Charles Gordon-Lennox, 10th Duke of Richmond

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Aug 272014
 

Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox

Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, the 10th Duke of Richmond, 10th Duke of Lennox, 10th Duke of Aubigny (of French nobility) and 5th Duke of Gordon (born on the 19th of September 1929), styled Lord Settrington until 1935 and Earl of March and Kinrara between 1935 and 1989, is a British Peer.

The son of Frederick Gordon-Lennox, 9th Duke of Richmond, he succeeded to the titles in 1989. He was educated at Eton and William Temple College, and was a 2nd Lieutenant in the 60th Rifles ( KRRC ) from 1949 to 1950. He is a Chartered Accountant.

Richmond has held a number of civic, business and church appointments, including Chancellor of the University of Sussex from 1985 to 1998, and Church Commissioner from 1963 to 1976; member of the General Synod of the Church of England from 1960 to 1980 and on committees of the World Council of Churches. He was a Deputy Lieutenant of West Sussex from 1975 until 1990, and Lord Lieutenant from 1990 to 1994. He is also a patron of Prisoners Abroad, a charity supporting the welfare of Britons imprisoned overseas and their families.

The Duke’s son and heir apparent, Charles, Earl of March and Kinrara, was born on the 8th of January in 1955. His daughter (adopted in 1962) is the actress Nimmy March.

The seat of the Dukes of Richmond is Goodwood House in Sussex.

Sourced from Wikipedia

Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond

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Aug 272014
 

Charles Gordon-Lennox

Charles Gordon-Lennox, the 5th Duke of Richmond and 5th Duke of Lennox, 5th Duke of Aubigny, KG PC (3rd of August 1791 – 21st of October 1860), styled Earl of March until in 1819, was a British soldier, politician and a prominent Conservative.

Background and education
Richmond was the son of Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond, and the former Lady Charlotte Gordon. He was educated at Westminster and Trinity College, Dublin.

Military career
Richmond (while Earl of March) served on Wellington’s staff in the Peninsular War, during which time he volunteered to join the 52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot’s advance storming party on the fortress of Ciudad Rodrigo. He formally joined the 52nd Foot in 1813, and took command of a company of 52nd soldiers at Orthez in 1814, where he was severely wounded; the musket-ball in his chest was never removed. During the Battle of Waterloo he was ADC to the Prince of Orange, and following that man’s wounding, served as ADC to Wellington. Richmond was chiefly responsible for the belated institution in 1847 of the Military General Service Medal for all survivors of the campaigns between 1793 and 1814. (There had only hitherto been a Waterloo Medal). He campaigned in Parliament and also enlisted the interest of Queen Victoria. Richmond himself received the medal with eight clasps.

Political career
Richmond sat as Member of Parliament for Chichester between the years of 1812 and 1819. The latter year he succeeded his father in the dukedom and entered the House of Lords. He was a vehement opponent in the House of Lords of Roman Catholic emancipation, and at a later date a leader of the opposition to Peel’s free trade policy, as he was the president of the Central Agricultural Protection Society, which campaigned for preservation of the Corn Laws. Although a vigorous Conservative and Ultra-Tory for most of his career, Richmond’s anger with Wellington over Catholic Emancipation led him to lead the Ultra’s into joining Earl Grey’s reforming Whig government in 1830 (Lang, 1999). He served under Grey as Postmaster General between 1830 and 1834. He was sworn of the Privy Council in 1830. Richmond was also Lord Lieutenant of Sussex between 1835 and 1860 and was appointed a Knight of the Garter in 1829.
In 1836, on inheriting the estates of his mother’s brother, the fifth and last Duke of Gordon, he assumed the name of Gordon before that of Lennox.

