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THE ’DUKES’ 1702-2006 A concise history and digest of The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding) with memoirs from the 20th Century Compiled by: Terry Butterworth, Scott Flaving and Richard Harvey Brigadier His Grace The Duke of Wellington KG LVO OBE MC DL Colonel-in-Chief The Duke of Wellington's Regiment (West Riding) The only Colonel-in-Chief not of royal blood, appointed by Her Majesty The Queen, 18th June 1974 3 FOREWORD by Major General Sir Evelyn Web-Carter KCVO OBE Colonel, The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding), 1999-2006 On the 6th of June, 2006, The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding), like many other famous Regiments around the same time, ceased to exist as a separate infantry Regiment. It was amalgamated with the other two great Yorkshire Regiments, The Prince of Wales’s Own Regiment of Yorkshire and The Green Howards. All three Regiments can be traced back over three hundred years and have their own history and traditions, of which everyone who have ever served with them, were rightly proud. The battalions of the three former Regiments are now the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Battalions of The Yorkshire Regiment. This book, A Concise History and Digest of The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment 1702-2006, is the first Regimental history book published since amalgamation. It combines updated extracts from previous publications, new, more recent entries and many previously unseen pictures. I commend the editor and his assistants for their industry and research. This book will be a valuable addition to the Regimental library. I hope you enjoy the book and ask that you give it the widest possible circulation to all those who hold the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment dear. This publication, alongside active local associations and regular reunions will help keep the ‘Golden Thread’ alive. 4 CONTENTS The Colonel-in-Chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Section 4 Foreword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Photo Gallery 1 - Deployments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Section 5 Prologue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Freedoms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Synopsis, 1702-2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 The Regimental Colours today . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Miscellany . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Section 1 The Regimental Titles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Section 6 Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, Photo Gallery 2 - General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 lst Duke of Wellington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 The Colonel of the Regiment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Section 7 The Colonels of the Regiment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 The Victoria Cross . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 The Commanding Officers, 1948-2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 The Regimental Distinctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Section 8 The Chronicle of Regimental Colours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Soldiers’ Service Memories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Battle Honours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Section 9 Section 2 Recollections of Commanding Officers . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Campaigns The War of Spanish Succession, 1854-1856 . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Section 10 The War of Austrian Succession, 1742-1748 . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Sport in the Regiment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 The Seven Years War, 1756-1763 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 The American War of Independence, 1755-1783 . . . . . . . 27 Section 11 Wars in India, 1787-1810 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Photo Gallery 3 - Sport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 The Napoleonic Wars, 1793-1815 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Forty Years of Peace, 1815-1854 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Section 12 The Crimean War, 1854-1856 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Training and Exercises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 Africa, India and the Far East, 1856-1899 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Affiliations and Alliances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132 The Indian Mutiny, 1857-1858 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Tercentenary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 Abyssinia, 1867-1868 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Amalgamations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 The Cardwell Reforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Rhodesia, 1896 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Regimental Association . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 The Boer War, 1899-1902 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Museums and Archives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138 The Great War, 1914-1918 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 The Inter-War Period, 1918-1939 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 The Second World War, 1939-1945 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 The Korean War, 1952-1953: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Section 3 The Modern Period The Cold War . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Cyprus, 1956 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Cyprus, 1967 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Ulster, 1971-2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Bosnia, 1994-1995 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Iraq, 2003 and 2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 5 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to thank Mr Jan Telensky, an enthusiastic Friend of the Regiment, without whose support and generosity this book would not have been published. The sources for the book are existing Regimental publications, the Museum and Archives of the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment, Dr Tracy Craggs PhD, who kindly supplied the soldiers’ interview material, and personal photographs and knowledge of the compilers, some of which has previously been published on the ‘Dukes’ website, the Iron Duke and other articles relating to the ‘Dukes’. All previous researchers and contributors, too many to mention, are also acknowledged. However, my foremost thanks are reserved for Mr Scott Flaving and Mr Richard Harvey, both retired ‘Dukes’, without whose source material, perseverance, knowledge and technical skills this book could not have been completed. I would also like to thank Bedrich Pandula (Buk), for his design skills and patience in dealing with the myriad of additions and amendments as new material has come to light and old facts proved to be incorrect, and Brigadier Dick Mundell for his invaluable assistance and support. Terry Butterworth, Halifax, August 2009. Editor: Terry Butterworth was born in Bradford on the 8th of September 1949. He enlisted into the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment on the 21st of January 1968, was appointed Regimental Sergeant Major of the 1st Battalion in June 1987 in Palace Barracks and commissioned in July 1989 at Ternhill. During his career he deployed on five roulement and two residential tours in Ulster. After commissioning, he spent two years as the Infantry Presentation Officer on the Northern Ireland Training and Advisory Team. He retired in 1994, when OC HQ Company, to assist his father who had terminal cancer. Terry re-enlisted in 2000 on a FTRS commission to become Deputy Commander Regional Recruiting SE&HC and, later, became Area Recruiting Officer, Kent. He retired for the second time in June 2009 to become the Project Manager for Holidays 4 Heroes, distributing free holidays to service men and women injured in Iraq or Afghanistan, on behalf of Mr Telensky. 6 PROLOGUE In the process of establishing a high “esprit de corps” it is very easy for regiments to come to believe that they are, in some way, special. Whatever the individual merit of such a claim, all regiments have one thing in common they are members of that truly unique British contribution to military organisation: the regimental system. Only those who have experienced it fully understand its strengths. General Sir Charles Huxtable put it succinctly at his final reunion dinner speech before vacating the colonelcy in 1990: “We are not a smart, social regiment. We do not seek to be ever in the headlines. We do not pretend to have some special expertise. Indeed, perhaps what makes us special is that we do not seek to be any of those things. We are ordinary, straight forward folk who stick together. We have in the ‘Dukes’ some of the best soldiers in the world. I would back the ‘Dukes’ soldier - the good, honest, straight forward, hard-working Yorkshireman - against any soldiers in the world. From these first class soldiers we have consistently obtained outstanding senior NCOs and Warrant Officers and hence have always had a powerful Sergeants’ Mess. Finally, we have officers who are not afraid to get their boots muddy and who understand the soldiers that they lead. If you put all these assets together in an organisation that works hard and plays hard; which gets on with its job and, if you ensure there is a proper understanding and communication between the various groups and add those loyal and supportive families, you end up with a first class, professional regiment. A regiment which will do any job it is given anywhere in the world and will stick at it until it is successful. You get a feeling of mutual support and respect; you get a group of people with strong bonds of friendship, of history, of enjoyment, of endeavour and achievement. In short, you get the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment.” 7 SYNOPSIS 1702-2006 In 1702 Colonel George Hastings, 8th Earl of Huntingdon, was authorised to raise a new regiment, which he did in and around the city of Gloucester. As was the custom in those days the Regiment was named Huntingdon’s Regiment after its Colonel. As Colonel succeeded Colonel the name changed, but in 1751 regiments were given numbers, and the Regiment was from that time known as the 33rd Foot. In 1782 the Regiment’s title was changed to the 33rd (or First Yorkshire West Riding) Regiment, thus formalising an association with the West Riding which, even then had been long established. The First Duke of Wellington died in 1852 and in the following year Queen Victoria, in recognition of the Regiment’s long ties to him, ordered that the Regiment’s title was changed to the 33rd (or The Duke of Wellington’s) Regiment. In 1881 the 33rd was linked with the 76th Foot, which had been raised in 1787, and had shared the same Depot at Halifax since its establishment in 1877. They became, respectively, the 1st and 2nd Battalions of The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding). In 1948 the 1st and 2nd Battalions were amalgamated into a single battalion, the 1st Battalion. The 1st Battalion has served with distinction in many of the world’s modern trouble spots. In Korea, the ‘Dukes’ desperate defence of the Hook position halted the last major Chinese attempt to break the UN Line before the truce in July 1953 brought the war to an end. In Cyprus the Battalion was successful in Operation Golden Rain, destroying a major EOKA terrorist group operating in the Troodos Mountains in 1956. In 1964 the Battalion joined the NATO deterrence in Germany on the front line in the Cold War and from 1971 was regularly engaged in ‘the Troubles’ in Ulster until 1997. In 1994, a peacekeeping tour in Bosnia was the setting for the first ever award of the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross, to Cpl Wayne Mills. A hasty deployment to Iraq in 2003 resulted in the award of the Theatre Honour Iraq 2003. ENDEX, Ex Medicine Man, Canada, 2004 Interspersed with these active service deployments have been many memorable postings, tours and exercises, including the Caribbean, Hong Kong, Kenya, Belize, Canada and the Falklands. The Regiment was amalgamated with the Prince of Wales’s Own Regiment of Yorkshire and the Green Howards, in June 2006, to become the 3rd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s). 8 Regimental Titles Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington Colonel of the Regiment Colonels of the Regiment Commanding Officers (1948-2006) Regimental Distinctions The Chronicle of Regimental Colours Battle Honours THE REGIMENTAL TITLES 33rd Regiment of Foot The Regiment was raised by Royal Warrant on 12th Feb 1702 and was known by the names of its Colonels until 1751: 1702 The Earl of Huntingdon’s Regiment; Henry Leigh’s Regiment; Robert Duncanson’s Regiment; George Wade’s Regiment (disbanded 1714).* 1715 George Wade’s Regiment; Henry Hawley’s Regiment; Robert Dalzell’s Regiment; John Johnson’s Regiment. 1751 33rd Regiment 1782 33rd (or First Yorkshire West Riding) Regiment. 1853 33rd (or The Duke of Wellington’s) Regiment. * Disbandment: see Miscellany section. 76th Regiment of Foot After one or two ‘false starts’ the Regiment was finally raised for the wars in India on 12 October 1787: 1745 Lord Harcourt’s Regiment (disbanded 1746).* 1756 76th Regiment (disbanded 1763).* 1777 76th Regiment (Macdonald’s Highlanders) (disbanded 1784).* 1787 76th Regiment. (Between 1806 and 1810 76th Regiment (Hindoostan)). * Disbandment: see Miscellany section 10 THE REGIMENTAL TITLES Amalgamation - 1881 The 33rd and 76th Regiments of Foot were linked to become the 1st and 2nd Battalions: 1881 (May) The Halifax Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s). 1881 (July) The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment). 1921 (January) The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding). Amalgamation - 1948 The 1st and 2nd Battalions were amalgamated on 17th June 1948 to become: 1st Battalion the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding). Amalgamation - 2006 The Prince of Wales’s Own Regiment of Yorkshire, The Green Howards and The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment were amalgamated on 6th Jun 2006; the ‘Dukes’ became: 3rd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s). 11 Field Marshal Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington: Arthur Wesley, later Wellesley and 1st Duke of Wellington, was born in 1769. In 1787 he was commissioned into the 73rd Regiment and in the next six years served in four other regiments including, briefly, the 76th Foot. Such switches from one regiment to another were common in those days when promotion was by purchase. In 1793 Arthur Wellesley purchased his Majority in the 33rd and six months later the Lieutenant Colonelcy. He was then 24 years old. In 1794 Wellesley took his regiment to Holland and there saw his first active service. Three years later he and the 33rd went to India. He remained in command until 1802. He then wrote: 1st Duke of Wellington (1839) by George Hayter "I have commanded them now for nearly ten years, during nine of which I have scarcely been away from them and I have always found them to be the quietest and best behaved body of men in the army." In 1806 Wellesley succeeded the Marquis Cornwallis as Colonel of the 33rd and held that appointment until 1813. Arthur Wellesley gained his initial military experience in Flanders; but he made his name as a military commander in India, when he commanded one of the British forces in the war against the Mahrattas. He won a series of decisive victories, particularly at Assaye in 1803. Daguerreotype portrait of Arthur Wellesley from 1844 In 1809 Wellesley was sent to Portugal to conduct the campaign against Napoleon’s armies in the Peninsula. In five years, without returning to the UK, he swept the French first out of Portugal and then out of Spain before advancing into Southern France in 1814. In that year Napoleon abdicated and was exiled to Elba. However his stay there was brief and by March 1815 he was again Emperor of France. On 18th June 1815 the famous battle of Waterloo was fought, which led to the final defeat of Napoleon and confirmation of the Duke of Wellington as one of Britain’s greatest military commanders. Subsequently, Wellington took an active part in politics and for a short time (1828- 1830) was Prime Minister. He died in September 1852, aged 83. The following year the 33rd was granted the title: The 33rd (or The Duke of Wellington’s) Regiment, thus becoming the only regiment in the British Army to be named after a commoner. The Duke’s descendants have always maintained close links with the Regiment. In 1935 the Earl of Mornington, the only son of the 5th Duke was commissioned into the Regiment. In 1941 he succeeded to the title, as the 6th Duke, but was killed in action with the Commandos at Salerno in 1942. Earl of Mornington, 6th Duke of Wellington, cousin of the 8th Duke In 1974 Brigadier His Grace the Duke of Wellington (the 8th Duke) was appointed Colonel in Chief of the Regiment. 12 THE COLONEL OF THE REGIMENT In times past a new regiment was formed by the monarch appointing a distinguished officer to raise and thereafter to be Colonel of “one of our Regiments of Foot”. It was in such a manner that Colonel George Hastings, Earl of Huntingdon, raised a regiment in 1702 which was, as was then the custom, named after him, viz: Huntingdon’s Regiment. As Colonel succeeded Colonel, so also was the name of the regiment altered. The Colonel was paid various allowances from which he clothed, equipped and fed his Regiment. In the circumstances it is not surprising that Colonels considered that they ‘owned’ their regiments, even to the extent of placing their own insignia on the Colours and accoutrements. In 1751 King George II decided the time had come to put greater emphasis on loyalty to the Crown, with the result that from that year regiments were allocated numbers and Colonels were forbidden to place their arms or other devices on the Colours and accoutrement. It was thus that the Regiment raised by the Earl of Huntingdon in 1702 became the 33rd Foot. The 76th Regiment was raised in 1787 by General Sir Thomas Musgrave Bt. Despite the changes made in 1751 Colonels continued to exert great influences on their Regiments. They were usually of high rank and often Members of Parliament as well. Field Marshal George Wade, by Johan van Diest, 1731 A good Colonel often spent his own money on his Regiment. Even so, because of the financial arrangements, most made a ‘profit’ from being Colonel. It was only in 1855 that Colonels ceased to be responsible for clothing their Regiments and not until 1881 that the appointment became an honorary title. The appointment of Colonel has always been valued and esteemed and though it may now be honorary, the Colonel still has wide ranging responsibilities for their Regiment’s welfare in the broadest sense, including recruiting and esprit de corps. Many distinguished officers have held the appointment of Colonel of the Regiment and of its forbears, the 33rd and 76th Regiments. Four of the Colonels of the 33rd became Field Marshals, namely: FM George Wade (1705-1717); FM John Griffin-Griffin, Lord Howard de Walden, (1760-1766); FM Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, (1806-1813) and FM Sir Charles Yorke (1855-1863). The final Colonel of the Regiment (1999-2006) was Major General Sir Evelyn Webb-Carter KCVO OBE, late the Grenadier Guards. His father, Brigadier B W Webb-Carter DSO OBE commanded the 1st Battalion with great distinction during and after the Second World War. By tradition, the Colonel, however exalted his actual rank, always wears the badges of rank of a Colonel when with his Regiment. 13 Colonels’ insignia THE COLONELS OF THE REGIMENT Colonels of the Regiment, 1702-2006. 1702-1703 Colonel George Hastings, 8th Earl of Huntingdon. 1703-1705 Colonel Henry Leigh. 1705-1705 Colonel Robert Duncanson (12th February to 9th June 1705). 1705-1717 Field Marshal George Wade. 1717-1730 Lieutenant General Henry Hawley. 1730-1739 Lieutenant General Robert Dalzell. 1739-1753 Lieutenant General John Johnson. 1753-1760 Major General Lord Charles Hey. 1760-1766 Field Marshal John Griffen-Griffen, 4th Lord Howard de Walden. 1766-1805 General George Cornwallis, 1st Marquis Cornwallis KG. 1806-1812 Field Marshal Sir Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington KG GCB GCH. 1813-1830 General Sir John Cope Sherbrooke GCB. 1830-1831 General Lord Charles Henry Somerset. 1831-1845 General Sir Charles Wale KCB. 1845-1847 Lieutenant General Sir Henry Sheey Keating KCB. 1847-1855 General Henry D’Oyley. 1855-1863 Field Marshal Sir Charles Yorke GCB. 1863-1895 General William Nelson Hutchinson. 1881-1886 General Frederick Darlby George CB. (Colonel of 76th, then joint Colonel, with Hutchinson, from 1881-1886, when made Colonel of another regiment). 1895-1897 General George Erskine. 1897-1909 General Sir Hugh Rowlands VC KCB. 1909-1934 Lieutenant General Sir Herbert Eversley Belfield KCB KCMG KBE DSO. 1934-1938 Brigadier General Percy Alexander Turner CMG. 1938-1947 Colonel Charles James Pickering CMG DSO. 1947-1957 General Sir Alexander Frank Philip Christison, Bart, GBE CB DSO MC. 1957-1965 Major General Kenneth Godfrey Exham CB DSO. 1965-1975 General Sir Robert Napier Hubert Campbell Bray GBE KCB DSO. 1975-1982 Major General Donald Edward Isles CB OBE. 1982-1990 General Sir Charles Richard Huxtable KCB CBE. 1990-1999 Brigadier William Richard Mundell OBE. 1999-2006 Major General Sir Evelyn John Webb-Carter KCVO OBE. 14 The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding) Warminster, Sunday 7th May, 2006 Colonels of The Regiment Brigadier WR Mundell OBE 1990-1999 Major General DE Isles CB OBE DL 1975-1982 Colonel-in-Chief Brigadier, His Grace The Duke of Wellington KG LVO OBE MC DL 1974-2006 15 Major General Sir Evelyn Web-Carter KCVO OBE 1999-2006 General Sir Charles Huxtable KCB CBE 1982-1990 THE COMMANDING OFFICERS Commanding Officers, 1948-2006. 1948-1950 Lt Col C R T Cumberlege. 1950-1951 Lt Col J H Dalrymple OBE. 1951-1954 Lt Col F R St P Bunbury DSO. 1954-1957 Lt Col R de La H Moran OBE. 1957-1960 Lt Col P P de La H Moran. 1960-1962 Lt Col A D Firth OBE MC. 1962-1965 Lt Col A B M Kavanagh OBE MC. 1965-1967 Lt Col D E Isles CB OBE. 1967-1970 Lt Col D W Shuttleworth OBE. 1970-1972 Lt Col C R Huxtable OBE. 1972-1975 Lt Col P A Mitchell OBE. 1975-1977 Lt Col J B K Greenway MBE. 1977-1979 Lt Col M R N Bray CBE. 1979-1982 Lt Col W R Mundell OBE. 1982-1984 Lt Col C R Cumberlege. 1984-1987 Lt Col E J W Walker OBE. 1987-1989 Lt Col A D Roberts MBE. 1989-1992 Lt Col A D Meek. 1992-1994 Lt Col D M Santa-Olalla DSO MC. 1994-1996 Lt Col N St J Hall. 1996-1999 Lt Col S C Newton MBE. 1999-2002 Lt Col N G Borwell OBE. 2002-2004 Lt Col D S Bruce OBE. 2004-2006 Lt Col P M Lewis OBE. 16 17 Colonel of the Regiment Sir Evelyn Webb-Carter 1999-2006 AD Roberts Sir Charles Huxtable CR Cumberlege SC Newton AD Meek EJW Walker 1987-89 1970-72 1982-84 1997-99 1989-92 1984-87 Colonel-in-Chief, His Grace The Duke of Wellington, 1974-2006 DS Bruce JBK Greenway WR Mundell NStJ Hall MRN Bray DE Isles 1994-97 2002-04 1975-77 1979-82 1977-79 1965-67 Commanding Officers of the 1st Battalion, the Colonel and Colonel-in-Chief Warminster, Sunday 7th May, 2006 The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding) PM Lewis 2004-06 THE REGIMENTAL DISTINCTIONS Honorary Colours. The award of the Honorary Colours was notified by the Governor General of India by Order in Council dated 1st October 1803. The following is the relevant extract from the Order. Red Facings. Common to both the 33rd and 76th Regiments were the relatively uncommon red facings on the uniforms worn prior to the Boer War, which continues today with the red backing to the cap badge, the red lanyards worn by Officers, Warrant Officers and Sergeants. The background colour of the Regimental Colour is normally the same colour as the Regiment’s facings, however, for those Regiments with either red or white facings it is a red St. George’s Cross on a white field. “In testimony of the peculiar honour acquired by the army under the personal command of His Excellency General Lake, the Governor-General in Council is pleased to order that Honorary Colours, with a device properly suited to commemorate the reduction of the fortress of Ally Ghur on the 4th, and the victory obtained at Delhi on the 11th September, be presented to the Corps of Cavalry and Infantry (European and Native) respectively employed on those occasions; and that a public monument be erected at Fort William to the memory of the brave officers and men (European and Native), who have fallen in the public service during the present campaign. The Cap Badge. The design was taken from the Crest of the Duke of Wellington, who commanded the 33rd for nearly ten years and was Colonel of the Regiment from 1806-1813. The crest is described as, “Out of a ducal coronet on, a demi-lion rampant gules, holding a swallow-tailed pennon of the last, the fly to the sinister the head charged with the ensign of St George.” The motto on the cap badge is “Virtutis Fortuna Comes”, which means “Fortune Favours the Brave”. Beneath the crest is a scroll bearing the words “West Riding”. These devices were granted on 5th August, 1853, and Sealed on 9th Jan 1897 - The crest and motto in white metal, the rest in gilt metal. A later seal, dated 7th Apr 1970, authorised an anodised version of the same device. The Honorary Colours granted by these orders to His Majesty’s 27th Regiment of Dragoons, and to the 76th of Foot, are to be used by those Corps while they shall continue in India, or until His Majesty’s most gracious pleasure be signified through His Excellency the Commander-in-Chief.” For some time, the Honorary Colours were the only stand used by the 2nd Battalion, prior to the presentation of replacement Colours in 1829 and a new stand of Honorary Colours on 3rd July 1830. The Regiment was the only Regiment in the British Army to carry four Colours on parade. This tradition has been carried forward by the 3rd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s). The Cap Badge Naming of the Regiment. On 18th June 1853, on the anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo following the Great Duke’s death on 14th September 1852, the following communiqué was received from Horse Guards by the Colonel of the Regiment, General D’Oyley, who had been instrumental in the granting of this distinction: The Collar Badge The Elephant. The badge of an elephant, circumscribed with the word Hindoostan, was granted to the 76th in recognition of the distinguished part the Regiment played in the campaigns in India in l803-4, during which Lord Lake referred to it as “this handful of heroes”. Later a Howdah was added. The Elephant became the Regimental collar badge on the linking of the 33rd and 76th in 1881 and was also the design used for the regimental buttons. Her majesty has been graciously pleased to command that the 33rd Regiment of Foot shall, henceforth, bear the name of “The 33rd (or The Duke of Wellington’s) Regiment”, which honourable distinction will be inscribed on the Colours of the Regiment. By Command G Brown Adjutant General 18 THE REGIMENTAL DISTINCTIONS The Guardroom Gong. The ‘Gong’, which stands outside the Battalion guardroom today was apparently adopted by the 33rd Regiment sometime around 1875-1879, as a copy of an earlier brass gong captured in 1803 by the 76th Regiment on campaign in India. An early Regimental history notes: “During this campaign [Scindia War, 1803] the regiment captured a splendid Ghariyal, or Indian gong, of great value, which is still carried about by the corps and is usually set up in front of the guard-room for the non-commissioned officer of the guard to strike the hour on.” (Anonymous author of the ‘History of the 76th Regiment’) Nicknames. The Regiment has acquired many nicknames throughout its history - The ‘Dukes’, ‘Johnson’s Jolly Dogs’, the ‘Havercake Lads’, ‘The Immortals’, ‘The Pigs’, the ‘Old Seven and Sixpennies’, the ‘Dirty Dukes’. Music. The Regimental Quick March, The Wellesley, was reputedly discovered in the papers of the 1st Duke after his death (See back cover). This was officially approved in 1883, with an additional bugle fanfare (the Seed arrangement) being approved in 1988. The Regimental Slow Marches were Destiny (from the 33rd) and Logie of Buchan (76th). Other airs were adopted by the Regiment, Ilkla Moor, I’m Ninety Five, The British Grenadiers, Grenadiers March, Mallendorf, Scotland the Brave and, most recently, Ode to Joy introduced in Minden by Lt Col Mundell when Commanding Officer of the 1st Battalion. The Guardroom Gong Mascot. An Indian Elephant. ‘Albert’, a carved wooden elephant, still resides in the Warrant Officers’ and Sergeants’ Mess of The 3rd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment and continues to attend rugby matches as the longest-serving supporter of the rugby squad. Sport. The 33rd/76th Foot were the winners of the first Army Rugby Competition in 1907 and since then the Regiment won the Army Rugby Cup fourteen times and was runner up eight times, a record unmatched anywhere else in the Army. The Regiment was successful in many other sports too, in particular football and boxing. Regimental Days. St George’s Day (23rd April) and Waterloo Day (18th June). The Fahnenband. On the 24th November, 2005, in the German town of Osnabruck, Major General Clauss, General Officer Commanding 7 (German) Panzer Division, on behalf of the German Federal Minister of Defence, awarded a ‘Bundeswehr Fahnenband’ to the Regiment. The Fahnenband is a prestigious military distinction and regarded in the same way as Regimental Colours. It was attached to the Regulation Queen’s Colour. The Fahnenband is only awarded to Allied units and formations, of battalion or equivalent size, or greater, which leave the Federal Republic of Germany after five years or more service, in recognition of their services in Germany. The Fahhnenband is in the German national colours of Red, Black and Gold. The front is inscribed from bottom to top with the words “Einsatz Fur Frieden und Freiheit”. Whilst the reverse has: “Bundesrepublik Deutschland 2005”. 19 ‘Albert’ - the Sergeants’ Mess mascot German Bundeswehr Fahnenband, 2005 THE CHRONICLE OF REGIMENTAL COLOURS The British Army dates from the restoration of the Monarchy in 1661. At that time the carrying of Colours was already an established practice, continued from the Civil War, and every company had its own Colour. As there were from ten to twelve companies in a regiment, ten to twelve Colours were required. The Colours were all different but throughout a Regiment had a similar central theme, which was usually some private badge of the Colonel or part of his coat of arms. Colours continued thus until about 1700 when, owing to changes in infantry tactics, the number was reduced to two or three. At about the same time a small Union Flag was included in the first, or Colonel’s, Colour. The Regulation and Honorary Colours In 1751 new regulations described the Colours to be carried in the future. The first, or King’s Colour, was to be a Union Flag with the Regiment’s number in the centre and the second, or Regimental Colour, was to be the colour of the Regiment’s facings, except for those regiments with red or white facings (such as the 33rd and 76th), whose Colour was to be a red St. George’s Cross on a white field. While the Colours carried today are basically the same as in 1751 there have been some important changes since that time, the principal ones being: The substitution of the Regiment’s title, for the earlier Regimental number, in the centre of the Colours. A considerable reduction in their size, which arose due to more accurate rifle fire making the Colours a more conspicuous target. At the battle of the Alma in 1854, for instance, five officers and ten sergeants of the 33rd were killed or wounded while with the Colours. The last time the 33rd carried the Colours in action was during the Battle of Magdala, in April 1868. The emblazoning of Battle Honours and other distinctions on the Colours was introduced from about 1800. Few Battle Honours were awarded before 1800. The first Battle Honour awarded to the 33rd, in 1813, was for the battle of Seringapatam, fought in 1799. Honours for earlier battles were not awarded until long after the event. Thus that for Dettingen, fought in 1743, was not awarded until 1882. 