The division comprised three infantry brigades and one mounted (yeomanry) brigade:
The Germans had decided to temporarily hold the R.I. position, (which was centred on the village of Bapaume) so on 25 February, the 5th and 6th brigades mounted an unsuccessful attack on the "Malt" trench - an outpost in front of the R.I. position.
On 7 January at Lugo, Leith's brigade mounted a successful bayonet charge, inflicting 300 casualties on Marshal Nicolas Soult's pursuing French for the loss of only 50 men.
On 6 November 1943, three brigades of the Partisans, supported by artillery and heavy machine-guns mounted an attack on the town of Koprivnica, which they took on 9 November.
Two brigades of the 101st Airborne skirmished through the day with fedayeen irregulars firing weapons mounted on pickup trucks, and dozens of Iraqis were killed in the exchanges, military officials said.
The Anzac Mounted Division (Australian and New Zealand Mounted Division) formed in Egypt in 1916 and was composed of four Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) mounted brigades three from the Australian Light Horse with the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade.
He commanded a brigade of Kentucky mounted infantry and cavalry at the Battle of Saltville in October.
While the two brigades of the Anzac Mounted Division; the New Zealand Mounted Rifles and the 2nd Light Horse Brigades with the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade were to move directly from the Jordan Valley to Amman following tracks further south along the Jordan Valley and climb up to the plateau.
The two South African brigades advanced with 40mm Bofors guns marking the lines of advance between the respective battalions and the first objectives on the Corps objective line called "Oxalic" were occupied by the Natal Mounted Rifles at 2350.