Family
Richmond married Lady Caroline, daughter of Henry Paget, 1st Marquess of Anglesey and Lady Caroline Villiers, on the 10th of April in 1817. The couple had five sons and five daughters, including:

Charles Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond (1818–1903)

Lady Caroline Amelia Gordon-Lennox (18th June 1819 – 30 April 1890), married John Ponsonby, 5th Earl of Bessborough

Fitzroy George Charles Gordon-Lennox (11th June 1820 – 1841), lost at sea aboard SS President

Rt. Hon. Lord Henry Charles George Gordon-Lennox (2nd November 1821 – 29 August 1886), married Amelia Brooman and left no issue

Captain Lord Alexander Francis Charles Gordon-Lennox (14th June 1825 – 22 January 1892), married Emily Towneley and left issue

Lady Augusta Catherine Gordon-Lennox (14th January 1827 – 3 April 1904), married Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar (1823–1902)

Lord George Charles Gordon-Lennox (22nd October 1829

Sourced from Wikipedia

General David John Ramsbotham

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Aug 252014
 

General David John Ramsbotham

General David John Ramsbotham, Baron Ramsbotham GCB, CBE ( he was born the 6th of November in the year of 1934 ) is a retired British Army officer, who later served as Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Prisons. He was awarded a life peerage in 2005, and now sits on the cross benches of the House of Lords.

Early life and military career
Ramsbotham was born in 1934, the son of a Church of England clergyman, later Bishop of Wakefield, John Alexander Ramsbotham, son of Rev Alexander Ramsbotham. Ramsbotham was educated at Haileybury and Imperial Service College. He entered the army through National Service, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery on 14th March in 1953. He completed his National Service as an acting lieutenant, and retained a Territorial Army commission. He then took a history degree at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.

On 21st February 1958 he was appointed to a regular army commission as a lieutenant, with seniority from 31st January 1957. He was promoted to Captain on 31st January 1961. He served in Borneo during the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation as an acting major in the period 24 December 1965 to 23rd of June 1966, and was Mentioned in Despatches. He was promoted to substantive major on 31 December 1967, and to lieutenant-colonel on 30th June 1971. From 11th June 1970 to the of 20th June 1973 he served as Military Assistant to the Chief of the General Staff, Sir Michael Carver. This was a particularly busy time for the British Army; the Troubles in Northern Ireland were beginning, and the army’s contribution, Operation Banner, was taking an increasingly large proportion of resources

For his performance in this role, Ramsbotham was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1974 New Year Honours. He later commanded a battalion of the Royal Green Jackets in Northern Ireland from 1974 to 1975.
He was elevated to Colonel on 30th June 1976, and brigadier on 31st December 1978 (with seniority from 30th June 1978). He then served in Northern Ireland, commanding a brigade based in Belfast, and was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his service there in the operational honours of 21st October 1980. His career was almost derailed when as the army’s director of public relations (a position he held from 1982–84 he leaked documents to a journalist which showed that prior to the Falklands War the army had developed a comprehensive plan for dealing with the media, but it had been overlooked; and the army was subsequently criticised for not having done such planning. He was then promoted to major-general and commanded 3rd Armoured Division for a period prior to 13th March 1987. On the 1st January 1987 he was appointed to the honorary position of Colonel Commandant, 2nd Battalion, Royal Green Jackets, in succession to Sir Frank Kitson, which he held until 25th July 1992.

On 15th April 1987 he was promoted lieutenant-general and appointed Commander UK Field Army and Inspector General of the Territorial Army. He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in the 1987 Queen’s Birthday Honours, and a further honorary appointment as Honorary Colonel of the Officer Training Corps at the University of Cambridge on 1st July, which he held until 1st May 1993. He stepped down as Commander of the Field Army on 13th August 1990, and received a further honorary appointment as Aide de Camp General to HM the Queen (ADC Gen) on 3 December 1990, which he held until his retirement form the army. On 27th December 1990 he was appointed Adjutant-General (AG), with the local rank of general, and he received substantive promotion to that rank on 24th January 1990 (with seniority from the 1st of September 1990). This period included the United Kingdom’s involvement in the Gulf War He was promoted to Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB) in the 1993 New Year Honours He stepped down as AG on 17th May 1993, and retired from the army on 13th July 1993.

Chief Inspector of Prisons
Ramsbotham was Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Prisons for England and Wales from 1st December 1995to 2001 when he was succeeded by Anne Owers CBE. As Chief Inspector of Prisons, he had an at times strained relationship with Home Secretaries Michael Howard and Jack Straw, and this contributed to his contract not being continued for the full eight years that had originally been possible (an initial period of five years, with extension for a further three years possible).