20 THE CHRONICLE OF REGIMENTAL COLOURS All Battle Honours, other than those awarded for the Great War and the Second World War, are emblazoned on the regulation Regimental Colour. Ten Battle Honours selected from those awarded for the Great War and a further ten selected from those awarded for the Second World War are emblazoned on the regulation Queen’s Colour. The 76th Regiment had an honorary stand of Colours presented for its conspicuous service at the capture of Delhi and in the reduction of the fortress of Ally Ghur in 1803. No other British Regiment carries four colours. These Colours are also unique because they are the original size Colours which were carried into battle. They only bear the Battle Honours awarded to the 76th prior to the amalgamation of 1881. In the past, Colours were the guiding and rallying point of the Regiment and their loss was considered a great disgrace. Today their use is ceremonial, symbolising the honour and sacrifice of a Regiment and all its members through the practice of showing Battle Honours. Colours are also used to symbolise and reinforce the, almost mystical, connection between a Regiment and the monarch by reflecting in their design tangible evidence of the loyalty and duty owed by both to the other. It is these symbolic values which established the status of Colours as the most important possession held by a Regiment. Regulation Queen’s Colour Regulation Regimental Colour Honorary Queen’s Colour 76th Foot Honorary Colour, presented in 1830, on display in the Regimental Chapel in York Minster 21 Honorary Regimental Colour BATTLE HONOURS (Names in capitals are Battle Honours emblazoned on the Regimental Colours) Polygon Wood, Broodseinde, Poelcappelle, Passchendaele, CAMBRAI 1917 and 1918, St Quentin, Ancre 1918, LYS, Estaires, Hazebrouck, Bailleul, Kemmel, Bethune, Scherpenberg, Tardenois, Amiens, Bapaume 1918, Drocourt-Quéant, Hindenburg Line, Havrincourt, Épehy, Canal du Nord, Selle, Valenciennes, Sambre, France and Flanders 1914-18, PIAVE, Vittorio Veneto, Italy 1917-18, Suvla, LANDING AT SUVLA, Scimitar Hill, Gallipoli 1915, Egypt 1916 Third Anglo-Afghan War: AFGHANISTAN 1919 Battle Honours borne on the Regimental Colours World War II: Dunkirk 1940, ST. VALERY-EN-CAUX, Tilly sur Seulles, Odon, FONTENAY LE PESNIL, NORTHWEST EUROPE 1940 and 1944-45, Banana Ridge, Medjez Plain, Gueriat el Atach Ridge, Tunis, DJEBEL BOU AOUKAZ 1943, North Africa 1943, ANZIO, Campoleone, Rome, MONTE CECO, Italy 1943-45, Sittang 1942, Paungde, Kohima, CHINDITS 1944, BURMA 1942-44 War of the Austrian Succession: DETTINGEN India: Hindoostan, MYSORE, SERINGAPATAM, ALLY GHUR, DELHI 1803, LESWAREE, DEIG Spain: CORUNNA Korea: THE HOOK 1953, KOREA 1952-53 France: NIVE, PENINSULAR, WATERLOO Iraq: Iraq 2003 (Theatre Honour) Crimean War: ALMA, INKERMAN, SEVASTOPOL Abyssinia: ABYSSINIA South Africa: RELIEF OF KIMBERLEY, PAARDEBERG, SOUTH AFRICA 1900-02 World War I: Mons, Le Cateau, Retreat from Mons, MARNE 1914 and 1918, Aisne 1914, La Bassée 1914, YPRES 1914, 1915 and 1917, Nonne Bosschen, HILL 60, Gravenstafel, St. Julien, Aubers, SOMME 1916 and 1918, Albert 1916 and 1918, Bazentin, Delville Wood, Pozières, Flers-Courcelette, Morval, Thiepval, Le Transloy, Ancre Heights, ARRAS 1917 and 1918, Scarpe 1917 and 1918, Arleux, Bullecourt, Messines 1917 and 1918, Langemarck 1917, Menin Road, Battle Honours emblazoned on Drum 22 CAMPAIGNS CAMPAIGNS The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702-1713: “It is somewhat singular that the first regiment which singularly distinguished itself in the first Peninsula War was the 33rd, which covered itself with honour at the storm of Valenza (1705)" ‘History of the British Army’ by Hon J. W. Fortescue. army ten times larger. In the meantime, the Duke of Marlborough was winning his resounding victories at Blenheim, Ramilles, Oudenarde and Malplaquet, which so overshadowed events in Spain and Portugal that little is now remembered of them, though the army there had to suffer far worse conditions than applied in Holland, due to poor quarters, lack of transport and a general shortage of essential supplies. Not for the last time in the history of the British Army were casualties in action trivial in comparison to those caused by privation and disease. Between 1689 and 1815 the British were often at war with the French - and created the British Empire in the process. The second of these wars, starting in 1702, was about who should succeed to the vacant throne of Spain. The British Army had to be rapidly expanded and this resulted in the raising of the 33rd Regiment, among others. Britain’s principal allies at the time were Holland and Portugal, and the 33rd was to see service in both these countries. In a matter of months of being raised the Regiment joined Marlborough‘s army in Holland, but after two campaigns it was despatched, with five more of Marlborough’s best regiments, to open up a new front in Portugal. For the next six years the Regiment was continually in action. There were victories; particularly at Valenza (Valencia de Alcántara) (1705) and Saragossa (1710) and also defeats. In 1707 the 33rd was part of an allied force cut to pieces at Almanza (Almansa). Quickly reraised, it again fought with distinction, until it was forced to surrender at Brihuega (1710), as part of the army‘s rearguard, overwhelmed by a Franco/Spanish To add insult to injury the Regiments serving with Marlborough were granted the Battle Honours associated with his victories, while the 33rd and the other Regiments which had served in Spain and Portugal received nothing: it was not the custom to award Battle Honours for unsuccessful campaigns! The 33rd, the only regiment to serve throughout the campaign, might have expected, by modern standards, to be awarded the Honour ‘Spain and Portugal 1704-10’, at the very least. 24 CAMPAIGNS Peace was signed in 1748 but events outside Europe, particularly in India and North America, were hardly affected. The peace was little more than a truce while the struggle for colonial advantage continued overseas. The War of the Austrian Succession, 1742-1748: At Rocoux (in Flanders) the 33rd Regiment petitioned to attack the enemy and "did it with so good a countenance that they got a great reputation." ‘The London Gazette Extraordinary’ 1746 In 1753 the 33rd was posted home and quartered at Reading. In that same year Lt Col John Johnson died and was succeeded by Colonel Lord Charles Hey. Shortly after the changeover the 33rd was posted to Edinburgh. At that time soldiers were employed to build a system of military roads. On reaching Edinburgh five companies were dispatched to Cock Bridge in the Grampians, three miles north of Corgarff Castle. From there they set about building a 15 mile stretch of road north to Tomintoul. That road is now known as the A939, Lecht Road. At the bottom of the hill they also built a well next to Conglass Water, like the road, that well still remains as a marker of the soldiers’ labours. British Infantry at Dettingen, 1743 From 1714 to 1742 there was a pause in the hostilities between Britain and France, due to the latter being too handicapped by internal corruption to present much of a problem. However, in the latter year war broke out again with France, this time about who should succeed to the vacant throne of Austria. The 33rd Regiment was part of the army that was sent to Germany to join its Dutch and Austrian allies. There, near Frankfurt in 1743, the Battle of Dettingen took place, in which the 33rd particularly distinguished itself. This resulted in a defeat for the French and the award of the Battle Honour ‘Dettingen’ to the Regiment, their first. Dettingen was followed, in 1745, by the Battle of Fontenoy, where the British infantry, under heavy fire, marched up to within pistol shot of the enemy and received their volley before firing a shot. The British volley devastated the enemy. As an example of the prowess of the British infantry, Fontenoy stands almost without parallel. Unfortunately the rest of the allied army failed in its tasks so that the British had to withdraw while in sight of success. After Fontenoy the 33rd returned to England for a brief period to help deal with the rebellion led by ‘Bonnie Prince Charlie’. In 1746 the Regiment was back in Flanders taking part in battles at Rocoux and Lauffeld (1747). At this time the 33rd was nicknamed ‘Johnson’s Jolly Dogs’ after the name of its Colonel. The Well of Lecht, 2008 25 CAMPAIGNS The Seven Years War, 1756-1763: “America has been conquered in Germany, where Prince Ferdinand’s victories have shattered the whole military power of that great military monarchy, France." - William Pitt, Prime Minister, in 1761. The shadowy borderland between nominal peace and open war was crossed in 1756 when the French took Minorca from the British, for the loss of which Admiral Byng was tried by Court Martial and sentenced to death. The plan of the British Government, led by William Pitt, was to use British sea-power to wrest from the French their possessions in North America, India, Africa, the West Indies and elsewhere, while sustaining a war in Europe so as to prevent the French from sending reinforcements overseas. In January 1757 a second battalion of the 33rd was raised, the 2nd/33rd. Major Peter Daulhat was placed in command. The following year the Battalion was renumbered as the 72nd Regiment of Foot. Lt Col Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond. Commanding Officer of the 1st/33rd, took over this new Regiment and his younger brother, Lord George Lennox, took command of the 33rd. In May the 33rd was posted to the Isle of White. Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond, 1758, by Sir Joshua Reynolds The 33rd, after taking part in two operations, against St Malo and St Cast, on the northern French coast in 1758, was assigned to Germany, arriving in 1760 as part of the ‘Glorious Reinforcement’ to join the allied army of British, Hanoverian and Prussian troops, which had, under the command of Prince Ferdinand, already won a great victory at Minden in the previous year. For the next three years the army was constantly campaigning, but few of these battles are now remembered. There was nothing that caught the interest of the public in the way that the capture of Quebec or the victory at Plassey in India had done. As in Spain and Portugal the Regiment had to campaign under atrocious conditions and in the end had nothing to show for it. In fact it was nearly 200 years before a proper history of the war in Germany came to be written. That war ended in 1763, by which time an empire had been won. To that empire had been added Canada, which thus joined Britain’s other North American colonies on the east coast of America. This is where the 33rd was to see action next. 26 CAMPAIGNS The American War of Independence, 1775-1783: “The 33rd Regiment was unquestionably the best trained Regiment in the British Army at this time (1765-1795).”- ‘Fit for service: The training of the British Army 1715-1795’ by J A Houlding. Ever since the end of the Seven Years War an undignified wrangle had been going on between the British Government and the American colonists about how much the latter should pay towards the cost of that war. War came in 1775, and the 33rd, under its young Colonel, Earl Cornwallis, was part of the reinforcements sent to America early in 1776. The Regiment was, at that time, said to be the best trained Regiment in the British Army and as a result was known as “The Pattern”. On arrival in America the Regiment was brigaded with the Guards and subsequently took part in numerous battles both in the north, around New York and Philadelphia, and later in the south, in Georgia and the Carolinas. It was in North Carolina, at Guildford Court House, that it fought one of its toughest battles. There, in 178l, a British force took on an American army twice as strong and defeated it. The famous historian, Forteseue, recorded, “Never, perhaps, has the British soldier been seen to greater advantage than in this obstinate and bloody battle”. Despite winning, Cornwallis was obliged to withdraw to Yorktown where he was forced to surrender his army, which included the 33rd. The British troops marched out with the bands playing “The world turned upside down.” This was yet another campaign which, because it was unsuccessful, resulted in no Battle Honours for the Regiments which had taken part. In 1782 it was decided that all regiments would be formally linked with a county. The 33rd thus became:- 33rd (or First Yorkshire West Riding) Regiment, a title Cornwallis had particularly requested as, in his words, “... the 33rd Regiment of Infantry has always recruited in the West Riding and has a very good interest, and the general good will of the people, in that part of the country.” In 1786 the Regiment returned to England. It was from about this time the Regiment acquired the nickname of “The Havercake Lads”, the havercake being an oat pancake, a traditional staple food in the north of England. 27 CAMPAIGNS Wars in India, 1787-1810: "Bring me my boots and the 76th Regiment of Foot and I am ready to go anywhere." Attributed to General Lord Lake, C-in-C India 1800-1808. In 1787 four Regiments were raised for service in India, one of them was the 76th, later to become the 2nd Battalion the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment. Like the 33rd, it was given the relatively uncommon red facings to its uniform. The first Colonel of the Regiment was General Sir Thomas Musgrave Bt. The 33rd at the storming of Seringapatam in 1799 The Regiment arrived in India in 1788 and from 1790 -1792 took part in the campaigns in Southern India which were to lead to the granting of the Battle Honour ‘Mysore’. The Regiment then moved north and in 1803 was in Cawnpore when war broke out against the Mahratta chiefs in Hindoostan. The army was commanded by General Lord Lake and the only British infantry battalion in his force was the 76th. General Lake fought a brilliant campaign and obtained a series of outstanding victories, notably at Ally Guhr, Delhi, Leswaree and Deig, at each of which the 76th played a prominent part. The members of the Regiment became so battle scarred that they became known as the ‘Immortals’. One of the Mahratta chiefs is quoted as saying of Lake’s army, “They came here in the morning, looked over the wall, walked over it, killed the entire garrison and retired for breakfast.” However, it was not as easy as all that. The campaigning conditions were extremely tough. For instance, before the battle of Leswaree the infantry marched 25 miles in eight hours in great heat. Then, after only a one-hour break, they went into action. For the numbers engaged, that battle was one of the bloodiest in the history of British warfare in India. Lake had 824 casualties, a quarter of them in the 76th. The Mahrattas had 7,000. For the part the Regiment played in the capture of the fortress of Ally Ghur and the capture of Delhi it was awarded an honorary stand of Colours. At the end of the campaign, at the behest of the East India Company, the Regiment was authorised to wear the word ‘Hindoostan’ on its Colours and appointments. At the same time the Commander-in-Chief, Lord Lake, obtained permission for the Regiment to use the badge of an e1ephant. In 1797 the 33rd was sent to India where it took part in the Fourth Mysore War, which resulted in the defeat of Tipoo Sahib, the ‘Tiger of Mysore’, and the award of the Battle Honour Seringapatam. In 1810 two companies of the Regiment and units of Madras Infantry were detached to join a small force under Colonel Henry Sheehy Keating, as part of a Royal Navy Squadron under the command of Commodore Josias Rowley, which successfully captured the French held Isle de Bourbon, (although named Isle de Bourbon by the British it was called Isle de Bonaparte by the French, and is currently known as ‘La Réunion’), east of Madagascar, approx 120 miles southwest of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. Keating was ordered to storm the port of Saint Paul which was sheltering a French frigate named Caroline and two captured East Indiamen, but was defended by five powerful gun batteries. Keating and Rowley agreed that a frontal assault would fail, and instead devised a plan in which Keating, with 368 of his own men, and 236 sailors and Royal Marines, under Nesbit Willoughby, would land at Point de Galet, seven miles from Saint Paul. The force would then advance and storm the batteries from the rear. The plan was a total success, Keating’s men capturing each battery in turn early in the morning of 21st September and used the cannon within to fire on the shipping in the harbour. A brief attempt at defence by local forces was brushed aside, and Keating and his men re-embarked in the evening, the force remaining offshore until 28th September. 28 CAMPAIGNS Keating also masterminded the invasion and capture of the Isle de France, during which he was stabbed in the thigh during a skirmish. For his service in the campaign, Keating was awarded 400 guineas worth of silver plate and given the governorship of the renamed Isle de Bourbon. In 1815, at the end of the war, Keating arranged for the island’s return to representatives of the restored French King, Louis XVIII, at the Congress of Vienna. The Napoleonic Wars, 1793-1815: "Upon the whole I consider this Regiment (the 33rd) to be in the most advanced state of any in the army." Sir Henry Clinton, Inspector General of Infantry of Wellington’s army in Flanders,16th January 1815. Corruna In the wake of the French Revolution, war broke out between England and France on 1st February 1793. The British strategy was to use the Navy to cut off all French colonial possessions and to restrict activity in Europe to subsidising her allies. But this did not work for long and in 1794 the 33rd was part of a contingent sent to the Netherlands. Because of the unsatisfactory state of the army, due to peacetime neglect, the appalling conditions and serious deficiencies of equipment; the force was soon in disastrous retreat. By 1795 the remnants were back in England. For Arthur Wellesley, who had assumed command of the 33rd two years earlier, it was a lesson in ‘how not to do it’. While the Regiment was in the Netherlands two of its companies were detached as part of a picked force to capture three French held islands in the West Indies. That campaign, likewise, ended in failure, as a result of appalling losses due to disease. The 76th returned from India in 1806. The following year it was ordered to the Peninsula where it disembarked at Corunna as part of a force of 11,000 men. They advanced into Spain where they joined up with the army of Sir John Moore. However, before long, the force had to retreat under threat to its lines of communication from a French army under Napoleon. The retreat took place under dreadful weather conditions, over very bad country. Eventually Corunna was reached where a battle was fought in which Sir John Moore was killed. The 76th was awarded the battle honour Corunna for its part in the campaign. Six months later, in June 1809, the 76th took part in the Walcheren Campaign. This expeditionary force, which was one of the largest ever sent from the shores of Britain up to that time, was also one of the worst managed. By December the 76th was back in England, much reduced in numbers. 23,000 men of the force had died of disease and only 217 had been killed in action against the French. In 1813 the 76th returned to the Peninsula and took part in the closing stages of the war in Spain. In the process it acquired the battle honours Peninsula and Nive. The war ended in April, but there was no rest for the 76th, which was forthwith ordered to Canada, arriving there in August 1814. The war against the United States had been in progress for two years and the cessation of the French war gave an opportunity to prosecute operations with greater vigour. The plan was to invade New York. The first objective was Plattsburg, where the Americans were nearly defeated. However, because of the loss of the command of Lake Champlain, which flanked the army’s route, the only option was to retire. Peace was signed at the end of the year and thus ended the 76th’s long period of active service. It was almost one hundred years before it again fought as a unit. 29 CAMPAIGNS The 33rd Regiment returned from India in 1812. A year later it formed part of a force first sent to northern Germany and then, in 1814, to the Netherlands. It was decided to attack the near impregnable fortress of Bergenop-Zoom as a preliminary to the capture of Antwerp. The attack failed. Later the same year peace was signed with France. The peace was short lived. Napoleon escaped from Elba and quickly gathered a new army about him. The Duke of Wellington had been placed in command of the allied forces in Belgium and there his old Regiment, the 33rd, joined him as part of the 5th Brigade. In June 1815 Napoleon began his advance on Belgium where the allied forces were distributed along the frontier. On 16th June the French attacked them at Quatre Bras. The 33rd was heavily involved and played its part in ensuring the safe withdrawal of the British force to Waterloo. There, on 18th June, was fought the battle which is forever to be associated with the name of Wellington. The battle lasted all day and, despite repeated attacks, the British squares held firm against the massed attacks of the French cavalry. Napoleon, frustrated, is reported to have said ‘These dogs of English never know when they are beaten’. Finally Wellington, aided by the Prussians under Blucher, drove the French from the field and the long periods of wars against them came to an end. Forty Years of Peace, 1815-1854: Due to the lack of medical knowledge at that time and the climatic conditions of the countries in which the army had to serve, peacetime service was often no less hazardous than war. Periods in the UK were usually relatively short in duration. Even when regiments were stationed in the UK, they rarely remained in one place for long. Thus the 33rd returned to the UK in 1816 and in the next four years was kept on the march between Hull; Sunderland; Nottingham and Portsmouth, from where half the Regiment went to Guernsey, Stirling; Glasgow; Ulster and, finally, Dublin. In 1821 it was sent to the West Indies where, like all other regiments, it suffered the ravages of yellow fever. From that and other causes, eleven officers and 560 NCOs and men died in the ten years the Regiment was stationed there. Back in the United Kingdom in 1832, it only had time for a brief spell in Ireland before being again sent overseas, this time to Gibraltar where it remained from 1836 until 1841. Next it went to the West Indies again, though this time for only three years. In that period six officers and 156 NCOs and men died from yellow fever and other causes. From 1844 the 33rd was in Nova Scotia, returning to the UK in 1848. When the Crimean war broke out in 1854 the Regiment was in Ireland. In 1815 the 76th was in Canada and remained there for the next twelve years before being sent to Ireland. In 1834 it was its turn for a tour in the West Indies where, like the 33rd, it suffered very many deaths from yellow fever. In 1839 alone, there were 120 deaths from the disease. In the next thirteen years the 76th was constantly on the move, being stationed successively in Nova Scotia, Ireland, England, Scotland, Corfu, Malta and, finally, in 1854, back in Nova Scotia. It only spent nine out of forty years in the UK. One other aspect of both home and overseas service in this period was that more often than not Regiments were dispersed into Company or smaller detachments. For instance; in 1848 when the 33rd gathered at St. John, Nova Scotia, for embarkation prior to return to the UK, it was the first time the Regiment 1845-1877 UK, 76th of Foot, Workshop, Sgt Maj William Collins had been concentrated in one place in (Front Centre) seven years of overseas service. 30 CAMPAIGNS The Crimea War, 1854-1856: "Of the 33rd Regiment or, as it is its delight and honour to be called, The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment, it can be fairly said that no Regiment has more largely shared in the losses, sufferings and the hard work of the expedition from the first to the last." - ‘The Times’ 26th June, 1856. Inside the Turkish defenses at Sevastopol, 1855 On 18th June 1853, the 38th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, it was announced that in future the 33rd would bear the name 33rd (or The Duke of Wellington’s) Regiment. The following year war broke out between Russia and Turkey. The Russians quickly won a naval victory in the Black Sea, opening the route to the Mediterranean. This threat was sufficient to bring the British and French into the war as Turkey’s allies. The plan was to capture the port of Sevastapol in the Crimea, denying its use to the Russians. The Allies landed about thirty miles north of Sevastapol and, on 20th September 1854, drew up in front of the Russians posted in the hills overlooking the river Alma. With a minimal regard to tactics, a frontal assault was made against the heavily defended Russian positions. However, such was the courage and confidence of the troops that they drove the Russians off the heights and forced them to retreat to Sevastapol. The cost was heavy. The 33rd, in the centre of the leading brigade, had 268 casualties, more than any other Regiment that took part in the battle, and more than at Waterloo, even though the engagement only lasted half as long. After the battle of Balaclava, in which the 33rd took no part, the Russians made an attack on the British position at Inkerman. Aided by dense fog they were into the British lines almost before either side realised it. The fog made any form of control impossible and as a result the Battle of Inkerman became known as ‘the soldiers’ battle’. During the subsequent winter the troops suffered very severely through lack of warm clothing, no shelter beyond light tents, scanty food and hopelessly inadequate medical services. As a result, often more men were sick than were fit for duty. In September 1855, the Allies captured Sevastapol, although six months were to elapse before peace was eventually signed. Little was gained by the war; but it did have far reaching effects on the army as action was taken to remedy many of the severe shortcomings in training and administration which had been highlighted during the campaign. 31 CAMPAIGNS Africa, Abyssinia and the Far East, 1856-1899: Between the conclusion of the Crimea War in 1856 and the end of the century the British Army was constantly engaged in various parts of the world, including India, Afghanistan, China, Abyssinia, West Africa, Egypt, Sudan, Burma and South Africa. More often than not these small wars started with a surprise attack by natives in overwhelming numbers, which usually led to the defeat or withdrawal of the British forces. In due course a field or expeditionary force would be assembled, followed soon afterwards by a crushing defeat of the enemy, the critical battle being of short and sharp duration. The Indian Mutiny, 1857-1858: In May 1857 mutiny broke out in the Indian Army, just as the 33rd arrived in Mauritius from England. However, after only the briefest of stays it was sent to India. There the Regiment was constantly on the move on the east coast, to the north and south of Bombay, operating in small and sometimes isolated detachments, notably at the taking of Dwarka. After the mutiny had been quelled a campaign medal was issued, but the 33rd, despite the arduous nature of its duties, did not qualify since, in those days, at least half of the Regiment had to be engaged together to be eligible. For the same reason the Regiment did not qualify for a Battle Honour, though the other Regiments of Sir Hugh Rose’s Central India Field Force, whose flanks the Regiment had protected, were awarded the honour of ‘Central India’. Map of India showing Mahratta region 32 CAMPAIGNS Abyssinia: 1867-1868: In March, 1866, a British envoy had been dispatched to secure the release of a group of artisans and missionaries, who had first been seized when a letter King Theodore (Tewodros II) had sent to Queen Victoria requesting munitions and military experts from the British had gone unanswered. They were released, however King Theodore changed his mind, recaptured and imprisoned them again, along with the envoy. An Expeditionary force was sent from India. 12,000 British and Indian troops, including the 33rd, marched over 380 miles from the Red Sea coast at Annesley Bay to King Theodore’s capital, Magdala. The task was achieved with great difficulty, as the road had to be built en-route for the artillery, wagons and elephants carrying a Naval rocket battery and supplies. On April 13th 1868, following a prior battle on the Plain of Arogye below Magdala, where the 33rd captured several artillery pieces, the hilltop fortress was stormed. The 33rd led the attack, gained entry to the fortress and captured it. After the battle Victoria Cross medals were awarded to Pte Bergin and Drummer Magner, both of the 33rd, who led the way into the fortress. The Regiment was granted the Battle Honour ‘Abyssinia’ and the soldiers were awarded the ‘Abyssinian campaign medal’. Magdala was the last occasion the 33rd carried Colours into action. It has been described as one of the most remarkable expeditions in the l9th century. Chetta Ravine on route to Magdala Soldiers of the 33rd at the Koki Bir Gate 33 CAMPAIGNS The Cardwell Reforms, 1881: From 1868 onwards, following Mr Cardwell’s appointment as Secretary of State for War, a number of far reaching changes were made to the organisation and administration of the army. For infantry regiments the most important was the decision, made in 1881, to link all regular regiments together in pairs. This brought about the joining of The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (33rd) with the 76th. They became, respectively, the 1st and 2nd Battalions. In addition the two Battalions of the 6th West Yorkshire Militia became the 3rd and 4th Battalions. At the same time the three West Riding Volunteer battalions became linked with the Regiment. Rhodesia, 1896 (The Mashonaland Field Force): In June 1896 the natives of Mashonaland rebelled and, operating over a large area, killed more than 120 white settlers. A small field force was quickly assembled comprising little over 500 men, of which 150 came from the 2nd Battalion, then stationed in Natal. In one battle the force inflicted over 200 casualties for the loss of three killed and four wounded - a typical example of the retribution inflicted in these small wars. By November 1896 the campaign was all over. However, the next war in southern Africa was to be of a very different nature. 1896, S Africa, Matabeleland, 2 DWR 1 x Cpl, 11 x Ptes in patrol jackets, all with South Africa medals 34 CAMPAIGNS The Boer War, 1899-1902: "The longest, the costliest and bloodiest and most humiliating war for Britain between 1815 and 1914." ‘The Boer War’ by Thomas Packenham. 1st Battalion Crossing the Modder River Following the discovery of gold in the Boer state of Transvaal there was a great influx of foreigners, mostly British. This so threatened the Boer supremacy that they determined to deny the new immigrants the vote and other rights. This was the underlying cause of the war, which broke out in October 1899. The British, supremely confident, and convinced that one of them was worth at least five Boers when it came to fighting, launched a series of attacks as if the Boers were nothing more than another body of rebellious natives. They were very quickly disillusioned when they suffered three serious defeats within one week, Stormberg, Magersfontein and Colenso, resulting in both Mafeking and Ladysmith coming under siege. These defeats led to a large number of reinforcements being sent to South Africa, of which the 1st Battalion formed part. It arrived in Cape Town early in 1900, from where it was soon sent forward as part of the force whose task was first to relieve Kimberley and then to capture the Boer capitals at Bloemfontein and Pretoria. The first task having been quickly achieved, the Boer commando, which had been contesting the relief of Kimberley, withdrew towards Bloemfontein. However they were forced to give battle at Paardeberg on 18th February where, after being besieged for ten days, 4,000 Boers, under Commander Viljoen, were obliged to surrender. This was the first major defeat for the Boers and a turning point in the war although the war dragged on for a further two years before peace was signed. It had thrown a great strain on the army and revealed many defects in the Victorian military system. Fortunately by the time war again broke out, in 1914, the defects had been remedied. 