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54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division

The 54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division was an infantry division of the British Army. The division was raised in 1908 following the creation of the Territorial Force (TF) as the East Anglian Division. During the First World War the division fought at Gallipoli and in the Middle East. The division was disbanded after the war but reformed in the Territorial Army in 1920. During the Second World War it was a home service division and did not see any combat service abroad and was disbanded in late 1943 but many of its component units went to see service in the Normandy Campaign and North-western Europe from June 1944 to May 1945.

East Anglian Division
54th (East Anglian) Division
54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division
Shoulder insignia of the 54th (East Anglian) Division, First World War
Active1908–1919
1920–1943
Country United Kingdom
Branch Territorial Army
TypeInfantry
SizeDivision
Peacetime HQWarley, Essex
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
the Hon. Julian Byng
Charles Townshend
Evelyn Barker
Cyril Lomax
Sir Ian Freeland
Insignia
Second World War division sign

Formation

The Territorial Force (TF) was formed on 1 April 1908 following the enactment of the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 (7 Edw.7, c.9) which combined and re-organised the old Volunteer Force, the Honourable Artillery Company and the Yeomanry. On formation, the TF contained 14 infantry divisions and 14 mounted yeomanry brigades.[1] One of the divisions was the East Anglian Division.[2] The infantry of the division was composed of the Essex, East Midland, and Norfolk and Suffolk Brigades. Divisional headquarters was based at Claremont House in Warley, while the infantry brigades were headquartered at Brentwood, Bedford, and Norwich. Its subunits were spread across East Anglia and the East Midlands.[3][4]

First World War

While on annual training, the division was ordered to mobilize on 4 August 1914, concentrating in the vicinity of Brentwood by 10 August. After moving to Chelmsford, Bury St Edmunds, and Norwich on 20 August, the division served on coast defence duty. Three battalions – the 4th battalion Suffolk Regiment, 1st Cambridgeshire, and 1st Hertfordshire – were sent to France between November 1914 and February 1915. They were replaced in April by the 8th Hampshires, 10th Londons, and 11th London. The battalions of the division were reorganized to include four companies in January 1915, and in May it concentrated near St Albans, preparing to be sent overseas. Its destination was revealed to be Gallipoli on 8 July. Leaving behind the divisional artillery and most of the train, the division departed St. Albans for Devonport and Liverpool between 20 and 30 July, boarding transports for Mudros, where it began arriving on 6 August.[3]

The 54th (East Anglian) Division landed at Suvla on 10 August in the Gallipoli Campaign, as a part of IX Corps under Lieutenant-General Stopford. By the end of 11 August, ten battalions and the divisional headquarters had landed.[3] As part of the evacuation of the Gallipoli peninsular the division was ordered to re-embark from Gallipoli on 26 November, and returned to Mudros between 3 and 8 December. On 9 December, it included 240 officers and 4,480 other ranks, including reinforcements. It began embarking for Egypt on 13 December, and arrived in Alexandria on 18 December. On the next day, it was concentrated at Sidi Bishr before moving to Mena Camp near Cairo.[5]

As a result of the Senussi uprising, the 161st Brigade was sent into the Western Desert on 28 December 1915. Between 11 and 15 February 1916, the divisional artillery, which had been sent to France in November 1915 and attached to the 33rd Division, rejoined the division at Mena.[6] The 161st Brigade returned to the division on 5 March, without the 4th Essex, which returned on 23 March. The division took over the southern section of the Suez Canal defences on 2 April,[5] as part of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force under General Archibald Murray.[7]

Then in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign, during the First Battle of Gaza, on 26 March 1917, the 161st Brigade and divisional artillery were in reserve while the 53rd (Welsh) Division carried out the main attack. These reserves were committed as the battle progressed resulting in the British gaining a foothold in the Turkish defences but the British commander called off the attack as night fell. In the Second Battle of Gaza, the 1/4th and 1/5th Battalions of the Norfolk Regiment sustained 75 per cent casualties (about 1,200 men).[8] It took part in the successful Third Battle of Gaza as part of XXI Corps led by General Bulfin, and by the end of 1917 Edmund Allenby's forces had taken Jerusalem. The division fought in the Battle of Jaffa on 21 and 22 December.[5]

 
Men of the Norfolk Regiment resting on the road to Beirut, late October 1918

The 162nd Brigade participated in the Fight at Ras el'Ain during the Battle of Tell 'Asur on 12 March 1918. The division fought in the attack at Berukin on 9 and 10 April/ In September 1918 the division took part in the Battle of Sharon between 19 and 23 September. After the end of the battle, the division concentrated at Hableh on 24 September and was ordered to move to Haifa three days later. It began advancing to Haifa on 28 September through Atlit, and finished concentrating there on 4 October, where it improved communications. The division was ordered to begin the advance to Beirut on 20 October, which was conducted by brigade group in daylong intervals. The advance began three days later, through Acre, Naqoura, Tyre, and Sidon. The division reached Beirut between 31 October and 5 November, as the war with the Ottoman Empire ended on 31 October.[5]

The division moved back by sea to El Qantara from 28 November, beginning with the 163rd Brigade, and then moved to Helmie, where it concentrated on 7 December without its artillery and train. The divisional artillery and train arrived via El Qantara by 14 December, except for the CCLXXII Brigade, which marched from Beirut to Tulkarm before entraining for Helmie on 9 December. The demobilization of the division began on 6 January 1919 with the disbandment of the three brigade trench mortar brigades. The division personnel filled the time with educational courses in January as they were gradually demobilized. By 22 May only six battalions remained, and on 29 May the 77th Brigade joined the division and was renumbered as the 161st Brigade. The CII Brigade joined and temporarily became the division artillery on 1 June. The Territorial units were reduced to cadre strength and the war-time units were disbanded, with the division ceasing to exist in Egypt on 30 September 1919.[5]

Between the wars

The division was disbanded after the Great War when the whole of the Territorial Force was disbanded. However, it was reformed in 1920 as the Territorial Army (TA) and the division was reconstituted with Eastern Command,[5] initially with a similar composition to before the First World War but, over the next few years, with a much different composition.

