The Royal Naval Division
Badges, Units & Order of Battle 1914-19.
(note; the 12 Battalions forming the RND were originally
numbered 1-12. This numbering system was dropped after
their return from Antwerp in late October 1914, probably
to avoid confusion with the 1st-6th Depot Bns. then
forming at Crystal Palace & the proposed 1st-7th
Reserve Bns. which later resided at the RND Camp, Blandford).
Drake Battalion
Auxilio Divino (With the help of God)
1st Bn. 1st RN Brigade, RND 1914.
Gallipoli, MEF (Dardanelles) April 1915-Jan.1916.
MEF (Mudros & Imbros) Jan.-May 1916
BEF (France & Belgium) May 1916-Feb.1918 189th Brigade,
63rd (RN) Division 19/7/1916 - May 1919.
BENBOW Battalion (disbanded before cap-badges were
issued).
(please note there is a common confusion of Benbow
as "3rd Battalion")
2nd Bn. 1st RN Brigade 1914. During their retreat from
Antwerp in Oct. 1914, the majority of Benbow Bn. crossed
into Holland & were Interned for the Duration. A
new Benbow Bn. was raised, but they remained in England
when the RND sailed for the Dardanelles, finally joining
the RND at Cape Helles 30/5/15. After the RND's massive
losses at the 'Third Battle of Krithia" 4/6/15,
the Benbow Bn. were chosen to be disbanded (along with
the Collingwood Bn. 8/6/15) to reinforce the five depleted
Naval Battalions, Drake, Hood, Howe, Anson & Nelson.
The Benbow Bn. suffered negligible losses on the 4th
of June & along with Hawke Bn, were the only full
strength RND Battalions left. However, the reason they
were chosen for the 'chop' seems to have been based
upon certain observations of the new 'Benbows' by senior
officers. Suffice to say, those observations were premature
& the ex-Benbows went on to serve in the Drake,
Hood, Anson, Nelson & Howe Bns. with great distinction.
Hawke Battalion
(please note there is a common confusion of Hawke as
"2nd Battalion")
3rd Bn. 1st RN Brigade 1914. During their retreat from
Antwerp in Oct. 1914, the majority of Hawke Bn. were
either captured by the Germans or crossed into Holland
& Interned for the Duration. A new Hawke Bn. was
raised; 'D' Company was formed by volunteers from the
'Public Schools Battalion.' They remained in England
when the RND sailed for the Dardanelles, finally rejoining
the RND at Cape Helles 30/5/15.
Gallipoli, MEF (Dardanelles) 30/5/15-Jan.1916.
MEF (Mudros & Imbros) Jan.-May 1916.
BEF (France & Belgium) May 1916-May 1919 189th Brigade,
63rd (RN) Division 19/7/1916-May 1919.
COLLINGWOOD Battalion (disbanded before cap-badges
were issued).
4th Bn. 1st RN Brigade 1914. During their retreat from
Antwerp in Oct. 1914, the majority of Collingwood Bn.
crossed into Holland & were Interned for the Duration.
A new Collingwood Bn. was raised, but they remained
in England when the RND sailed for the Dardanelles,
finally rejoining the RND at Cape Helles 30/5/15. After
the RND's massive losses at the 'Third Battle of Krithia"
4/6/15, the Collingwood Bn. were chosen to be disbanded
8/6/15 (along with the Benbow Bn. 12/6/15) to reinforce
the five depleted Naval Battalions. The ex-Collingwoods
went on to serve with great distinction.
Sub.Lt. The Hon. Vere Sydney Tudor HARMSWORTH RNVR.
Son of Lord Rothermere. Lucky to have returned from
Antwerp; very few 'Collingwoods' did. Transferred to
the new Hawke Bn. in early 1915 & KIA 13/11/16.
THE COLLINGWOOD MYTH.
It is supposed by many, that the Collingwood Battalion
was all but destroyed at Gallipoli 4/6/15.
