| 6th Infantry Brigade |
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| Active | 1940–1942 |
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| Country | South Africa |
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| Allegiance | South Africa |
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| Type | Brigade |
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| Nickname | The Police Brigade |
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Notable commanders | Brigadier Frederick William Cooper |
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The 6th South African Infantry Brigade was an infantry brigade of the army of the Union of South Africa during World War II.
The Brigade formed part of the South African 2nd Infantry Division. The brigade served in the Western Desert Campaign until it was captured by German and Italian forces at Tobruk on 21 June 1942.
History
The Brigade was formed on 17 June 1940 at Pietermaritzburg. It comprised two infantry battalions formed in early 1940 from the South African Police : the 1st and 2nd South African Police battalions, and also the 2nd Transvaal Scottish battalion based at Johannesburg. It was commanded throughout its existence by Brigadier Frederick William Cooper.[1]
It became part of the South African 2nd Infantry Division on 5 November 1940,[2] and arrived in Egypt on 6 June 1941.
It participated in the successful Operation Crusader and recaptured Bardia, Sallum and the Halfaya Pass in January 1942.
In June 1942, the Brigade was part of the garrison of Tobruk, and went into captivity after the Axis capture of Tobruk on 21 June 1942. It wasn't reformed after this.[3]
Order of battle
Order of Battle as at 21 June 1942 (surrender at Tobruk)[4]
Citations
South African Army Units |
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| Training | |
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| Parachute Infantry | |
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| Air Assault Infantry | |
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| Seaborne Infantry | |
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| Light Infantry | |
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| Mechanised Infantry | |
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| Motorised Infantry | |
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- Army Support Bases (Eastern Cape, Johannesburg, Kimberley, KZN, Limpopo, Potcheftstroom, Western Cape, Mpumalanga)
- Mobilisation Centre
- Main Ordnance Depot
- National Ceremonial Guard
- Logistical Support Unit
- General Andrew Masondo Maintenance Unit
- Madiba Bay Maintenance Unit
- 15 Maint Unit
- Other Maintenance Units
- Doman Field Workshop
- General Sipho Binda Field Workshop
- Sabelo Phama Field Workshop
- Chris Hani Field Workshop
- Sekhukhune Field Workshop
- Ngungunyane Field Workshop
- Other Field Workshops
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| Regular |
- 1 Signal Regt
- 2 Signal Regt
- 3 Signal Regt
- 4 Signal Regt
- 5 Signal Regt
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| Reserve | 6 Signal Regt
- Gauteng Reserve Signal Unit
11 Field Postal Unit
- Western Cape Signal Unit
- Kwa-Zulu Natal Signal Unit
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| Commands | |
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| Corps | |
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| Divisions | |
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| Brigades | |
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| Battlegroups | |
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UDF and SADF Regiments and Battalions |
| Field Engineer |
- 1 Field Engineer Regiment
- 4 Field Engineer Regiment
- 6 Field Artillery Regiment
- 6
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 19
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| Homeland Battalions | |
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| Military Areas | | Training Areas |
- Boschhoek
- Grahamstown
- Hellsgate
- Mosita
- Pomfret
- Riemvasmaak
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| UDF and SADF Commando System | |
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| State Presidents Guard | |
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Mobilisation Units (Reception Depots) | |
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Bantustan Defence Forces (1977/1981–1994) |
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Bophuthatswana Defence Force 1977–1994 |
- 1 BDF Infantry Battalion
- 2 BDF Infantry Battalion
- BDF Parachute Battalion
- BDF Military School
- BDF Special Forces
- 1 BDF Military Area
- 2 BDF Military Area
- 3 BDF Military Area
- BDF Signals Unit
- BDF Bafokeng base
- BDF Mankwe base
- BDF Odi base
- BDF Thaba'Nchu base
- BDF Taung base
- BDF Air Wing
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Venda Defence Force 1979–1994 |
- VDF Headquarters Sibasa
- 1 VDF Battalion Manenu
- 2 VDF Battalion Maunavhathu
- VDF Vuwani Military Base
- VDF Signals Unit
- VDF Air Wing
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| Ciskei Defence Force 1981–1994 |
- 1 CDF Battalion
- CDF Special Forces
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Transkei Defence Force 1981–1994 |
- 1 TDF Battalion
- TDF Special Forces
- TDF Mounted Battalion
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| Citizens Batteries |
- 1st Citizen Battery
- 2nd Citizen Battery
- 3rd Citizen Battery
- 4th Citizen Battery
- 5th Citizen Battery
- 6th Citizen Battery
- 7th Citizen Battery
- 8th and 9th Citizen Batteries
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| Military Districts |
- 1st (Cape Town)
- 2nd (Port Elizabeth)
- 3rd (East London)
- 4th (Pietermaritzburg)
- 5th (Durban)
- 6th (Standerton)
- 7th (Potchefstroom)
- 8th (Johannesburg)
- 9th (Pretoria)
- 10th (Kroonstad)
- 11th (Bloemfontein)
- 12th (Prieska)
- 13th (De Aar)
- 14th (Worcester)
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World War I 1914–1918 |
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| Europe Campaign 1914–1918 |
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| East Africa Campaign 1914–1915 |
- 1st Infantry ACF
- 2nd Infantry ACF
- 5th Infantry ACF
- 9th Infantry ACF
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| German South West Africa Campaign 1915 | |
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Volunteer Militias 1903–1909 |
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Non-Statutory Forces 1961–1994 |
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Colonial Armies 1885–1902 |
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Bibliography
- Cooper, Brigadier Frederick William. The Police Brigade: 6th S.A. Infantry Brigade 1939 - 1945. 1972, Constantia Publishers.
- Agar-Hamilton, J.A.I. & Turner, L.F.C. Crisis in the Desert: May - July 1942. 1952, Oxford University Press, Cape Town.