Buildup to the Second World War

Throughout the 1930s, tensions built between Germany and the United Kingdom as well as its allies.[9] During late 1937 and throughout 1938, German demands for the annexation of Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland led to an international crisis. In an attempt to avoid war, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain met the German Chancellor Adolf Hitler in September and brokered the Munich Agreement. The agreement averted immediate war and allowed Germany to annex the Sudetenland.[10] Chamberlain had intended the agreement to lead to further peaceful resolution of issues, but relations between both countries soon deteriorated.[11] On 15 March 1939, Germany breached the terms of the agreement by invading and occupying the remnants of the Czech state.[12]

In response, on 29 March, the British Secretary of State for War Leslie Hore-Belisha announced plans to increase the Territorial Army from 130,000 men to 340,000 and in so doing double the number of territorial divisions.[13] The plan of action was for the existing units to recruit over their allowed establishments (aided by an increase in pay for territorials, the removal of restrictions on promotion that had been a major hindrance to recruiting during the preceding years, the construction of better quality barracks, and an increase in supper-time rations) and then form Second Line divisions from small cadres that could be built upon.[13][14] As a result, the 54th was to provide cadres to form a Second Line duplicate unit, which would become the 18th Infantry Division following the start of the war.[15] In April, limited conscription was introduced. At that time 34,500 militiamen, all aged 20, were conscripted into the regular army, initially to be trained for six months before being deployed to the forming second line units.[16][17] Despite the intention for the army to grow in size, the programme was complicated by a lack of central guidance on the expansion and duplication process and issues regarding the lack of facilities, equipment and instructors.[13][18]

Second World War

Upon the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, the 54th Division, commanded by Major-General John Priestman, a Regular Army officer, and serving under Eastern Command, was mobilised for full-time war service.[19] Comprising still the 161st, 162nd and 163rd Infantry Brigades and divisional troops, the division absorbed hundreds of conscripts and spent the first few months of the war, after guarding various designated 'vulnerable points', training for eventual overseas service.[20]

The division remained in the United Kingdom as a local defence formation, being downgraded to a Lower Establishment in January 1942. The division was disbanded and broken up on 14 December 1943. Its component units would take part in the Normandy Campaign as support units, with the HQ Royal Artillery becoming HQ 8th Army Group Royal Artillery and HQ Royal Engineers becoming HQ Royal Engineers for the 6th Airborne Division. The divisional HQ was redesignated HQ Lines of Communication (54th Division) for the 21st Army Group. The division was not reformed in the post-war Territorial Army in 1947 but the 161st and 162nd Infantry Brigades both survived until disbandment in the 1960s.[20]

Postwar

The formation became known as East Anglian District[21] when the Territorial Army was reformed on 1 January 1947.[22] In 1961 it became a district headquarters as 54th (East Anglian) Division/District,[23] and it was disbanded on the reduction of the TA into the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve on 1 April 1967, when many individual TA units lost their identities.[24] The district headquarters itself formed the core of the structure for the creation of Eastern District under HQ UK Land Forces in 1972.[25]

General officers commanding

General Officers Commanding have included:[26]

Appointed General officer commanding
August 1908 Brigadier-General John H. Campbell
October 1910 Major-General the Hon. Julian H.G. Byng
October 1912 Major-General Charles V.F. Townshend
7 June 1913 Major-General Francis S. Inglefield (sick)[27]
6 October 1915 Brigadier-General F.F.W. Daniell (acting)[27]
11 October 1915 Major-General Francis S. Inglefield (sick)[27]
14 October 1915 Brigadier-General Henry Hodgson (acting)[27]
13 November 1915 Major-General Francis S. Inglefield[27]
27 April 1916 Major-General Sir Steuart W. Hare (sick)[27]
31 March 1917 Brigadier-General Henry George Sandilands (acting)[27]
12 April 1917 Major-General Sir Steuart Hare (leave)[27]
4 January 1918 Brigadier-General Davison Bruce Stewart (acting)[27]
16 March 1918 Major-General Sir Steuart Hare[27]
July 1923 Major-General John Duncan
February 1927 Major-General Sir Torquhil G. Matheson
September 1930 Major-General Francis J. Marshall
September 1934 Major-General Russell M. Luckock
September 1938 Major-General John H.T. Priestman
February 1941 Major-General Evelyn H. Barker
April 1943 Major-General Charles B. Wainwright
May 1943 Major-General Colin B. Callander
1946 Major-General Cyril E.N. Lomax
March 1948 Major-General Maurice S. Chilton
April 1950 Major-General Charles E.A. Firth
January 1951 Major-General Hugh C. Stockwell
May 1951 Major-General Leslie K. Lockhart
December 1952 Major-General Roger H. Bower
May 1955 Major-General Reginald P. Harding
June 1958 Major-General Dennis E.B. Talbot
March 1961 Major-General Ian H. Freeland
July 1963 Major-General Richard A. Fyffe
May 1965 Major-General Fergus A.H. Ling

Orders of battle

1910

East Anglian Division (1910)[28]
  • Norfolk and Suffolk Brigade
    • 4th Battalion, Norfolk Regiment
    • 5th Battalion, Norfolk Regiment
    • 4th Battalion, Suffolk Regiment
    • 5th Battalion, Suffolk Regiment
  • East Midland Brigade
    • 5th Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment
    • 4th Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment
    • 1st Battalion, Cambridgeshire Regiment
    • 1st Battalion, Hertfordshire Regiment
  • Essex Brigade
    • 4th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 5th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 6th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 7th Battalion, Essex Regiment

