The '27th Infantry Brigade' was a
British Army brigade during the
Second World War and
Korean War.
Unit History
World War II
In 1939 this brigade was formed as part of the
9th (Highland) Infantry Division a duplicate of the
51st (Highland) Infantry Division . When the 51st Highland Division surrendered during the
Battle of France the 9th Highland Division was redesignated as a new 51st Division. Due to this the 27th Brigade became the
British 153rd Infantry Brigade.
Post World War II
The Brigade was reformed in 1948 and sent out to
Hong Kong , but was then sent on to Korea at the outbreak of the
Korean War , where Major
Kenneth Muir of the
Argylls won the
Victoria Cross in September 1950. On January 3, 1950, the Brigade had been forced into hand-to-hand combat to rescue one of its cut-off battalions and had suffered heavy casualties in its defense of the
Third Battle of Seoul. The Brigade was joined by the specially raised 16 Field Regiment
Royal New Zealand Artillery in January 1951, and then a Canadian infantry battalion in February. They fought in the intense
Battle of Kapyong in April 1951. Kapyong was the last action for the brigade as such, as Headquarters 28 Brigade arrived to take over, along with two new battalions.
Component units
1939-1940
★ 5th Bn,
The Black Watch
★ 7th Bn,
The Gordon Highlanders
★ 9th Bn, The Gordon Highlanders
★ 1st Bn, The Gordon Highlanders
1948 onwards
★ 1st Battalion,
The Royal Leicestershire Regiment
★ 1st Battalion,
The Middlesex Regiment (to April 1951)
★ 1st Battalion, The
Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders (to April 1951)
★ 1st Battalion, The
Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
★ 16th Field Regiment,
Royal New Zealand Artillery
Commanders
★ Brig. G.T. Gurney
★ Brig. William Fraser
★ Brig.
D.A.H. Graham
Korea
★ Brig B.A. Coad
References
★ Gregory Blaxland, The Regiments Depart: A History of the British Army 1945-70, William Kimber, London, 1971.
External links
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