Recent activities
On 22nd of March 2005, it was announced that Ramsbotham was to be elevated to a life peerage. The title was gazetted as Baron Ramsbotham, of Kensington in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea on 17th May. He sits in the House of Lords as a crossbench peer. He is Chairman of the Koestler Awards scheme, and Vice-Chair of both the All Party Penal Affairs Group and the All Party Parliamentary Group for Learning and Skills in the Criminal Justice System. He is President of UNLOCK, The National Association of Ex-Offenders and an Ambassador for the charity, the Prison Advice and Care Trust (pact). He is a trustee and vice-Chairman of the Institute for Food, Brain and Behaviour.

He was elected an honorary Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge in 2001, and serves on the advisory board of the International Centre for Prison Studies at King’s College London. He is also a Patron of Prisoners Abroad, a charity that supports the welfare of Britons imprisoned overseas and their families, and Prisoners Education Trust, a charity that supports serving prisoners through a range of academic, creative and vocational distance learning courses whilst inside. He is also a Patron of the African Prisons Project, an international non-governmental organisation with a mission to bring dignity and hope to men women and children in African prisons through health, education, justice and reintegration. He is President of the charity PTSD Resolution, Charity number 1133188, providing treatment to Veterans with post traumatic stress through its UK-wide network of 200 therapists.

He as written extensively on matters relating to prisons and the military, in particular his 2003 book (Prisongate ): The Shocking State of Britain’s Prisons and the Need for Visionary Change sets out his vision for reform of the prison system.

Sourced from Wikipedia

The Regimental Obituary of  David RamsBotham

David Ramsbotham, always known affectionately, or not, as ‘The Ram’, achieved high rank in the Army as a four-star general commanding the UK Field Army and finally as Adjutant General. But it was a role he assumed on retirement from the Army which brought him to national attention. As HM Inspector of Prisons he alerted the Government and the public to the state of the nation’s custodial establishments.

One of five children, David John Ramsbotham was born on 6th November 1934, the son of John Alexander Ramsbotham, who became the Bishop of Wakefield.

After Haileybury and Imperial Service College, he undertook National Service in the Royal Artillery before he, like his father, went up to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge to read History and in 1958 he was granted a regular commission in the Rifle Brigade. After early regimental service in UK and Germany he completed a tour at the Depot in Winchester. In 1962 he took up the appointment of staff captain in 70 (Kings African Rifles) Brigade before attending the Staff College. He returned to the battalion to command B Company based in a small jungle fort during the Confrontation operations in Borneo for which he was mentioned in dispatches. In 1966 he was posted as DAA & QMG of 7th Armoured Brigade in Soltau, West Germany and then rejoined his battalion, now 3rd Battalion The Royal Green Jackets, stationed nearby at Celle before becoming second-in-command of the 2nd Battalion.

When General Sir Michael Carver visited Borneo in 1965 he had met Ramsbotham and been so impressed by him that he chose him for his MA when appointed Chief of the General Staff. The Northern Ireland Troubles were then escalating quickly and, sharply attuned to his master’s mind, Ramsbotham served the staff assiduously, crucially saving time by giving warning of new requirements and of fanciful suggestions pressed on the defence secretary or the CGS during their frequent visits to Belfast. He then commanded the 2nd Battalion in UK and Gibraltar with tours in Belize and inevitably Northern Ireland. After two years as Colonel AG 4the Armoured Division he returned to the Province to take command of 39 Infantry Brigade in Belfast. In 1978 the policy of restoring police primacy was still at a delicate stage and he frequently found it difficult to restrain his impatience for results against the IRA. He was a redoubtable brigade commander and was appointed CBE at the end of his tour of duty.

After attending the Royal College of Defence Studies, Ramsbotham became the Army’s Director of Public Relations, a role which others had found a gruelling task. The Falklands and the Troubles remained the frontline military topics, so his dealings with the press corps were aided by his experience and, latterly, by an emerging wit all of which would stand him in good stead on leaving the Army.

He then moved on to take command of 3rd Armoured Division in Germany in 1984. At this time the entire concept of the defence of West Germany was being turned on its head by the new commander of the Northern Army Group, General Sir Nigel Bagnall. The forward, linear defence plan of many decades had been replaced with a concept of manoeuvre, in which the 3rd Division had the role of aggressive counterstroke. This suited Ramsbotham admirably, and he drove the division hard.