35 CAMPAIGNS A Patrol of ‘Dukes’ Mounted Infantry In addition to the 1st Battalion, a Company from the 2nd Battalion, stationed in Burma, fought in the war as part of the Burma Mounted Infantry. The 3rd (Militia) Battalion also served in South Africa, as well as three Volunteer Service Companies sent out, in turn, to strengthen the 1st Battalion by the Volunteer Battalions. The Battle Honour granted to the Regiment for the Boer War was South Africa 1900-1902. The Great War, 1914-1918: "In every respect the Expeditionary Force of 1914 was incomparably the best trained, best organised and best equipped British Army that ever went to war." - ‘Military Operations in France and Belgium 1914’ by Brigadier Sir James Edmonds. Great Britain declared war on Germany on 4th August 1914 and immediately mobilised the British Expeditionary Force. The 2nd Battalion, in 5th Division of 2nd Corps, was fully operational in France by 18th August. The plan of the French and British was to advance into Germany, but the Germans, who were sweeping through neutral Belgium, quickly frustrated this. On 24th August six German divisions came up against the two divisions of 2nd Corps at Mons. Despite their overwhelming superiority the German attack crumbled in the face of the superb musketry of the units of the 3rd and 5th Divisions. Mons was followed by a withdrawal towards Paris, but the tide was turned at the Battle of the Marne and the Germans withdrew. Now began a ‘race to the sea’ as each army tried to outflank the other. At Ypres, during October and November, a desperate battle was fought as the Germans tried to break through to Calais. They were stopped but the British battalions were, by then, down to a quarter of their strength. The old regular army died at Ypres, but it had set a superb example for the new armies, which were being raised in the UK at that time. The expansion of the army was achieved by doubling the Territorial Army (the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th Battalions of the TF, formed in 1908 from the Volunteer battalions, each raising a second battalion) and by the raising of ‘Service’ battalions, which, in the Regiment’s case were numbered the 8th, 9th and 10th. LCpl B Holdsworth, All these battalions fought on the Western Front during the long hard slog of 10th Battalion DWR trench warfare and in the process helped the Regiment to gain the Battle 36 CAMPAIGNS Honours of Somme, Arras, Cambrai and Lys. The only battalions to serve elsewhere were the 8th, which took part in the Gallipoli campaign and gained the Honour Landing at Sulva, and the 10th, which fought in Italy, where it gained the Battle Honour Piave. In addition to these battalions the 12th and 13th were raised as Labour battalions, the 11th remained in the UK and acted as reserve to the 8th, 9th and 10th and the 14th was briefly formed in 1918, although it did not see service. The 54th Young Soldiers Battalion was also badged to the Regiment. In total 23 battalions were raised during the war, of which 14 battalions were in action. These 14 battalions saw active service in various theatres of operations and were awarded a total of 197 Battle Honours, many of which, of course, were granted to more than one unit fighting side by side on the same battlefields. Over 8,300 members of the Regiment were killed during the conflict, many of whose names are recorded on the Memorials to the Missing, such as the Thiepval Memorial on the Somme battlefield. Raising of a Battalion for the First World War At the outbreak of war the 1st Battalion had been stationed in India and remained there for the duration. At one stage, in 1914, it was one of only eight British battalions left to garrison the country. Later this weak garrison was considerably augmented. This was just as well as, in the aftermath of the war; there was much civil unrest during which the lst Battalion played its part in an internal security role. In 1919 the Battalion took part in the 3rd Afghan War, during which it was awarded the further Battle Honours Spin Baldak and Afghanistan 1919. Machine Gun Section 1/4th Battalion DWR, 1916 37 CAMPAIGNS The Inter War Period, 1918-1939: Drums leading 2nd Battalion DWR to Kazipur, India, 1929 During the period between 1920 and 1935 the 1st Battalion was stationed in the UK, except for a brief period in Gibraltar and Turkey in 1922/23. In 1935 the Battalion was moved to Malta, returning to England in 1938 where it joined the 1st Infantry Division. 2nd Battalion DWR Patrol North West Frontier Province, 1935 The 2nd Battalion was overseas for almost the whole of the period between the wars, sailing for Egypt in 1922, before proceeding to Singapore and then India, where it arrived in 1928. During 1934/35 the battalion took part in the Looe Agra and Mohmand operations on the North West Frontier. 38 CAMPAIGNS The Second World War, 1939-1945: On the outbreak of war, the 1st Battalion was sent to France, where little happened until May 1940, when the Germans attacked through Holland and Belgium. In the ensuing retreat to Dunkirk the 1st Battalion formed part of the rearguard covering the embarkation of the BEF. In November 1942 the Battalion landed in North Africa and took part in several battles in Tunisia, notably at Banana Ridge and Djebel Bou Aoukaz in 1943. The following year it participated in the landings at Anzio and subsequently saw some of the most desperate fighting of the war, particularly at Monte Ceco in October 1944, where Private Richard Burton was awarded the VC. Following the Japanese attack on the Americans at Pearl Harbour, in December 1941, the overstretched forces of the Allies were soon swept aside by the Japanese Army. In February 1942 the 2nd Battalion was hastily mobilised as part of a force sent to reinforce Burma. Within a week of landing at Rangoon the Battalion found itself withdrawing to the bridge across the river Sittang, which was blown up before the Battalion could withdraw across it. From there the campaign developed into a long retreat back to India. After a period for reorganisation the 2nd Battalion was assigned to the Chindits, in which it formed two columns - the 33rd and the 76th. Acting independently, both columns were involved in the relief of Imphal in March - July of 1944. 58th Anti Tank Regiment (1/4th DWR), with M10 Achilles Tank Destroyers, Italy, 1944 Before the outbreak of the war both the 4th and 5th TA Battalions were converted to other arms - the 1/4th and 2/4th to Royal Artillery, becoming 58th and 68th Anti Tank Regiments (RA) , respectively, and the 5th to Royal Engineers (Searchlights) and, later, as 600 Regiment (RA) fighting in the infantry role at the liberation of Dunkirk in 1945. Both the 1/6th and the 2/6th Battalions saw service in Europe, the former in Normandy in June 1944, after duty in Iceland, having originally been tasked to assist the Norwegians in April 1940, and the latter in the campaign of 1940, becoming part of 2nd Armoured Delivery Regiment in 1944. 39 CAMPAIGNS The 1/7th Battalion landed in France on 11th June 1944 and fought with distinction in Normandy, where it gained the Battle Honour Fontenay-le-Pesnil on 25th June 1944. The battalion took part in the liberation of Holland and was there when the war ended. Men of the 1/6th Battalion and Polish Navy Officers ready to sail from the Clyde to Norway in 1940 The 2/7th was sent to France in March 1940 as a non combatant unit on pioneer duties. In May it was caught up in the German advance following the German invasion of France, Belgium and the Low Countries on 10th May. By 7th June it had withdrawn to Dieppe, joining 51st Highland Division, and fought a gallant action at St Valery-en-Caux before being evacuated to the UK. The battalion was then converted to armour, becoming 115th Regiment RAC, but did not see any further action during the war. The 8th Battalion was reformed in July 1940 and in the following year was converted to 145th Regiment RAC and as such served in North Africa and Italy, fighting alongside the 1st Battalion on occasion in Tunisia. Italy, Gothic Line 8th DWR (145 Regt RAC), Churchill Tanks Harboured up, 1944 40 The 9th and 10th Battalions were also reformed in 1940. The 9th was converted to RAC (146th Regiment), It was sent to India and saw service in Burma and, after the end of the war, in Sumatra. The 50th Holding battalion became the 10th Battalion in 1940, training reinforcements for the overseas battalions, except for two years from 194244 when it had an operational role in the UK. CAMPAIGNS Liberation of Roosendaal 1944, 15 platoon, C. Company, 1/7th DWR. John Hey to right of centre in middleground The Regiment was awarded 23 Battle Honours for its service during the Second World War, of which 10 are permitted to be carried on the Queen’s Colour, including North West Europe 1940, 44-45 and Burma 1942, 44. Regulation Queen’s Colour showing First and Second World War Battle Honours 41 CAMPAIGNS The Korean War, 1952-1953: On 25th June 1950, communist North Korea invaded a poorly defended South Korea. Narrowly averting defeat at Pusan, General MacArthur’s UN forces successfully landed behind the communist forces at Inchon and, by 9th October 1950, they had invaded North Korea. Failing to envelope the main enemy force he pushed them back to the Chinese frontier, drawing communist China into the war. The UN forces withdrew to the 38th Parallel and by June 1951 the war had settled down to First World War style trench warfare and raiding. Halifax, Handing in Colours prior to Korea, 14th October, 1952 The 1st Battalion was warned off for duty in Korea in early 1952 and, after rigorous training in Minden and Pontefract, arrived in Pusan on 30th October, 1952, moving to the Yong Dong feature for ‘acclimatization’. By December the Battalion was considered ready for front line duty and relieved the DLI at Naechon, where patrols were soon in action against the communist forces. After a brief period of ‘rest’ between December to April 1953, the ‘Dukes were back at the front, supporting the Black Watch on the Hook and relieving them in the front line on 13th May, as it became clear that the Chinese were preparing a further major attack. Quickly familiarising themselves with the ground and the Defensive Plan, the Battalion got to work wiring and mining as the Chinese artillery fire became heavier and casualties mounted. On 28th May major artillery bombardments were precursors to a major attack by Chinese infantry which quickly developed into a struggle among the trenches and bunkers on the Hook position. Subsequent attacks were scattered by artillery and machine-gun fire and a final attack was broken up by the Assault Pioneer platoon supported by tank fire. 42 CAMPAIGNS Map from the Regimental War Diaries, archived as WO/308/53, National Archive, London. A counter attack relieved the besieged garrison and the position was declared clear at 0300 hours. Losses were 3 Officers and 17 Other Ranks killed, two Officers and 84 ORs wounded, plus 20 ORs missing. Chinese losses were estimated as 250 killed and 800 wounded. For this action the Regiment was awarded the Battle Honour ‘The Hook 1953’. Later the 1st Battalion’s Headquarter Company was renamed ‘Hook Company’. Mortar Platoon Position, 1st Battalion, Korea, 1953 43 CAMPAIGNS The ‘Dukes’ embarked for Gibraltar on 13th November 1953, where they arrived on 10th December. In May 1954, during a visit to Gibraltar by Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, the Commanding Officer (Lieutenant Colonel FR St P Bunbury) and a further 10 officers and other ranks received decorations for their actions in Korea. Gibraltar, Lt Col Bunbury receiving DSO for Korea from Queen Elizabeth, 1954 General Franco of Spain objected to the Queen visiting Gibraltar and promptly closed the Spanish/Gibraltar border, thus confining the ‘Dukes’ to Gibraltar until September 1955 when they left to return to the UK. The border did not reopen until 1985, when the ‘Dukes’ were, coincidentally, again stationed in Gibraltar. Gibraltar, Yorkshire Volunteers on Four Corners Guard, 1985 44 THE MODERN PERIOD THE MODERN PERIOD Cpl Neil Cairns wrote an article for the Archives on his experiences of Cyprus in 1956: The Cold War: The Cold War had its origins in the Second World War, or perhaps even as far back as the Allied Intervention in Russia during the civil war when the White Russians were defeated by the Bolsheviks at the end of the First World War. Although there was no direct conflict between the Soviet Union and the USA, there were many ‘proxy’ wars and confrontations, which included the Korean War, the War in Vietnam, many daring spying escapades and much posturing involving nuclear weapons. We were on a search and destroy mission against EOKA terrorists in the area of the Markheras Monastery. Information had been received that Afxentiou, one of the more notorious of the EOKA leaders, had for long periods lived in a hide near the monastery. The arrest of a man who knew the location of the hide led to a decision to try to snatch Afxentiou. At dawn on the 3rd of March, the hide was discovered and, on being summoned to give up, four men crawled out slowly, offering no resistance. From them it was learned that Afxentiou was still in the hide. His response to a call to come out was a burst of machine gun fire, which killed Corporal P Brown. It was clear that Afxentiou intended to sell his life dearly. Corporal Brown, a National Serviceman, with only two weeks to go before demob, had been hit three times in the stomach, one round in the solar plexus, the other two cutting the runners each side of his belt buckle. His back had been blown away. Later we found that the weapon used was a Thompson sub machine gun with the .45 lead type bullet. The Battalion was devastated. In 1945 the 1st Battalion had moved from Italy to Palestine and was involved in the troubles in that region until returning to England in late 1947. In 1951 the ‘Dukes’ moved to Minden, joining the British Army of Occupation on the Rhine, defending western Germany from the expected Soviet invasion. The major conflict involving British Forces during the Cold War was Korea (see page 42). This was then followed by two tours of duty on the Strategic Reserve, first in Chiseldon, during which there was a move to Malta to support forces involved in the Suez Crisis, August 1956, and then in Colchester, 1960. The Battalion next faced the Soviets in 1964, based in Quebec Barracks, Osnabruck, with spells in Cyprus, Norway and Denmark, before returning to England prior to leaving for Hong Kong. The Hide Afxentiou was in was dug into a shale banking. We plastered it with everything we had got, but to no avail, he was just so well dug in and all our hardware was just bouncing off the scree. Corporal Bailey MM, nicknamed Mickey Mouse, was talking to someone, saying that if that had been us in Korea the Gooks would soon have had us out. An officer overheard the conversation and said, “What would that be, Cpl Bailey?” On being told the officer dashed off and was soon back with two cans of AVGAS (aviation petrol). Climbing above the hide he poured both cans down the hillside. Getting clear of the area and leaving time for the fuel to soak in, he fired a Very pistol at the hide. Whoosh! Up it went. Typical, for his trouble he got a mention in Dispatches, poor old Bailey got nothing. In 1976 The Battalion became part of 11th Armoured Brigade, again in Minden, preparing to hold the Russians on the Inner German Border, this time interspersed with tours of duty in Northern Ireland. The final tour of deterrence was carried out in Osnabruck between 2000 and 2005, when the threat of an imminent advance by massed armour across the north German Plain had receded, following the collapse of Communism in 1991. Cyprus - EOKA Campaign, 1956-1957: After the bloody encounters in the Korean War, the ‘Dukes’ were occupied by a series of garrison duties, being first deployed to Gibraltar, then to Cyprus in 1956, where they participated in anti-terrorist operations against EOKA. 46 THE MODERN PERIOD one officer and 24 men; two ad hoc reserve platoons formed from the administrative men of HQ Company, and reserve sections created at every HQ from any men who could be made available. In support of the Zone was a 30 strong detachment of the United Nations’ Civil Police. At first these were New Zealanders who were then replaced by Australians. ‘A’ Squadron 5th Inniskilling Dragoon Guards, in armoured cars, was also located in the Zone but though available to me in an emergency it was the designated Force Reserve for the southern part of the island. Outside reinforcements, again at times of crisis, came from the Canadian Recce Squadron, the Danish, Finnish and Swedish battalions. Cyprus, 1967: Lieutenant Colonel (later Major General) Donald Isles commanded 1 DWR between 1964 and 1967. During this time, April 1967, the Battalion was sent to Cyprus as part of the United Nations Peacekeeping Force (UNFICYP). This is Maj Gen Isles' first hand account of that six month tour. The above is the background to our time in Cyprus from May to November 1967. I had been on a recce in April and had found one disturbing fact. It was that Kophinou District was under command of the Swedish District Commander. As Kophinou was a distinct trouble spot I did not relish my soldiers being away from my control and I was determined to change it. It took about a month but, by June, Kophinou was under my command and I had the Battalion in a tidy state. Charles Huxtable (later General Sir Charles Huxtable CBE) commanded at Kophinou, Peter Hoppe at Limassol, at first Rodney Harms, my 2IC, at Paphos and then Jim Newton, while Robin Stevens was up in the north at Polis. For our six-month tour I can safely say that, once a week, I saw every man in the battalion. Life for the soldiers manning an OP could be most tedious yet, once there happened to be trouble between Greek and Turk, there was very often much to be done. My sector commanders did a most tremendous job in sorting out many petty, but potentially serious, problems between the two communities. Somehow both communities quickly understood the Yorkshire common sense and phlegm and the situation de-fused. If not handled properly, relatively minor issues could have affected the whole peace keeping operation in Cyprus. Major General Donald Edward Isles CB OBE We were responsible for the Limassol Zone, an area of some 1,500 square miles on the west and south of the Troodos Mountains. It extended from Pomos Point in the north to Larnaca in the east and included much of the most rugged country in Cyprus. Apart from the main roads (certainly no motorways in those days), which are mostly near the coast, movement between the villages was by means of narrow, stony tracks which twist and turn to match the contours of the mountain sides. Average speeds seldom exceeded 20mph and distances were large - from one extremity of the Zone to the other is some 140 miles. My Battalion HQ, or HQ Limassol Zone, was in Polemedhia Camp in Limassol with the majority of HQ Company. This camp also housed the Limassol District HQ and two rifle platoons. There were also three rifle Company Headquarters each functioning as a District HQ with a fourth rifle company headquarters, within Paphos District, at Polis. The latter, with only one platoon, kept a close watch on the usually quiet northern flank of the Zone, but was under command of Paphos District. The Battalion, with 824 men, was organised into the Recce Platoon; twelve rifle platoons, each with a minimum strength of There were four large-scale ‘shoot-ups’ involving the firing of nearly two thousand rounds of small arms and larger calibre rounds on each occasion. Shooting incidents of a few rounds were commonplace, as were minor clashes between Turkish Cypriot fighters and Cypriot Police or the Greek National Guard, entailing the hurling of stones and the shouting of threats and insults. 47 THE MODERN PERIOD Bomb incidents and vendetta killings were endemic to Cyprus and there is no doubt that the political situation was blamed for some occurrences, which had more of a personal than a political motive behind them. made our way to Ayios Theodhorous and spent the whole night in Martin Bray’s platoon position right in the middle of the crossfire. About dawn we managed to arrange a ceasefire but, as I have said above, nine platoons and the armoured squadron were needed to keep the warring parties apart. It was not a pleasant experience but, as in Limassol, no one was hurt and this despite the use of heavy machine guns from the surrounding positions in the hills. However, I knew that Kophinou would eventually cause grave problems for the United Nations unless we could get rid of the Turkish defences which were well dug-in around Kophinou and Ayios Theodhorous. Along with Charles I drew up a plan for a ‘peaceful’ Battalion attack on the Turkish positions. The idea was to saturate the area with Blue Berets and advance up to and through the Turkish defences, relying, we believed, in that the Turks in the face of such numbers would not open fire. Needless to say the plan was not approved but, if it had been, it would certainly have prevented the disaster that overtook the 1st Green Jackets on the 16th of November, barely a week or so after they had taken over from us. On this occasion, the Greek National Guard, in considerable numbers and with artillery and heavy weapons, assaulted Kophinou killing 22 Turks and wounding nine. General Grivas himself was involved in this outrage. It was clear that the Greeks had waited until the experienced Dukes had left and the new Green Jackets had taken over before putting in their attack. Perhaps one good outcome of this outrage was that General Grivas went back to Greece and was never seen again in Cyprus. He had caused so much trouble in his time and, as a UN soldier, I resented having to salute him when, on occasions, he drove through our Zone in his black Mercedes staff car flying his Greek commander’s flag. United Nations Cap Badge During such incidents it was essential to establish a UN presence as quickly as possible before it had a chance to escalate. For one of the more serious incidents at Kophinou and Ayios Theodhorous, all of nine platoons and all the armoured cars of the squadron were required for interposition between Greeks and Turks. At Kophinou I had Charles Huxtable, with five platoons and two troops of armoured cars permanently under his command, based in the former police compound. Mehmet, a regular Turkish officer from the mainland, was the Turkish Fighters’ leader. He was young and most aggressive, not only to the Greek Cypriots, but also to the United Nations. The Black Watch, before us, had had an incursion into the compound when some forty fighters rammed the wire with a truck and, once in, proceeded to batter the Jocks with pick handles and also caused considerable damage to UN property. The crux of the problem at Kophinou was that a road off the main Nicosia-Limassol road ran to the village of Ayios Theodhorous. Additionally there was a Cypriot Police post at Skarinou adjacent to Kophinou. Ayios Theodhorous was a mixed Greek/Turkish village and thus the Cypriot Police felt compelled, and indeed had the legal right, to visit it by a jeep patrol at least daily. The Turks had never liked this and on the 20th of July, to express their disapproval, they opened fire on some Greeks in the village. The Greeks retaliated and the firing went on throughout the night. Charles and I had In the first week in November Frank Kitson (later General Sir Frank Kitson) and his Green Jackets took over from us and we found ourselves back in Osnabruck with our families. We left two soldiers in hospital in Cyprus but they soon re-joined us. It had been a valuable tour and I enjoyed working with Mike Harbottle, the UNFICYP Chief of Staff and his staff officers. 48 THE MODERN PERIOD Ulster, 1972-2007: Bosnia, 1994-1995: At one time, the Regimental Training Depot was at Fermoy in the south of Ireland. However, in 1922 the Island was partitioned, the six counties of Ulster remaining loyal to the Crown and continuing as part of the United Kingdom, just as the 1st Battalion left The Curragh for Gibraltar. 1st Battalion prepares to leave for Bosnia, 1994 In March, 1994, the ‘Dukes’ deployed to Bosnia, with an area of responsibility covering Bugojno, Vitez, Travnik and the besieged enclave of Goražde. Cpl Porter & Section Dismounting, 1970s The latter was under siege for much of the war. It was declared a UN Safe Zone in that year. The ‘Dukes’ were one of the first units to enter the town. The Regiment pushed the Bosnian-Serb Army from their positions around the town to a distance of over one mile. Their objective in doing this was to create a safe zone for the town. In 1957 the Battalion was in Belfast for a quiet posting, but the situation had altered by the time the Battalion returned 14 years later. The ‘Dukes’ deployed to Northern Ireland a number of times during the ‘The Troubles’. Their first deployment was in 1971, during one of the bloodiest times in the Province in which 43 British soldiers and many civilians and terrorists lost their lives. There were further tours to the Province first to Shacklton Barracks, in Ballykelly in early 1973 for 18 months, followed by shorter ‘Emergency’ tours in 1976, 1977, 1979, 1981 and 1986. While at Goražde, Private Shaun Taylor of C Company was killed during an engagement with Bosnian-Serb forces while manning an observation post. The engagement lasted fifteen minutes, with over 2,000 rounds of ammunition being expended by the ‘Dukes’. Seven of the Bosnian-Serb soldiers were killed in the fire-fight. In 1987 the ‘Dukes’ deployed again to Northern Ireland for a further two year tour, based in Palace Barracks, just outside the city of Belfast. Following this tour the ‘Dukes’ returned to Tern Hill Barracks in Market Drayton, Shropshire. Part of the advance party had moved in when the barracks was attacked by the IRA, in the form of a bomb in one of the accommodation blocks. Although the building was occupied no injuries were sustained. Goražde remained a safe zone, being held by British troops from 1994-95. It was the only safe zone to survive the war and avoided the tragedies that occurred in other UN safe zones such as Srebrenica and Žepa. The last tour was as the Province Reserve Battalion, based in Weeton Camp, Blackpool, providing Companies for roulement tours of duty. The ‘Dukes’ lost one officer and five soldiers to hostile action during these deployments. 49 THE MODERN PERIOD Cpl Wayne Mills Corporal Wayne Mills of the 1st Battalion became the first recipient of the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross, second only to the Victoria Cross, on 29th April 1994. A patrol led by Corporal Mills came under heavy small-arms fire from a group of Bosnian-Serbs. The patrol returned fire, killing two of the attackers. The patrol then withdrew, but the attackers persisted in firing on the patrol. The patrol soon reached an open clearing, where it was obvious they would be highly vulnerable to fire from the attackers. Corporal Mills then performed an astonishing feat of bravery. He turned back and engaged the group in a fire-fight, delaying the attackers long enough to allow the rest of his patrol to cross the clearing. While doing this brave act, Corporal Mills shot the leader of the group, the rest scattering into the woods. Due to that action he returned to his patrol safely, who were giving covering fire. Lieutenant Colonel David Santa-Olalla received the Distinguished Service Order for his inspirational leadership and courage during the ‘Dukes’ deployment to Bosnia. He personally arranged for the mutual withdrawal of Serbian and Muslim forces from the besieged town of Goražde, just as the Geneva talks were being held on the town. He was a truly competent leader during the Bosnia deployment, being first on the scene whenever an incident occurred. Bosnia, Gorazde, LCpl Johnson & Burma Coy Foot Patrol, 1994 50 THE MODERN PERIOD Iraq, 2003 and 2004: In 2003, the ‘Dukes’ were part of Operation Telic 1, the invasion of Iraq, as part of 1st (United Kingdom) Armoured Division. Initially tasked to construct and operate a Prisoner of War holding camp and, later, internal security in the south of the country. Within a week they were re-deployed, in the Light Role, as the Divisional Support Group. They then relieved the Black Watch (2 RTR Battlegroup) to secure the town of Az Zubayr. For this deployment the Theatre Honour ‘Iraq 2003’ was awarded. ‘Dukes’ in Iraq, 2003 The ‘Dukes’ returned to the southeast of Iraq, as part of 4th Armoured Brigade, in October 2004, to join the British-led MultiNational Division (South-East), as a fully equipped Armoured Infantry Battalion with Warrior Armoured Personnel Carriers on Operation Telic 5, patrolling the Basrah area. Iraq, Gulf War, Dukes, Burma Coy Warrior, 2004 On patrol in Iraq, 2004 51 Farewell photo in Iraq, 2005 THE MODERN PERIOD 52 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Hong Kong, Manning a road block, 1969 Caribbean, Exercise Sun Pirate, Norman Island, 1972 Cyprus, UN Medal Parade Rehearsal, 1975 Ireland, Bessbrook Mill, Somme company, 1976 Ireland, Belfast, Stop & Search Patrol, 1980 54 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Northern Ireland, Milan Platoon Patrol, 1986 Northern Ireland, Belfast Patrol Briefing, 1980 Northern Ireland, Street Patrol Supporting Royal Ulster Constabulary, 1980 Northern Ireland, Belfast Patrolling Multi-storey Housing Complex, 1980 Belfast Street Graffiti, 1980 55 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Belize, Alma Coy marching through Belize City, 1985 Belize, Battle Group North, GMPG emplacement, 1985 Belize, Corunna Coy, Jungle Patrol, 1985 Belize, Alma Coy Jungle Patrol with sacks of confiscated Marijuana,1985 Belize, Dettingen Coy Patrol waiting for a Helicopter, 1985 56 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Belize, Exercise Nayan Sword, Commanding Officers O Group, 1985 Battalion Shooting Team, Bisley, 1984 Kenya, EX Strident Call, Mpala Farm, GPMGs Field Firing, 1986 UK, Ternhill, Western District SAA meeting, 1989 Falklands, South Georgia, Ariel View of Grytviken & King Edward Point, 1990 Falklands, South Georgia, Capt Richard Best & Recce Platoon, 1990 57 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Norway, Pte Atkinson, Pte Jackling & Pte Aurmea, 1992 Kenya, Katherdini, Burma Coy, 4 Platoon, 1994 Norway Ex Hardfall, Pte Coomes leads 9 Pl, 1993 Canada, 81mm Mortar, Sgt Maj Thompson, Sgt Sneider & Sgt Antcliffe, 1989 Iraq, Burma Coy Warrior Section, 2004 58 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Shatt Al Arab Hotel, DWR Flag, 2004 Kenya, Mpala Farm, Permanent Range Team, 1994 New Zealand, Lt McCormick with his Kiwi-Fijian platoon, 1998 Germany, Sennelager, PNCO's Cadre, 2002 59 PHOTO GALLERY 1 - DEPLOYMENTS Germany, Sennelager, Capt Sutcliffe, 2000 Germany, Sennelager, 2000 Germany, Sennelager, 2000 60 Freedoms The Regimental Colours Today Miscellany FREEDOMS The Freedom of a City, Borough or Royal Borough is conferred on a unit to signify a long standing relationship with, or eminent service to, that district through a special Council resolution. The privilege of a Freedom allows the unit to march through the borough with “drums beating, Colours flying and bayonets fixed.” The Regiment has been awarded the following Freedoms: 1945 Halifax - Awarded on the 18th June. 1952 Huddersfield - Awarded on 2nd July. 1959 Spenborough - Awarded 24th February. 1967 Mossley - Awarded to the West Riding Battalion on 8th July. 1991 Skipton - The Honorary Citizenship of the town was awarded on 4th May. 1995 Barnsley - Transferred to the ‘Dukes’ on 8th May, via the York and Lancaster Regiment and 3rd Battalion DWR. 1996 Bradford - Transferred on 26th April, through 70th Fd Regt RA, the Yorkshire Volunteers and 3rd Battalion DWR. 2002 Sheffield - Awarded on 13th April. 