- Flying column
A flying column, in military organization, is an independent corps of troops usually composed of all arms, to which a particular task is assigned. It is almost always composed in the course of operations, out of the troops immediately available.
Mobility being its "raison d'être", a flying column is composed of picked men and horses accompanied with the barest minimum of baggage. The term is usually, though not necessarily, applied to forces under the strength of a
brigade .The mobile columns employed by the British forces in the South African War of 1899–1902, were usually of the strength of two
battalion s ofinfantry , a battery ofartillery , and a squadron ofcavalry , almost exactly half that of a mixed brigade.The
Long Range Desert Group (LRDG) was used by theBritish Army in theWestern Desert Campaign in North Africa duringWorld War II .Flying columns are often used in
guerrilla warfare , notably the mobile armed units of theIrish Republican Army during theIrish War of Independence 1919–21.ee also
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Jock column
*Combe Force References
*cite book | author=Jim Maher | title=The Flying Column - West Kilkenny 1916-1921| publisher=Geography Publications| year=1988|
*1911
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