After promotion to lieutenant-general he became commander of the UK Field Army, and then on elevation to four-star rank was appointed Adjutant-General in the Ministry of Defence, responsible for the soldier as an individual, including recruitment, training, terms of service and welfare. His time as AG coincided with the draconian cuts to the army under the Government’s ‘Options for Change’ at the end of the Cold War. By persistence and sheer force of personality, ‘the Ram’ ensured that those made redundant did so on unprecedentedly generous terms. On retiring from the Army in 1993 he was promoted to GCB.

He was created a life peer in 2005, sitting on the cross-benches and continuing to campaign for prison reform. He served as chairman of the Koestler Awards scheme, encouraging creative arts in prisons, and as vice-chairman of the All Party Penal Affairs Group and the All Party Parliamentary Group for Learning and Skills in the Criminal Justice System. He was also a founding member of the Chagos Islands all-party parliamentary group seeking justice for the islanders.

In 1958 he had married Susan Caroline Dickinson. They had two sons, Richard, and James, who served in The Royal Green Jackets from 1978-89. Sue Ramsbotham predeceased him in 2021 and David Ramsbotham died on 13th December 2022 aged 88.

All credits to the RGJA on the above obituary notice

Flanders Field

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Aug 172014
 

We shall not sleep.
“In Flanders fields,
the poppies blow
between the crosses,
row on row,
that mark our place,
and in the sky
the Larks still bravely
Singing fly,
Scarce heard amidst
the guns below.
We are the dead
short days we lived,
felt dawn
saw sunset glow
loved and were loved
and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel
with the foe,
to you from failing lands
we throw the Torch-
be yours to hold it high;
if ye break faith
with us who die,
we shall not sleep,
though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.”
John McCrae.
30,293.

IMG_0263
“We shall keep the faith.”
Oh! you who sleep
in Flanders fields,
sleepsweet- to rise
anew!
We caught the torch you threw
and holding high,
we keep the faith with all who died.
by Moina Michael.
30,293.000

K.R.R.C 12840.000
Rifle Brigade 11575.000
O.B.L.I. 5878.000

IMG_0263

 

 

Update Page

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Aug 172014
 

MEMORIAL AT PENINSULA LTD

Own the Copyright to the artwork used on the Memorial Project for the Memory and Tribute Chair.

This legal copyright which is a registered copyright, is for artwork which replicates

the RGJ and GJB Cap Badges worn by the Riflemen and Officers during service with

The Regiment and many veteran service men.

The copyright was taken by MEMORIAL AT PENINSULA LTD to protect the originality of the Cap Badges, thus protecting the honours within the Cap Badge, awarded for battle, Some Gave All. Whilst honouring those honours and protecting them, we also honour those that Gave, ALL GAVE SOME – SOME GAVE ALL. This copyright forms a shield of protection against those that are willing to allow the cap badge to be defaced in pursuance of monetary gain.

There is only one original Cap Badge. MEMORIAL AT PENINSULA LTD do not endorse any other copies which are deemed to be fake.

MEMORIAL AT PENINSULA LTD are the only Company that can issue a certificate of authenticity to the graphic design artwork of the GJB and RGJ Cap Bade worn.

The RGJ Cap Badge 

The GJB Badge

MEMORIAL AT PENINSULA LTD 

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Shot at Dawn

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Jul 162014
 

SHOT AT DAWN

We have two poems by different writers on this page

SHOT AT DAWN by Philip Pickford and SHOT BY DAWN by Derrick W Sole,

we are very pleased to be able to display both poems by fellow Riflemen. 

Picture found on Facebook unknown source

Shot at Dwan

©Shot before dawn.

My eyes felt they were about to explode, the pressure in the air through my head did load, the sound wave blow out my eardrums, in my head I felt so numb, showered in dust and falling stone, in a hole on my own.

My hands held my head, I screamed out I’m still here, not yet dead, then game another one, how much more of this could I take, or do I now begin to run, in bed I find myself, cold sweat bathed in the rays of a warm sun.