2002 Craven District - Awarded on 20th July. 2005 Erquinghem-Lys - On 12th November, the Regiment was awarded the singular distinction of the ‘Keys to the Town’ of Erquinghem-Lys in France. Freedom Scroll, Halifax, 1945 Drums Platoon lead the Regiment to Erquinghem Lys Town Hall to receive the Key to The town, 2005 62 THE REGIMENTAL COLOURS TODAY The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment was unique in having the privilege of carrying four colours on parade. The first stand of colours was a standard set of Regulation Colours, which all Regiments are presented with, and the second, an Honorary stand of Colours, presented to the 76th Regiment of Foot by the Honourable East India Company for distinguished service in India. The Honorary Colours are of the 1768 pattern, 6 foot 6 inches flying by 6 foot on the pike. Following amalgamation, on the 6th June 2006, the 3rd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s) retained the Honorary Colours. The Colours The ‘Dukes’ were presented with their last stand of new colours by HM Queen Elizabeth II, represented by The Colonel of The Regiment, Major General Sir Evelyn Webb-Carter KCVO OBE, due to the ill health of the Queen’s official representative, the Regiment’s Colonel-in-Chief, the Duke of Wellington. On Saturday the 31st March, 2007, the stand of Regimental Regulation colours taken out of service in 2002, in Osnabrück, Germany, at the Regiment’s Tercentenary parade was laid up in the Halifax Parish church. The Colour party, with 2 escorts of 40 troops, marched from the Town Hall to the Parish Church, preceded by the Regimental Drums and the Heavy Cavalry and Cambrai Band. There was a short ceremony in the church grounds where the Troops were inspected by the Mayor of Halifax, Councillor Colin Stout, and the Lord Lieutenant of West Yorkshire, Dr Ingrid Roscoe. The Colours, Halifax Parish Church 63 MISCELLANY The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment was the only British Regiment to have a Colonel-in-Chief who was not of Royal blood. Havercake Ale. The Regiment had a beer, called Havercake Ale, named in their honour by the Timothy Taylor Brewery in Keighley, to mark the Regiment’s Tercentenary. Timothy Taylor, the founder of the brewery, had served in an antecedent unit of the Regiment in 1859. Since then other members of the family, and employees, had also enlisted as ‘Dukes’. One employee, a Drayman called Arthur Poulter, was awarded a Victoria Cross at Erquinghem Lys for his action in saving the lives of many of his comrades during the Battle of the Lys, France, in 1918. The Battalion normally has five Companies, each named to commemorate a significant campaign or battle in which the ‘Dukes’ took part and were awarded a Battle Honour: A Company - Alma - commemorating the Battle of Alma, Crimean War, 1853-1856 B Company - Burma - commemorating the Burma Campaign, Second World War, 1941-1945 C Company - Corunna - commemorating the Battle of Corunna, Peninsular War of 1809-1813 Support Company - Somme - commemorating the Battle of the Somme, First World War, 1914-1918 Headquarter Company - Hook - commemorating the Battle of the Hook, Korean War, 1952-1953 When required an additional rifle company may be formed: Havercake Ale D Company - Dettingen - commemorating the Battle of Dettingen, War of the Austrian Succession, 1743. Disbandments. Both the 33rd and 76th Regiments have previously been disbanded and reformed in the past. The 33rd Regiment was disbanded on 25th May, 1714, but was officially registered as the 33rd Regiment of Foot in January 1715 and re-raised under that title on 25th March, 1715. It was last formed in Minden, Germany, in 1978. And an additional administration company: W Company - Waterloo - commemorating the Battle of Waterloo, Waterloo campaign, 1815. The 76th was disbanded on three occasions prior to being raised for duty in India in 1787; first as Lord Harcourt’s Regiment, raised 17th November, 1745, disbanded June 1746; re-raised, following the loss of Minorca to the French, in November, 1756, as the 61st Regiment but renumbered 76th, by General Order in 1758, being disbanded in 1763. A second Battalion raised by this Regiment in October, 1758, for duty in Africa was formed into the 86th Regiment but was disbanded in 1763. The 76th Highland Regiment of Foot was raised between December, 1777, and March, 1778, for service in America. On return from America it was disbanded at Stirling in March, 1784. The 76th was then re-raised in October, 1787, to become the 2nd Battalion the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment in 1881. It was last formed for Operation Oculus, Kosovo, in 2001. Timothy Taylor's Havercake Ale Beermat 64 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Gibraltar, 1954 Buckingham Palace, 1971 Aldershot, Dining in of Lt Col J B K Greenway, 1975 Gibraltar, 1984 Platoon Commanders Competition - Gibraltar, 1984 66 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Freedom Parade in Yorkshire, 1986 Gibraltar Caves, Band Inspection, 1984 WOs’ and Sgts’ Mess - Belize, 1985 67 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Halifax, Bankfield Museum, 1989 Buckingham Palace, Ceremonial Duties, 1988 Skipton - exercising Honorary Citizenship, 1995 Italy - Memorial Plaque for Anzio Harbour, 2004 Erquinghem-Lys, France, 2005 68 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Halifax, Korean Veterans’ Parade, 1998 Halifax, Korean Veterans’ Parade, 1998 Halifax, Korean Veterans’ Parade, 1998 Halifax, Korean Veterans’ Parade, 1998 Halifax, Freedom Parade, 1998 69 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Freedom Parade - Yorkshire Freedom Parade - Yorkshire Ian Walters and Craig Charlesworth on board HMS Iron Duke, 1977 Osnabruck, Germany, 2000 Regimental Weekend, Warminster, 2006 Inspecting the new Honorary Colours, 2002 70 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Halifax, Save The ‘Dukes’ Protest, 2006 Save the Dukes Protest, Halifax Piece Hall, 2006 71 PHOTO GALLERY 2 - GENERAL Halifax, Save The ‘Dukes’ Protest, 2006 72 THE VICTORIA CROSS THE VICTORIA CROSS A Royal Warrant of Queen Victoria on 29th of June 1856 instituted the Victoria Cross. It is awarded to “those officers or men who served us in the presence of the enemy and that shall have performed some single act of valour or devotion to the country.” Their Citations read as follows: Abyssinia Campaign, 1867-68: 3691 Drummer Michael MAGNER, 33rd Regiment and 949 Private James BERGIN, 33rd Regiment. For their conspicuous gallantry, in the assault of Magdala, on the 13th April 1869. The Victoria Cross, instigated 29th January, 1856 Drummer Michael Magner The idea originated with the Prince Consort, who is said to have designed the medal. The cross carries with it an annuity, then of £10 and now of £1300. In 1902 King Edward VII sanctioned the cross to be given to the representative of soldiers who would have been entitled to it had they survived. The decoration consists of a bronze ‘Maltese Cross’, which, until 1942, was made from the metal of Russian guns captured at Sevastopol, in the Crimean War. It is worn with a red ribbon by Army recipients and with a blue ribbon for recipients in the Navy. A total of nine serving members of the Regiment were awarded the Victoria Cross. Private James Bergin Lieutenant General Lord Napier reports that while the head of the column of attack was checked by the obstacles at the gate, a small stream of Officers and men of the 33rd Regiment and an officer of engineers, breaking away from the approach to Magdala, and climbing up a cliff, reached the defences and forced their way over the wall and through the strong and thorny fence, thus turning the defenders of the gateway. The first two men to enter Magdala were Drummer Magner and Private Bergin of the 33rd Regiment. (London Gazette, 28th July 1868) Private James Bergin Drummer Michael Magner Sergeant James Firth Second Lieutenant Henry Kelly Private Arnold Loosemore Private Arthur Poulter Second Lieutenant James Palmer Huffam Private Henry Tandey Private Richard Henry Burton 74 THE VICTORIA CROSS He twice rallied his company under the heaviest fire and finally led the only three available men into the enemy trench and there remained bombing until two of them had become casualties and enemy reinforcements had arrived. He then carried his Company Sergeant Major, who had been wounded, back to our trenches, a distance of 70 yards, and subsequently three other soldiers. He set a fine example of gallantry and endurance. (London Gazette, 25th November 1916) The Boer War, 1900-1902: 2522 Sergeant James FIRTH, 1st Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment During the action at Plewton’s Farm, near Arundel, Cape Colony, on the 24th February 1900. 15805 Private Arnold LOOSEMORE, 8th Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment. For most conspicuous bravery and initiative during the attack on a strongly held enemy position south of Langemarck, Flanders on 11th August 1917. 2522 Sergeant James Firth Lance Corporal Blackman having been wounded and lying exposed to a hot fire at a range of 400 - 500 yards, Sergeant Firth picked him up and carried him to cover. Later in the day, when the enemy had advanced to within a short distance of the firing line, Second Lieutenant Wilson being dangerously wounded and in a most exposed position, Sergeant Firth carried him over the ridge, which was being held by the troops, to shelter and was himself shot through the nose and eye whilst doing so. (London Gazette, 11th June 1901) 15805 Private Arnold Loosemore His platoon having been checked by heavy machinegun fire, he crawled through partially-cut wire, dragging his Lewis gun with him, and single handed dealt with a strong part of the enemy killing about twenty of them and thus covering the consolidation of the position taken up by his platoon, immediately afterwards his Lewis gun was blown up by a bomb and three of the enemy rushed for him, but he shot them all with his revolver. Later, he shot several enemy snipers, exposing himself to heavy fire each time. On returning to the original post he also brought back a wounded comrade under heavy fire at the risk of his life. He displayed throughout an utter disregard of danger. (London Gazette, 14th September 1917) The First World War, 1914-1918: 2nd Lieutenant Henry KELLY, 10th Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment. For most conspicuous bravery in attack at Le Sars on 4th October 1916. 2nd Lieutenant Henry Kelly 75 THE VICTORIA CROSS 24066 Private Arthur POULTER, 1/4th Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment (TF). For most conspicuous bravery when acting as a stretcher-bearer, at Erquinghem-Lys, on the 10th April 1918. When, during the advance on Marcoing, his platoon was held `by` machine-gun fire, he at once crawled forward, located the machine-gun, and with his Lewis gun team knocked it out. On arrival at the crossing he restored the plank bridge under a hail of bullets, thus enabling the first crossing to be made at this vital spot. Later in the evening, during an attack, he, with eight comrades, was surrounded by an overwhelming number of Germans and, though the position was apparently helpless, he led a bayonet charge through them, fighting so fiercely that 37 of the enemy were driven into the hands of the remainder of his company. Although twice wounded he refused to leave until the fight was won. (London Gazette, 14th December 1918) 24066 Private Arthur Poulter Henry Tandey donated his medals to the Duke of Wellington's Regimental Museum in Halifax, West Yorkshire. On special occasions and parades he would sign them out to wear. During the last period that he had signed them out, he died. Unaware that the medals should have been returned to the museum, the medals were auctioned in 1981 at Sotheby's in London by his wife. Where a private collector subsequently bought them. They were presented to the Regimental Museum of The Green Howards (the regiment in which he had earlier served), by Sir Ernest Harrison OBE, at a ceremony in the Tower of London on the 11th of November, 1997. On ten occasions Private Poulter carried badly wounded men on his back to a safe locality, through a particularly heavy artillery and machine-gun barrage. Again, after a withdrawal over the river had been ordered. Private Poulter returned in full view of the enemy, who were advancing, and carried back another man who had been left behind wounded. He bandaged-up over forty men under fire, and his conduct throughout the whole day was a magnificent example to all ranks. This very gallant soldier was seriously wounded when attempting another rescue in the face of the enemy. (London Gazette, 28th June 1918) 34506 Private Henry TANDEY DCM MM, 5th Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment (TF). For most conspicuous bravery and initiative during the capture of the village and the crossings at Marcoing and the subsequent counterattack on 28th September 1918. Private Henry Tandey 76 THE VICTORIA CROSS 2nd Lieutenant James Palmer HUFFAM, 5th Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment (TF). For conspicuous bravery and devotion to duty on 31st August, 1918. The Second World War, 1939-1945: 5891907 Private Richard BURTON, 1st Battalion The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding) 2nd Lieutenant James Palmer Huffam Private Richard Burton With three men he rushed an enemy machine-gun post and put it out of action. His post was then heavily attacked and he withdrew fighting, carrying a wounded comrade. Again on the night of the 31st August 1918, at St Servin’s Farm, accompanied by two men only, he rushed an enemy machine-gun post, capturing eight prisoners and enabling the advance to continue. Throughout the whole of the fighting from 29th August to 1st September 1918 he showed the utmost gallantry (London Gazette, 26th December 1918) In Italy on 8th October 1944, two companies of the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment moved forward to take a strongly held feature 760 metres high. The capture of this feature was vital at this stage of the operation, as it dominated all the ground on the main axis of advance. The assaulting troops made good progress to within twenty yards of the crest, when they came under withering fire from Spandaus on the crest. Private Burton rushed forward and engaging the first Spandau’s position with his Tommy-gun, killed the crew of three. When the assault was again held up by murderous fire from more machine guns, Private Burton, again showing complete disregard for his own safety, dashed forward toward the first machine-gun, using his Tommy-gun until his ammunition was exhausted. He then picked up a Bren gun and, firing from the hip, succeeded in killing or wounding the crews of the two machine-guns. Thanks to his outstanding courage the Company was then able to consolidate on the forward slope of the feature. Private Burton’s magnificent gallantry and total disregard of his own safety during many hours of fierce fighting in mud and continuous rain were an inspiration to all his comrades. (London Gazette, 4th January 1945) 77 THE VICTORIA CROSS At Ningthoukong, in Burma, soon after midnight of 6th of June, 1944, an attack was made by a strong force of Japanese. Three out of four light machine-guns in Sergeant Turner’s platoon were destroyed and the platoon forced to give ground. Sergeant Turner, with coolness and fine leadership, at once reorganised his party and withdrew 40 yards. When it was clear that the enemy were attempting to outflank the position, Sergeant Turner at once, boldly and fearlessly, went forward from his position alone, armed with all the hand grenades he could carry, and went into attack against the enemy single-handed. He used his weapons with devastating effect and when his supply was exhausted he went back for more and returned to the offensive again. During all this time the enemy were keeping up intense small arms and grenade fire. 4624899 Corporal (Acting Sergeant) Hanson Victor TURNER Corporal Hanson Victor Turner Although originally a ‘Duke’, Acting-Sergeant Turner, had transferred to The West Yorkshire Regiment (The Prince of Wales's Own) and was serving with them when he was awarded his VC. When his medal came up for sale it was purchased by the Halifax Town Council, as he was a resident of Halifax. The medal is, therefore, displayed alongside the Duke of Wellington's collection at Bankfield Museum, Halifax, for convenience. Sergeant Turner in all made five journeys to obtain further supplies of grenades and it was on this sixth occasion still single-handed, while throwing a grenade among a party of the enemy, that he was killed. He displayed outstanding valour and had not the slightest thought for his own safety. He died on the battlefield in a spirit of supreme self-sacrifice. (London Gazette, 17th August 1944) 78 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES sea, away from the crowded and fully stocked ship, for safety. The ship drifted into the side of the harbour wall and damaged the propeller. The following day all the stores, equipment and men were transferred to the HMT Empire Pride, and at exactly 1930hrs they set off again along the Algerian coast to Bone, now known as 'Annaba', arriving there at 1700hrs the next day, again during an air raid. (from the Archives) Pte Clifford Garlick - WW2, North Africa & Italy, 1942-1945. Whilst they were at Bone, preparing to attack the German forces, the monsoons started. The Battalion was camped 4 to 5 miles along the coast in tents. The weather had turned wet and there was heavy rain for several days. The ground turned into a thick quagmire of mud, resembling the battlefields of WW1. This resulted in some roads being washed away and a few landslides onto the roads, making walking and driving difficult. Elsewhere, even tracked vehicles and aircraft were getting bogged down; trying to dig them out was almost impossible. The Battalion was instructed to move, by road, on the 13th, to Gafour, in Tunisia. Audio archives from the Imperial War Museum record an artillery officer in the convoy saying they travelled on an irregular road with steep inclines and through a forest of Cork Trees. They arrived in Garfour at 03:00hrs, just a few miles to the southwest of Bou Arada. On the 15th The Dukes moved into the line and started sending out patrols. A number of actions occurred over the next few days as the battalion moved forward. Pte Clifford Garlick Clifford Garlick was born on 25th May 1923 in Holmfirth. His father worked as a road mender for the council. Clifford left school at 14 and his sister found him a job, at first yarn spinning, then scouring, in the local mill. It was a hard 48 hour week; and there was always someone waiting for your job at the mill gates. Money was tight in the Garlick family, Clifford’s father had been gassed in the First World War, whilst serving with the Royal Engineers. Clifford was 19 when he was called up into the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment. He completed his training at Brancepeth in County Durham. Prior to his call up he had never been out of the relatively small village of Holmfirth. From Scotland, he recalls he was sent to Bristol and from there posted to North Africa. The troopship took an evasive route through the Irish Sea to dodge German submarines, taking 10 days to reach Algiers. Clifford suffered with seasickness throughout and on arrival the Germans attacked them and blew a propeller off the ship. They made their way forward, unaware Germans were watching them from camouflaged observation posts. It took about 5 days pushing through to reach the last hill only to find the enemy were at the top, lobbing hand grenades down on them, when suddenly there were six German tanks behind them, cutting them off from the rest of the Regiment. They were told to fix bayonets, and they ran down to the bottom of the hill, where the Germans’ tanks had them covered, and called on them to surrender. The German tank commander spoke perfect English, but nobody moved and so the German gunners opened up on them with machine guns. Several soldiers were hit, including the lad next to Clifford. He stayed with his badly wounded comrade, who was bleeding from leg wounds, helping to put him in a German motorbike’s sidecar. The Regimental War Diary indicates that the Battalion left Crieff, Scotland, by two trains, at 2115hrs and 2215hrs on the 25th of February 1943, to Avonmouth, by 1500hrs the next day they were fully embarked on HMT Moreton Bay in Avonmouth Dock, with a Battalion strength of 40 Officers, 9 Warrant Officers and 885 Other Ranks. They left Avonmouth on the 27th going up the coast to the Clyde and joined up with another convoy. They arrived at Algiers port around 1700hrs on the 9th of March At 1900 hrs. Whilst mooring there was an air raid and the tugboat Captain cast off his lines and headed out towards the open 80 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES Regimental War Diaries record that at around 2230hrs on the night of the 20th of April the Right flank of the Battalion lines, at Banana Ridge, was infiltrated by German troops. C Coy sent men to reinforce A Coy, and during this night 2 officers, Lts Naylor & Wraight, and about 30 men were reported missing. At 0500hrs German tanks and Infantry came round the south of Gren Hill and attacked the Battalion. (from the Archives) they also built a box to go over the top. The Italian guards couldn’t understand the box with holes in the top! Approximately 500 Allied prisoners were sent to Tunis and put on a POW ship as the Germans were evacuating. The RAF was under orders to stop the Germans fleeing Tunis and they bombed the ship, after it had got a couple of miles out to sea. The Italian sailors decided to run the ship on to a sandbank, where they abandoned the ship, got into the lifeboats and left the prisoners behind. A German gun crew on the ship insisted one lifeboat should be left for their use and, after one of the gun’s crew was killed, they also abandoned the ship. The POWs quickly dipped the ship’s guns, in surrender, and draped white sheets over the decks to try and stop the attack, but the RAF continued bombing the ship. Two of the strongest swimmers decided to set off for the shore to try and stop the onslaught. Then one bomb went through one side of the ship and lodged into the other side, the heat setting fire to the bedding there. The surviving prisoners were rescued when the harbourmaster came out with boats from Tunis to take them off. Clifford had not had any food or drink for several days and accepted his capture. He clambered up on a tank and one German soldier gave him a drink of cold coffee from his bottle, then the 50 to 60 prisoners were lined up and marched about 100 km to a farm where, exhausted, they slept for several hours. The next day they lined up to get a cold drink from a water tap and were given broad beans to eat in their mess tins, along with German black bread. Clifford had also been injured. He had a shrapnel wound at the back of his neck and another in his arm, which had cut through his battledress. At Tunis a stretcher-bearer bandaged his wounds and he managed to get something to drink, everyone had dysentery; Clifford drank some wine as he couldn’t find any water. He was sent to the hospital tent and there he found his mate who’d been shot in the leg during the previous battle. His German captors had given him first class medical treatment and this had saved him from losing his leg. The prisoners were then marched to a POW camp, which was under the command of the Italians, where they spent the next two to three weeks. The Italians treated the British captives reasonably well. The sanitary arrangements were somewhat primitive; they had to dig holes for latrines, with planks across, and Italy, B Coy 1 DWR, 1944 81 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES embarked aboard the liberty ship Robert R. Livingston and shipped to the Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG) in Maryland, USA (from the archives). Clifford was patched up and went on to take part in the landing at Pantelleria. He watched the island being bombed, by both the Navy and the RAF. He went ashore on a landing craft and ran up the beach with a PIAT (Projector Infantry Anti-Tank) gun, which he considered no use at all, in those circumstances. As a result of the intensive bombing the landing was unopposed and Clifford was only there for two to three days. They found a water-well, in a church, and saw the Italian women and children re-emerging from where they had taken shelter. They had to quickly organise attacks to try and push the Germans back. The trenches were full of water and they were soaked wet through for weeks on end. There was no rest at all, as they spent two hours on duty and two hours off, sleeping wherever they could find a place to lay down. On one occasion they advanced up a railway embankment where they heard Germans talking on the other side, then suddenly German tanks came round both sides of the embankment behind Clifford and his mates, so he and his comrades started to pull back, sheltering in craters. They eventually managed to get back safely, but they had no weapons or ammunition, they rejoined the other Dukes further back. They were told to go back to the front by a Sergeant; but Clifford refused as they had no weapons, that probably saved his life, as only half a dozen men survived the attack. Men of 1 DWR taking a rest in bombed out ruins on Pantelleria, 1943 The Regiment was brought back to Tunisia, to reequip, before taking part in the landing at Anzio, where Clifford was one of the first to get off his landing craft. It was a straight-forward landing, but he soon found the Germans to be the better fighters and the allied soldiers were outclassed. ‘Anzio Annie’ fired every night, they didn’t get many supplies and sometimes survived for days on end just on army biscuits, which they usually crumbled to make a porridge. ‘Anzio Annie’ - Italy, 1944 Clifford lost a good friend at the railway embankment, Attwell, where Clifford dug him a grave. Another of his mates was hit by a sniper, he screamed all day, although he was close they were pinned down by a sniper so they couldn’t rescue him. At Anzio Clifford was in a trench with Eric Mallinson when three reinforcements arrived with a Corporal, none of them knowing what to do. Clifford advised them to quickly dig a trench. Later, whilst they were asleep shells started coming over and one hit a box of ammunition, the resulting explosion burying them in their trench. Stretcher-bearers pulled them out and it took Clifford a long time to recover from the shellshock. "Anzio Annie” was actually two railway guns, making up the German K-5 RR battery that shelled the Anzio Beachhead. “Robert” and “Leopold” were the names the Germans gave the two guns. When the Allies broke out of the Anzio Beachhead, the German moved the guns to Civitavecchia, just north of Rome. There “Robert” and “Leopold” were spiked with explosives and immobilised to prevent them from falling into Allied hands. On the 7th of June, 1944, the 168th Infantry Regiment of the 34th Division 'captured' the guns. Leopold was the least damaged of the two and it was moved to Naples, then 82 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES After Anzio, Clifford was sent to work in the cookhouse. The ‘Dukes’ were advancing into Rome and he recalled being in an attack on his 21st birthday, rigged out with fluorescent flares. He could see other soldiers being injured when the flares were hit by gunfire, one lad had just gone 19 and he died talking about his girlfriend and his mother. Eric recalls hearing the sound of sirens on the first night of the war. His brothers were both called up Tom served with the Northumberland Fusiliers and his older brother, Jack, with the Royal Army Service Corps in North Africa, Italy and France. Eric was called up in January 1942, and started his training at Norwich, then at Cromer, where he remembers running on the front at 6.30 in the morning. He became a Bren gunner and continued his training (and battled midges) at Loch Fyne, having joined the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment. Further training at Forfar involved nine-mile marches with full packs - then dancing at night, and suffering continuous rain at Inverary. “Training was tough, made you fit for ‘owt!” Later Clifford put in for transfer to the Army Catering Corps. He had made breakfasts for 100 men before being sent back to England, where he spent 6 weeks in Aldershot doing nothing but sweeping up. He didn’t like it, so he put in for another transfer back to cooking at Yeovil. Clifford was sorry to leave the ‘Dukes’, even for a safe job. Clifford was finally demobbed just before Christmas in 1947, and returned to work in the mill “though you had to beg for your job back” he recalled. Clifford worked in the same mill until his retirement. Clifford met Phyllis whom he married in 1948 and they completed their family with 4 children, 4 grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren. Early in 1943, Eric left for North Africa. On arrival at Algiers he recalls the ship’s guns firing at a Spitfire, but the shooting stopped when they realised it was an allied aircraft. His first action was very frightening, the Germans had already taken one platoon prisoner and some had been killed at that time. Eric’s unit was told to fix their bayonets. They walked straight into heavy machine-gun fire, and Cpl Warren was shot through the stomach. Eric was hit by a ricochet bullet and winded, though many of his comrades were killed during that night. Cpl Eric Mallinson, WW2 - North Africa, Italy, Palestine, Syria, Egypt, 1942-1945: During that period Eric went on a night patrol wearing shorts and the night was very cold, after two and a half hours they were all frozen. On the way back they walked into a minefield and many were wounded. A ball bearing pierced Eric’s shoulder and he spent a week in hospital. Regimental War Diaries show that on the 28th of March, 1943, a night patrol, lead by 2Lt Buckland, reported back in the early hours, with casualties. (from the archives) Cpl Eric Mallinson Eric Mallinson was born at Holmbridge, near Holmfirth, on 21st January, 1922. His father, Wilfred, was a stone mason by trade and had served in the First World War. His mother, Ada, sisters, Doris and Gladys, and brothers, Tom and Jack, completed the family. Eric attended Brockholes Church School from the age of 11 to 14 and then became an apprentice stonemason until he was 19. 83 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES Image shown with permission of the National Archives. Ref: WO175/497 Before leaving North Africa, Eric and another soldier were chosen to go on the Victory March at Tunis. They were given new kit which was rather uncomfortable and chafed. The campaign was over and they were taken to Cap Bon. On one occasion he missed the transport back, following a day’s leave in Tunis, so some Redcaps found him somewhere to sleep, though it was rife with mosquitoes. The next morning the Redcaps took him back in a wagon, luckily he was not put on a charge. In fact he returned to the Battalion to find his Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Webb-Carter, washing his hair! Eric was sent back to C Company as a cook. From North Africa he took part in the invasion of the island of Pantelleria. The troops faced no resistance from the Italians, taking the Island without loss of life. He remained there for a few weeks. Later he found himself on the Anzio beachhead and, working as a cook, assumed he would be out of the line of fire. However, Eric soon reverted to his role as a Bren gunner. The Anzio landing was straightforward. The men were given a tot of rum, they thought they would meet opposition but, initially, they didn’t. Even when they landed there was no enemy action. They found a cattle shed to sleep in and spent about a fortnight there before moving on. Later, though, the horrendous conditions on the beachhead soon started to impact on the men and casualties mounted. There was a good deal of shellfire preventing any movement in daylight. Lance Corporal Thomas was killed on the Anzio beachhead and Eric lost two Cpl Eric Mallison, Sgt Wheeler, Topper Brown, Clifford Garlick more mates whilst in the trenches there. The Germans seemed to be encircling them and one injured lad was carried in with the help of a German POW. It was very cold at Anzio. Meals were sent up to the troops and they had K rations and little heaters for tea. At a railway line the Germans came over one night and attacked them and quite a few ‘Dukes’ were wounded, - Eric often wonders why he came through it when so many others didn’t. His comrade, Clifford Garlick, had to bury his mate after this attack. 