126th (East Lancashire) Brigade

East Lancashire Brigade
126th (East Lancashire) Brigade
126th Infantry Brigade
Active1908–1919
1920–1941
Country United Kingdom
Branch Territorial Army
TypeInfantry
SizeBrigade
Part of42nd (East Lancashire) Infantry Division
EngagementsGallipoli Campaign
Battle of Romani
Battle of Passchendaele
Battles of the Somme (1918)
Hundred Days Offensive (1918)
Dunkirk evacuation
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Brigadier-General Viscount Hampden
Brigadier Lionel Bootle-Wilbraham
British 42nd (East Lancashire) Division Insignia

The 126th (East Lancashire) Brigade was an infantry brigade of the British Army during the First World War and the Second World War. It was assigned to the 42nd (East Lancashire) Division and served in the Middle East and on the Western Front in the Great War. In the Second World War, now as the 126th Infantry Brigade, it served again with the 42nd (East Lancashire) Division in France and was evacuated at Dunkirk and then later converted into 11th Armoured Brigade.

For most of its existence the brigade was composed of battalions of the East Lancashire Regiment and the Manchester Regiment, although in the late 1930s and the Second World War it was composed of battalions of the King's Own Royal Regiment (Lancaster) and the Border Regiment.