On leave but I don’t want to go back, I’m not a coward, whatever the meaning is of that, I don’t want to but I will, still seeing the faces of those I kill, there are those who depend on me, who I am, I can’t let them see.

On a cold morning tied to a post, a boy not a man, I see his ghost, World war one, a battle not won, too much for such a young man, shot as a cowed before his life had yet begun.

Still little has changed, staffers in comfort see it as a game, not a hole in the grown, not the smell of death all around, not the never ending noise, someone in no man’s land, crying for help, totally ignored.

To close your eyes, see a screaming face and an out stretched hand, mud waste deep in no man’s land, many dead but not all, not able to help, but clearly you hear their call, the constant rain of falling shell, explosive sounds, a living hell.

The mind shuts down, and no one understands, mess tins together bang, you curl up on the ground, to some just a bit of fun, the final straw, and you run and run, no understanding, just an example out of you, cowardice in the face of the enemy, that won’t do.

Before dawn, you will never see the sun again; a blindfold of rag, over your eyes is drawn, against a wall or tied to a pole, boy or man, you will never get old, the disgrace is not yours, though they say it is so, the officer class, just love a show.

PTSD is nothing new, but still today, many more suffer than a few, you leave the war, but the battle doesn’t leave you, that screaming face you see today, fore ever in your dreams, and won’t go away.

No longer shot a dawn, but can’t find the help that you need, to be rid of those faces, it seems death is the only way to succeed, no long in a corner curled up in a ball, no more screaming, no pain at all, no more tomorrows, high on a building, all you need to do is fall.

Derrick W Sole copyright protected 2016.

©Shot at Dawn Poem

YOU TIED MY HANDS, BLIND FOLDED ME.

BOUND ME TIGHT, AS I TREMBLED WITH FRIGHT.

IT WAS THEN THAT I HEARD, A COMFORTING WORD,

FROM THE PADRE, WHO KNELT BY MY SIDE.

HE BID ME FAREWELL ON MY JOURNEY THROUGH HELL.

THE LAST WORD I HEARD WAS AMEN.

YOU DIDN’T HEAR, YOU DIDN’T SEE.

ALL YOU DID WAS PUT BULLET’S IN ME.

The above work of art 

also call “Shot at Dawn” is by fellow

Rifleman Philip Pickford

2017©Memorial At Peninsula Ltd

www.salientart.eu

Shot at Dawn Poem and Painting by Philip Pickford

SHOT AT DAWN Between the years of 1914 and 1920, more than 3,000 British Soldiers were sentenced to death by courts martial for desertion, cowardice, striking an officer, disobedience, falling asleep on duty or casting away arms. Saying that, only 11 per cent of the sentences were carried out.

In total 346 where shot at dawn and 1 hung = 347 including some who committed murder, 306 where pardoned by the Government many many years later. ( yet there are 307 posts at The NMA) ?

Roughly 90% of cases, the sentence was commuted to hard labour or penal servitude.

Medical evidence apparently showing that many were suffring from shell-shock, this was also submitted to the courts, but was not recognized and misinterpreted. Most hearings lasting no more than 20 minutes.

Transcripts made public 75 years on after the events suggest that some of the men were underage. Others appeared to have wandered away from the battlefield in states of extreme distress and confusion, yet they were charged with desertion. When the suppressed documents relating to these courts martial were released, they showed that these men were demonstrably shell-shocked.”

Contrary to popular belief, they were not all denied natural justice….’Rough justice’ it may have been, but justice nevertheless. They were given access to legal representation but not the right of appeal, as the Field Marshal’s decision was absolute. Because ‘Shell- Shock was not recognized back then, most of them were not given proper medical examinations and so their conditions were over-looked.

The function of the threat of executions was to a intimidate and frighten soldiers in the battlefield….Risk the possibility of a bullet in battle or certain death if you don’t do your duty.

The standard soldier in the trenches would be suffering from chronic insomnia and anxiety attacks. He would be wet and cold in wind-chill factors that dragged temperatures as low as minus -18. This alone was enough to drive anyone crazy.

To say that all these men who were shot were bad and deserved their punishment is to ignore all these factors. Most just couldn’t take any more.