84 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES The trenches filled with water, often up to the men’s knees. Eric was on guard one night when he heard shells coming in close. One hit the next trench and killed the lad in it and then Eric and Clifford’s trench collapsed on them. Eric could hear shells and the big railway gun ‘Anzio Annie’ firing. He saw “Shellshocked people looking vacant.” They started withdrawing; they had just reached a First Aid Station and got into a tent, when a German aircraft strafed it and quite a few men were wounded. Cpl Peter Walker, WW2 - taken Prisoner of War, 1940: The war started for me when John Marsland, who worked at the same mill as me, and I decided to join the Territorial Army, rather than wait until the balloon went up and probably lose all chances of making up our own minds as to where and in what we served. So, one May evening in 1939, John and I turned up at an empty shop in Cow Green, Halifax and then, having coughed for the MO, who then listened to our hearts, we were signed on as members of the 2/7th Battalion the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment. Training started in the R.E.S gym in Great Albion Street. There, every Tuesday and Thursday night we spent two hours from 7 until 9 o’clock doing very elementary military training - foot drill - rifle drill learning parts of the rifle and aiming and squeezing the trigger of the same - stripping and reassembling the Bren Gun. Eric stayed with the Battalion until near Bologna, where he missed the action as he returned to work in the cookhouse. His next destination was Haifa, in Palestine, where he worked in a proper battalion cookhouse. From there he went into Syria, to Damascus, and Beirut, then by train to Ismailia in Egypt. Eric and Clifford were asked to join the Army Catering Corps (ACC), and Eric was made a full Corporal after a few months. By the final stages of the war they were feeding approximately 800 men. Peter was given a basic day’s pay each time he had accrued eight hours. He was soon promoted to Corporal. In August he first experienced firing live ammunition during a training weekend, at a firing range, he was also given some webbing equipment to take home. When he came home he found it really difficult to settle, his comrades had gone and he had to finish the last months of his apprenticeship. He married Doreen in 1947 and when their daughters were born life was sometimes a real struggle. Eric was always busy, building walls and houses and he stayed in the building trade until retirement - “always having to graft to make ends meet.” Uncomfortable in crowds, Eric also suffered from nightmares and couldn’t sleep at times; the unrecognised legacy of combat. Cpl Peter Walker This was our first bit of uniform and was out of date First World War stuff. On Friday September 1st, John rang me up at work, just after dinner. He told me to report to the R.E.S. gym straight away, with my webbing equipment and washing tackle. It was a very scary yet exciting bus ride into town - the afternoon was hot and the bus windows were open as were the doors of the houses on the road side. From 85 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES these doors came the sound of wirelesses turned up loud and the sound of announcers calling out the orders to the reservists, Army, Navy and Air Force, telling them which Depots they had to report to. It filled me with excitement; tinged with apprehension and, I suppose, fear. By May 17th things were not going very well for the Allies and our three, less than half-trained, half-armed divisions had been changed from Lines of Communication troops to front line divisions. Eight o’clock on the evening of 18th of May saw the Battalion marching down to the station, headed by the band and drums who were going with us, just as in the days of Marlborough or Wellington. For food we had one day’s rations. On arrival at the gym we were issued with our very own rifles and bayonets and told to wait until the Company was complete, when we would be getting our orders. Fortunately we were issued with a mug of hot, sweet tea and a bully beef sandwich, as it was dusk before orders finally came - not that it made any difference to the rank and file - confusion seemed to reign supreme. The Battalion travelled to Rouen and met up with the rest of 137th Brigade and another Battalion, the 2/4th KOYLI from 13th Brigade. They were bound for Bethune via Amiens but the railway bridge over the Somme had been destroyed by the enemy so they were diverted through Dieppe to Abbeville. On approaching their destination they came under attack from German bombers. Peter’s platoon was taken by bus to Walsden and the end of the Summit Tunnel. The Company was to defend the tunnel from saboteurs - both German and IRA. They returned to Halifax a month later, now kitted out with battle dress. In the near distance, from our train, the bombing and fires in Abbeville could plainly be seen and it became obvious that the Germans had occupied the town. The only way we could now go was backwards towards Dieppe. The KOYLI made their way back on foot, mainly owing to lack of transport. The trains carrying the two ‘Dukes’ battalions had come to a halt on an embankment and could not be unloaded without being moved back to more level land. To make matters worse, night had fallen and it had become dark. After travelling back about five very long, jerky miles we came upon another bombed section of the line and were forced to halt. On our return to Halifax we were billeted in Maude’s Temperance Hotel. There our training consisted of marching round Halifax, doing foot drill and bayonet drill, both with and without gas masks. In December, the Company was detailed to guard Standege Tunnel, on the Huddersfield - Manchester railway line. Soon after Christmas, I was recommended for OCTU and transferred to ‘W’ Coy in Huddersfield where all the potential officers were concentrated. By now we were fully equipped with up-to-date uniforms and webbing equipment, if not with weapons. Having unloaded two utility trucks, one was taken to make contact with other units and the other was taken by a party led by Lieutenant Smith of the 2/7th DWR for a reconnaissance. This truck came under fire from the Germans near Abbeville and Lt Smith was killed by a machine gun bullet and the rest of the party fled. The remaining men of the two battalions took defensive positions on either side of the train. In March 1940, the Battalion prepared for pioneering duties in France. After a church parade at Huddersfield Parish Church on 28th April, they left by train for Southampton and boarded an Isle of Man passenger ferry. The next morning they arrived in Cherbourg and after some delay, a train consisting of cattle trucks and a carriage for the officers, took them to Blain, a small market town about 20 miles from Nantes in the Loire Valley. W Coy was to act as loaders for the RASC, moving petrol, oil and lubricants from trains arriving from Nantes to awaiting RASC trucks. The defensive position took the form of a line of soldiers lying on the ground armed with a rifle and 50 rounds of small arms ammunition per man, with a Bren gun, with only one magazine, per platoon. We were lying flat on the ground, because we had neither pick, shovel nor entrenching tool. During the day there was much enemy air activity, although luckily 86 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES not near our position, and through some good chance we seemed to have been missed by the spotter planes. Scouting parties had been out all that day searching for the last line of retreat and had found that the railway lines to the rear had been blocked for about five miles, by bombed trains and tracks. It was decided to march back to find a better defensive position and see what turned up. During our stay in the POW cage we had a grandstand view of the first bombing raids on the port. Previously it had been spared bombing as a hospital port but the movement of troop trains through the port and our subsequent arrival had been noticed by the enemy and on the first bombing raid five ships, including a hospital ship, were sunk. ‘W’ Coy moved to the race course and dug weapons pits but were soon withdrawn after a bomber attack and were billeted in a house. They established a road block on a minor coastal road. Scout parties brought food and looted equipment. As we started the march back in the direction of Eu, in the vicinity of Fressenville, we came across several trains that had been bombed. Some were civilian trains and had obviously been evacuated in a hurry, except for those unfortunates who had been killed. The sight of two carriages wedged up in the air, with a woman hanging upside down from the buffers, is something that will remain with me forever. Unfortunately, being without tools of any sort we were unable to bury the dead until later. I am still left with the memories; of the seemingly endless columns of refugees, with their cars and carts piled high with household possessions, and those without transport trudging along with their pathetic little bundles in their hands and on their backs; the fine weather, the way in which one’s spirits sank in the loneliness of the 3am to 4am morning guard duty and tins of petit pois, the only things we were able to buy from the one remaining shop that was open. We were, however, able to free some horses from what was evidently a train transporting either French or Belgian cavalry. A dog which we freed from the train quickly became attached to the Battalion and they say it remained with us to the end. The last train we passed was a hospital train containing French wounded. The CO promised to get help through to the hospital and the Battalion took up a defensive position in a wood near the railway line. On 7th June, Peter’s platoon was moved to the west bank of the River Bethune. Three days later, the bridge over the Bethune in Dieppe was destroyed and they prepared for hostile attack. Our hearts seemed to drop with a feeling of ‘this is it’. The Battalion had very little food and water and sent a scouting party to find supplies. They found water at Chepy-les-Valenes railway station. They returned with a request to provide protection and to help repair a train that had broken down, enabling the hospital train to continue. The 2/6th Battalion left for Rouen on foot, leaving the 2/7th assisting at the station. They soon received orders to make their way to Dieppe and form a defensive line along the river Bethune, inland. They also received news that the hospital at St Valery-sur-Somme had been evacuated. A truck was sent to collect any remaining food to sustain the men before they were loaded into cattle trucks bound for Dieppe. The journey took several days and on arrival they were accommodated in an empty POW cage. They stayed for a few days during which one of the Battalion signallers read a message from a Naval vessel to the Dieppe Harbour-Master, the evacuation of Dunkirk was being completed. At about midnight, the Battalion marched to Petit Appeville where transport was waiting to take them to Veules-les-Roses, a small port. They took up defensive positions and awaited Naval evacuation back to England. As dusk fell, a number of tanks approached. There would be about 40 or 50 tanks attacking across our frontage, firing into the wood with their canon and machine-guns. Fortunately the ground sloped fairly sharply down from the attacking tanks to the road behind our wood so they tended to shoot high. As a result, in our area of the combat, there were comparatively few casualties from machine-gun fire or direct hits from the tank canon. The greatest number of wounds were due to shrapnel from the canon shells as they burst among the trees and minor wounds when the bursting shell blew chips off the trees with enough force to penetrate the skin. 87 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES As the attack continued, from out of range of our weapons, a few of us took shelter in a slit trench that somebody had been able to dig. Soon darkness hid us all and having had no orders to retire we stayed where we were. Under the influence of three or four days without sleep, we nodded off and woke up at intervals through the short night. wandering about the casino grounds looking for anything useful, edible, or upon which we could write home. Peter did manage to write and sent three letters to his family, which took two months to arrive home. This was the first news they received and they informed the War Office of his situation. When he had recovered he was marched with three other British and sixteen French soldiers to dismantle some Nissen huts and marquees which had been part of British No.1 Base Depot. This was known as ‘Organisation Todt’. When we all came to at sunrise we could hear the sound of Germans searching the wood and the rattle and roar of armoured vehicles and motorbikes on the outskirts of the wood. After a short discussion our little group came to the conclusion that any heroics would be useless so we came out of the wood and surrendered to the Germans. Amongst those taken prisoner with me were:- Capt T Warton, ‘Y’ Coy, PSM Douggie Harpin, ‘W’ Coy, and CQMS John Marsland. The staff of No.1 Base Depot must have left in somewhat of a hurry! When we came to clean the kitchen and dining area we found ourselves dealing with breakfast plates with the half-eaten bacon and egg breakfast still on them. In the dining tent were Soyer stoves half full with maggot-ridden, halfcooked stew, several weeks old. We cleaned up all the plates, Soyer stoves and utensils for the Germans, also the toilet buckets out of the latrines. Our most unpleasant job was burying a month, to six week, old corpse of a horse. For the latter we were given British gas masks and a bottle of brandy, we provided ourselves with anti-gas gloves which were lying about in profusion. ‘Otto’, our guard, had an evil, unshaven, piratical look about him, he came from East Prussia where he said he had a reputation for horse smuggling. He was actually quite reasonable and gave us no trouble. The prisoners were permitted to take any clothes left in the depot where they also found plenty of paperback books. They continued to clear the camp until mid December when they were moved to St Laurent-Blangy, a small village on the outskirts of Arras, and continued labouring. Peter had shrapnel wounds on his shoulder, although his webbing straps had given him some protection. He was taken to a field dressing station in a casino at Forges-les-Eaux and treated by a German medical orderly who gave him an anti-tetanus injection. He spent the next two weeks recovering there. The time was spent in waiting for the next meal - one bowl of thin soup and one thin slice of French bread twice a day - and as soon as it became possible, At Christmas we each received a Xmas box consisting of a small, rather hard, piece of spice cake and a few cigarettes from O.T. along with the Germans. We did not however feel very much in the festive spirit. We just thought of all those at home and missed them. For all of us it was our first Christmas away from home. We were all very homesick and without any real news of what was happening at home. 88 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES After Christmas, Peter remained with Operation Todt with another British and four French prisoners. The rest were sent to a camp in Germany. further down the escape line and he was smuggled into the back of a truck bound for Lens. Mme Evans and her friends continued to help British soldiers escape until May 1941 when they were betrayed to the Gestapo, kept in solitary confinement for nine months, and then deported to slave labour camps in Germany, although all three survived the war. Jock and I did general odd jobs around the chateau and anything that tickled Otto’s fancy. Amongst the fads that took his fancy was fishing, as he said they did it even in the midst of the East Prussian winter… it was as we were passing our time with these fishing expeditions that we first met two French ladies and a seventeen year old girl. In Lens, Peter was hidden with two British soldiers and they were given identity cards. They soon left with six young Frenchmen hoping to join the Free French in England, or to get into the unoccupied zone. They made for Paris in an old carriage next to the engine of a coal train. Some German soldiers boarded, unaware of the prisoners in the old carriage and this helped, as the staff at the control station chose not to search a train carrying troops. Mme Evans, Mme Devienne and Elizabeth, the French ladies, visited Peter and Jock, first bringing them cigarettes and biscuits, then asking them if they would like to escape as they could provide help and shelter. The men decided to make an attempt and planned how to get out of the building. We decided to take a couple of sandbags up to our room after work on the day of the escape to provide a hessian wrapping for our boots. We hoped this would quieten our footsteps… we hoped to creep silently from our room, down the top flight of stairs, through the window already opened, creep along the balcony to the end opposite the stairs and climb down the drain pipe. The train chugged its way slowly through the day and night and it arrived at its destination, a goods depot just outside Paris, early in the morning. We left the train and were led by a back route out of the depot and taken to a railwaymens’ café for a coffee and rum. After that we took the Metro into Paris and at the same time lost sight of the French members of the party. On our arrival in the centre of Paris we were dumped in a café for an uncomfortably long time, trying to pass the time without talking but still trying to look alive - my two companions had not a word of French between them and my French was the sort that the French understood but which caused them to burst out laughing. It was a very unnerving few hours as my friends deemed that, as Englishmen, they had the right to talk their native language, whatever the situation, and could not understand that not all French may be sympathetic towards them. On the evening of the day of the escape everything went very well, we managed to get the sandbags and sneak the window open, without being noticed, on the way up to our room. The minutes seemed to pass like hours as we waited for the time to escape and in the end the waiting proved too much for Jock, he cried off at the last moment, wished me good luck and told me to go it alone. As half past eight approached I went. Peter managed to climb out of the window and down the drain pipe. He waited in the bushes for his friends to arrive. He was taken to Mme Evans’ haberdashery shop and given a meal of fried eggs and chips. However, after a few hours, and a lot of coffee had passed, our guide returned. He then took us on a sightseeing tour of Paris, by foot. My first view of the ‘Eternal Flame’ at the Arc de Triomphe was alongside two German soldiers on local leave - a most peculiar feeling. Towards evening we were taken for a meal of unrationed soup with some bread and then to a seedy hotel, where we were to spend the night. “I was wet through and trembling from tension - after all it was not something that one did every day.” He spent two weeks hiding in the shop and the villagers treated him very well. He began to dress as a civilian and was given a French name - ‘Henri Beaujean’. Soon arrangements were made to pass him 89 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES The next afternoon they took the train for Bordeaux. They got off at Lillebourne, the last station before Bordeaux, and took a stopping train to Coutras then hid in undergrowth until morning. A German motorcycle patrol passed and the escape party made for the Vichy France outpost where they were welcomed with coffee and bread. They began walking to Mussidan but were delighted to be given a lift in a Red Cross ambulance to Perigeux. They then took a long train journey to Nimes. very filling in the portion we received, was at least very tasty. One Friday meal however was not so appetising. It consisted of three or four small raw salted sardines. Not fancying the idea of raw fish we took them back to the barrack room and tried to boil them. Much to our dismay the boiling water dissolved the flesh off the fish and all we were left with were the fish skeletons floating in the boiling water. The American Consulate was responsible for ensuring the welfare of British internees and gave them a small monthly allowance, enough to buy a modest meal in the village. Peter remembers having little energy but he enjoyed exploring the village. In April 1941 the German Control Commission forced the French to confine internees to their camps except for organised escorted trips, this caused disappointment, but the arrival of Red Cross crates containing food, cigarettes and tobacco for the whole camp was appreciated. At Nimes, Henri informed us that that was as far as he took us and the Gendarmes there would take us to a camp from which the British servicemen were being repatriated. After having collected our identity cards from us, for re-use he said, he removed our photos from them and presented them to us. His last words to us were to tell us where to find the Gendarmerie, he could not afford to be identified with us for the sake of the parties following. Being at the time rather naïve and being, as it were, stranded in an unknown French town we had no other option but to believe him and do as he said. The Gendarmes were very pleasant and treated us well and fell in with Henri’s story of a repatriation camp. They provided us with a supper of coffee, a chunk of bread and a piece of gruyere type cheese and a bed to sleep in, albeit in a locked cell. Early next morning we set off for Nimes railway station and took a local train and on the morning of 14th of February 1941, I arrived at the Detachment ‘W’, St Hippolyte-du-Fort, Gard. I found myself amidst two hundred or so survivors from Dunkirk, Calais, Boulogne and St Valery, survivors from almost everywhere in North and North-East France where the B.E.F. had operated. In March, 1942, the camp was moved to a border fort in the French Alps called ‘Fort de la Revere’. Three things happened soon after our arrival at the fort which helped to raise our spirits somewhat. Firstly we were allowed to purchase radio sets from a shop in Nice and every room clubbed up to buy a set. These could receive short wave stations and we were able to listen to the news from London… (next); the arrival from the Red Cross of British army clothing, enough to outfit every member of the camp with a complete uniform and two sets of shirts and underclothes… The other issue from the Red Cross was that of individual food parcels. Some were Canadian, the preferred type, and the others British but still very welcome. The Canadian parcels contained a pound each of spam and butter and a large tin of Klim - milk powder - also jam, large cracker type biscuits, prunes and a large block of eating chocolate and coffee, together with a packet of sugar. The British parcels contained various tins; meat, or meat and vegetables, condensed milk, sugar, sometimes beefsteak puddings, margarine, tea, a small packet of biscuits and raisins. No doubt the passage of time has caused me to forget some of the contents; but I am eternally grateful for the efforts of the Red Cross and those at home who supported it. For the first six weeks or so after we arrived at St Hippolyte we were allowed to leave the camp during the day so long as we were back for the evening rollcall. Our rations consisted of half an ounce of cheese with a small slice of bread and half a cup of coffee substitute in the morning and then nothing until the evening meal when we received the rest of the daily bread, making up a total of about 125 grams a day. The rest of the evening meal consisted of a meagre helping of vegetables consisting of, for example, spinach one day or overgrown bitter chicory another day. Friday was red letter day most times, as we were served up with a white fish paste which whilst not 90 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES After two RAF officers escaped from the fort, all remaining RAF officers were removed. This failed to prevent further attempts and 58 internees escaped and, in September 1942, the camp moved again. They were taken by train from Nice to the Camp de Chambaran, Isere, formerly a French Air Force training camp in the foothills of the Alps near Grenoble. It was more comfortable than the fort, but after the Allied invasion of North Africa they could not stay. The camp was in the Italian zone of France and the internees were told they would be escorted through France to Spain. Peter had a disagreement with the NCO in charge of the hut and was given seven days in prison. He was the only prisoner and got on well with the guards who shared extra rations of olive oil and onions with him. He enjoyed being part of the working party, keeping the camp tidy, and when he was released the Sergeant in charge offered him a place with the party. He received an extra loaf of bread for his work and soon noticed his fitness improving. In the spring we played a very vigorous form of touch rugby. The soccer players in the camp thought that we were mad and, as we played all through the summer, so did the Italian guards. We enjoyed it though. The hut 23 ‘Wasps’ playing in army vests, dyed yellow with a stripe of black round the middle, became the Champions of Settore 1. One night however a fleet of ambulances turned up outside the camp and we were on the move again, eight to an ambulance, with what hand luggage we could pack in the time allowed. We set off to Modane, a French railway station just on the Franco-Italian border. Here we got on the train that was to take us to sunny Italy… We went through Turin, Alessandria, to Modena and arrived at the little town of Carpi in the Po Valley. From there we marched to our next home for nine months. This was the Italian POW camp Campo Concentranento di Prigioneri di Guerra No.73 - and we were in Settore Una, ie. Compound 1, Hut 23. This was the first time most of the ex-internees had been Prisoners of War and the introduction was not a kind one. After the invasion of Sicily and the Allied assault on Italy, the prisoners expected a backlash from the Italians, though none came. After the Capitulation of Italy on 8th September 1943, the camp inmates received orders to stay and await liberation by Allied forces, but the day after the Italian guards had fled, the camp was surrounded by German armoured cars. We were ordered to pack up what we could carry and were then marched to the nearest railway siding where awaiting engines stood… We were ordered into these - about 50 men to a truck with a loaf of bread and a bit of cheese per man. As soon as the train was loaded it set off on its journey to Germany. The camp was large - capable of holding about 6,000 prisoners - and quite new. Constructed for prisoners taken at Tobruk and El Adem in the summer of 1942, it held British, Australian and South African troops. Peter was taken to Stalag IV F at Hartmannsdorf near Chemnitz. It was a huge camp with several thousand prisoners of different nationalities. The camp seemed unprepared for new arrivals and they were penned in a compound until the next day. The food from the Italians was marginally better than what we had received in France and consisted of an artificial coffee drink with a small baguette type loaf of maize bread first thing in the morning, followed by about a pint of rather watery minestrone soup at midday and again in the evening the same soup. Red Cross parcels were only one between two men per week. As a result of the shortage of solid food the camp was busy at night with people tripping to the latrines. The next morning the Germans began processing us in groups of a hundred. We had our heads shaved… the next stage was delousing and bathing, where we stripped and our clothes went through a stoving machine to kill any lice, whilst we were painted with delousing ointment in all our private places and passed forward into the shower. Here we had a soapless shower and dried ourselves as best we could on the bits of cloth which the Germans provided. We were then reunited with our clothes and possessions, got dressed and the processing continued. In Hut 23 the main way of passing time was in conversation, reading when one was lucky enough to get hold of a book, and a pastime that was new to us ex-internees, cracking lice between two thumb nails. 91 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES Having noted our army number the Germans then gave us our German Prisoner of War number. I now became No. 247892. It seems such a little thing but after the first few days as a POW had passed I think that this was one of the most depressing things to have happened. I no longer felt to be a British soldier but rather a German POW. Most of the German workers were Nazi supporters, though not all were party members, and appeared to despise Poles and Slavs. The way in which (Polish) slave workers and Russian POWs were marched about their business in the midst of winter, inadequately clothed in rags and wearing wooden clogs with their feet just wrapped up in old cloth, without any show of concern on the part of the civilians made it very hard for us to feel any sympathy at all for their (Germans) sufferings under the air raids. When, after the invasion of France, they began boasting about how the V1 and V2s had destroyed London any sympathy, that we had left, went. Although perhaps we shouldn’t have done we derived a great deal of satisfaction from their confusion with the air raid warnings towards the end of the war. After having been given our numbers we were next finger-printed and photographed with our numbers in front of us. When the processing was complete we were admitted to the British prisoners’ compound and allotted a hut. After being at Stalag IV F for about a week, a hundred or so of us were sent to a working camp situated in a small market town nearby called Mittweida, 20 km or so towards Dresden. This work camp went under the name of Arbeitskommando M88. Most days were spent helping the machine operators or stacking the newly delivered planks of wood. The two people we worked with most were Walter, a thirty or so year old, lapsed communist and Wolfgang, a seventeen year old member of the Hitler Youth and Panzerfaust operator in the local Volks-sturm. As a communist, Walter had served a sentence, prewar, in a concentration camp and was well aware of what happened there. Wolfgang lost his enthusiasm for his Panzerfaust after the bombing of Dresden and the advance of the Allies towards Saxony. Soon after their arrival, Red Cross parcels began to arrive weekly and morale in the camp improved. The inmates talked about their wartime experiences and their plans for the future and in the Spring of 1944, some brass musical instruments arrived and a small band was established. The evening concerts became very popular. Members of Room 2 - St Hippolyte Du Fort Feb 1942 J. Cox, F. Evans, W. Davidson, R. Squires, A. Menzies, B. Chambers, P. Walker, A. Gunstone. T. Miller, A. Anderson, E. MacDonald, L. Lines, D. Weaver. Hector the Dog The work camp provided labour for a nearby electronics factory. Peter was first employed digging trenches for water pipes. He and John, a fellow POW, then started work at a joiners’ shop in Mittweida. They helped the machine operators, stacked timber and took finished furniture and coffins to customers. 