First World War

54th (East Anglian) Division (1914–1918)[29]
  • 161st (Essex) Brigade
    • 1/4th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 1/5th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 1/6th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 1/7th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 161st Machine Gun Company, Machine Gun Corps (formed 23 April 1916, moved to 54th Battalion, Machine Gun Corps 19 April 1918)
    • 161st Trench Mortar Battery (formed by 17 May 1917)
  • 162nd (East Midland) Brigade
    • 1/5th Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment
    • 1/4th Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment
    • 1/1st Battalion, Cambridgeshire Regiment (to France, February 1915)
    • 1/1st Battalion, Hertfordshire Regiment (to France, November 1914)
    • 2/1st Battalion, Cambridgeshire Regiment (joined February 1915 from 2nd East Anglian Division to replace 1/1st Cambridgeshires, returned to 2nd East Anglian Division in April of that year)[30]
    • 1/10th (County of London) Battalion, London Regiment (Hackney) (from April 1915)
    • 1/11th (County of London) Battalion, London Regiment (Finsbury Rifles) (from April 1915)
    • 162nd Machine Gun Company, Machine Gun Company (formed 26 April 1916, moved to 54th Battalion, Machine Gun Corps 19 April 1918)
    • 162nd Trench Mortar Battery (formed by 5 May 1917)
  • 163rd (Norfolk and Suffolk) Brigade
  • 54th (East Anglian) Divisional Artillery [a]
  • 1/I East Anglian Brigade, RFA (numbered CCLXX Brigade on 26 May 1916 and CCLXXII Brigade on 21 December 1916)
    • 1/1st Norfolk Battery (became A Battery on 26 May 1916)
    • 1/2nd Norfolk Battery (became B Battery on 26 May 1916)
    • 1/3rd Norfolk Battery (became C Battery on 26 May 1916, broken up between A and B Batteries on 21 December 1916)
    • 1/I East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column
  • 1/II East Anglian Brigade, RFA (numbered CCLXXI Brigade on 26 May 1916)
    • 1/1st Essex Battery (became A Battery on 26 May 1916)
    • 1/2nd Essex Battery (became B Battery on 26 May 1916)
    • 1/3rd Essex Battery (became C Battery on 26 May 1916, broken up between A and B Batteries on 20 December 1916)
    • C (Howitzer) Battery (joined 20 December 1916 from CCLXXII (H) Brigade)
    • 1/II East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column
  • 1/III East Anglian Brigade (Howitzers) (numbered CCLXXII (H) Brigade on 28 May 1916, broken up 21 December 1916)
    • 1/1st Suffolk Battery (Howitzers) (became A (Howitzer) Battery 28 May 1916, to CCLXXI Brigade 21 December 1916)
    • 1/2nd Suffolk Battery (Howitzers) (became B (Howitzer) Battery 28 May 1916, to CCLXX Brigade 21 December 1916)
    • 1/III East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column
  • 1/IV East Anglian Brigade, RFA (numbered CCLXXIII Brigade on 29 May 1916 and CCLXX Brigade on 21 December 1916)
    • 1/1st Hertfordshire Battery (became A Battery on 29 May 1916)
    • 1/2nd Hertfordshire Battery (became B Battery on 29 May 1916, broken up between A and C Batteries on 21 December 1916)
    • 1/1st Northamptonshire Battery (became C Battery on 29 May 1916, became B Battery on 21 December 1916)
    • C (Howitzer) Battery (joined 21 December 1916 from CCLXXII (H) Brigade)
    • 1/IV East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column
  • 1/1st East Anglian (Essex) Heavy Battery, RGA (left in England when division went to Gallipoli; later served in France)
  • 54th (East Anglian) Divisional Ammunition Column (detachment accompanied division to Gallipoli, while the remainder were sent to France in November 1915, where they became the 55th (West Lancashire) Divisional Ammunition Column January 1916)

Divisional artillery after August 1916 reorganisation:

  • CCLXX Brigade, RFA
    • A, B, C (H) Batteries
  • CCLXXI Brigade, RFA
    • A, B, 440 (H) Batteries
  • CCLXXIII Brigade, RFA
    • A, B, C (H) Batteries
  • Trench Mortars (joined on 3 October 1917, left 2 March 1918)
    • X.54 Medium Trench Mortar Battery
    • Y.54 Medium Trench Mortar Battery
    • Z.54 Medium Trench Mortar Battery


  • Divisional Engineers
    • 1/1st East Anglian Field Company, RE (joined 2nd Division in France on 5 January 1915)
    • /2nd East Anglian Field Company, RE (renumbered 484th Field Company on 1 February 1917)
    • 2/1st East Anglian Field Company (formed after mobilisation; renumbered 485th Field Company on 1 February 1917), RE
    • 1st Kent Fortress Field Company, RE (joined 1 July 1916; renumbered 495th (1st Kent) Field Company on 1 February 1917)
    • 54th (East Anglian) Divisional Signal Company, RE
  • Royal Army Medical Corps
    • 1st East Anglian Field Ambulance (joined 29th Division in January 1915)
    • 2nd East Anglian Field Ambulance
    • 3rd East Anglian Field Ambulance
    • 2/1st East Anglian Field Ambulance (formed after mobilisation)

Second World War

54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division (Second World War)[19]
  • 161st Infantry Brigade (until 17 December 1940)[33]
    • 1/4th Battalion, Essex Regiment (left 20 July 1940)
    • 1/5th Battalion, Essex Regiment (until 14 December 1940)
    • 2/4th Battalion, Essex Regiment (left 18 September 1939)
    • 2/5th Battalion, Essex Regiment
    • 5th (Hackney) Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment (left 18 September 1939)
    • 7th (Hackney) Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment (left 18 September 1939)
    • 161st Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company (formed 10 July 1940)
  • 162nd Infantry Brigade (until 10 November 1942 and from 5 September 1943)[34]
  • 163rd Infantry Brigade (redesignated 53rd Infantry Brigade 18 September 1939)[35]
    • 5th Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment (until 17 September 1939)
    • 6th Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment (until 17 September 1939)
    • 7th Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment (until 17 September 1939)
    • 2/4th Battalion, Essex Regiment (from 18 September 1939 until 11 April 1943)
    • 5th (Hackney) Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment (from 18 September 1939 until 1 November 1943)
    • 7th (Hackney) Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment (from 18 September 1939, disbanded 10 October 1942)
    • 163rd Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company (formed 1 February 1940, disbanded 14 July 1941)
    • 6th Battalion, King's Own Royal Regiment (Lancaster) (from 16 October until 11 December 1942)
    • 1st Buckinghamshire Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry (from 12 December 1942 until 30 May 1943)
    • 5th Battalion, King's Regiment (Liverpool) (from 18 July 1943 until 1 November 1943)
  • 198th Infantry Brigade (from 20 December 1940)[36]
Divisional troops

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ The divisional artillery did not accompany the division to Gallipoli. On 17 November 1915 it embarked for France, where it was attached to the 33rd Division, a 'Kitchener's Army' division whose artillery were still under training.[31][32] It rejoined 54th Division in Egypt in February 1916.
  2. ^ Note typo: 19th not 199th

