37th Infantry Brigade

37th Infantry Brigade

The 37th Infantry Brigade was a British Army unit during the First and Second World Wars .

History

World War I

World War II

A duplicate of the British 133rd Infantry Brigade it was re-created on 7 October 1939. In France 1940 as part of the 12th (Eastern) Division which was nearly completely destroyed fighting the German invasion. It was reorganised as the British 7th Infantry Brigade (Guards) on 8 December 1941.

tructure

* 5th Royal East Kent Regiment
* 6th The Royal Sussex Regiment
* 7th The Royal Sussex Regiment
* 2/6th The East Surrey Regiment

ee also

*British 7th Infantry Brigade (Guards)

External links

*oob unit | id = 1897 | name = 37 Infantry Brigade
**oob unit | id = 6516 | name = 5 The Buffs
**oob unit | id = 8423 | name = 6 The Royal Sussex Regiment
**oob unit | id = 8424 | name = 7 Royal Sussex Regiment
**oob unit | id = 7278 | name = 2/6 The East Surrey Regiment
* [http://orbat.com/site/ww2/drleo/017_britain/40_org/_inf-div.html#div-51 Source for History of 12 Eastern Division]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (United States) — Infobox Military Unit unit name=37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team caption=37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team shoulder sleeve insignia dates=September 1, 2007 Present country=United States allegiance=United States Army branch= type=Infantry role=… …   Wikipedia

  • 37th Infantry Division (United States) — Infobox Military Unit unit name=37th Infantry Division caption=37th Infantry Division shoulder sleeve insignia dates=1917 1968 2007 as the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team country= United States of America allegiance=Ohio National Guard branch=… …   Wikipedia

  • 37th (Howitzer) Brigade Royal Field Artillery — was a brigade of the Royal Field Artillery which served in the First World War.It was originally formed with 31st, 35th and 55th (Howitzer) Batteries, each equipped with 4.5 howitzers, and attached to 4th Infantry Division. In August 1914 it… …   Wikipedia

  • 7th Infantry Brigade (Guards) — The 7th Infantry Brigade (Guards) was a British Army formation in the Second World War , it served with the British 3rd Infantry Division in France and Belgium 1940. On 15th September 1941 it was converted to the Guards Support Group . On 8th… …   Wikipedia

  • 37th Brigade — or 37th Infantry Brigade may refer to:* 37th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom) * 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (United States) ee also* 37th Division* 37th Regiment* 37th Squadron …   Wikipedia

  • 196th Infantry Brigade (United States) — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 196th Infantry Brigade caption=196th Infantry Brigade shoulder sleeve insignia dates= 1921 1946 1966 1972 1998 present country= United States allegiance= branch= U.S. Army type= role= Training Support Brigade size …   Wikipedia

  • 37th Division (Imperial Japanese Army) — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 37th Infantry Division caption= dates= 1939 1945 country=Empire of Japan allegiance= branch=Imperial Japanese Army type=Infantry role= size= command structure= garrison=Kumamoto, Japan current commander=… …   Wikipedia

  • 37th Regiment — or 37th Infantry Regiment may refer to:* 37 Signal Regiment, a unit of the United Kingdom Army * 37th Armor Regiment (United States), a unit of the United States Army * Combat Logistics Regiment 37, a unit of the United States Marine Corps ;… …   Wikipedia

  • 37th Division (German Empire) — Infobox Military Unit unit name=37th Division ( 37. Division ); from August 2 1914, 37th Infantry Division ( 37. Infanterie Division ) dates=1899 1919 country=Prussia/Germany branch=Army type=Infantry (in peacetime included cavalry) size=Approx.… …   Wikipedia

  • 37th Division (United Kingdom) — Infobox Military Unit name=37th Infantry Division dates=March 1915 ndash;March 1919 country=United Kingdom type=InfantryThe 37th Infantry Division was a unit of the British Army during World War I. The divisional symbol was a gold horseshoe, open …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”