The
Volunteer Force of part-time military units formed in Great Britain after an invasion scare in 1859 had no higher organisation than the battalion until the
Stanhope Memorandum of December 1888 proposed a comprehensive mobilisation scheme. Under this scheme Volunteer infantry battalions would assemble in their own brigades at key points in case of war. In peacetime these brigades provided a structure for collective training. Five Volunteer Infantry Brigades were initially formed in Scotland, covering the Highlands, the South of Scotland, and the
Clyde,
Forth and
Tay estuaries. The Volunteer Battalions (VBs) of the
Gordon Highlanders, recruiting from
Aberdeenshire and
Banffshire, were initially assigned to the Tay Brigade (1st, 2nd and 4th VBs) and the Highland Brigade (3rd, 5th and 6th VBs). However, the original Volunteer brigades were too large and cumbersome, and in 1890 the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th VBs of the Gordons were separated to form the
Aberdeen Brigade (Headquarters (HQ) at 60 School Hill,
Aberdeen), with only the 6th VB remaining in the Highland Brigade. Until 1892 the command of the Aberdeen Brigade was exercised by the officer commanding 75th Regimental District, then
Major-General F.S. Russell of Aden was appointed to the command, which he held until 1902. In the reorganisation at the end of the
Second Boer War in 1902, the Aberdeen Brigade was renamed the
Gordon Brigade, now consisting of all seven VBs of the regiment (an additional battalion having been raised in
Shetland in 1900) under the officer commanding the regimental district: • 1st Volunteer Battalion at Aberdeen • 2nd Volunteer Battalion at
Old Meldrum • 3rd (The Buchan) Volunteer Battalion at
Peterhead • 4th (Donside Highland) Volunteer Battalion at 28 Guild Street, Aberdeen • 5th (Deeside Highland) Volunteer Battalion at
Banchory • 6th Volunteer Battalion at
Keith • 7th Volunteer Battalion at
Lerwick (three companies attached to 1st VB) • Gordon Bearer Company,
Army Medical Corps •
Army Service Corps Company For the Royal Review at
Edinburgh on 17 September 1905, the
7th (London Scottish) Middlesex Rifle Volunteer Corps and the officers of the
8th (Scottish) Volunteer Battalion, King's (Liverpool Regiment), were attached to the Gordon Brigade under the command of
Brigadier-General P.D. Trotter, which was part of the '3rd Infantry Division' formed for the day. In 1906 permanent commanders were appointed to the Volunteer Brigades, drawn from retired
colonels, Col J.W. Hughes-Hallett being appointed to the Gordon Brigade. ==Territorial Force==