92 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES These concerts soon caught the attention of the German civilians taking their evening strolls and their numbers soon attracted the attention of the German authorities. The guards were ordered to make us put blankets up on the barbed wire, the sight of British POWs enjoying themselves was not good for the German morale, or so they thought. D-Day gave a big boost to our morale which had already started rising with the turn of the tide and the increasing severity of the bombing of German cities, even the Polish slaves looked happier in their misery. with very happy British soldiers. Reaching Gera by early evening after a very pleasant drive in warm, spring weather we were billeted in private houses for the night. What a luxury it was to sleep in a proper bed after all these years - even if it was a rather peculiar German bed. The next morning we climbed up into big, three-ton, American trucks driven by the Transport Corps, who drove long hours on what was known as the ‘Red Ball highway’, a route reaching back to the stores depots in France. On this highway they had complete right of way but were now becoming extremely tired. We were bowling along quite nicely towards Erfurt when, all of a sudden, the truck started to lean to the right and after a few moments the lean became more and more pronounced until eventually the truck came to a halt, remarkably gently, on its side with everybody inside all of a jumble. The driver had dropped asleep at the wheel but fortunately the roadside ditch was wide but not very deep and our descent was very gradual. The driver was woken by the accident and we soon managed to get the truck back on the road and resumed our journey. As the early months of 1945 passed, the daylight sky on many days was filled with the lace like tracery of the condensation trails of American planes on their daylight raids. This was a beautiful sight, both visually and from the point of view of morale, tinged with a great sadness when one of these spearheads burst into silver fire and started twisting downwards to earth like a falling leaf. Sometimes little toy-like parachutes could be seen floating down in the distance but other times there was just a flash and then nothing. With the increased air-raids the prisoners were made to dig trenches. On one occasion a bomb was dropped about half a mile from the camp, after a raid on Dresden, but no-one was harmed. By the end of February the bombing of transport facilities affected the delivery of mail and parcels. On 21stApril, the Americans arrived. They arrived at Erfurt in the late afternoon of 26th of April and a nominal roll was taken. The next morning they were flown to Brussels and then to England. We were delivered by truck to a very large house near High Wycombe. Here we were processed with great efficiency and kindness. First we were dusted under our clothes with DDT, then given a very good meal. Then we were given a bath and a complete set of uniforms with underclothes and a kitbag and all our details were taken. A telegram was sent for us to our folks at home. That evening the repatriation centre put on a dance for the ex-prisoners. There were scenes of wild rejoicing as an American tank and two jeeps came driving up the valley to the camp gates, and the odd tear as their crews were greeted, - five years had been a long time. Our two guards had now disappeared into the countryside with our blessing, as they had not been so bad on the whole. The next morning they were given leave papers for two months and an advance of pay. Then Peter made his way back to Halifax. The Americans provided K rations and gave orders for them to remain and keep order between the foreign and slave workers. On 25th of April the Americans told us to commandeer what transport we could and then make our way to Gera, where we could be picked up by army trucks and taken to Erfurt to be flown from there as soon as an aircraft was available. The next morning the convoy set off, several vehicles crammed 93 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES washed his ears. They took us on the rifle range on Hawksworth Moor and when it was my turn to shoot, the Sgt said I had missed the target and killed a little old lady shopping on Ilkley High Street. Also I played rugby with Leeds under 18’s and I used to get telegrams to go play. The Sgt did not like this and never gave me the telegram in my hand but threw it on the floor so I had to pick it up. Pte Bob Dawson, National Service & Korea, 1952-1953: After basic training all the recruits who would be 19 yrs old by October went to the battalion in Germany. The rest of us went to Fulford Road Barracks in York, for training for the Far East. Whilst at York Geordie Duncan and I went out for a drink, on reporting back to the Guardroom the Orderly Officer was standing there in full dress. Geordie Duncan said to him “What band are you in mate?” The Guardroom door opened, and as quick as a flash Geordie was dragged inside. He got 3 days ‘jankers’ for that episode. I went on a scheme against the Brigade of Guards on Fylingdale Moors and later went back on those moors to do live firing, one of the lad’s Sten gun went off by accident and shot Lt Cherrington through the leg. Pte Bob Dawson I started my National Service on the 6th of March 1952 in the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment. I was told to report to the depot at Halifax on the day above by 4pm. On arriving at Halifax railway station I saw a big notice saying ‘All recruits wait here’. I stood by the notice and after a short while an NCO appeared, took me outside, put me in a 3 tonner and set off for the barracks. On the way we stopped at a pub and had a pint. On arriving at the barracks we got kitted out. My first meal was pork pie, mashed potatoes and peas. The next morning our Platoon Sgt came in and he turned out to be a bully. One lad who shall remain nameless was made to stand at the side of the square and every 15 minutes shout “I have dirty flesh Sergeant.” Just because the Sergeant said he had not While at York I was charged with a frivolous complaint and made to scrub the Company Office floor for 5 nights. Just as I had finished on the first night the Sgt Major came in and said, “Have you finished?” I said “yes”. He walked on the floor and said, “If you have finished what are those feet marks doing on the floor? Scrub it again.” On the fifth night just as I was going to scrub the floor the Sgt Major 94 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES appeared and said, “Leave it and get off.” The Archbishop of York came and conducted a service in the barracks church. It took us all our time to keep awake. Field Marshal Sir William Slim came and we showed him how good we were on the assault course and the range. I don’t think he would have been impressed with us after being in command of the Fourteenth Army in Burma during the war. On taking me back to the barracks and putting me to bed under the muzzier net I said I was like a ‘lion in a cage’ and jumped out of bed and ran out of the barrack room with no clothes on. The rest of them chased me, put me back to bed and laid on me until I went to sleep or passed out. I knew nothing till the next morning. It was my first, and last, streak. It was an offence to go out after tea with your arms and legs uncovered, because of malaria. We also took one Paladrine tablet every day. At the Battle School we were allowed to go to Kowloon or Hong Kong on Saturday or Sunday. It cost 1/6d in the passion wagon. I finished training at York and went on two weeks embarkation leave. I went back to York and then by troop train to London, on the underground to another station where we were kept well away from the public, and then to Southampton. Arriving at the dock side, I got a cup of tea and a bun off the WVS then boarded the Empire Orwell for Hong Kong, stopping at Port Said, Aden, Colombo, Singapore then Hong Kong. It was a right eye-opener, this journey, for the lads from Yorkshire. We were attached to ‘D’ Company of the Wiltshire Regiment. I was sent to Sekon Battle School for 2 weeks with ‘D’ Company. We used to patrol the border with Communist China. While stationed with ‘D’ Company at Bees Stables Johnny Waite and I were sent back to Se-kon Battle School on a 2 week 3” mortar course, I came top of the course and never fired another mortar again. 1st of December 1952, we went down to Hong Kong and boarded the Empire Hallidale bound for Kure in Japan. On the 2nd of December it was my 19th birthday. After 5 days we arrived in Kure Japan. We stayed there four days, getting winter kit for Korea and zeroing our rifles in. We sailed overnight on the ‘E Sang’ for Pusan in Korea, where we got on a train to Tockchon, then a wagon to the Battalion. I was 19 years and 10 days old. On arriving at the Battalion HQ a Sgt, or a CSM, said “What have you lot come for we don’t want you and you are not on ration strength”. They found us a tent to sleep in and gave us some tinned food, there were ten of us. Next morning we lined up and were told which rifle coy we were going to. I was sent to C Company, where I spent the rest of my service. When I got to C Coy HQ I met the Company Commander, Major Kavanagh, who told me I was to be the Company Runner, the position I held from the 12th of December to February. The first night I was told to dig myself a ‘hoochie’, I was digging this in the dark, by myself, at 20° below zero, when the Coy Commander’s batman came and gave me a plate full of dinner. His name was Eddie Cantrell, he was the only person I saw all night. While at the Battle School, we were walking over the hill, to swim in the sea, and we thought we had witnessed a murder. We saw two Chinese men snapping flesh off the bones of a dead body. On reporting this to the officer he said it was a Chinese custom. They put the dead bones in a large earthenware jar and take it to a family vault where they let firecrackers off every anniversary. In Hong Kong I got 7 days ‘jankers’ for losing my pay book, which had been stolen. At the end of my 7 days ‘jankers’, me and my mates got drunk in the NAAFI. Things were very quiet on that position on Christmas Day. The Chinese told us they would leave us in peace for the day. A British light aircraft flew over and dropped newspapers and cigs. In between Christmas Day and New Years Day we went farther up the front line and changed positions with A Company. During one night I was to take a message to 8 Platoon over the other side of the valley, I was told to take John Burke with me, as the Chinese infiltrated the valley at night. We got there and back without any incident. On reporting to Major 95 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES Kavanagh he said, “Everything alright?” I said, “Yes”, Johnny Burke said “No, Bob’s mad he has just walked straight through a minefield”, I was told I was lucky because they were anti-tank mines and I was not heavy enough to set them off, also the ground was frozen. When the Company came to A Coy’s position they gave Alfie, who was a teetotaller, the company rum ration to carry. Somebody egged him on to drink some and Alfie was the worse for wear and shouting for the CSM. The ground, at this time, was frozen solid with permafrost and we were not allowed to wash our faces until after 10am when the sun made it a bit warmer. we were in the rest area we drank a few beers, did some live firing exercises and watched Bill Silius demonstrate the bazooka by firing at a small hill, he missed it and the rocket exploded amongst friendly people, so the platoon took off over the hills out of sight. I was then sent on a two week cadre to be a Lance Corporal, luckily I passed and then was put in rifle platoon No 7. When the spring thaw set in we were taken to the mobile showers, that was the first time I had taken my clothes off for three months, except for changing my socks. Going in the shower we took all our clothes off and just kept our boots on. Coming out at the other end we got sprayed with DDT and given clean clothes to put on. Shortly after, we returned to the front line on Hill 146. It was a bit lively on this hill, which we took over from the Americans, we got dive bombed but the bombs missed everybody. One morning going for breakfast we got mortared and Bill Silius got hit in the back of the head. His mate Hank picked him up and shouted, “They have got my mate”, Hank was also hit in the back. We rushed through the mortar fire to help them, Bill Silius was disabled for the rest of his life, Hank’s wounds were only flesh wounds and he returned to us after a spell in hospital. At night I used to ride shotgun on the Company jeep taking the sick and wounded back to the Regimental Aid Post. The driver of the jeep was Whitham, he was 26 years old and I thought he was an old man. We had quite a few escapades, one night running into two tanks and getting lost on more than one occasion. During the day I used to walk on the path between the hills, across the valley taking messages for the Coy Commander, in full view of the Chinese who never bothered me. If anybody else or groups crossed this path in daylight they were mortared. The Coy Commander said I was the decoy and the Chinese recognised me because of my ginger hair. I had to stop crossing the path and cross lower down where I could not be seen and the others had to do the same. On this position HQ was on top of the hill and a sniper had a few goes at me and always missed. One of the lads got shot through the head by the sniper, his name was Pickles. After a while we were pulled off that hill, had about a week’s rest then went to the Hook. On the night we went to relieve the Black Watch the wagon I was in toppled into a river, there were about ten of us in the wagon and two got injured, one with a broken arm and one had a broken leg. The river was only about two foot deep and the eight of us went into the front line without any weapons and wet through, till the Black Watch gave us some dry clothes. The next morning we were taken to the river to get our weapons, and sleeping bags and take them back to the front line. We cleaned our weapons and waited till our sleeping bags had dried before we could sleep in them. While they were drying we got mortared and our sleeping bags looked like airtex. One morning at first light CSM Harry Randall took me and a man called Hogg out in front of the Company position to inspect the wiring, when we got round the front a machine gun opened up on us and I threw myself down in the snow, as the firing kept on, after a while I got brave and looked up to see what the other two were doing and they were running through the snow back round the hill out of sight, me, being just 19 years old, soon caught them up, never mind the machine gun. One day round the back, at the bottom of the hill, I was burning rubbish and throwing bullets in the fire when Brigadier Kendrew appeared and told me off for causing smoke saying we would be mortared. Nothing much happened in that position after that, and the whole Commonwealth Division went into rest at the end of January. While Our position on the Hook was at the top of the spur called ‘Long Finger’. At the bottom of ‘Long Finger’ the Chinese dug tunnels and caves to hide their troops in, ready to assault us. We were in this position from 12th May ‘53 to 29th or 30th May ’53. Every day or night we got shelled and mortared. Every night we 96 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES went down ‘Long Finger’ on standing patrols, recce patrols, and on most nights we were mortared or ended up in a fire fight with the Chinese. On one of these patrols we thought the Chinese had got behind us and we were going to open fire when we found out it was our own men doing wiring. Another time on patrol ‘Brown 32’ opened fire with his Sten gun on our recce patrol, but luckily missed. Whilst on OP one day I saw two Chinese on the hill opposite. I looked for the Bren gun to shoot them but it was stripped down getting cleaned. I borrowed a rifle and put the sights to 1200 yds and fired two shots. They both missed but it made the Chinese run 1200 yds! With the limits of the .303 rifle it was a waste of time shooting at that distance. Besides all these goings on, the shelling and mortaring was intensifying, trying to weaken us before the big battle. In one hoochie a mortar bomb, or shell, went straight inside, leaving one dead, one with his foot blown off, one with both eardrums burst and one with his thigh sliced open. We had two more with buttocks and arm wounds so our platoon was six short before the battle, the Centurion tank that was with was hit but that stayed in action. We had been told all this was leading up to the Chinese attacking us. On the night of the battle it was very dark and drizzling, just as we were getting ready to go on Stand-To a massive barrage fell on us, Cpl Johnny Sargeant shouted “Come on, the b--s are coming”. With that he led the way through the shelling to the firing pits, I was the last to go and got caught in the open by the next barrage. I could not see my way through this so, to my great shame, I laid down to die. When the shelling missed me, I got up and dashed through the bombardment and dashed into the firing pit, then I picked up a rifle and started firing down ‘Long Finger’ towards where the Chinese were grouping to attack us. After a short time the Bren gun arrived. Zero Brown and I shared firing the Bren down ‘Long Finger’ to where the Chinese were grouping for the rest of the battle. Shells and mortar bombs were hitting the firing pits and trenches all night long. I could not see down ‘Long Finger’, the cordite fumes were like a fog as they hung in the damp air. The hill we defended was like a lunar landscape, every 5ft trench destroyed and half of the firing pits. As we went to what was left of our hoochies at the back of the hill and started to clean our weapons Major Kavanagh came round and said “You are only boys, I hope you never have to go through that again”, there were tears in his eyes. I have been told 30,000 shells and mortar bombs fell on the Dukes position that night. The Chinese got into ‘D’ Coy at the side of us but none got into our trenches, we put down plenty of small arms fire to keep them away. Later that morning we were taken off the hill and went into a rest area where they gave us a good meal and we had a long sleep. The rest of the time in rest area was spent swimming in a river, getting our lost kit made up and getting reserves for the men we had lost. 97 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES After a week we went back into the line in the Naechon Valley where we stayed till the war finished. While out on patrol one night in the Naechon Valley a Canadian patrol got caught by the Chinese and we could hear them crying for their mothers. We could hear them coming towards us so we prepared to take them on, but before they got to us the artillery opened up on them and not another sound came from them. We presumed they were all killed. After that things went quiet, just a bit of shelling and mortaring. ship was the crew’s quarters, which was out of bounds to us, some of the crew dressed as women and danced together, they attracted a bigger crowd than the films. On the troopship I was on duty as the ‘Canteen Corporal’. At 2200hrs I had to clear the canteen, but when I went the sailors told me to ‘Clear off, or I would end up as fish meat in the Indian Ocean’. Luckily just then the Orderly Officer came with Cpl McKenzie and we cleared the canteen. Nobody argued with McKenzie - who had fought with World Champion Freddie Mills. We were told the ceasefire would be on the 27th of July 1953 at 2200 hrs. At 2200 hrs the last post was played and the war finished. We were given 48hrs to clear our ammo out and leave the front line. In this 48hrs the Chinese came out of their trenches and walked about, there looked to be hundreds of them, we were not allowed out of our trenches to meet them. When we got to Gib our Regimental Band played the ship in, and we marched behind the band to the Moorish Castle, which was a bit of a shambles. We were told if we had £22 10s credit we could apply for Christmas leave, I applied. Our new Company Commander said “When do you get demobbed?” I said, “March 1954”, he said, “You go home soon enough”. I told him “I haven’t seen home since August 1952.” The reply was “You are going home soon enough, dismissed”, I was spitting blood. Gib was all guards, and more guards, and a bit of sport and getting drunk on Main Street in the Universal and Trocadero Bars. Every so often the British Med fleet came in for leave, then the American 6th Fleet, but never together. When they were in port the town was a bit more lively. We did a Guard of Honour on the dockside for the Spanish paying their respects to the Governor of Gib. On Christmas Eve I was Guard Corporal on Four Corner’s Guard at the Spanish Border, so of the two Christmases I was in the Army one, Christmas 1952, was spent on the front line and at Christmas 1953, I was on guard at Four Corners in Gib. We were taken back behind the Imjin River, still inside the DMZ, and we made a large tented camp. We then started digging positions on Gloucester Hill overlooking the Imjin River, in case the war started again. We settled into normal army life, with a fair bit of sport, till it was time for the Battalion to go down to Pusan and wait for the ship to Gibraltar. We were in Pusan about a week, where we went running on the beach and got drunk, and went to the UN Graveyard for a memorial service for the dead we were leaving behind. We left Britannia Camp and boarded HMS Asturius bound for Gibraltar. The ship called at Hong Kong, Singapore, Colombo and Aden. I think in each port we got drunk. On board ship there was an epidemic of dysentery. With dysentery, people are sick and have diarrhoea at the same time, so the combined toilet and washroom was a right mess. There were not enough toilets, so the lads were having to use the tiled floor. We stood with squeegees where you entered the toilets, when the ship dipped forward all the sick and mess came out of the toilets towards the sinks, we used to rush forward with our squeegees and push it all into the gulley at the edge of the washroom, then when the ship dipped backwards it all disappeared. When it came time for me to go home the CSM spent half a day trying to get me to sign on, saying I was a born soldier, I would not sign on. On my last guard duty at Moorish Castle one of the prisoners said, “Do you go home on Sunday?” I said “Yes”. He replied “I am going to run away so you will have to stay for a Court Martial. I am not taking orders from NCOs just coming out of England.” He and I had been in Korea together. I locked him in his cell, threw a bucket in to use as a toilet and would not let him out at all. The RPs let him out the next day. On the Sunday all the lads in the barrack room got up early to see me off to There were 2000 servicemen on this ship, with whole companies sleeping on the same deck. They used to show films up on the open deck. At the rear of the 98 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES the airport and wish me all the best. We flew BEA to Blackbushe Airport in the South of England, it was the first time I had been in an aeroplane. We had to refuel in France, it took about six hours to fly to England in those days. We landed at Blackbushe late Sunday afternoon, got the train to London, and went to King’s Cross Station. Ernie Sharp answered the phone and told us there was no transport that early and we would have to get the first bus, which we did, I was in Korea with Ernie Sharp. When we got to the depot we went to the Guard Room and Ernie got us all a cup of tea. When the barracks came alive we went to the cookhouse for breakfast, the lads were nattering me to go to the Company Office for passes so we could go home. Going into the company office the LCpl clerk was sat with his feet on the desk and he was reading a book. I asked him for passes to go home. He told me to f--off as he had had a rough weekend, I grabbed him by the throat dragged him over the desk and told him I had had a rough two years. He then took us to the Officer in Charge, who was Lt Huxtable, he had been with me in Korea, in C Company. He immediately gave us 7 day passes and sent us home. I went back after 7 days, got de-mobbed and left the Depot without a thank-you or a goodbye. Lt Huxtable stayed in the army and ended up a General in charge of all Land Forces in Britain. So ended my army service. When I got home I felt a complete stranger and it took a long time to settle down. The train for Huddersfield had just left and the next one was about 2300hrs. There were about a dozen of us so we took our kit to the left luggage where the porter took it, and would not charge us for looking after it, it was the same on the tube train, they just waved us through the barriers without us having to get tickets. While waiting for the train we went looking for something to eat. A chap saw us and took us to a cheap cafe, then we went to the pub. The landlady played us all at darts for half-crown each, and beat us all. We got the train to Huddersfield, then to Halifax and slept all the way. On arriving very early morning at Halifax Station, I phoned the Depot for transport for us to take us there. Final preparations for Korea, Depot, Halifax, 1952 99 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES “The advance party for Korea was to go to Pontefract, in Yorkshire, England, to form up and be made ready. I was put on this advance party and assumed my service role of Sniper and Intelligence, this was the role I was to oversee when the Battalion arrived in Korea.” Sgt Tom Nowell MM, Korea, 1952-1953: “We arrived in Pontefract, and after a couple of days getting sorted out, we were given a few days leave and told to report back.” “We were then transported down to Southampton and put aboard the Troopship HMT Empire Orwell, quite a large ship, as they went in those days. On this ship were other units who were on a similar errand, ‘all going to the Far East’.” Sgt Tom Nowell Tom Nowell was born in Goldthorpe, South Yorkshire, on 23rd November 1922. He comes from a family of 8 children, 4 boys and 4 girls, his father was a Mines Inspector. Tom attended school in the Dearne Valley. As there were few jobs available he followed his fathers footsteps and became a miner. “This was the back end of July 1952 and British troops were already out in Korea, being drawn from the Far East Stations of Hong Kong and Singapore. These were the nearest troops we had out there at that time. We were to get out there in time to relieve them and allow them a well earned respite from the rigours and privations of the Korean climate and hostilities… the Korean winters could be quite fearsome, we were told.” At the outbreak of the Second World War, mining was designated as a reserved occupation, so he could not enlist into the regulars. He volunteered to serve in the Home Guard, obtaining the rank of Sgt and eventually the rank of Lieutenant. In 1948, when the ‘reserved occupation’ regulations were lifted, Tom enlisted into the Regulars and was recruited into the York and Lancasters, his parent Regiment. Wartime Home Guard ranks were not retainable for Regular service, this required Tom to start again as a private. During training it was discovered he could shoot well, and he remained at the Depot as a weapons training instructor, again rising to the rank of sergeant. When the Korean War started the ‘Dukes’ had been reduced to a strength of 600 men, as time expired personnel were discharged from the army. Tom was rebadged as a ‘Duke’ and served with the ‘Dukes’ throughout the Korean War as a Sniper Sgt and Intelligence gatherer, from his excursions beyond the front lines. What follows is an excerpt drawn from Tom’s memoirs, a copy of which is held in the Regimental Archives: “During the sea voyage we did some training and listened to some lectures on the peninsula of Korea and the pitfalls that we may have to overcome, including the health side of it. Travelling in the Mediterranean was pleasant enough. At the island of Malta we pulled into Valletta Harbour, this was only a brief stay and we did not get the chance to go ashore. The Orwell then set course for Port Said in Egypt, at the Northerly end of the Suez Canal. When we arrived there, we had to await clearance to go down the Canal.” “It is an eerie sensation going down the Suez Canal on as large a ship as the Orwell was. One wondered how they managed to get enough sea water into the canal to keep these big ships afloat and moving. We were required to go down slowly so as not to make too much ‘wash’. We were heading for Aden at the lower end of the Red Sea, just before the waters give way to the Indian Ocean.” 100 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES “The temperatures in this part of the world were high and uncomfortable. After a brief stop in Aden we set sail out into the Indian Ocean, heading for Colombo in Ceylon. The weather was hot and sticky, even though we were out at sea.” “It was to prove to be a long, tiring journey and most uncomfortable journey, travelling through the night without stopping. The next day, near lunchtime, we arrived at the detraining point known as Tockchon. We alighted and were bussed up to a reserve area just behind, what was then, the front line. We had arrived! The next thing to do was to get organised and into some sort of order. We were to travel up to the front line proper the next day, to join the Regiment that was to be our base until our own Regiment came into the country as the main party.” “After Colombo, the Orwell set sail for Singapore, going by way of the Straits of Malacca and down the coastline of Malaya. The passage through was a bit rough, the troopship being thrown about a bit in the process. However the weather cleared somewhat, and we settled down to something like normal before we got to Singapore at the end of the Peninsula. At Singapore there was the briefest of stays, no shore leave, and the Orwell set off for the journey across the China Sea, towards Hong Kong. The seas were pretty rough.” “The noticeable thing about Korea was one of hills, not really big mountains, but high enough hills nevertheless, as fast as you got by, or over, the one in front then there was another one to go up or down. The lower parts of the hillsides were terraced and made into paddy fields, making the most of what ground there was, for the cultivation of crops. The remains of the terraced bunds, or banks, were still visible, even though the war had ravaged them as a result of the shelling and constant bombardment and diggings.” “At Hong Kong we were astounded by all the activity that was going on in the harbour and on the waterfront. Our troopship had quite a lot of stores and linen to change so we were offered shore leave. Eventually we put back out to sea, heading for the port of Pusan in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula. This was the largest port available to the United Nations Forces at this time.” “We joined the Battalion in the line . . .this was to be a time of learning - the position of supplies, positions of your own and enemy displacements etc, where and to what extent did our patrols operate? What type of patrols were needed, and at what strength? Having to go out at night with your opposite number on patrols and observing what the other patrols were doing or achieving.” “As the Orwell threaded its way north, through the group of islands that were dotted about the Southern coast of Korea, and headed into Pusan proper there was an unmistakable stench of fertiliser. It permeated all over the place, the smell was to be found all over the Korean Peninsula. The big ship nosed its way into Pusan Harbour, and proceeded to tie up. We had arrived in Korea!” “The Regiment that we, the ‘Dukes’, were with, was the Welch Regiment. They were a fine crowd and easy to get on with. We settled in well to their routine, it was important that we learnt the business fast so that when our Regiment came into the conflict, there would not be any break in the continuity of action.” “There were formalities to be observed, such as the greetings from the local dignitaries of Pusan, a group of little Korean children garlanded our ship’s CO, Major Charles Grieves, with flowers much to the cheers from troops aboard the ship. There was an American forces band on the quayside, who played for us in greeting… it was most enjoyable but left a mixed feeling in the mind as to just what we were in for.” “Patrolling at night certainly sharpened your reflexes and senses. The sound of your own breathing sounded like a hoarse rasping, although it wasn’t really, you were aware of your pulse throbbing to the point that you were sure people around could hear it loud and clear. A period of mental training and preparation was required to be a success at night-time patrolling and reporting - you could say that self discipline was a must.” “Once the off-loading of men and supplies had been completed, we were given some haversack rations and put aboard a train that was to take us northwards to the area of the front.” 