14th (Light) Division
Military unit
Memorial to the 14th (Light) Division at Hill 60 (Ypres) in Belgium.
The 14th (Light) Division was an infantry division of the British Army , one of the Kitchener's Army divisions raised from volunteers by Lord Kitchener during the First World War . All of its infantry regiments were originally of the fast marching rifle or light infantry regiments, hence the title "Light". It fought on the Western Front for the duration of the First World War.
The division was disbanded by March 1919, and was not reformed in the Second World War.
Order of battle
The division comprised the following infantry brigades , which underwent major changes between February 1918 (the Army's brigade reorganisation from 4 to 3 infantry battalions) and June 1918 (rebuilt after the losses of the German spring offensive ).[ 1]
41st Brigade
Before June 1918
7th Battalion, The King's Royal Rifle Corps (left February 1918 )
8th Battalion, The King's Royal Rifle Corps
7th Battalion, The Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own)
8th Battalion, The Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort's Own)
41st Machine Gun Company (joined February 1916, left to move into 14th MG Battalion March 1918 )
41st Trench Mortar Battery (joined May 1916 )
After June 1918
42nd Brigade
Before June 1918
After June 1918
43rd Brigade
Before June 1918
After June 1918
Divisional Troops
11th Battalion The King's Regiment (Liverpool) (pioneers) (left June 1918 )
15th Battalion The Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) (pioneers) (joined June 1918 )
249th Machine Gun Company (joined July 1917, left October 1917 )
224th Machine Gun Company (joined November 1917, left to move into 14th MG Battalion March 1918' )
14th Battalion Machine Gun Corps (formed March 1918 )
14th Divisional Train ASC (100, 101, 102 and 103 Companies)
26th Mobile Veterinary Section AVC
215th Divisional Employment Company, Labour Corps (joined June 1917 )
Artillery
XLVI Brigade RFA
XLVII Brigade RFA
XLVIII Brigade RFA (left January 1917 )
XLIX (Howitzer) Brigade, RFA (broken up October 1916 )
V.14 Heavy Trench Mortar Battery RFA (joined July 1916, left January 1918 )
X.14, Y.14 and Z.14 Medium Mortar Batteries RFA (formed March 1916; Z broken up February 1918, redistributed to X and Y )
14th Heavy Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery (left 8 June 1915 )
Engineers
61st, 62nd and 89th Field Companies
14th Divisional Signals Company
Royal Army Medical Corps
42nd, 43rd and 44th Field Ambulances
25th Sanitary Section (left April 1917 )
Battles
Second Battle of Ypres
Hooge (German Liquid Fire Attack) – 30 and 31 July 1915
Second Attack on Bellewaarde – 25 September 1915
Battle of the Somme
Battle of Arras (1917)
The First Battle of the Scarpe – 9–14 April 1917
The Third Battle of the Scarpe – 3–4 May 1917
Third Battle of Ypres
The Battle of Langemark – 22–27 August 1917
The First Battle of Passchendaele October 1917
The Second Battle of Passchendaele November 1917
First Battles of the Somme 1918
The Battle of St Quentin – 23–25 March 1918
The Battle of the Avre – 4 April 1918
Hundred Days Offensive
The Battle of Ypres 1918
The advance in Flanders
Commander
Major-General Thomas Morland (7 September – 17 October 1914)
Brigadier-General Francis Alexander Fortescue (17–22 October 1914) acting
Major-General General Victor Arthur Couper (22 October – 30 December 1914)
Brigadier-General Francis Alexander Fortescue (30 December 1914 – 3 January 1915) acting
Major-General Victor Arthur Couper (3 January 1915 – 22 March 1918)
Major-General Walter Howarth Greenly (22–27 March 1918)
Major-General Sir Victor Arthur Couper (27–31 March 1918)
Major-General Percy Cyriac Burrell Skinner (31 March 1918)
See also
References
External links
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