Citations

  1. ^ Westlake 1992, p. 3
  2. ^ Conrad, Mark (1996). "The British Army, 1914". Retrieved 27 February 2015.
  3. ^ a b c Becke 1936, p. 130.
  4. ^ Westlake, Ray (2011). The Territorials, 1908–1914: A Guide for Military and Family Historians. Pen & Sword. ISBN 978-1848843608.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Becke 1936, p. 131.
  6. ^ Becke 1936, p. 127.
  7. ^ "Murray's first despatch". Desert Column. Retrieved 28 January 2012.
  8. ^ Eastern Daily Press, "Sunday" section May 5, 2007
  9. ^ Bell 1986, pp. 3–4.
  10. ^ Bell 1986, pp. 258–275.
  11. ^ Bell 1986, pp. 277–278.
  12. ^ Bell 1986, p. 281.
  13. ^ a b c Gibbs 1976, p. 518.
  14. ^ Messenger 1994, p. 47.
  15. ^ Joslen 2003, p. 60.
  16. ^ Messenger 1994, p. 49.
  17. ^ French 2001, p. 64.
  18. ^ Perry 1988, p. 48.
  19. ^ a b c Joslen 2003, p. 89.
  20. ^ a b IWM 2017.
  21. ^ . Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
  22. ^ Watson, Graham. "Territorial Army 1947". Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  23. ^ . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 5 July 2007. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  24. ^ Watson & Rinaldi, p. 289.
  25. ^ 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.
  26. ^ "Army Commands" (PDF). Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Becke 1936, p. 125.
  28. ^ Hart 1910, pp. 131–132.
  29. ^ Becke 1936, pp. 127–129.
  30. ^ James 1978, p. 112.
  31. ^ Becke, Pt 3b, pp. 33–7.
  32. ^ Macartney-Filgate, pp 3–5.
  33. ^ Joslen 2003, p. 349.
  34. ^ Joslen 2003, p. 350.
  35. ^ Joslen 2003, p. 351.
  36. ^ Joslen 2003, p. 382.
  37. ^

Sources

  • "Badge, Formation, 54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division & 162nd Infantry Brigade". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  • Becke, Major A. F. (1936). Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2A. The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st-Line Territorial Force Divisions (42–56) (2007 Naval & Military Press reprint ed.). London: His Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 1-871167-12-4.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 3b: New Army Divisions (30–41) and 63rd (R.N.) Division, London: HM Stationery Office, 1939/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-41-X.
  • Bell, P.M.H. (1986). The Origins of the Second World War in Europe (2nd 1997 ed.). London: Pearson. ISBN 978-0-582-30470-3.
  • French, David (2001) [2000]. Raising Churchill's Army: The British Army and the War Against Germany 1919–1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924630-4.
  • Gibbs, N.H. (1976). Grand Strategy. History of the Second World War. Vol. I. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 978-0-11-630181-9.
  • Hart, Fitzroy, ed. (1910). Hart's Annual Army List: Special Reserve List, and Territorial Force List, for 1910. London: John Murray. OCLC 46781398.
  • James, Brigadier E.A. (1978). British Regiments 1914–18. London: Samson Books Limited. ISBN 0-906304-03-2.
  • 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.
  • Maj J. Macartney-Filgate, History of the 33rd Divisional Artillery in the War 1914–1918, Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2005, ISBN 978-1-843429-78-4.
  • Messenger, Charles (1994). For Love of Regiment 1915–1994. A History of British Infantry. Vol. 2. London: Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 978-0-85052-422-2.
  • Perry, Frederick William (1988). The Commonwealth Armies: Manpower and Organisation in Two World Wars. War, Armed Forces and Society. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-2595-2.
  • Watson, Graham E.; Rinaldi, Richard A. (2018). The Corps of Royal Engineers: Organization and Units 1889–2018. Tiger Lily Books. ISBN 978-171790180-4.
  • Westlake, Ray (1992). British Territorial Units 1914–18. Men-at-Arms Series. Vol. 245. Osprey. ISBN 978-1-85532-168-7.

Further reading

  • Atkinson, C. T. (1952). The Royal Hampshire Regiment 1914–1918 (2003 Naval & Military Press reprint ed.). Glasgow: Robert Maclehose & Co. ISBN 9781843426936.
  • Burrows, John W. (1923). Essex Units in the War, 1914-1919. Vol. 5: Essex Territorial Infantry Brigade (4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th Battalions). Southend-on-Sea: J.H. Burrows & sons. OCLC 4045637.
  • Fair, A.; Wolton, E. D. (1923). The History of the 1/5th Battalion, The Suffolk Regiment. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode. OCLC 59761790.
  • Gibbons, Thomas (1921). With the 1/5th Essex in the East (2009 Naval & Military Press reprint ed.). London: Benham and Company. ISBN 9781847349798.
  • Murphy, Charles Cecil Rowe (1928). The History of the Suffolk Regiment, 1914-1927 (2002 Naval & Military Press reprint ed.). London: Hutchinson. ISBN 1847341608.
  • Northamptonshire Regiment Regimental History Committee (1932). The Northamptonshire Regiment, 1914-1918 (2005 Naval & Military Press reprint ed.). Aldershot: Gale & Polden. ISBN 9781845742706.
  • Petre, F. Loraine (1922). The History of the Norfolk Regiment, 1685-1918. Vol. 2: 4th August 1914 to 31st December 1918. Norwich: Jarrold & Sons/Empire Press. OCLC 1013369401.
  • Webster, F. A. M. (1930). The History of the Fifth Battalion the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment (T.A.). London: Frederick Warne & Co. OCLC 17648450.