101 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES “The portion of the front that we were allocated responsibility for at that time was considered a quiet sector, but, as things turned out, it could change quite easily into a hotbed of activity. A sudden flurry, or burst of action, caused the front to erupt into a hot and fearsome shooting war with both sides going at it ‘hammer and tongs’. It was all a question of who held the highest hill around, and how he dominated the surrounding area. If the enemy thought that the hill you were on was a threat to them and of benefit to you, plans were put into operation to take that hill from you and deprive you of the use of it, thereby putting you and yours in danger. Vigilance and watchfulness was the order of the day.” and string vests which proved to be very effective. Inner and outer gloves also made for good protection, but in the moments of leaving your hands free for chores, such as loading your weapon, you stood the risk of your hands becoming stuck to your rifle.” “When ensconced in your hoochie, heat was produced by a petrol or diesel ‘chuffer’. This was made from an empty ammo box with a little sand, or soil, in the bottom with a series of holes around the base. A petrol pipe tube from outside the hoochie was the power source and some sort of nipping to the pipe or a valve would control this flow of fuel. A length of stove piping took the soot and fumes out of doors, and you were in business. That is, until the pipe got clogged up with soot or was hit by a stray piece of shrapnel, then it was a case of sooty faces and a dash to the entrance to get some air and to effect a repair to the central heating. In the first months of the Regiment’s stay in Korea, it was estimated that we had more casualties from the effects of these stoves back-firing than from enemy action.” “Soon, the time came for the Welch Regiment to go out of the line and into reserve, to make the changeover with the new Regiment, the ‘Dukes’. They would then be free to ease out of the conflict and prepare for posting home.” “Most of the winter months were spent in a sector called Nai Chon, and the ‘Dukes’ did a lot of good work here. Patrol activity increased and there was always something to be fighting about. The enemy was intent on pushing as far as they could get so they would be in a strong position for any armistice or settlement talks.” “From early November to late March, in Korea, winter sets in and the freezing cold winds from the North East, mainly Siberian, were sufficient to keep the temperatures down into the freeze zone and the ground became frozen to a depth of some feet. Excavating the ground in order to make a safe ‘hoochie’ could only be achieved by blasting the ground with explosives - picks and shovels were not up to the task on their own.” “New types of wet winter clothing were getting through to the British Forces and although it emanated from stock that was devised and kept for the Norwegian Expeditionary Force, two world wars ago, it proved to be good and warm. There was an inner and outer parka with a hood and toggle arrangement that pulled the garments together to keep out the cold winds. Heavy woollen socks and nylon inserts for the cold, wet weather boots were also issued. To top up the protection we had ‘Long Johns’ Korea, Sgt Tom Nowell and Sgt Bill Norman “We had an idea about the patterns of activity on the features known as Winston, Churchill, Antony, Eden, Wellington and Boot. These were the code names that we used to describe the various features opposite us. A few weeks before Christmas 1952, we saw what we 102 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES thought at first to be some repairs being carried out on the feature Eden. There were two men working together and by the look of their clothing they were either living or working in a dusty place. It soon became obvious that these two were working in the side of the hill, and the movement that we saw was when they were coming out of the entrance of their tunnel and emptying a make-shift barrow of earth and spoil down the hillside facing away from us. My position gave me a good view of where they were and what they were up to. We observed them for the rest of the day, and then at nightfall we made our way back and made our report to the Intelligence Officer. We were given orders to concentrate on this particular feature and keep tabs on what progress these two workers were making.” “The observation of these two was now well advanced and the report led the CO to realise that a more detailed look was required. It was decided that a young officer, Ian Orr, and myself would go out on our own to have a look around and try to find out a little more about the tunnel and its environs. This particular patrol was to become a most gruelling stint and entailed going over and staying out there the whole of that next day, making our way back at the end of the next night. The temperatures at this time of year had been recorded as the coldest of the winter so far.” “I went down to the Company dug-out and joined up with Ian Orr. After a conference with the CO and a final briefing, we were escorted down to the wire and minefield gap. There we were bid ‘a good patrol’, and ‘the best of luck’, and we were off.” “One morning we saw a person appear who was cleaner in appearance and wearing a fairly clean uniform. He was talking to these two Chinese workers, now known to us as Little Dusty and Big Dusty, and it looked as if he was giving them a right old ear-bashing. He was their Commissar and he was giving them their weekly pep talk and urging them on to better output.” “Threading our way down the remainder of the hillside and negotiating the minefield and extents of the wire, we made it to the first bund, the objective we had set ourselves. The night was fairly dark, the moon had not broken through the clouds and we wanted as much darkness as we could get. What a noise we seemed to be making. The ice underfoot crackling and the sound of foliage swishing through as we tried to step carefully. As we went along picking out our landmarks and our ‘leaps and bounds’ we kept talking down to a minimum and made do with the odd sign, or grabbing one another’s arm for attention. We both felt naked out there but, having got past the point of no return, we concluded that it was now safer to go forward than to retrace and go back.” “Suddenly a series of clicks and bangs went off and the sky was illuminated by a string of flares and tracer that lit up the sky, there was obviously some disturbance further down the valley and for a short time there was quite a racket going on. We were travelling light, a couple of hand grenades, a Sten gun and no radio cover. We were to make notes, or mentally take stock of the layout and fortifications that were there.” 103 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES “We came to the foot of our objective and decided to go around and further into the enemy territory to come up on the hill from the rear. Climbing up the slopes we made our way along the ridge of the outcropping feature and came across some large logs that were being used for the construction of the tunnel, so we knew we were on the right track for the tunnel itself. Getting near to where we thought the tunnel entrance should be, we split up and were to make separate hides, or observation points, that were to be our position for the rest of the next day. Ian Orr stayed at that point and I decided to go further forwards, where I thought the tunnel entrance should be. Out with the jack-knife then, I cut some small firs that were growing in the area and fashioned them into a sort of cover.” “Although the gunners and our mortars had been given the order not to fire on this particular feature during our mission, there were a couple of occasions when they did open up and one bombardment came uncomfortably close, a sliver of one of the shells cut a furrow up to where I was laying. It stopped just short of doing me an actual injury.” “The enemy night shift returned to take up their positions again. As far as I could make out there were seven or eight in the new patrol. They came over and settled in a group on my side of the tunnel entrance. My limbs had been stuck all day in one position without being able to stretch and relax, but after what seemed like an eternity I managed to get far enough away to ease my stiff limbs and work my way back to where I last saw Ian Orr. I explained to him what was going on and that the enemy were situated in front of us. We decided to go further, deeper into enemy country, and circle around the enemy patrols. My outer garments by this time were frozen up and it took quite a while to get the circulation back to my feet. When I got some feeling into my limbs we set off. I have never been as cold in all my life, the thought of being able to do something to ease the pain of the cold now was a blessed relief to me.” “Having made everything as ready as I could, it was a case of settling myself in and making myself as comfortable as I could. I had a self-heating can of soup in my supplies and activated the striker. God, what a noise! The crack that it made sounded like a gunshot going off and as it warmed up, there was the inevitable sizzle sounding like a kettle about to blow its whistle. I couldn’t stop the thing and it seemed to be getting louder. I tried to smother it against my chest to quieten it, only to be showered with hot, steamy beef stew!” “We set off on our return journey and proceeded to go around and to the rear of this position. With a lot of care where we trod, and how fast we moved, this route helped us to pass the enemy patrols and make it down off the hill and out into no-mans land. There was still the valley to traverse and we had no idea of the patrol plans of both sides involved, so it was a case of playing it by ear. What had appeared a straightforward return proved complicated on the inward run. We stumbled, rather than stepped, and our reference points seemed indistinct and confusing. We approached with as much caution as we could muster when we were challenged by a patrol of ours. Not knowing the changed password there was some moments of confusion as to who we were until someone piped up that we must be the two who were expected in sometime in the morning, and they were to keep an eye out for and render assistance if needed. We were escorted through the minefield and wire to the approaches of the Company HQ, where there was a welcome meal being prepared. Whilst we were “When daylight finally came, I found myself in my little hide just on the lip of the entrance to the tunnel. I had a grandstand view of what they were up to all right, but I was too close for comfort. With this and the bitter cold I was in a most precarious position.” “Little Dusty came away from the mouth of the tunnel and made to come in my direction, ostensibly for another tree log or something. It turned out that he wanted a pee, so I had the indignity of having my homemade hide pee-d on by a Chinese labourer. Apart from that, he splashed me in the process but the wonder of it all is that he didn’t see me in the hide.” “All the time we continued to note as much as we could of the enemy tunnel and the size of the logs etc, it appeared that they had almost finished construction.” 104 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES having this meal we were able to give the Company Commander as much of the information as we could that affected his part of the front.” so I called a halt. A thorough inspection of the tunnel and its workings was made, to ascertain how many troops or guns could be housed there. There were signs that the Chinese were grouping for a fight.” “I was given transport back to my hoochie at Battalion Headquarters, which I shared with the Intelligence Sergeant, Tony Goddard. He helped me out of my still frozen clothes and gave me a good rub down with a warm blanket and then I was put to bed.” “Seeing that we were in their territory and could get off the hill, away from the relative safety of no-man’s land, it was decided to re-group and head for our lines again. The tunnel party to go out first and the fighting party to cover the rear. Up to this point we had fired no shots but now there was every likelihood of a shooting match and there was considerable tension. The darkness of the night led to some confusion. Flares were being sent up and if the enemy did not know where we were before, they did then. All hell broke loose and for a while it looked like we were going to have some casualties. Making our way through no-mans land was quite a noisy affair with constant stoppages for listening and observing. The light was beginning to break and we were aware we had overstayed our time there. We were thankful to reach the safety of our own wire and minefield approaches to the Company area, from where we had originally set out. There the QM had laid on some hot drinks.” “The debriefing was intense and because of the proximity of the Chinese workers and the freezing cold, I had only made notes of the important points of the stay-over. I had committed all else to memory, so early de-briefing was essential. All in all it was considered a successful patrol and a decision was made to send a fact finding patrol of some strength to find out the inner size and strength of that tunnel. Now, who were the two most likely people to lead this patrol? Obviously the two who had been over there and had already ‘sussed’ it out, namely Ian Orr and myself.” “The planning went ahead and the time came when the CO decided that conditions were favourable for this to go on. Everything that could be done to ensure success was done. It was to be a night patrol and all back-ups were alerted.” “It was then decided that a party would be led to destroy the tunnel.” “Good progress was made at the outset, but things got a bit hairy when approaching the foot of the enemy hill position. There was activity afoot, and the diversions that we had organised did not seem to be having any effect. The possibility of further work having been done to the warning system of the new tunnel could not be overlooked. We had decided to make an approach from the front and make a sudden storm of the tunnel entrance, hoping to catch the enemy napping and to take some prisoners.” “I was then given a set-back. I was informed that I wasn’t ‘to be going on this one’ and that I was ‘to help with the administration instead’. I couldn’t understand it. I thought they would need my experience of the hill, but they had decided that I had done more than my share of dealing with this troublesome feature and that I was to rest this one out.” “I had mixed feelings; because I had fully expected to be going, firstly I had feelings of being let down and angry; then the other feeling of relief of being spared the ordeal of what it entailed. Everyone round about thought I was mad to be even wanting to get involved in this raid, and some wag had scrawled on my hoochie front porch - ‘Nutter Nowell Lives Here’.” “In the event, the Chinese had been disturbed by the diversionary tactics that had been set up and were fleeing the tunnel when we got there. I was in charge of the fighting side of the party and we followed the enemy further into their territory, leaving the tunnel party to get into the tunnel and make their observations. We pursued the enemy to the top of an outcropping spur, and I considered that to continue any further would separate the two parties needlessly 105 SOLDIERS’ SERVICE MEMORIES During a daylight raid the demolition of the tunnel proved a success. Tom was subsequently awarded the Military Medal for his role in the gathering of vital information during his 36 hour hide-out. The April edition of the Iron Duke, 1954, Page 69, Records a MM being awarded to Tom Nowell and Cpl MA McKenzie plus a further MID (Mention-in-Dispatches) for Distinguished Conduct in Korea to Tom Nowell. Sgt Tom Nowell MM, 2003 1 DWR Assault Pioneer PlatoonAwaiting Deployment to Korea 1952 ‘Dukes’ in Korea 1953 106 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS was relatively quiet, although Larne had the potential for trouble from Loyalist factions and the Recce platoon monitored it and the Glens of Antrim, which were thought to be an occasional terrorist training area. Lieutenant Colonel PA Mitchell, 1972-1975 We had a Company detached under the command of one of the Londonderry City units and based in Bridge Camp, which was responsible for the troublesome Brandywell area. One Company was resting and responsible for the security of our camp, Shackleton Barracks. The fourth company was either on leave, guarding HMP Magilligan or available as a reserve for the frequent unexpected event. All these tasks were carried out in support of the RUC Divisions ‘O’ and ‘P’, in conjunction with 1 and 5 UDR based in Ballymena and Coleraine respectively. Lieutenant Colonel PA Mitchell In early 1970 the Battalion was still in Hong Kong and was visited by Colonel Peter Hamer, Colonel GS Director of Military Operations at MOD. As 2IC, I was present at his meeting with the CO (Lt Col Charles Huxtable) at the end of which we asked about the situation in Ulster and to our surprise were told that the planners were working on a major military commitment in the Province, lasting at least 20 years. Nevertheless, I don’t think we appreciated just how large a part the Province was to play in the Battalion’s life over the next two decades. We operated a four week turnaround for the companies in the various tasks, and although it could be argued that there was some loss of continuity, in my view this was overtaken by the morale advantages arising from a fair division of the most dangerous location (The City) between the companies and in any event everyone quickly got to know the various areas. We all swiftly learned that Intelligence was the key to success. We established very close links with the RUC Special Branch, covering our areas, who appeared to have some excellent sources. There was an Intelligence Corps NCO based with the Company for a time. The Bn Intelligence Officer and his team built up a very large database, covering both the City and County areas. Despite all of this, together with intelligence, which from time to time came to us from “above”, we were caught out on occasions. Nevertheless, there was a large number of successful operations leading to the discovery of roadside bombs, arms caches and many arrests of wanted men. Inevitably, and sadly, we had casualties, with two killed and some fifteen injured arising from the 363 attacks (shootings and explosive) upon us. In March 1973, having recently taken over as CO, the Bn moved from Catterick to Ballykelly, replacing 2 RGJ. Ballykelly had until recently been a RAF Coastal Command base and thus covered an enormous area. The base housed a number of minor units in addition to the Bn. A great bonus on an 18 month accompanied tour was the large number of station married quarters, so that all the families could be housed locally, which was of great importance, since the workload promised to be intense and the rifle Companies were likely to spend a good deal of time away from the Barracks. We found ourselves responsible for most of Co Londonderry with a company based in the RUC station in Magherafelt, which spent it’s time combating the IRA South Derry “Brigade”, operating mainly around Bellaghy, Maghera, Kilrea and Toomebridge. There was a further platoon based in the RUC station in Dungiven, a strongly republican area. We also kept an eye on North Antrim, which It was a very busy time, made more so since the Government was trying to make political progress and the tour was studded with elections for Parliament, Stormont and local Councils, in each of which voting locations had to be guarded and a heightened alert maintained. These all passed off without major incident, as did the Ulster Workers 108 RECOLLECTION OF COMMANDING OFFICERS strike, for which substantial preparations were made, although in the event it passed over quickly. our expected move to join 11 Armd Bde in Minden, West Germany, in 1976. In the event, training was interrupted by the need to provide troops for ceremonial street-lining for the State Visit of President Nyerere of Tanzania and our sudden departure for Northern Ireland, four days before we were due to join the Spearhead Roster. Mechanised conversion training was resumed after our relatively uneventful two months in Northern Ireland, then interrupted by the need to provide a large party of Officers and NCOs to help prepare a BAOR-based Gunner Regiment for a tour in Northern Ireland. We found our feet satisfactorily in Minden, although we discovered on arrival that the tactical doctrine of 1 Armd Div, which we had studied carefully in Aldershot, had changed and we had to bone up sharply on the new one! We won the Army Rugby Cup (and the inaugural Army Sevens) in 1975, but, sadly, failed to hang onto it in 1976. The Battalion moved after eight months to join 16 Airportable Brigade in Aldershot and faced a new set of challenges. Lieutenant Colonel JBK Greenway, 1975-1977 Lieutenant Colonel JBK Greenway (picture taken when Brigadier) Afternote: in this period CO 1 DWR reported to seven different people in succession: two Comds 16 Para Bde; one Comd 39 Inf Bde; GOC Cyprus; Comd Dekhelia Garrison and two Comds 11 Armd Bde. This period in the life of the 1st Battalion was characterised by unexpected change. In Mons Barracks, Aldershot, in early 1975 the expectation was a short period in 16 Para Brigade, before a six-month tour with the UN Force in Cyprus. In the event, only Alma and Corunna Companies joined UNFICYP, under the command of 1 Royal Tank Regiment. The rest of the Battalion prepared to train with 16 Para Bde in Canada, but was ultimately sent to the Sovereign Base Area in Cyprus, working from, first, Episkopi and then Dhekelia, as part of the tail-end of Britain’s response to the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974. During ‘Operation Mayflower’, following the Vienna Agreement, Alma and Corunna Companies helped the UN to monitor the historic and sad move to northern Cyprus of Turkish Cypriot families from their homes in the south. The Sovereign Base Area was peaceful; indeed our families, waiting patiently in Aldershot, were heard to say: “If he writes to me about one more beach barbecue, I’ll barbecue him when he gets back”. Lieutenant Colonel MRN Bray, 1977-1979 Lieutenant Colonel MRN Bray The 6th May 1977, my first day in command, coincided with the arrival of the BAOR Northern Ireland Training Team who came to prepare us for the Battalion’s sixth tour since the campaign had begun some seven years earlier. A couple of months later we deployed to Londonderry. The level of violence in the Province had dropped to the point where the challenge for the Army was how to wear down the A return to Aldershot in late 1975 promised further training with 16 Para Bde, plus a spell on Spearhead standby and conversion to the mechanised role, before 109 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS IRA, which was still a significant threat, particularly to the RUC, who were still a long way from being able to operate without us, without creating a counterproductive effect on the community. The Battalion was responsible for the City of Londonderry west of the River Foyle. RHQ was in the Strand Road Police station, Alma (Major Peter Andrews) in the old City responsible for the Bogside, Burma (Major Johnny Walker) in the Creggan, Corunna (Major Chris Fitzgerald) in the Brandywell and all Companies shared the onerous task of protecting the City. Our weekly bill for static guards was 12,000 man-hours and we were able to make only modest reductions in this, despite strenuous efforts, during our tour. best four, headed by Pte Barraclough, of the Drums, into a special spotting patrol. This proved so effective that the Bishop of Derry subsequently remarked that the young men in the Creggan could not understand how the ‘Dukes’ always greeted them by name whenever they entered the Old City. We just missed the large parade in BAOR for the Queen’s Silver Jubilee, but she came to Ulster while we were there and this created a bit of a stir. The Republicans of ‘Derry’ saw it as an opportunity to stage a riot and the head of Special Branch warned us that the IRA was hoping to create another Bloody Sunday type event. So, with all the self-control shown at Waterloo, we stayed in our squares and let our enemies entertain themselves. Perhaps the prologue and the epilogue were the most amusing memories. The first saw a helicopter lift the CO’s secret op order for the visit to a height of 200 feet above Brigade HQ and left his escort pursuing the airborne pages around the Waterside; successfully thank goodness. And the latter saw Councillors from the City Council tricked into watching a video of the riots and being asked to give their views on how the Army, which was there to support the civil power, was supposed to deal with such events, much to their consternation. Since members of the public could not safely give evidence in court, bringing terrorists to justice was dependent on catching them red-handed or on collecting forensic evidence. The latter was a technical matter largely outside our responsibility. The former required good intelligence and in this we could play our part; we established strong intelligence sections at both Battalion and Company level. For some years I had pondered the role of the RSM, whose modern role did not seem to match in status his historic role as the principal tactical trainer of the Battalion, when tactics had been learnt on the drill square. So I put Mick Carter, a typical modern, intelligent RSM, in the intelligence section, to give him an important operational role, together with Keith Best as the IO and our EME, John Sanderson. Following this logic, our very bright CSMs ran the Company intelligence sections. Shortly after we arrived, the Regiment at Fort George, running the northern part of the area west of the Foyle was withdrawn, and the ‘Dukes’ became responsible for the whole of the area west of the Foyle, with an RTR squadron and a Company of Coldstream Guards under our command. This had not occurred since the Troubles began and had to be regarded as progress. Nevertheless, it is interesting to record that the Chief Superintendent for whom we worked could only deploy 12 men at any one time, compared with our 400. Nor had he ever been into the Creggan or the Bogside until we took him. Police primacy, a suitable aspiration, was, in reality, distinctly short of muscle. Others in the command team were Charles Cumberlege, 2IC, Richard Ward, Adjutant, Peter Mellor, Community Relations, David Harrap, Ops Officer, Laurie Linskey, QM, Tim Sinclair as PRO. Bob Tighe, the Tech QM, the robust Education Officer, Ewan Simmonds, and John Dixon, the RMO, who saw not one soldier sick or injured in our first eight weeks (greatly to the credit of our men) were active patrollers from a forward admin base beside the Guildhall. One of the more interesting operations involved a tip off about a weapons hide, followed by the installation by specialists of a bug in a rifle, which we were able to track when it was moved. This early example of the use of new technology led to a search of a large number of houses, to conceal our precise knowledge, and to us collecting the weapon, plus one we had not expected to find in a nearby club, and the arrest of the We had made an interesting discovery during recognition training before deployment. Some people, very few, have an incredible ability to memorize names and faces. We held a competition and put the 110 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS householder. Food for thought: the householder was a well-educated family man with a good job, and not known to the security forces. The rifle was under a child’s cot. Why was such a man involved? The legacy of Irish history was still potent. We had an extremely cold two weeks at Soltau in February, getting back up to speed in the mechanized role. Memorable was the Adjutant going to the seedier part of Hamburg in the CO’s car to arrange some entertainment to warm the cockles at Soltau, and taking over 24 hours to reappear! And the CO got into trouble with the BAOR rugger management for refusing to release 12 members of the Battalion, mostly Officers, to play in one of their fixtures. We got our priorities right and beat 1 RRW in a very exciting Army Cup final, 13-12, in March. We also went to Berlin and beat 2 PARA in a very close interunit boxing championship final, in the Olympic stadium; an evening never to be forgotten, as we were considered the underdogs and won on the last bout. Life had its lighter moments, for example, 2Lt Peter Harvey, detailed to patrol in the Bogside very early in the morning of his 21st birthday, found himself drinking champagne with the CO in front of the infamous Free Derry graffiti wall. And the following grace from our incomparable Padre, Peter Bayley, indicates that there were some social moments: “O Lord, accept our grateful prayer, For gifts provided through Thy care. May those who scheme to bomb and fight, Not disrupt our Dinner Night. And grant us, Lord, in this location, Patience with the Irish Nation!” The summer of 1978 was dominated by training on the Army’s mechanized training area on the Canadian Prairie at Suffield. Sadly our rifle Companies were divided between different battle groups but everyone got there. Our own battle group was based on Corunna company, a company of the Royal Canadian Regiment, tank squadrons from the Blues and Royals and the QDG and many other detachments, 14 cap badges in total. Determined to fill all the aircraft seats we were allotted, we even had Gurkhas and university students; and to most people’s surprise a large white ensign flying on the aerial of an APC denoted the presence of a RN Officer. This was the best available mechanized training, much of it live firing, and we all profited. Four days leave to explore made a popular finish. We had our successes, perhaps most fundamentally, holding the ring with great patience, humour and endurance, during part of the long process of getting the legacy of history out of the Republican bloodstream. Our men were marvellous and all came home intact except, sadly, for Private Michael John, who was severely injured by a bullet to the head at close range at a City check point. In Minden, under the enthusiastic care of the Families’ Officer, Vernon Davies, and our stalwart wives, life had flourished, and on the Battalion’s return, we really enjoyed our Christmas, which included reestablishing ourselves as the leading ski-ing battalion in the Army. We also suffered one of those infuriating Defence reorganisations, designed to look good on paper but which made us less effective if we had to go to war. Somme Company HQ, the Recce platoon, and the Assault Pioneer platoon were disbanded to form Dettingen as a fourth rifle Company, with many of Hook Company double-hatted in it and the Drums moving from Battalion HQ defence to be a doublehatted rifle platoon in Dettingen. WO1 Dave Hughes, an outstanding man, took over as RSM in the Battalion and also became our master coach to focus on all aspects of small arms training. In the autumn we took part in some higher formation exercises, which included the interesting and motivating experience of deploying in our real war positions north of the Hartz Mountains, very close to the Inner German border, with its watch towers and minefields. By the end of the year, we had the doubtful privilege of being selected as the busiest unit in the Corps and therefore the subject of the Pay Review, which involved a lot more work! The impact of Northern Ireland tours, major exercises and sundry other commitments imposed from above, meant that in a four year tour in BAOR it was rare that a battalion had a period of decent length when it could chose what it wanted to do. However, the first eight months of 1979 gave us this opportunity; the 111 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS only time in our four years. I had always had a bee in my bonnet about giving platoon commanders the opportunity to really focus on platoon training and the development of leadership, skill and initiative at that level, so this is what we chose to do for the first half of the year. It was an outstanding sporting year. We were again the best ski-ing battalion, retained the boxing championship and won the BAOR cricket. The Duke and Duchess spent two happy days with us, with the last word on their visit, belonging to a small child in our school who had obviously heard of the Iron Lady as well as the Iron Duke, the Election being the week before. As the Duchess and Anne Bray were leaving a classroom, a small voice was heard to say, “which one is Mrs Thatcher?” We had a very tough two sided and competitive inter platoon patrol exercise conducted in snow and very cold weather in a large forest and then an excellent two week skill at arms camp at Sennelager. This was followed by two weeks at Vogelsang where the climax was a 36 hour inter-platoon competition which General Richard Vickers, our Divisional commander, allowed us to organise as his annual inspection of the Battalion. Each platoon had to deal with 13 demanding stands, without respite. Lt Simon Dixon’s Platoon came out the winners, with Lt Jonathan Wood’s being the overall winner of the four-month competition. An extract from the GOC’s formal report read: The final major event of my time in command was a two-week period of mechanized training at Soltau, culminating with an exercise that allowed us to demonstrate two widely different methods of attack. One was a set piece attack, with all the varied fire support elements carefully coordinated and the procedure conducted according to the School teaching. This is a slow affair and probably suitable for a well-prepared enemy. However, if we are advancing, there is a good chance that the enemy is withdrawing and in this case it may be that a good old style cavalry charge, with the maximum of momentum and minimum of delay, may reap major dividends. “On top of the thoroughly sound practical performance in foul conditions on a very demanding, unseen and varied competition, the outstanding impression of the visit was the dogged determination, the quietly humorous enthusiasm, the unwavering persistence, and the outstanding physical toughness of every competitor. This was robustness in its true sense. I fought with them with complete confidence on the Hook and I would be proud to do so again.” Charge we did, and it was a grand sight and a grand finale. After a debrief on the objective to see that all ranks had appreciated the point of the exercise, the order was “carry on sergeant” and all Officers were led to a secret RV in the forest with the Mess staff, white table clothes and silver laid, and the ACC ready to give us a magnificent lunch…. life should always be fun and memorably so, a lesson I had learnt early from that great ‘Dukes’ officer, Tony Firth. Each platoon then went off on two weeks adventure training chosen by the platoon commander. This was the centenary year of rugby in the ‘Dukes’. We won the Army Cup again, under Tim Sinclair’s able captaincy, beating the RRW by 12-7, and followed this with a great week-end’s celebration of the Centenary. The highlight was a game against a team raised by General Bill Scotter, the C-in-C and President of the ARU. His team included three All Blacks, Ken Kennedy of Ireland and the British Lions, top players from Germany and Holland, and BAOR team members (there were not many who were not ‘Dukes’!) and some ‘Dukes’ who were not serving in the Battalion. Many visitors came from England, including a strong party of our famous League players from National Service days and Major (QM) Cyril Kenchington, Mayor of Kirklees, who came in the Corporation’s Rolls Royce, “to show the locals of Minden how a real Mayor operates.” Minden, Annual Review, Clifton Bks, 1978 112 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS Pte Pryce from Somme Company was gunned down on Whiterock Road. We returned to Minden, with heads high; it had been a tough tour. Lieutenant Colonel WR Mundell 1979-1982 After block leave we settled down to prepare for Ex Spearpoint, a massive Corps Exercise that tested our ‘war’ role. With our friends, the Life Guards, we formed two battle groups in 4th Division. We prepared at Soltau on Ex Muji Kas; where my lasting memory was of Major Thorn, OC Corunna Coy, in charge of a reserve demolition in his NBC suit and respirator, who was radioed to ‘blow the bridge’: as he could not get at his pencil to sign the engineer’s authority - it ‘was a race between him drowning in his sweat or the young RE officer being strangled’!! The actual exercise across the German countryside was both exhilarating and testing - we ended up changing sides, having painted orange crosses on our armoured vehicles, and AFV 432s scything through the 1st Division. A great finale to our BAOR tour. Lieutenant Colonel WR Mundell I was privileged to take over command of the 1st Battalion on the 10th of August 1979, in Minden, West Germany. The Battalion was just starting to prepare for an operational tour in West Belfast; my first recollection was interviews with two Company Commanders and the RSM. One alerted me to a medical problem, which might prevent him going, the second deafness and the RSM announced his intention of not applying for a commission - what a start! I can report that both Commanders shone in Belfast, each in their different ways and that the RSM was commissioned. Back to Minden to hand over and hold a final Beating of Retreat in front of the Chain of Command and our German hosts. In the floodlight our great Band & Drums ended slow marching down the square between the tall Barrack Blocks to Beethoven’s Ode to Joy. The Burgermeister’s wife, sat next to me, overcome with emotion, could not stop kissing me!! To Somme Lines, Catterick, with a new RSM, Peter Robinson, in November 1980. Our first chore was two months of public duties at Chelsea Barracks in London. Whilst not keen on the duty it did sort out our uniform and drill. The RSM and Drum Major Welsh, intoxicated with ceremony and drill, got the best standards. Two significant features - the ‘Ballymurphy Gun Team’ and the construction of ‘Fort Whiterock’, marked the tour from October to February 1980. The gun team’s ‘modus operandi’ was to take over a house and ambush security forces, firing through a closed window, prior to a speedy retreat. The first such incident happened on our handover from 1st KOSB at Springfield Road. The Jocks’ 4 Tonner was the target, with several wounded; one of whom owes his life to LCpl Tate, a wounded ‘Dukes’ Medic, who kept him alive. This was followed by a gun battle in the Royal Victoria Hospital between ‘Dukes’ guards and the IRA dressed as hospital staff! Sadly, later the IRA team again ambushed an armoured RUC land rover, which had stopped to allow a police Officer to retrieve his hat from the station. The resulting machine gun fire burst into the back of the vehicle, killing our APTC - QMSI Bellamy, and a RUC officer. Tragically, this was followed two months later when Actually it was the best possible preparation for the Presentation of Colours by our Colonel in Chief in Catterick on 4th April 1981. On a very cold, clear day in our home county in front of our families and dignitaries we received the Colours in style. Two senior past Colonels: Generals Sir Philip Christison and Sir Robert Bray proudly watched the boys march past. My wife recalls being given General ‘Christy’s frock coat to keep her warm - not bad for one well over 90! 