the rest of 7th Division was at Graspan
Modder River to Bloemfontein 7th Division then took part in
Lord Roberts' advance from. the
Modder River towards the
Orange Free State (OFS) capital at
Bloemfontein, reaching
Jacobsdal on 15 February. When the OFS army under General
Piet Cronjé was cornered at the
Battle of Paardeberg on 18 January, Chermside was ordered to march there from Jacobsdal. 14th Brigade arrived on the evening of 19 January to join the siege of Cronjé's force, doing good work in repelling the Boer reinforcements trying to cut their way through to relieve him. The 1st KOSB had several sharp engagements against them, particularly on 23 February, when the Boer relieving force failed to recapture 'Kitchener's
Kopje'. After Cronjé's surrender at Paardeberg the remaining Boer forces in the region dug in on both sides of the Poplar Grove
drift across the Modder, blocking the way to the OFS capital of
Bloemfontein. Roberts planned to surround the Boers south of the river with a wide outflanking manoeuvre on 7 March, and sent Chermside's 14th Brigade to harass and pin them in position. It was accompanied by 7th Division's artillery (3rd Brigade-Division,
Royal Field Artillery – 18th, 62nd and 75th Batteries) and the divisional mounted troops (Nesbitt's Horse, reinforced by the
New South Wales and
Queensland Mounted Infantry), with orders to start when
6th Division had cleared the
Kopjes to the front. However, the Boers started to withdraw as soon as 6th Division began its advance and the
Battle of Poplar Grove was inconclusive. On 9 March Roberts issued his orders for the advance from Poplar Grove to Bloemfontein. This was in three parallel columns, with Tucker commanding the right (southern) column consisting of 7th Division and mounted troops. It was not engaged in the
Battle of Driefontein, and reached Bloemfontein on 14 March, the day after Roberts' entry. The division was then posted north of the city while Roberts built up his forces for the next phase of the campaign into
Transvaal.
Bloemfontein to Pretoria Roberts sent a force up the railway to establish an advanced base at Karee Siding before advancing on
Johannesburg and
Pretoria. It included 7th Division (6000 strong – 3000 short of establishment) and three mounted brigade, which gathered at Glen Siding, where the railway crossed the Modder (the Boers had destroyed the bridge). 14th Brigade crossed the Modder on 28 March and next day the force marched towards Karee Siding, where the Boers were strongly positioned in the hills. 7th Division followed the railway with 14th Bde echeloned ahead of 15th Bde, while the mounted troops made wide turning movements on the flanks. The Boers abandoned the first line of hills, which Chermside occupied. He then moved on to the second line, where a few shots were fired at the Lincolns in the lead but which were occupied by 13.30. However, the Boers' main position was well-concealed on the third and final range of hills. Two companies of the KOSB advancing over open ground came under fire and were forced to take shelter in a
spruit (watercourse) . Two Boer guns caused some casualties until they were silenced by two British guns brought over rough ground to Chermside's right. A gap having opened between 14th and 15th Bdes, two battalions of the 15th moved over to extend Chermside's left, giving him six battalions in the firing line. Ineffectual fire was then exchanged for about an hour while the mounted troops attempted to turn the Boer position. However, about 16.00 15th Bde was able to force the position in its front, and the Boers began to give way. 14th Brigade then attacked, with the Norfolks in the lead, and cleared the hills. The mounted troops and artillery were still too far away to do much damage to the Boers fleeing towards
Brandfort, but 7th Division now held the hills, opening the way for Roberts' later advance. 14th Brigade's casualties in the action were about 100. Roberts was unable to advance from Bloemfontein until early May when he had built up his forces and supply lines. During April Chermside was transferred to the command of
3rd Division and
Colonel John Maxwell was promoted to take over 14th Bde. Before the army could move, 7th Division carried out some preliminary movements on 30 April to clear the hills north of Krantzkraal. The operation was confused by unclear orders, but Maxwell's 14th Bde was able to occupy its objective without trouble. The main advance began on 3 May, with 7th Division part of the central column. 14th Brigade was delayed by the
Ermelo Commando until nearly sunset, but Roberts' wide advance forced the Boers to retreat and Brandfort was occupied that day. Roberts' infantry halted on 4 May to allow supplies to come up, but renewed their advance next day, passing through Smalldeel on 6 May. The Boers attempted to make a stand at the Zand River to defend
Kroonstad, but Roberts forced a crossing on 10 May, the cavalry turning the flank and 7th Division going over at Junction Drift. 15th Brigade led the way, supported by 14th Bde, which worked to make the drifts easier for the transport column. Kroonstad was occupied on 12 May, where there was another 10-day halt to bring up supplies. Roberts then advanced rapidly with his central column, crossing the
Vaal River and entering Johannesburg on 31 May. Roberts stationed 15th Bde to garrison Johannesburg, leaving 14th Bde as 7th Division's only infantry. The advance towards Pretoria began on 3 June, and the undefended city was occupied two days later. The Central Column, including 14th Bde, had marched 299 miles from Bloemfontein since 3 May. Between 16 May and 16 June, 14th Bde had only lost 150 (5 per cent) out of its 2657 men, mostly to sickness and exhaustion. Once Pretoria was occupied 14th Bde was assigned as its garrison, with Maxwell appointed as governor. 14th Brigade remained in existence at Pretoria for some months, but after the
Battle of Diamond Hill (11–12 June 1900) 'divisions and even brigades were broken up haphazardly to form columns', and permanent numbered formations disappeared.
Postwar During 1902, 7th Division and 14th Bde began to reform at the
Curragh outside Dublin, but it was not until 1 November 1905 that Colonel
Alexander Thorneycroft was appointed as brigadier-general commanding 14th Bde, which then comprised: • 4th Bn,
Royal Warwickshire Regiment at the Curragh • 4th Bn,
Royal Fusiliers at Dublin • 1st Bn,
East Lancashire Regiment at Dublin • 1st Bn,
South Staffordshire Regiment at the Curragh Under the
Haldane Reforms, a
British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was planned, with Regular Army units assigned in peacetime to the permanent brigades and divisions with which they would go overseas in the event of war. Divisions were now to comprise three rather than two brigades, so the division at the Curragh was renumbered
5th Division. Colonel
William Douglas succeeded Thorneycroft in command of 14th Bde on 1 November 1909, by which time the composition of the brigade was: • 1st Bn, Royal Fusiliers at Dublin • 2nd Bn,
Essex Regiment at Dublin • 2nd Bn,
Royal Sussex Regiment at the Curragh • 1st Bn,
Royal Berkshire Regiment at the Curragh Units were regularly rotated thereafter.
Curragh incident The
Curragh incident occurred in March 1914, when officers serving in Ireland were asked whether they were prepared to march to
Ulster, potentially to act against the
Ulster Volunteers who were threatening to rebel against
Irish Home Rule. Although most attention was paid to
3rd Cavalry Brigade at the Curragh, 14th Brigade was also involved. On 20 March the officers of the 2nd Bn,
Suffolk Regiment, among others, unanimously resolved to resign their commissions rather than take action against Loyalists in Northern Ireland. Next day the commanders of 5th Division and 14th Bde addressed the officers of the Suffolks, who agreed to march north if ordered for protective duty, reserving the question of resignation if they were subsequently ordered to take action they considered unacceptable. The Government shelved the question in the face of widespread protests, and it was overtaken by the outbreak of
World War I later in the year. ==World War I==