External links

54th, east, anglian, infantry, division, infantry, division, british, army, division, raised, 1908, following, creation, territorial, force, east, anglian, division, during, first, world, division, fought, gallipoli, middle, east, division, disbanded, after, r. The 54th East Anglian Infantry Division was an infantry division of the British Army The division was raised in 1908 following the creation of the Territorial Force TF as the East Anglian Division During the First World War the division fought at Gallipoli and in the Middle East The division was disbanded after the war but reformed in the Territorial Army in 1920 During the Second World War it was a home service division and did not see any combat service abroad and was disbanded in late 1943 but many of its component units went to see service in the Normandy Campaign and North western Europe from June 1944 to May 1945 East Anglian Division54th East Anglian Division54th East Anglian Infantry DivisionShoulder insignia of the 54th East Anglian Division First World WarActive1908 19191920 1943Country United KingdomBranchTerritorial ArmyTypeInfantrySizeDivisionPeacetime HQWarley EssexEngagementsBattle of Gallipoli First Battle of Gaza Battle of Mughar Ridge Battle of Jerusalem 1917 Action of Tell Asur Battle of AraraCommandersNotablecommandersthe Hon Julian ByngCharles TownshendEvelyn BarkerCyril LomaxSir Ian FreelandInsigniaSecond World War division sign Contents 1 Formation 2 First World War 3 Between the wars 3 1 Buildup to the Second World War 4 Second World War 5 Postwar 6 General officers commanding 7 Orders of battle 7 1 1910 7 2 First World War 7 3 Second World War 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksFormation EditThe Territorial Force TF was formed on 1 April 1908 following the enactment of the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 7 Edw 7 c 9 which combined and re organised the old Volunteer Force the Honourable Artillery Company and the Yeomanry On formation the TF contained 14 infantry divisions and 14 mounted yeomanry brigades 1 One of the divisions was the East Anglian Division 2 The infantry of the division was composed of the Essex East Midland and Norfolk and Suffolk Brigades Divisional headquarters was based at Claremont House in Warley while the infantry brigades were headquartered at Brentwood Bedford and Norwich Its subunits were spread across East Anglia and the East Midlands 3 4 First World War EditWhile on annual training the division was ordered to mobilize on 4 August 1914 concentrating in the vicinity of Brentwood by 10 August After moving to Chelmsford Bury St Edmunds and Norwich on 20 August the division served on coast defence duty Three battalions the 4th battalion Suffolk Regiment 1st Cambridgeshire and 1st Hertfordshire were sent to France between November 1914 and February 1915 They were replaced in April by the 8th Hampshires 10th Londons and 11th London The battalions of the division were reorganized to include four companies in January 1915 and in May it concentrated near St Albans preparing to be sent overseas Its destination was revealed to be Gallipoli on 8 July Leaving behind the divisional artillery and most of the train the division departed St Albans for Devonport and Liverpool between 20 and 30 July boarding transports for Mudros where it began arriving on 6 August 3 The 54th East Anglian Division landed at Suvla on 10 August in the Gallipoli Campaign as a part of IX Corps under Lieutenant General Stopford By the end of 11 August ten battalions and the divisional headquarters had landed 3 As part of the evacuation of the Gallipoli peninsular the division was ordered to re embark from Gallipoli on 26 November and returned to Mudros between 3 and 8 December On 9 December it included 240 officers and 4 480 other ranks including reinforcements It began embarking for Egypt on 13 December and arrived in Alexandria on 18 December On the next day it was concentrated at Sidi Bishr before moving to Mena Camp near Cairo 5 As a result of the Senussi uprising the 161st Brigade was sent into the Western Desert on 28 December 1915 Between 11 and 15 February 1916 the divisional artillery which had been sent to France in November 1915 and attached to the 33rd Division rejoined the division at Mena 6 The 161st Brigade returned to the division on 5 March without the 4th Essex which returned on 23 March The division took over the southern section of the Suez Canal defences on 2 April 5 as part of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force under General Archibald Murray 7 Then in the Sinai and Palestine Campaign during the First Battle of Gaza on 26 March 1917 the 161st Brigade and divisional artillery were in reserve while the 53rd Welsh Division carried out the main attack These reserves were committed as the battle progressed resulting in the British gaining a foothold in the Turkish defences but the British commander called off the attack as night fell In the Second Battle of Gaza the 1 4th and 1 5th Battalions of the Norfolk Regiment sustained 75 per cent casualties about 1 200 men 8 It took part in the successful Third Battle of Gaza as part of XXI Corps led by General Bulfin and by the end of 1917 Edmund Allenby s forces had taken Jerusalem The division fought in the Battle of Jaffa on 21 and 22 December 5 Men of the Norfolk Regiment resting on the road to Beirut late October 1918 The 162nd Brigade participated in the Fight at Ras el Ain during the Battle of Tell Asur on 12 March 1918 The division fought in the attack at Berukin on 9 and 10 April In September 1918 the division took part in the Battle of Sharon between 19 and 23 September After the end of the battle the division concentrated at Hableh on 24 September and was ordered to move to Haifa three days later It began advancing to Haifa on 28 September through Atlit and finished concentrating there on 4 October where it improved communications The division was ordered to begin the advance to Beirut on 20 October which was conducted by brigade group in daylong intervals The advance began three days later through Acre Naqoura Tyre and Sidon The division reached Beirut between 31 October and 5 November as the war with the Ottoman Empire ended on 31 October 5 The division moved back by sea to El Qantara from 28 November beginning with the 163rd Brigade and then moved to Helmie where it concentrated on 7 December without its artillery and train The divisional artillery and train arrived via El Qantara by 14 December except for the CCLXXII Brigade which marched from Beirut to Tulkarm before entraining for Helmie on 9 December The demobilization of the division began on 6 January 1919 with the disbandment of the three brigade trench mortar brigades The division personnel filled the time with educational courses in January as they were gradually demobilized By 22 May only six battalions remained and on 29 May the 77th Brigade joined