113 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS We then won the Army Rugby Cup on 15th of April at Aldershot: 1 DWR 20 - 7 RHA 0. Well done to Capt Bill Atkinson and his team of 8 soldiers and 7 officers. The expected next tour to Northern Ireland was delayed by four months, which allowed us to get back to some hard, basic military and adventurous training across the Yorkshire Moors, though Corunna Company returned to ceremonial duties to provide a Royal Guard at the opening of the Humber Bridge in July. In early December, we relieved 1 D and D in South Armagh to begin a very different Northern Ireland tour. Helicopters, with no vehicle movement close to the border; searches; long rural foot patrols; OP’s and cross border liaison with the Gardai - the Eire police. The Colonel in Chief visited and ‘could not leave the Burma find of a culvert bomb (10 milk churns packed with l,000lbs explosive) for many minutes!’ RN helicopters, with a Wren and rum, marked a snowy Christmas Day. OC Hook Company (an ex boxer and rugger player) helped on the busy helipad at Bessbrook until an arriving RAF Chinook turned him into a snowman! On a more serious note, much progress was achieved in finds, intelligence and cross border co-operation between the two police forces. Northern Ireland, Crossmaglen, 1981 We all returned safe and sound by Chinook helicopter direct from South Armagh, refuelling at Weeton in Lancashire, to our barracks in Catterick to the sound of the Band and the welcome of our wives and families on the 24th April 1982. Five days later I was towed out of camp with so many memories and so much emotion; and with gratitude to our Officers and soldiers who had ‘always come up the hill’! Catterick, the Battalion flies back from S Armagh by Chinook, 1980 114 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS My priorities for the battalion were relatively straightforward. First and foremost to maintain our military skills which were always going to be difficult given the space and facilities available? Incentive was sharpened by the rumour that Margaret Thatcher’s edict to the Defence Chiefs that what had happened in the Falklands would not happen in Gibraltar. Each Company was able to train, in turn, at the Portuguese Training Centre in Estoril and on two occasions we disrupted Gibraltar’s sleepy routine with a full-scale Battalion exercise throughout the rock. All this, plus any number of ideas to make the training interesting, fun and worthwhile! Lieutenant Colonel CR Cumberlege, 1982-1984 Drill was always going to play an important part in our lives. Monday morning guard mountings outside the Convent and the Ceremonies of the Keys were in full swing (since curtailed for manning and security reasons). Our Queen’s Birthday Parades in 1983 and 1984 (under the stewardship of RSM Sam Basu and RSM Bob Heron, respectively) were marked by the firing of a Feu de Joie which, so my father told me, had not been fired since the 1920’s in India by the 2nd Battalion. On that occasion during a rehearsal, the noise of the firing caused the 2IC’s horse to rear, depositing the said 2IC on the ground behind. For the parade itself the CO gave the order “the parade will fire the feu de Joie…. hold on Bonzo…fire!” Lieutenant Colonel CR Cumberlege The return of the Battalion from Northern Ireland, my assuming command from Dick Mundell and the build up to, and execution of, the Falklands War, all coincided in April 1982. The latter influenced our planning and training in as much as I was at one time asked when we would be ready to take part in the war. We had Exercise Pond Jump West planned which was the ideal preparation, should it have been necessary to head south but, in the event, the war was over by the time we returned to Catterick in July. The remainder of the year was relatively uneventful: Exercise Keystone in Germany, individual training, preparation for our move to Gibraltar, KAPE tour and of course the annual assault on the Army Rugby Cup. We won the UK Cup in 1982, under Chris Gilbert, before being beaten by BAOR Engineer Regiment in a rather unsatisfactory Army final in Aldershot. Never having been renowned for my Rugby prowess, it was with certain trepidation that I found myself sitting between two very senior and knowledgeable exponents of the game. The conversation didn’t exactly flow. Gibraltar, Operation Steep Slope, 1984 Gibraltar was an attractive proposition in as much as it was a family sunshine posting and provided the Battalion with a well-earned rest. There were plenty of opportunities to have fun, enhance our reputation (the battalion was fondly remembered from its tour 30 years earlier); but fraught with potential PR nightmares. 115 RECOLLECTIONS OF COMMANDING OFFICERS Many battalions before us had tended to keep themselves apart from the local populace. I felt this wrong and counter productive. Each Company identified its own community project…a school, boys club, medical centre, kindergarten or whatever and the return in goodwill was inestimable. However “Operation Steep Slope” became the Battalion project, which entailed clearing mountains of rubbish and squatters’ homes from in front of the old City Walls. The task took 15 months to complete. Operation Steep Slope, clearing the city walls, 1984 Whilst it may seem to be an odd and filthy project to inflict on the Battalion, it was enormously appreciated by Gibraltar as a whole and accepted with great patience if not enthusiasm by the Battalion. It resulted in the flood lighting of the City Walls for the first time ever and, eventually, the award of the 1984 Wilkinson Sword of Peace for fostering good relations with the local community. Sadly 21 years later the area is overgrown and the lights smashed. Eventually the border, which had been closed since our arrival, was opened to pedestrians allowing members of the battalion to enjoy the fruits of the Costa del Sol; in the meantime we entered into every activity we could find on the rock: The Hindoostan Rowing Club was resurrected, with Simon Morgan the Captain of Boats; amateur dramatics (“The 15 minute Hamlet”); sailing (Brigadier Tony Firth shipped out a Victory Class yacht which he had found for us in Portsmouth), fishing, wind surfing, water skiing, pot holing, cricket, hockey, and so on. Rugby was difficult, but I like to think that under Peter Robinson’s care, our skills didn’t suffer irreversibly. It would be wrong not mention the band which was just outstanding, under Bandmaster Keith Taylor, from beginning to end; plus the countless fundraising events in support of Gibraltarian charities. Commanding 1 DWR in Gibraltar was very different to that experienced by my predecessors and those coming after me. Marvellous administrators under Bob Tighe, some excellent Company commanders, and two first class 2ICs, in Alan Westcob and Peter Gardner, supported me. It was a wonderful privilege, ending with a very civilised handover to Johnny Walker around the swimming pool at the Rock Hotel. Gibralter, DM Wilkinson Leads The Band and Drums, 1983 116 SPORT IN THE REGIMENT SPORT IN THE REGIMENT Team spirit and fitness, two essential requisites of the soldier, are rapidly developed under active service conditions. However, looking back over the previous 300 years shows that whilst there have been many wars and campaigns, there have always been long periods of peace. It is during peacetime that sport plays an essential part in building up and maintaining the esprit de corps of a regiment and, moreover, in keeping everyone fit to fight. In all branches of sport the Dukes have always been a force to be reckoned with, but in rugby football the Regiment established a particularly fine record. 1st Battalion won the Calcutta Cup nine times, the Madras Cup seven times and the Bombay Cup six times. The 2nd Battalion won the first ever newly instituted Army Challenge Cup in 1907. Since then the Regiment has won the Army Cup 14 times and have been runners up a total of eight times. In the Regiment’s heyday it won the Army Cup four years in a row, 1965-68. Since the early days the Regiment produced an impressive eleven international players, 7 English, 1 Irish and 3 Scottish. CF Grieve and FJ Reynolds toured South Africa in 1938 with the British Lions. Yet our most successful player was MJ CampbellLamerton, who toured with the Lions to South Africa in 1962 and captained the Lions in Australia and New Zealand in 1966. Furthermore, at one point the England half back pairing was a ‘Dukes’ partnership, with DW Shuttleworth and EMP Hardy providing vital continuity to both the Battalion and England in the early fifties. Brigadier DW Shuttleworth became President of the Rugby Football Union in the 1985/86 season. The ‘Dukes’ and Rugby 2nd Battalion Army Rugby Cup winners, 1907 By the second half of the 19th Century over 50% of the rugby clubs in England were in the north of the country; the game being very popular with the working classes. This tradition was continued with the break-away and formation of the Rugby League in 1895. With our recruiting tradition already in the West Riding and the establishment of the Depot in Halifax in 1877 it was not long before the Regiment’s tradition of playing rugby began, with both Battalions gaining early honours. This reputation and strength was (and still is) constantly enhanced by the recruitment of Officers with a flair for rugby. Shuttleworth, supported by Hardy, goes for the try Army Caps The ‘Dukes’ produced over 50 players that were capped for the Army against the Navy and the Air Force since 1914. Most recently the Regiment had four members of the Army Squad and Ed Smith and Finlay Bibby were part of the Combined Services Squad. In those far off days of Rugby League, the thirteen-aside game was played by all the elementary schools of Yorkshire, and thus the Depot recruited a steady stream of recruits who played rugby. Because of its rugby ability the 2nd Battalion became the initiator of serious Regimental rugby. The Regiment went on to cement its soldiering and rugby prowess in South Africa and India. In India between 1904 and 1914, the The Battalion’s Northern Ireland Tour of 1957-59 saw the Battalion play Club Rugby across Northern Ireland. As the tour drew to an end, the Ulster team honoured the Regiment by playing the Battalion at 118 SPORT IN THE REGIMENT Ravenhill. The Regimental team, Captained by Capt Gilbert-Smith, produced an outstanding performance resulting in the Battalion taking a well-deserved victory with a score of 19 to Ulster’s 8. Other Sports Naturally, other traditional sports such as cricket, soccer, athletics and boxing have also flourished and the Regiment has produced some notable personalities such as Second Lieutenant Peter Hoppe, who became the first Officer ever to win the Army Boxing Championship when it was opened to all ranks. Truly he was a formidable boxer at lightheavyweight but he followed some equally great exponents of the noble art - ‘Horsey’ Brown, of rugby fame, ‘Boy’ Tucker and Private Mills, in the Army Championships of 1929, Jack Dalrymple, ‘Bull’ Faithfull and Sam Robertson, in later years, all made their mark as great fighters. In 1960, whilst undertaking an emergency posting to Kenya the Battalion was invited to play the Kenyan Champions. This led to a problem in that they, due to the nature of the posting, had no team strip to wear. However one was quickly obtained from the ‘Kenya Regiment’ and the Match took place in Nakuru. The Battalion upheld the pride of the Regiment by winning the match. Whilst stationed at Osnabruck, West Germany, from 1965 to 1968, the Battalion had four consecutive victories in the Army Cup. At cricket the Regiment produced some excellent players and results. Major C H B Pridham, Captain of the 1924 2nd Battalion XI in Cairo, writes of a delightful game entitled “The 76th score 76”, when 76 runs were needed to win the All Egypt Command Cup. Three ‘Dukes’ have won Army Caps, many have played for the Free Foresters, while Private Brian Stead had the odd game for Yorkshire. Rugby Union - Individual Honours Charles (Bull) Faithfull, England (3 caps) 1924-1926. Lt (Horsey) Brown, Army & Ireland (12 Caps) 19251928. Capt Mike Campbell-Lamerton, Army, London Scottish, Scotland (23 Caps), British Lions in South Africa 1962, Captain of British Lions in Australia & New Zealand 1966. Lt Grieve, Army, Scotland & British Lions in South Africa in 1938. Soccer, too, has always been popular but apart from some good performances in the Infantry Cup it is as long ago as 1931/32 when the Regiment was beaten in the final of the Army Cup and our sole recipient of an Army Soccer cap is Private M Hawthorn, who played against the Royal Navy in 1932. Rugby League - Individual Honours Brian Curry, England 1956. Norman Field, GB 1963. Jack Scroby, Army 1959, GB 1966. Charlie Renilson, Scotland, GB 1965 & 1967. Arthur Keegan, GB 19681969. The 1st Battalion developed a successful boxing team whilst stationed in Minden in the late 70s, reaching the Finals in Berlin, in 1977 and 1978. Army 7s Rugby Since the inaguration of the Army 7s Tournament in the early 80s, ‘Dukes’ teams have won the championship more times than any other unit. To celebrate the Regiment’s Tercentenary in 2002 the ‘Dukes’ took 30 players to New Zealand for a sixweek tour, playing various New Zealand Military and Club sides. W Swap, APTC, with the Battalion Boxing Team. Minden, 1977 119 Various Sports Trophies Won, Minden, 1979 SPORT IN THE REGIMENT 120 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT Ian Reid - Hong Kong, 1968 Army Cup Team, 1966 Battalion Football Team, Hong Kong, 1969 Tim Sinclair, Captain Army Cup winning team Graydon Williams 122 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT Pete Robinson and Dave Dickens Minden, 1978 Battalion Rugby, Minden, 1978 Aldershot, 1975 Battalion Rugby Team, Minden, 1976-1977 Season 123 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT Battalion Rugby Team, Minden BAOR Trampoline Team Championships, Winners, 1977 Regimental Boxing Team, 1977 ‘Dukes’ Rugby Centenary, Minden, 1979 124 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT Battalion Team, Bulford, 1986-87 Season Dinner for DW Shuttleworth, President England RFU, Bulford Sergeant’s Mess, 1986 Bulford, 1986 Dinner, Bulford Sergeant’s Mess, MJ CampbellLamerton, DW Shuttleworth and EMP Hardy, 1986 Battalion Cricket Team, Bulford, 1986 125 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT Battalion Cross Country Team, 1985 Boxing Team, 1994 Battalion Rugby Team, Palace Barracks, 1988 Cross Country Team - Winners Battalion Rugby 7s Team, Palace Barracks, 1988 Battalion Cross Country Team, N Ireland, 1988-89 126 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT Battalion Rugby Team, 1992-1993 Season Sergeants’ Mess charity squash marathon, Bulford Halifax, Yorkshire Tour, 1989 Canoing enthusiasts 127 PHOTO GALLERY 3 - SPORT ‘Dukes’ Nordic Skiers with Lt Colonel Mundell, 1977 Ptes Hannon & Johannson With the Army Combined Services Boxing Squad Regimental Biathlon Squad, Sgt Brennan, Lt Triplow, Pte Murgatroyd & Pte O'Donnel 128 TRAINING AND EXERCISES AFFILIATIONS AND ALLIANCES TERCENTARY AMALGAMATIONS TRAINING AND EXERCISES When not engaged on operations a soldier’s life is one of training and exercises. In days gone by, this would consist of musketry, route marches and drill, especially drill. Sergeant Major James Colbeck has left us with a splendid account in his Journal of the drill instructions at the time of Waterloo, a copy of which is held in the Archives. Depot, Wellesley Park, Officers’ Mess and CO’s House, Halifax, 1959 At that time the Regimental Depot was at the Citadel in Hull, it later moved to Fermoy in southern Ireland and, in August 1877, the newly completed Depot in Halifax was occupied by the Depot Companies of the 33rd and 76th Regiments. Generations of ‘Dukes’ soldiers were trained here, apart from a short gap during World War Two when training was moved to Brancepath Castle and the Depot was ‘loaned’ to some Royal Engineers and a WRAC contingent. The ‘Dukes’ returned on 1st November, 1946, until 1959 when the training intakes were moved, first to Richmond, then to Strensall. 6th Battalion (673 LAA Regt RA) Annual Camp, Norfolk, 1949 130 TRAINING AND EXERCISES Strensall was eventually closed as a training centre, even though the ranges had been constructed with the help of the 1st Battalion whilst stationed in Bradford in 1892, and training moved to Oulston Camp, briefly, and then to various Army Training Regiments before being centralised at the Infantry Training Centre at Catterick. Once out of Depot, the trained soldiers exercise with their battalions. In modern times this will range from Skill at Arms, in a hut on camp, to a full-blown Corps exercise in Germany, with many variations in between. In addition, a modern battalion trains its own drivers, signallers, physical training instructors and medical assistants. Germany, Exercise Dusty Tyke, 1978 Notable Exercises have been Ex Sun Pirate in the Caribbean, the Muji Kas series of exercises devised by Dick Mundell, the series of large scale exercises in Germany during the 70s and 80s, such as Dusty Tyke, Spearpoint, Full House, Keystone, Northern Crusade, Wagon Train and Snow Boot. In addition the Headquarters elements are tested on Command Post Exercises and, particularly popular with the rank and file Tactical Exercises Without Troops. In recent times these have been upgraded with state of the art electronic battlefield simulations, Brigade and Battlegroup Trainers became Command and Staff Trainers, leading to multi million pound Combined Arms Tactical Trainer. Field Training Exercise, Sennelager, 2002 Most of these last for a few days or weeks, but longer exercises take place regularly in Canada, with annual Medicine Man and Pond Jump West exercises, as well as Belize. Facilities such as Tin City in Sennelager for Northern Ireland training has recently given way to the Green Zone in Thetford for pre deployment training for Afghanistan. 131 AFFILIATIONS AND ALLIANCE Over the years many affiliations and alliances have been built up with various units and organisations. Some have sadly lapsed over time, such as the 33rd Bn Australian Infantry, others have ceased with the passing of the units, such as HMS Sheffield, which was decommissioned in November 2002, and others have been renewed from time to time, as with the re-commissioning of a new HMS Iron Duke in 1993, after a gap of 47 years. The pages of the Iron Duke record the following alliances and affiliations: The Yorkton Regiment - terminated, 1953, when it became Royal Canadian Artillery. The Voltigeurs de Quebec 10th Bn Baluch Regiment 33rd Bn Australian Infantry HMS Wellington HMS Iron Duke HMS York HMS Sheffield LMS Railway Engine The Duke of Wellington Wellington College CCF Giggleswick School CCF Leeds Grammar School CCF Colonel’s Company, 33rd Re-enactment group, USA Colonel’s Company, 33rd re-enactment group, USA 132 TERCENTENARY pairs of Colours been presented together at the same time. The ceremony, and festivities afterwards, were a huge success bringing together serving and retired, many of whom had travelled from far corners of the world to be there, as well as all the Regiment’s Freedom Mayors and Lord Mayors and civic dignitaries from across the West Riding. A highlight of the celebrations was a musical re-enactment of the Regiment’s history on the square before a formal dinner held in marquees on the sports field for all ranks and their wives and friends and where all were able to see and admire the new Colours. 2002 was the Tercentenary Year for the Regiment when it celebrated three hundred years of service to Crown and Country and, above all, the deep ties between the Regiment and its home county, the West Riding of Yorkshire from where, for generations, the Regiment had drawn its soldiers. The first event of the year was the granting of the Freedom of Sheffield to the Regiment, the freedom scroll being received by the Duke Of Wellington, the Colonel in Chief, at a parade on 13th April. In May a team of soldiers, led by a group in ‘Waterloo’ uniform, as well as many others for various stages, completed the ‘Havercake March’, a march the full length of the Regiment’s recruiting area from Settle to Sheffield. The route took the marchers through all the Regiment’s freedom towns where they personally presented to their Mayors and Lord Mayors invitations to join the Regiment for the Presentation of New Colours in Germany in June. The name of the march was drawn from the old nickname for the Regiment of the ‘Havercake Lads’ - the havercake or oatcake being the traditional staple fare of the people of the West Riding. To assist in the celebrations, Timothy Taylor’s brewery, based in Keighley with a long family association with the Regiment, had created a special ‘Havercake Ale’ which included oats as a key ingredient in the brew. The success of the brew was reflected in the warmth of the celebrations, which continued into the early hours (see page 64). The year’s events concluded with Freedom Parades in all the Regiment’s Freedom Towns across the West Riding and where the Regiment was able to show its new Colours to its home communities. The warmth of the reception by the Lord Mayors and Mayors was a testament to the strength of those ties and the esteem they, and the towns they represented, held for the Regiment as an integral part of the heritage of the West Riding. The focal point for the year’s celebrations was the Presentation of new Regulation and Honorary Colours to the 1st Battalion in Osnabruck on 18th June, Waterloo Day. This was a unique ceremony. The Regiment is the only Regiment in the Army to carry four Colours and never before had both new 133 TERCENTENARY Mayors at Tercentenary Parade, 2002 Colours being marched on parade, Tercentenary, 2002 Tercentenary Plate - Limited Edition, 2002 CO, Lt Col Bruce, leading the march past, Tercentenary, 2002 134 AMALGAMATIONS 1881 - 33rd & 76th Regiments of Foot Project United Warrior On 1st May 1881, as part of the Cardwell reforms, General Order 41 (Army Organisation) laid down that the Infantry of the Line and the Militia would be organised in Territorial Regiments, each of four battalions, the first two being Line battalions. Although the 33rd and 76th Regiments had shared the Depot at Halifax since 1877, this order inexorably linked them together as the 1st and 2nd Battalions of The Halifax Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s), a title not liked by anyone, which was soon replaced by an Appendix to Order 41 on 30 June 1881, amending the title to The Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment) after an appeal by Colonel Allerdice to the Duke of Cambridge. The rare red facings had also disappeared, being replaced by white for all English County Regiments. Under Project ‘United Warrior’, headed by Lt Col M A Lodge, various publicity and Launch Events were carried out leading up to the Amalgamation Parades in June 2006. The Cap Badge Launch took place at Clifford’s Tower in York on 6th December, 2005. On 20th February, 2006, Prince Andrew, The Duke of York was appointed to be the Colonel-in-Chief, and Brigadier His Grace The Duke of Wellington was appointed to be the Deputy Colonel in Chief, of the new Yorkshire Regiment, to be effective on 6th June 2006. The East & West Riding Regiment merger day, 1st April 2006, replacing the Light Infantry Company with the Green Howards Company from the Tyne Tees Regiment. 1948 - 1st and 2nd Battalions The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment The re-badging parades took place on 6th June 2006 in the various locations that the new battalions of the Regiment were located: In January 1948 it was decided that the 1st and 2nd Battalions would be amalgamated as part of a widereaching re-organisation of the Infantry, which saw the reduction of most Line Regiments to single battalion size. The formal parade was held on 17 June 1948 when the Honorary Colours of the 76th Regiment were handed over to the 1st Battalion. 1st Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Prince of Wales’s Own) - Somme Barracks, Catterick. 2nd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Green Howards) - Metal Factory, Banja Luka, Bosnia. 2006 - The Prince of Wales’s Own, Green Howards and Duke of Wellington’s Regiments 3rd Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment (Duke of Wellington’s) - Battlesbury Barracks, Warminster. In December 2004, as part of the re-organisation of the infantry, it was announced that the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment would be amalgamated with the Prince of Wales’s Own Regiment of Yorkshire and the Green Howards, all Yorkshire-based Regiments in the King’s Division, to form: 4th Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment - TA Centres. The 4th Battalion also held a formation parade and the Cadet Forces held a re-badging parade on 10th June 2006 at the Knavesmire in York. The Yorkshire Regiment (14th/15th, 19th and 33rd/76th Foot) 135 AMALGAMATIONS Final parade of the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment (West Riding) at the re-badging ceremony, 6 June 2006 Rebadging Parade, 6 June 2006 136 THE REGIMENTAL ASSOCIATION Currently, as at October, 2009, the Regimental Association is a vibrant mixture of Clubs and Reunions, with members meeting together at various social events and occasions: The Reunion Dinner: The Reunion Dinner generally takes place on the first Saturday in October at the Hilton Hotel in Bradford, the only venue in the Regiment’s traditional recruiting area able to take the numbers, as well as being convenient for public transport links and car parking. Organised by the Halifax Office. RHQ: The Assistant Regimental Secretary oversees all the various Regimental functions and events from the old RHQ building in Halifax, which is now the Halifax Area Office of the Yorkshire Regiment, Branches: Currently, the following Branches meet regularly: Halifax/Bradford (meeting monthly in Halifax); Huddersfield; Keighley; London (three meetings a year); Sheffield; Skipton and York. The meetings are organised by the respective Branch officials. Full details can be obtained from the Iron Duke, the Regimental website or the Halifax Office. The Officers’ Dinner Club: The Officers’ Dinner Club meets annually in either London or Yorkshire. Organised by Major David Harrap from RHQ YORKS at the York Office. The Officers’ Luncheon Club: The Officers’ Luncheon Club meets annually in London. Organised by Brigadier Michael Bray. The ‘Dukes’ London Group: A careers and resettlement networking group, with occasional meeting at various venues in London. The Convener is Captain Peter Lee. Further details from the Halifax Office. The Molar Dinner Club: The Molar (Late Entry) Officers’ Dinner Club meets every November. Organised by Major Bob Heron. The 33/76 Club: Held at Strensall Camp, with limited accommodation, an informal evening function organised by WO2 ‘Reggie’ Perrin. More details on the ‘Dukes’ website. The Halifax Reunion: An informal evening round the watering holes of Halifax. Generally held on the same night as the Reunion Dinner. Organised by John Swain, more details on the website. The Website: The Regimental Website is at www.dwr.org.uk. The editor in chief is Colonel Charles Cumberlege. Further details from the website! DWR Branch Standards The AGM: The Annual General Meeting of the Association is generally held immediately before the Annual Reunion Dinner at the Hilton Hotel, Bradford. Organised by the Halifax Office. 137 MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES Museum The Museum was established at the Depot in Halifax in 1921 to collect Regimental Artefacts and also educate new recruits on the heritage of their Regiment. In 1960, after the Closure of the Depot, the Museum moved to the Calderdale Borough Council Bankfield Museum, Akroyd Park, in Halifax. Following two successful Lottery Bid Projects, in 2003 (Through Soldiers’ Eyes) and 2007 (Forgotten Voices), the exhibitions and displays at Bankfield have been completely modernised. The refurbished series of displays describe the history of the Regiment from 1702 to the present day. The display cases are related to selected campaigns. Over 170 audio recordings, by individual ‘Dukes’ from 1939, telling their own stories, bring to life their experiences and conditions they endured. Actors have been used to tell the stories of ‘Dukes’ prior to the Second World War. Computer programmes have also been introduced to access images from the archives. The completed refurbishment was opened by Christa Akroyd, with Look North TV coverage, on 11th November, 2008, attended by the Lord Lieutenant, The Mayor of Calderdale and Major General Sir Evelyn Webb-Carter. The Bankfield Museum, Haley Hill, Halifax is open Tuesday to Saturday, 1000 to 1700hrs and Sundays and Bank Holiday Mondays, 1400 to 1700hrs. Archives Most of the archives are stored at the outstation of RHQ The Yorkshire Regiment at Wellesley Park, Halifax. Regimental HQ, Halifax, 2006 138 MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES Regimental Museum, Bankfield, Halifax R Heron, TJ Isles and W Robins examine the Phase 2 Refurbishment displays 139 © The Duke of Wellington’s Regiment Museum and Archives, August 2009 Printed by: UniPress, Trutnov, Czech Republic Regimental March The Wellesley