5th Infantry Division (United Kingdom)
The 5th Infantry Division was a regular army infantry division of the British Army. It was established by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington for service in the Peninsular War, as part of the Anglo-Portuguese Army, and was active for most of the period since, including the First World War and the Second World War and was disbanded soon after. The division was reformed in 1995 as an administrative division covering Wales and the English regions of West Midlands, East Midlands and East. Its headquarters were in Shrewsbury. It was disbanded on 1 April 2012.
Peninsular War
The 5th Division during the Peninsular War under the command of General James Leith was present at most of the major engagements including the Battle of Bussaco, the Battle of Sabugal, the Siege of Almeida, the Battle of Badajoz, the Battle of Salamanca, the Battle of Vitoria, the Siege of San Sebastian, the Battle of Nivelle and the Battle of the Nive.Peninsular War order of battle
The order of battle in summer 1813 was:- 1st Brigade
- * 3/1st Regiment of Foot
- * 1/9th Regiment of Foot
- * 1/38th Regiment of Foot
- * 2/38th Regiment of Foot
- * 2/47th Regiment of Foot
- * 1 Coy., Brunswick-Oels Jaegers
- 2nd Brigade
- * 1/4th Regiment of Foot
- * 2/4th Regiment of Foot
- * 2/30th Regiment of Foot
- * 2/44th Regiment of Foot
- * 2/47th Regiment of Foot
- Portuguese Brigade
- * 1/3rd Infantry Regiment, Portuguese Army
- * 2/3rd Infantry Regiment, Portuguese Army
- * 1/15th Infantry Regiment, Portuguese Army
- * 2/15th Infantry Regiment, Portuguese Army
- * 8th Caçadores Battalion, Portuguese Army
Waterloo Campaign
Waterloo order of battle
The division's order of battle at Waterloo was as follows:- 8th British Brigade, Major-General Sir James Kempt
- * 1/28th Regiment of Foot
- * 1/32nd Regiment of Foot
- * 79th Regiment of Foot
- * 1/95th Regiment of Foot
- 9th British Brigade, Major-General Sir Dennis Pack
- * 3/1st Regiment of Foot
- * 42nd Regiment of Foot "Black Watch"
- * 2/44th Regiment of Foot
- * 92nd Regiment of Foot
- 5th Hanoverian Brigade, Colonel Ernst von Vincke
- * Landwehr Battalion Gifhorn
- * Landwehr Battalion Hameln
- * Landwehr Battalion Hildesheim
- * Landwehr Battalion Peine
- Artillery, Major Heinrich Heise
- * Roger's Battery, Royal Artillery
- * Braun's Battery, Hanoverian Foot Artillery
Second Boer War
Second Boer War order of battle
The formation was as follows:11th Infantry Brigade initially commanded by General Edward Woodgate but he was wounded at Spion Kop and died shortly afterwards. He was succeeded by General Arthur Wynne who was later wounded at the Battle of the Tugela Heights and succeeded by Colonel Walter Kitchener.
- 2nd Battalion Kings Own Royal Lancaster's
- 2nd Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers
- 1st Battalion South Lancashire Regiment
- 1st Battalion York and Lancaster Regiment
- Imperial Light Infantry
- 2nd Battalion Dorset Regiment
- 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment
- 2nd Battalion Somerset Light Infantry
- Yorkshire's and Warwickshire's being left at Cape Colony
First World War
Order of battle
The order of battle was as follows:13th Brigade
The 13th Brigade was temporarily under the command of 28th Division between 23 February and 7 April 1915, when it was replaced by 84th Brigade from that Division.
- 2nd Battalion, King's Own Scottish Borderers
- 2nd Battalion, Duke of Wellington's Regiment '
- 1st Battalion, Queen's Own
- 2nd Battalion, King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry '
- 1/9th Battalion, London Regiment '
- 14th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment '
- 15th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment '
- 16th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment '
- 13th Machine Gun Company, Machine Gun Corps '
- 13th Trench Mortar Battery '
The 14th Brigade transferred to 32nd Division on 30 December 1915
- 1st Battalion, Devonshire Regiment '
- 2nd Battalion, Suffolk Regiment '
- 1st Battalion, East Surrey Regiment '
- 1st Battalion, Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry '
- 2nd Battalion, Manchester Regiment
- 1/5th Battalion, Cheshire Regiment '
- 1/9th Battalion, Royal Scots '
- 2nd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers '
- 14th Machine Gun Company, Machine Gun Corps '
- 14th Trench Mortar Battery '
The 15th Brigade was temporarily under the command of 28th Division between 3 March and 7 April 1915, when it was replaced by 83rd Brigade from that division.