the division and was renumbered as the 161st Brigade The CII Brigade joined and temporarily became the division artillery on 1 June The Territorial units were reduced to cadre strength and the war time units were disbanded with the division ceasing to exist in Egypt on 30 September 1919 5 Between the wars EditThe division was disbanded after the Great War when the whole of the Territorial Force was disbanded However it was reformed in 1920 as the Territorial Army TA and the division was reconstituted with Eastern Command 5 initially with a similar composition to before the First World War but over the next few years with a much different composition Buildup to the Second World War Edit Throughout the 1930s tensions built between Germany and the United Kingdom as well as its allies 9 During late 1937 and throughout 1938 German demands for the annexation of Czechoslovakia s Sudetenland led to an international crisis In an attempt to avoid war British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain met the German Chancellor Adolf Hitler in September and brokered the Munich Agreement The agreement averted immediate war and allowed Germany to annex the Sudetenland 10 Chamberlain had intended the agreement to lead to further peaceful resolution of issues but relations between both countries soon deteriorated 11 On 15 March 1939 Germany breached the terms of the agreement by invading and occupying the remnants of the Czech state 12 In response on 29 March the British Secretary of State for War Leslie Hore Belisha announced plans to increase the Territorial Army from 130 000 men to 340 000 and in so doing double the number of territorial divisions 13 The plan of action was for the existing units to recruit over their allowed establishments aided by an increase in pay for territorials the removal of restrictions on promotion that had been a major hindrance to recruiting during the preceding years the construction of better quality barracks and an increase in supper time rations and then form Second Line divisions from small cadres that could be built upon 13 14 As a result the 54th was to provide cadres to form a Second Line duplicate unit which would become the 18th Infantry Division following the start of the war 15 In April limited conscription was introduced At that time 34 500 militiamen all aged 20 were conscripted into the regular army initially to be trained for six months before being deployed to the forming second line units 16 17 Despite the intention for the army to grow in size the programme was complicated by a lack of central guidance on the expansion and duplication process and issues regarding the lack of facilities equipment and instructors 13 18 Second World War EditUpon the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939 the 54th Division commanded by Major General John Priestman a Regular Army officer and serving under Eastern Command was mobilised for full time war service 19 Comprising still the 161st 162nd and 163rd Infantry Brigades and divisional troops the division absorbed hundreds of conscripts and spent the first few months of the war after guarding various designated vulnerable points training for eventual overseas service 20 The division remained in the United Kingdom as a local defence formation being downgraded to a Lower Establishment in January 1942 The division was disbanded and broken up on 14 December 1943 Its component units would take part in the Normandy Campaign as support units with the HQ Royal Artillery becoming HQ 8th Army Group Royal Artillery and HQ Royal Engineers becoming HQ Royal Engineers for the 6th Airborne Division The divisional HQ was redesignated HQ Lines of Communication 54th Division for the 21st Army Group The division was not reformed in the post war Territorial Army in 1947 but the 161st and 162nd Infantry Brigades both survived until disbandment in the 1960s 20 Postwar EditThe formation became known as East Anglian District 21 when the Territorial Army was reformed on 1 January 1947 22 In 1961 it became a district headquarters as 54th East Anglian Division District 23 and it was disbanded on the reduction of the TA into the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve on 1 April 1967 when many individual TA units lost their identities 24 The district headquarters itself formed the core of the structure for the creation of Eastern District under HQ UK Land Forces in 1972 25 General officers commanding EditSee also General officer commanding General Officers Commanding have included 26 Appointed General officer commandingAugust 1908 Brigadier General John H CampbellOctober 1910 Major General the Hon Julian H G ByngOctober 1912 Major General Charles V F Townshend7 June 1913 Major General Francis S Inglefield sick 27 6 October 1915 Brigadier General F F W Daniell acting 27 11 October 1915 Major General Francis S Inglefield sick 27 14 October 1915 Brigadier General Henry Hodgson acting 27 13 November 1915 Major General Francis S Inglefield 27 27 April 1916 Major General Sir Steuart W Hare sick 27 31 March 1917 Brigadier General Henry George Sandilands acting 27 12 April 1917 Major General Sir Steuart Hare leave 27 4 January 1918 Brigadier General Davison Bruce Stewart acting 27 16 March 1918 Major General Sir Steuart Hare 27 July 1923 Major General John DuncanFebruary 1927 Major General Sir Torquhil G MathesonSeptember 1930 Major General Francis J MarshallSeptember 1934 Major General Russell M LuckockSeptember 1938 Major General John H T PriestmanFebruary 1941 Major General Evelyn H BarkerApril 1943 Major General Charles B WainwrightMay 1943 Major General Colin B Callander1946 Major General Cyril E N LomaxMarch 1948 Major General Maurice S ChiltonApril 1950 Major General Charles E A FirthJanuary 1951 Major General Hugh C StockwellMay 1951 Major General Leslie K LockhartDecember 1952 Major General Roger H BowerMay 1955 Major General Reginald P HardingJune 1958 Major General Dennis E B TalbotMarch 1961 Major General Ian H FreelandJuly 1963 Major General Richard A FyffeMay 1965 Major General Fergus A H LingOrders of battle Edit1910 Edit East Anglian Division 1910 28 Norfolk and Suffolk Brigade 4th Battalion Norfolk Regiment 5th Battalion Norfolk Regiment 4th Battalion Suffolk Regiment 5th Battalion Suffolk Regiment East Midland Brigade 5th Battalion Bedfordshire Regiment 4th Battalion Northamptonshire Regiment 1st Battalion Cambridgeshire Regiment 1st Battalion Hertfordshire Regiment Essex Brigade 4th Battalion Essex Regiment 5th Battalion Essex Regiment 6th Battalion Essex Regiment 7th Battalion Essex Regiment Divisional Artillery 1st East Anglian Brigade Royal Field Artillery RFA 1st Norfolk Battery 2nd Norfolk Battery 3rd Norfolk Battery 1st East Anglian Ammunition Column 2nd East Anglian Brigade RFA 1st Essex Battery 2nd Essex Battery 3rd Essex Battery 2nd East Anglian Ammunition Column 3rd East Anglian Howitzer Brigade RFA 1st Suffolk Battery 2nd