104th Brigade (United Kingdom)
{{Short description|Military unit}}
The 104th Brigade was a formation of the British Army during the First World War. It was raised as part of the new army, also known as Kitchener's Army, and assigned to the 35th Division. The brigade served on the Western Front.
The infantry was originally composed of Bantams, the name given to soldiers who would otherwise be excluded from service due to their short stature.{{cite book |last1=Davson |first1=H.M. |title=The History of the 35th Division in the Great War |date=1926 |publisher=Naval & Military Press |location=London |isbn=9781843426431 |page=1-2 |edition=2020}} This became a regular infantry Brigade with the end of the Bantam experiment at the end of 1916, after it was noted that bantam replacements were not up to the physical standards of the original recruits.{{cite book |last1=Davson |first1=H.M. |title=The History of the 35th Division in the Great War |date=1926 |publisher=Naval & Military Press |location=London |isbn=9781843426431 |page=81-82 |edition=2020}}
The brigade was disbanded in April 1919 at Ripon;{{cite book |last1=Davson |first1=H.M. |title=The History of the 35th Division in the Great War |date=1926 |publisher=Naval & Military Press |location=London |isbn=9781843426431 |page=296 |edition=2020}} the brigade was not reformed in the Second World War.Joslen p. 305
Order of battle
The composition of the brigade was as follows:{{cite web|accessdate=20 January 2012 |publisher=The Long Long Trail |title=35th Division |url=http://www.1914-1918.net/35div.htm |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111221233129/http://www.1914-1918.net/35div.htm |archivedate=21 December 2011 }}
- 17th (Service) Battalion, Lancashire Fusiliers (1st South-East Lancashire)
- 18th (Service) Battalion, Lancashire Fusiliers (2nd South-East Lancashire)
- 20th (Service) Battalion, Lancashire Fusiliers (4th Salford) (disbanded February 1918)
- 23rd (Service) Battalion, Manchester Regiment (8th City) (disbanded February 1918)
- 19th (Service) Battalion, Durham Light Infantry (2nd County) (joined February 1918 from 106th Brigade)
- 104th Machine Gun Company Machine Gun Corps (joined April 1916, left for division MG battalion February 1918)
- 104th Trench Mortar Battery (joined February 1916)
Commanders
- Brig-Gen G M Mackenzie to 14 April 1916
- Brig-Gen J W Sandilands C.M.G., D.S.O. from 14 April 1916 to March 1919