- 1st Battalion, Norfolk Regiment
- 1st Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment
- 1st Battalion, Cheshire Regiment
- 1st Battalion, Dorset Regiment
95th Brigade transferred from 32nd Division on 26 December 1915
- 12th Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment
- XV Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
- XXVII Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
- XXVIII Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
- VIII Brigade, Royal Field Artillery
- 108th Heavy Battery, Royal Garrison Artillery
- 17th Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 59th Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 1st South Midland Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 2/1st North Midland Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 1/2nd Home Counties Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 2nd Durham Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 6th Battalion, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders
- 14th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment
Insignia
Second World War
Upon the outbreak of the Second World War, in September 1939, the 5th Infantry Division was a Regular Army formation, commanded by Major-General Harold Franklyn, who had been in command since 1938. The division was based at Catterick under Northern Command. Both of its infantry brigades went to France to join the rest of the British Expeditionary Force in early October 1939 as independent infantry brigades, but the divisional Headquarters crossed to France on 19 December 1939, coming under the command of Lieutenant-General Alan Brooke's II Corps from 23 December. By the new year of 1940 the division was reformed with three infantry brigades -the 13th, 15th and 17th, all commanded by men who would achieve high rank in the next few years. The 13th was commanded by Brigadier Miles Dempsey, the 15th by Brigadier Horatio Berney-Ficklin, and the 17th by Brigadier Montagu Stopford.Globe Trotting
Throughout the early months of 1940 the division saw some changing of units, as the Territorial Army divisions began to arrive in France from the United Kingdom. This was part of official BEF policy, based on experience from the Great War, and was intended to strengthen the inexperienced TA formations with experienced Regulars, although at the same time diluting the strength of the Regular divisions with inexperienced TA units. Despite this, the division still maintained its integrity as a Regular formation. The next few months were spent in training, although this was hampered by severe shortages of modern equipment. Due to the lack of immediate action many soldiers believed the war would amount to very little. Despite this, morale in the division was high. This period of inactivity was known as the "Phoney War"., accompanied by General Lord Gort, Commander-in-Chief of the BEF, inspecting men of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers at Bethune, France, 23 April 1940.
In mid-April the 15th Brigade was sent to Norway and fought, very briefly, in the unsuccessful Norwegian Campaign, evacuating from there and arriving in the United Kingdom in early May, but did not rejoin the 5th Division until 3 July 1940. In early May the 25th Infantry Brigade came temporarily under command of the division in France. The German Army launched its attack in the West on 10 May 1940 and the 5th Division saw action in the battles of Belgium and France in May–June 1940 including the Battle of Arras, supported by the 1st Army Tank Brigade, on 21 May 1940 and at the Battle of the Ypres-Comines Canal from 26 to 28 May 1940, and then was withdrawn to Dunkirk, along with the rest of the BEF, where they were evacuated to England, with most of the division arriving on 1 June. Lieutenant-General Brooke, commanding II Corps, wrote in his diary that there "is no doubt that the 5th Div in its fight on the Ypres-Comines canal saved the II Corps and the BEF".
The division, having sustained very heavy losses, remained in the United Kingdom for the next 21 months, with most of 1940 being spent in Scotland under Scottish Command, reforming in numbers and being brought up to strength with large numbers of conscripts, alongside training in anti-invasion duties and preparing for Operation Sea Lion, the German invasion of the United Kingdom which never arrived. In late March 1941 the division, now under the command of Major-General Horatio Berney-Ficklin, who had taken over in July 1940, was sent to Northern Ireland, coming under command of Lieutenant-General James Marshall-Cornwall's III Corps, under overall control of British Troops Northern Ireland, and, as in Scotland, continued training to repel a German invasion there.
section of the 6th Battalion, Seaforth Highlanders, creep forward during exercises at Crum Castle in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, November 1941.