Suffolk Battery 3rd East Anglian Ammunition Column 4th East Anglian Brigade RFA 1st Hertfordshire Battery 2nd Hertfordshire Battery Northamptonshire Battery 4th East Anglian Ammunition Column East Anglian Essex Heavy Battery Royal Garrison Artillery Divisional Engineers 1st East Anglian Field Company Royal Engineers RE 2nd East Anglian Field Company RE East Anglian Divisional Telegraph Company RE Army Service Corps East Anglian Transport and Supply Column Royal Army Medical Corps 1st East Anglian Field Ambulance 2nd East Anglian Field Ambulance 3rd East Anglian Field Ambulance First World War Edit 54th East Anglian Division 1914 1918 29 161st Essex Brigade 1 4th Battalion Essex Regiment 1 5th Battalion Essex Regiment 1 6th Battalion Essex Regiment 1 7th Battalion Essex Regiment 161st Machine Gun Company Machine Gun Corps formed 23 April 1916 moved to 54th Battalion Machine Gun Corps 19 April 1918 161st Trench Mortar Battery formed by 17 May 1917 162nd East Midland Brigade 1 5th Battalion Bedfordshire Regiment 1 4th Battalion Northamptonshire Regiment 1 1st Battalion Cambridgeshire Regiment to France February 1915 1 1st Battalion Hertfordshire Regiment to France November 1914 2 1st Battalion Cambridgeshire Regiment joined February 1915 from 2nd East Anglian Division to replace 1 1st Cambridgeshires returned to 2nd East Anglian Division in April of that year 30 1 10th County of London Battalion London Regiment Hackney from April 1915 1 11th County of London Battalion London Regiment Finsbury Rifles from April 1915 162nd Machine Gun Company Machine Gun Company formed 26 April 1916 moved to 54th Battalion Machine Gun Corps 19 April 1918 162nd Trench Mortar Battery formed by 5 May 1917 163rd Norfolk and Suffolk Brigade 1 4th Battalion Norfolk Regiment 1 5th Battalion Norfolk Regiment 1 4th Battalion Suffolk Regiment to France November 1914 1 5th Battalion Suffolk Regiment 1 8th Isle of Wight Rifles Princess Beatrice s Battalion Hampshire Regiment from 19 April 1915 163rd Machine Gun Company Machine Gun Corps formed 1 May 1916 moved to 54th Battalion Machine Gun Corps 19 April 1918 163rd Trench Mortar Battery formed by 4 May 1917 54th East Anglian Divisional Artillery a 1 I East Anglian Brigade RFA numbered CCLXX Brigade on 26 May 1916 and CCLXXII Brigade on 21 December 1916 1 1st Norfolk Battery became A Battery on 26 May 1916 1 2nd Norfolk Battery became B Battery on 26 May 1916 1 3rd Norfolk Battery became C Battery on 26 May 1916 broken up between A and B Batteries on 21 December 1916 1 I East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column 1 II East Anglian Brigade RFA numbered CCLXXI Brigade on 26 May 1916 1 1st Essex Battery became A Battery on 26 May 1916 1 2nd Essex Battery became B Battery on 26 May 1916 1 3rd Essex Battery became C Battery on 26 May 1916 broken up between A and B Batteries on 20 December 1916 C Howitzer Battery joined 20 December 1916 from CCLXXII H Brigade 1 II East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column 1 III East Anglian Brigade Howitzers numbered CCLXXII H Brigade on 28 May 1916 broken up 21 December 1916 1 1st Suffolk Battery Howitzers became A Howitzer Battery 28 May 1916 to CCLXXI Brigade 21 December 1916 1 2nd Suffolk Battery Howitzers became B Howitzer Battery 28 May 1916 to CCLXX Brigade 21 December 1916 1 III East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column 1 IV East Anglian Brigade RFA numbered CCLXXIII Brigade on 29 May 1916 and CCLXX Brigade on 21 December 1916 1 1st Hertfordshire Battery became A Battery on 29 May 1916 1 2nd Hertfordshire Battery became B Battery on 29 May 1916 broken up between A and C Batteries on 21 December 1916 1 1st Northamptonshire Battery became C Battery on 29 May 1916 became B Battery on 21 December 1916 C Howitzer Battery joined 21 December 1916 from CCLXXII H Brigade 1 IV East Anglian Brigade Ammunition Column 1 1st East Anglian Essex Heavy Battery RGA left in England when division went to Gallipoli later served in France 54th East Anglian Divisional Ammunition Column detachment accompanied division to Gallipoli while the remainder were sent to France in November 1915 where they became the 55th West Lancashire Divisional Ammunition Column January 1916 Divisional artillery after August 1916 reorganisation CCLXX Brigade RFA A B C H Batteries CCLXXI Brigade RFA A B 440 H Batteries CCLXXIII Brigade RFA A B C H Batteries Trench Mortars joined on 3 October 1917 left 2 March 1918 X 54 Medium Trench Mortar Battery Y 54 Medium Trench Mortar Battery Z 54 Medium Trench Mortar Battery Divisional Engineers 1 1st East Anglian Field Company RE joined 2nd Division in France on 5 January 1915 2nd East Anglian Field Company RE renumbered 484th Field Company on 1 February 1917 2 1st East Anglian Field Company formed after mobilisation renumbered 485th Field Company on 1 February 1917 RE 1st Kent Fortress Field Company RE joined 1 July 1916 renumbered 495th 1st Kent Field Company on 1 February 1917 54th East Anglian Divisional Signal Company RE Royal Army Medical Corps 1st East Anglian Field Ambulance joined 29th Division in January 1915 2nd East Anglian Field Ambulance 3rd East Anglian Field Ambulance 2 1st East Anglian Field Ambulance formed after mobilisation Second World War Edit 54th East Anglian Infantry Division Second World War 19 161st Infantry Brigade until 17 December 1940 33 1 4th Battalion Essex Regiment left 20 July 1940 1 5th Battalion Essex Regiment until 14 December 1940 2 4th Battalion Essex Regiment left 18 September 1939 2 5th Battalion Essex Regiment 5th Hackney Battalion Royal Berkshire Regiment left 18 September 1939 7th Hackney Battalion Royal Berkshire Regiment left 18 September 1939 161st Infantry Brigade Anti Tank Company formed 10 July 1940 162nd Infantry Brigade until 10 November 1942 and from 5 September 1943 34 6th Battalion Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment 1st Battalion Hertfordshire Regiment to September 1942 2nd Battalion Hertfordshire Regiment to September 1942 162nd Infantry Brigade Anti Tank Company formed 1 February 1940 disbanded 14 July 1941 163rd Infantry Brigade redesignated 53rd Infantry Brigade 18 September 1939 35 5th Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment until 17 September 1939 6th Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment until 17 September 1939 7th Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment until 17 September 1939 2 4th Battalion Essex Regiment from 18 September 1939 until 11 April 1943 5th Hackney Battalion Royal Berkshire Regiment from 18 September 1939 until 1 November 1943 7th Hackney Battalion Royal Berkshire Regiment from 18 September 1939 disbanded 10 October 1942 163rd Infantry Brigade Anti Tank Company formed 1 February 1940 disbanded 14 July 1941 6th Battalion King s Own Royal Regiment Lancaster from 16 October until 11 December 1942 1st Buckinghamshire Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry from 