A Memorial was erected at Blandford & an annual
service of rememberance is still held there around the
4th of June. HOWEVER; the "Collingwood's"
immortality within RND history is mainly due to the
fact they were a newly raised '2nd' or 'replacement'
Collingwood Bn. & that they lasted only ten days
at Cape Helles before disbandment.
From their total of approx. 1000 men, they suffered
only 185 men killed in action 4/6/15, with 15-20 men
dying from wounds later, together with about 400 men
wounded. This still left about 400 men in the battalion,
a number very similar to the strength of other RND battalions
in May (before the first reinforcements arrived).
It was the need for immediate reinforcements for five
of the Naval Battalions that provided the real reason
for the disbandment of the Collingwoods. The Drake,
Anson, Howe, Hood & Nelson battalions had all suffered
serious casualties 4-6/6/15 & the RND GOC, General
Paris, was faced with no option but to disband battalions
to provide the neccesary reinforcements. Of the eight
Naval battalions, he chose two of the newest arrivals,
Collingwood & Benbow. This was done partly to preserve
the newly acquired battle honours of the RND battalions
which had fought so hard from the start of the campaign.
The Collingwood battalion was under half-strength in
men & had almost no officers remaining, so was perhaps
a natural choice, but still provided about 400 men as
reinforcements. However, the Benbow battalion was at
full strength, having had only about seven men killed
& provided the bulk of the reinforcements.
Of the greatest importance (& why I believe their
demise was so lamented & documented) was the fact
that their losses in officers killed was exceptionally
high. Sub.Lt. Oscar Freyberg RNVR, the brother of Lord
Freyberg VC DSO (then serving in the Hood Bn), was just
one noted man killed.
An officer of the '2nd' Collingwood Bn, Lt. Geary RM
(one of the few survivors of the 4th of June 1915),
compiled a book which contained photos & biographical
details of all the officers & a nominal roll of
the other ranks, which gave only their Platoon, Company,
pay number, home address & their fate on 4/6/15.
Despite the lack of information on other ranks, the
recorded details of the Collingwood Bn. are now the
envy of all WW1 historians (if only they had documented
ALL WW1 Battalions such!).
Nelson Battalion
5th Bn. 2nd RN Brigade 1914.
Gallipoli, MEF (Dardanelles) April 1915-Jan.1916 First
landed at ANZAC Beachhead 29/4/15. Transferred to Cape
Helles 13/5/15.
MEF (Mudros) Jan.-May 1916.
BEF (France & Belgium) May 1916-Feb.1918 189th Brigade,
63rd (RN) Division 19/7/1916-Feb.1919.Disbanded in France
February 1918; personnel absorbed by remaining Naval
RND Battalions.
Howe Battalion
6th Bn. 2nd RN Brigade, RND 1914. - Gallipoli, MEF
(Dardanelles) April 1915 - Jan.1916.
MEF (Mudros & Stavros, Salonica) Jan. - May 1916
Served with 2nd Brigade, RND at Stavros, Salonika, Feb.-April
1916.
BEF (France & Belgium) May 1916-Feb.1918 188th Brigade,
63rd (RN) Division 19/7/1916-Feb.1918. Disbanded in
February 1918; personnel absorbed by remaining Naval
RND Battalions.
Hood Battalion (The "Steadies.")
7th Bn. 2nd RN Brigade, RND 1914.
Gallipoli, MEF (Dardanelles) April 1915-Jan.1916.
MEF (Mudros & Tenedos) Jan.-May 1916.
BEF (France & Belgium) May 1916-May 1919 189th Brigade,
63rd (RN) Division 19/7/1916-May 1919.
There formed in the Hood Bn. what was known as "THE
LATIN TABLE." A collection of truly remarkable
& passionate young men.
Anson Battalion
Nil Desperandum (Despair of nothing)
8th Bn. 2nd RN Brigade, RND 1914.
Gallipoli, MEF (Dardanelles) April 1915 - Jan.1916.
MEF (Mudros & Stavros, Salonica) Jan. - May 1916
Served with 2nd Brigade, RND at Stavros, Salonika, Feb.-April
1916.
