12th (Eastern) Division
The 12th Division was an infantry division raised by the British Army during the First World War from men volunteering for Kitchener's New Armies. The division saw service in the trenches of the Western Front from June 1915 to the end of the war.The 12th Division, was one of the first Kitchener's Army divisions raised from volunteers by Lord Kitchener. It was formed within Eastern Command as a result of Army Order No. 324 of 21 August 1914, as part of the K1 wave of divisions. It fought on the Western Front for the duration of the First World War. One of its most notable actions was the Battle of Épehy where there is a memorial cross to the 12th Division.
In the First World War, the division's insignia was the Ace of Spades, which has since been adopted by the present 12th Armoured Infantry Brigade.Order of Battle
35th Brigade
36th Brigade
'9th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers 7th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment11th Battalion, Duke of Cambridge's Own '5th Battalion, Princess Charlotte of Wales's '36th Machine Gun Company, Machine Gun Corps '36th Trench Mortar Battery '37th Brigade
- 6th Battalion, Queen's
- 6th Battalion, Buffs
- 7th Battalion, East Surrey Regiment '
- 6th Battalion, Queen's Own
- 37th Machine Gun Company, Machine Gun Corps '
- 37th Trench Mortar Battery '
Divisional Troops
'9 Motor Machine Gun Battery '235th Machine Gun Company '12th Battalion Machine Gun Corps 'Divisional Mounted Troops *A Squadron, King Edward's Horse '*12th Divisional Cyclist Company, Army Cyclist Corps '12th Divisional Train Army Service Corps*116th, 117th, 118th and 119th Companies23rd Mobile Veterinary Section Army Veterinary Corps214th Divisional Employment Company 'Royal Artillery
Royal Engineers
- 69th Field Company
- 70th Field Company
- 87th Field Company
'12th Divisional Signals CompanyRoyal Army Medical Corps
- 36th Field Ambulance
- 37th Field Ambulance
- 38th Field Ambulance
- 23rd Sanitary Section
- Major-General James Spens August 1914 – February 1915
- Major-General Frederick D.V. Wing February 1915 – 2 October 1915
- Major-General Arthur B. Scott 1916-1918
- Major-General H. W. Higginson April 1918