12 December 1942 until 30 May 1943 5th Battalion King s Regiment Liverpool from 18 July 1943 until 1 November 1943 198th Infantry Brigade from 20 December 1940 36 8th Irish Battalion King s Regiment Liverpool 6th Battalion Border Regiment 7th Battalion Border Regiment until 9 December 1942 198th Infantry Brigade Anti Tank Company formed 30 July 1940 disbanded 14 July 1941 2nd Battalion Hertfordshire Regiment from 9 December 1942 Divisional troopsHQ 54th Divisional Artillery Royal Artillery became 8th Army Group Royal Artillery 1 May 1943 85th East Anglian Field Regiment to 24 August 1942 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment to 9 June 1942 134th Field Regiment to 10 February 1942 168th Field Regiment from 9 June 1942 to 9 June 1943 55th Suffolk Yeomanry Anti Tank Regiment to 21 February 1943 19th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment from 21 April 1942 to 9 September 1942 19 b 37 HQ 54th Divisional Engineers Royal Engineers to 6th Airborne Division 20 May 1943 248th East Anglian Field Company to 16 September 1939 249th East Anglian Field Company to 6th Airborne Division 20 May 1943 286th Field Company to 20 May 1943 289th Field Park Company to 2 March 1942 250th Field Company from September to 42nd Divisional Engineers 20 October 1939 556th Field Company from 4 January 1940 to 29 December 1941 591st Antrim Field Company from 1 January 1942 to 6th Airborne Division 20 May 1943 54th East Anglian Divisional Signals Royal Corps of Signals 54th Battalion Reconnaissance Corps raised 15 July 1941 See also Edit United Kingdom portal War portal World War I portal World War II portalList of British divisions in World War I List of British divisions in World War II British Army Order of Battle September 1939 Independent CompanyReferences EditFootnotes Edit The divisional artillery did not accompany the division to Gallipoli On 17 November 1915 it embarked for France where it was attached to the 33rd Division a Kitchener s Army division whose artillery were still under training 31 32 It rejoined 54th Division in Egypt in February 1916 Note typo 19th not 199th Citations Edit Westlake 1992 p 3 Conrad Mark 1996 The British Army 1914 Retrieved 27 February 2015 a b c Becke 1936 p 130 Westlake Ray 2011 The Territorials 1908 1914 A Guide for Military and Family Historians Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1848843608 a b c d e f Becke 1936 p 131 Becke 1936 p 127 Murray s first despatch Desert Column Retrieved 28 January 2012 Eastern Daily Press Sunday section May 5 2007 Bell 1986 pp 3 4 Bell 1986 pp 258 275 Bell 1986 pp 277 278 Bell 1986 p 281 a b c Gibbs 1976 p 518 Messenger 1994 p 47 Joslen 2003 p 60 Messenger 1994 p 49 French 2001 p 64 Perry 1988 p 48 a b c Joslen 2003 p 89 a b IWM 2017 Sir Maurice Somerville Chilton Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 7 June 2020 Watson Graham Territorial Army 1947 Retrieved 6 June 2020 Eastern District Regiments org Archived from the original on 5 July 2007 Retrieved 6 June 2020 Watson amp Rinaldi p 289 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 Army Commands PDF Retrieved 28 May 2020 a b c d e f g h i j Becke 1936 p 125 Hart 1910 pp 131 132 Becke 1936 pp 127 129 James 1978 p 112 Becke Pt 3b pp 33 7 Macartney Filgate pp 3 5 Joslen 2003 p 349 Joslen 2003 p 350 Joslen 2003 p 351 Joslen 2003 p 382 19 LAA Rgt at Ra 39 45 Sources Edit Badge Formation 54th East Anglian Infantry Division amp 162nd Infantry Brigade Imperial War Museum Retrieved 5 August 2017 Becke Major A F 1936 Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2A The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st Line Territorial Force Divisions 42 56 2007 Naval amp Military Press reprint ed London His Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 1 871167 12 4 Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 3b New Army Divisions 30 41 and 63rd R N Division London HM Stationery Office 1939 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 41 X Bell P M H 1986 The Origins of the Second World War in Europe 2nd 1997 ed London Pearson ISBN 978 0 582 30470 3 French David 2001 2000 Raising Churchill s Army The British Army and the War Against Germany 1919 1945 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924630 4 Gibbs N H 1976 Grand Strategy History of the Second World War Vol I London Her Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 11 630181 9 Hart Fitzroy ed 1910 Hart s Annual Army List Special Reserve List and Territorial Force List for 1910 London John Murray OCLC 46781398 James Brigadier E A 1978 British Regiments 1914 18 London Samson Books Limited ISBN 0 906304 03 2 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 Maj J Macartney Filgate History of the 33rd Divisional Artillery in the War 1914 1918 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 843429 78 4 Messenger Charles 1994 For Love of Regiment 1915 1994 A History of British Infantry Vol 2 London Pen amp Sword Books ISBN 978 0 85052 422 2 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 7190 2595 2 Watson Graham E Rinaldi Richard A 2018 The Corps of Royal Engineers Organization and Units 1889 2018 Tiger Lily Books ISBN 978 171790180 4 Westlake Ray 1992 British Territorial Units 1914 18 Men at Arms Series Vol 245 Osprey ISBN 978 1 85532 168 7 Further reading EditAtkinson C T 1952 The Royal Hampshire Regiment 1914 1918 2003 Naval amp Military Press reprint ed Glasgow Robert Maclehose amp Co ISBN 9781843426936 Burrows John W 1923 Essex Units in the War 1914 1919 Vol 5 Essex Territorial Infantry Brigade 4th 5th 6th and 7th Battalions Southend on Sea J H Burrows amp sons OCLC 4045637 Fair A Wolton E D 1923 The History of the 1 5th Battalion The Suffolk Regiment London Eyre and Spottiswoode OCLC 59761790 Gibbons Thomas 1921 With the 1 5th Essex in the East 2009 Naval amp Military Press reprint ed London Benham and Company ISBN 9781847349798 Murphy Charles Cecil Rowe 1928 The History of the Suffolk Regiment 1914 1927 2002 Naval amp Military Press reprint ed London Hutchinson ISBN 1847341608 Northamptonshire Regiment Regimental History Committee 1932 The Northamptonshire Regiment 1914 1918 2005 Naval amp Military Press reprint ed Aldershot Gale amp Polden ISBN 9781845742706 Petre F Loraine 1922 The History of the Norfolk Regiment 1685 1918 Vol 2 4th August 1914 to 31st December 1918 Norwich Jarrold amp Sons Empire Press OCLC 1013369401 Webster F A M 1930 The History of the Fifth Battalion the Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment T A London Frederick Warne amp Co OCLC 17648450 External links Edit54th East Anglian Division Archived 5 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Royal Artillery 1939 1945 archive site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 54th East Anglian Infantry Division amp oldid 1076942771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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