The division left Northern Ireland on 16 March 1942 and served and travelled in so many regions of the world that they were known as the Globe Trotters, and became the most travelled division of the British Army during the Second World War. In April 1942 the 13th and 17th Infantry Brigades and a portion of the divisional troops were detached to 'Force 121' for Operation Ironclad, the invasion of Vichy French held Madagascar. The division was not complete again until August 1942. It was sent from the United Kingdom to India for three months and then to Middle East Command, where it spent time under the command of British III Corps, now under Lieutenant-General Desmond Anderson, as part of the British Tenth Army, under overall control of Persia and Iraq Command, where it trained in mountain warfare.
In mid-February 1943 the division was sent to Syria, remaining there for the next four months, and later Egypt, where it came under the command of British XIII Corps, commanded by Lieutenant-General Miles Dempsey, which was part of the British Eighth Army, under General Sir Bernard Montgomery. The division, serving again alongside the 50th Division, began training in amphibious operations in preparation for Operation Husky, the Allied invasion of Sicily.
Sicily, Italy and North-Western Europe
The 5th Division saw action during the invasion of Sicily where, towards the end of the campaign, in early August, the divisional commander, Major-General Berney-Ficklin, who had commanded the division since July 1940, was replaced by Major-General Gerard Bucknall. The division was pulled out of the line and absorbed replacements, and invaded the Italian mainland in Operation Baytown on 3 September, still as part of XIII Corps of the Eighth Army, but now serving alongside the 1st Canadian Infantry Division, and advanced up the spine of Italy. Later in the year, the division fought in the Moro River Campaign, although sustaining relatively light casualties in comparison to the other Allied formations involved.climbing a track in mountainous terrain, Italy, 21 November 1943.
trudge down a snow-covered hillside, Italy, on New Year's Day, 1 January 1944.
Progress for the Allied Armies in Italy, commanded by General Sir Harold Alexander, towards the end of 1943 had slowed down considerably, due mainly to a combination of worsening weather, stiffening German resistance and the Winter Line. The Eighth Army, operating on the Adriatic coast, had already pierced the Gustav Line at its eastern end. However, the appalling weather conditions forbade further progress and so operations there were closed down. As a result, the relatively intact 5th Division was available elsewhere. Therefore, in early January 1944 the division was transferred from the Eighth Army, now under Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese, to the western end of Italy to join Lieutenant-General Richard McCreery's British X Corps. X Corps, stationed along the Garigliano river, was part of Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark's U.S. Fifth Army at the time. The division, now commanded by Major-General Philip Gregson-Ellis and with the veteran 201st Guards Brigade under command, crossed the Garigliano river as part of the First Battle of Monte Cassino.
In March 1944 the division, after holding its positions that it gained during First Cassino, was transferred again, this time to the Anzio bridgehead where they came under command of Major General Lucian Truscott's U.S. VI Corps and relieved the battered 56th Division, which was returning to the Middle East. Although by this time the major battles for the Anzio beachhead were over, the division was involved in minor skirmishing and operating in conditions more reminiscent of the trench warfare of the First World War. In May the division participated in Operation Diadem and the breakout from Anzio, which led to the capture of the Italian capital of Rome in early June. During the fighting, Sergeant Maurice Rogers of the 2nd Battalion, Wiltshire Regiment was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross, the first and only to be awarded to the 5th Division during the Second World War. Soon afterwards the division, having sustained just under 3,000 casualties since its arrival at Anzio three months before, was then withdrawn to Palestine, arriving there in mid-July. The division came under command of Persia and Transjordan Command.
advance in single file during operations to outflank German resistance in Uelzen, Germany, 16 April 1945.
The division, now commanded by the relatively young Major-General Richard Hull, who, at the age of 37, was the youngest division commander in the British Army, returned to Italy in early 1945 where they relieved the British 1st Infantry Division, which had fought alongside the Globetrotters at Anzio. Soon afterwards, however, the division was transferred to the Western Front in March 1945 to participate in the final stages of the North West Europe Campaign. Arriving in Belgium just after the British crossing of the Rhine, the division came under command of VIII Corps, under Lieutenant-General Evelyn Barker, part of the British Second Army, under Lieutenant-General Miles Dempsey, and took part in the Western Allied invasion of Germany, closely supported by elements of the 6th Guards Armoured Brigade.