BEF (France & Belgium) May 1916-May 1919 188th Brigade,
63rd (RN) Division 19/7/1916-May 1919.
The Royal Marine Brigade (Aug.-Nov.1914)
Served at the Defence of Antwerp in Oct. 1914 (also
at Dunkirk & Ostend). All RND who served in France
& Belgium in 1914 were entltled (somewhat contraversially)
to the 1914 Star; many to the 1914 Star & Bar.
9th (Chatham) Battalion RMLI
10th (Portsmouth) Battalion RMLI
11th (Plymouth) Battalion RMLI
12th (Deal) Battalion RMLI
The Royal Marine Brigade was formed in Aug. 1914 from
untrained RMLI Depot (Deal) recruits, RMLI Royal Fleet
Reservists (Class 'A' & 'B') & regular Long-Service
Marines made available from their home Divisions. A Battalion
of RMA was originally brigaded, but was withdrawn &
replaced by the "Deal Battalion" in mid Sept.
1914.
The 3rd Royal Marine Brigade (Nov.1914-Aug. 1915)
The 3rd Royal Marine Brigade, renamed to conform with
RND Brigade Nos., had a short life. The four RMLI Bns.
listed above formed the Brigade, but minus their number
prefixes. After suffering crippling losses at ANZAC
& Cape Helles (April-Aug. 1915), the four RMLI Bns.
were amalgamated to form two new RM Bns:-
The 1st Royal Marine Bn. (aka The 1st Bn. RMLI) Chatham
formed "A" & "B" Coys; Deal
formed "C" & "D" Coys.
The 2nd Royal Marine Bn. (aka The 2nd Bn. RMLI) Portsmouth
formed "A" & "B" Coys; Plymouth
formed "C" & "D" Coys.
Five days after the amalgamation of the four RMLI Bns.
the 3rd Royal Marine Brigade was disbanded & the
two new RM Bns. were brigaded with the Howe & Anson
Bns. to form the new:-
2nd Naval Brigade (Aug. 1915-May/June 1916)
1st Royal Marine Bn.
2nd Royal Marine Bn. (disbanded 28/4/18. Personnel to
1st RM Bn.)
Anson Bn.
Howe Bn. (disbanded in Feb.1918. Personnel to other
RND Bns.)
The new 2nd Naval Brigade & the amalgamation of
the four RMLI Bns, was intended as a stop-gap measure
until reinforcements allowed the reconstitution of their
original formations. Unfortunately the reinforcements
were never forthcoming & despite honest intentions,
the two RM Bns. remained unchanged until April 1918.
However, the 2nd Naval Brigade was disbanded in May
1916 on arrival in France, & the 3rd RM Bde. briefly
reformed. There followed an exercise in Admiralty mathematics,
whereby they got their calculations hopelessly wrong
for the numbers of drafts available. Not before 1st
& 2nd Hood Bns. had been formed in France, &
2nd Hawke, 2nd Anson & 2nd Drake Bns. at Blandford,
was the truth revealed & all "2nd" Bns.
disbanded. The end result was that for a short time
the two RM Bns., with Howe & Anson Bns., became
part of a "new" 1st RN Brigade. However as
the Army had now taken control of the Division, it was
decided to bring their designation into line with the
Army's idea of titles. The RND was renamed "The
63rd (RN) Division & the "new" 1st RN
Bde. became:-
188th Infantry Brigade (July 1916-May 1919)
1st Royal Marine Bn.
2nd Royal Marine Bn.
Anson Bn.
Howe Bn.
This new formation was to last until Feb. 1918, when
the neccesary change in British Army units affected
the Brigade strength, when Howe Bn. disbanded, leaving
only three Bns. to the Brigade. In late April 1918,
the 2nd RM Bn. was disbanded & its personnel absorbed
by the 1st RM Bn. From May 1918 only the 1st RM Bn.
remained from the four RMLI Bns. who had fought at Antwerp
& Gallipoli.
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