Throughout the Second World War, the British 5th Infantry Division used a 'Y' on a khaki background as its insignia.
Order of battle
The 5th Infantry Division was constituted as follows during the war:13th Infantry Brigade '
- 2nd Battalion, Cameronians
- 2nd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
- 1st Battalion, Green Howards
- 1st Battalion, King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry
- 1st Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment
- 15th Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company
- 2nd Battalion, Royal Scots Fusiliers '
- 2nd Battalion, Seaforth Highlanders '
- 2nd Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment '
- 17th Infantry Brigade Anti-Tank Company '
- 6th Battalion, Seaforth Highlanders '
- 17th Infantry Brigade Support Company '
- 7th Battalion, Cheshire Regiment '
- 3rd Battalion, Tower Hamlets Rifles
- 5th Reconnaissance Battalion, Reconnaissance Corps '
- 9th Field Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 91st Field Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 92nd Field Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 97th Army Field Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 156th Field Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 52nd Anti-Tank Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 18th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery
- 245th Field Company, Royal Engineers '
- 252nd Field Company, Royal Engineers '
- 506th Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 38th Field Company, Royal Engineers
- 254th Field Park Company, Royal Engineers
- 18th Bridging Platoon, Royal Engineers
- 5th Divisional Signals Regiment, Royal Corps of Signals
Post Second World War
1995-2012
The 5th Division was reformed as an administrative division – effectively a military district – from Wales and Western Districts on 1 April 1995. It had its permanent headquarters at the Copthorne Barracks in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. It additionally inherited the units that had formerly made up South West District, that is, Headquarters Salisbury Plain Area and 43rd Brigade from 3rd Division on 1 April 1999.By 2000 the division comprised the following Regional Brigades:
- 43rd Brigade
- 143rd Brigade
- 160th Brigade
The Division reported to Army Headquarters at Andover from 2010. The new HQ Support Command in Aldershot began operation in January 2012 when HQ 4th Division in Aldershot disbanded. HQ 2nd Division in Edinburgh and HQ 5th Division in Shrewsbury were both disbanded in April 2012.
General officers commanding
The following officers commanded the division:GOC 5th Division
- 1902–1903 Major-General Sir Leslie Rundle
- 1903–1906 Lieutenant-General Henry Grant
- 1907–1909 Lieutenant-General Sir Herbert Plumer
- 1909–1913 Major-General William Campbell
- 1913–1914 Major-General Sir Charles Fergusson
- 1914–1915 Major-General Thomas Morland
- 1915–1916 Major-General Charles Kavanagh
- 1916–1918 Major-General Reginald Stephens
- 1918–1919 Major-General John Ponsonby
- 1919–1922 Major-General Sir Hugh Jeudwine
- 1929–1931 Lieutenant-General Walter Kirke
- 1931–1934 Lieutenant-General Thomas Humphreys
- 1934–1937 Major-General Geoffrey Howard
- 1937–1938 Major-General Guy Williams
- 1938–1940 Major-General Harold Franklyn
- 1940–1943 Major-General Horatio Berney-Ficklin
- 1943–1944 Major-General Gerard Bucknall
- Jan 1944 – Nov 1944 Major-General Philip Gregson-Ellis
- 1944–1946 Major-General Richard Hull
- 1946–1947 Major-General Philip Gregson-Ellis
- Apr 1947 – Sep 1947 Major-General John Churcher
- 1958–1959 Major-General Geoffrey Musson
- 1968–1970 Major-General Walter Thomas
- 1970–1971 Major General Mervyn Janes
- 1995–1996 Major General Ian Freer
- 1996–1999 Major General Robin Searby
- 1999–2000 Major General Peter Grant Peterkin
- 2000–2003 Major General Arthur Denaro
- 2003–2005 Major General Nicholas Cottam
- 2005–2008 Major General Andrew Farquhar
- 2008–2012 Major General Martin Rutledge