By 1930, Parliament had introduced legislation banning the death sentence for the offences for which the 306 were shot. None would be shot today.

Remarkably, most of those shot in the 1914-18 war were volunteer soldiers rather than conscripts and, perhaps unsurprisingly considering what was happening in their homeland, Irish soldiers were shot with proportionately more frequency than those of other regiments.

Among other principles of justice, the presumption of innocence was paid no more than lip service by many British courts martial. Some believe that the British Army was far more likely to shoot a working class man than an officer, and broadly speaking, this was true.

They were finally ‘pardoned’ in the August of 2006 under section 359 of the British Army Act.

In it is shown a list of the ‘original offences’ that soldiers could be tried and executed for :-

359 – Pardons for servicemen executed for disciplinary offences: recognition as victims of First World War

(1)This section applies in relation to any person who was executed for a relevant offence committed during the period beginning on the 4th August 1914 and ending with the 11th November 1918.

(2)Each such person is to be taken to be pardoned under this section in respect of the relevant offence (or relevant offences) for which he was executed.

(3) In this section “relevant offence” means any of the following– (a) an offence under any of the following provisions of the Army Act 1881 (c. 58)– (i) section 4(2) (casting away arms etc); (ii) section 4(7) (cowardice); (iii) section 6(1)(b) (leaving post etc without orders); (iv) section 6(1)(k) (sentinel sleeping etc on post or leaving post); (v) section 7 (mutiny and sedition); (vi) section 8(1) (striking etc superior officer); (vii) section 9(1) (disobedience in defiance of authority); (viii) section 12(1) (desertion or attempt etc to desert); (b)an offence under any of the following provisions of the Indian Army Act 1911 (Indian Act, No 8 of 1911) (i) section 25(b) (casting away arms, cowardice, etc); (ii) section 25(g) (sentry sleeping on post or quitting post); (iii) section 25(i) (quitting guard etc); (iv) section 27 (mutiny, disobedience, etc); (v) section 29 (desertion or attempt to desert).

(4)This section does not (a) affect any conviction or sentence; (b) give rise to any right, entitlement or liability; or (c) affect the prerogative of mercy.

(5) Any reference in this section to a provision of the Army Act 1881 (c. 58) includes a reference to that provision as applied by any enactment, wherever enacted.

The first soldier to be Shot at Dawn was Thomas Highgate

(Information obtained from www.tommy1418.com)

Good books too read are

Blindfolded and Alone

by Cathryn Corns and John Huges Wilson

and also

Shot at Dawn

By Julian Putkowski and Julian Sykes

Below are the posts of the soldiers executed by firing squads in WWI

The posts are in the Nation Memorial Arboretum at Alrewas

 

IMG_9160

1

 J.H Abigail 

8th Bn Norfolk Regiment

IMG_8793

2

Pte Adamson J S

7th Bn Cameron Highlanders

IMG_8794

3

Labourer Ahmed M M

385. Egyptian Labour Corps.

IMG_8795

4

Pte Ainley G

1/4th Bn King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry

IMG_8796

5

Sgt Alexander W

10th Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force Alberta Regiment

IMG_8797

6

Pte Allsop A E

 King’s Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8798

7

Pte Anderson J A

12th Bn King’s (Liverpool) Regiment

IMG_8799

8

Pte Anderson W E

5th Bn Dorsetshire Regiment

IMG_8801

9

Pte Ansted  A T

4th Bn Royal Fusiliers

IMG_8802

10

Pte Archibald J

17th Bn Royal Scots

IMG_8803

11

Lance Bombardier Arnold F S

1st Bde Canadian Field Artillery CEF

IMG_8804

12

L/Sgt Ashton H

11/Cameronians

IMG_8805

13

L/Cpl Atkinson A

1st Bn. West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8806

14

Pte Auger F

14th Bn. Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_8822

15

Pte Baker W

26th Bn. Royal Fusiliers

IMG_8821

16

Pte Ball J

4th Coy. 2nd Bn. Middlesex Regiment

17

Rfn. Barker R L

1st/6th Bn. London Regiment (City of London Rifles)

IMG_8819

18

Pte Barnes J E

7th Bn. Royal Sussex Regiment

IMG_8818

19

Rfn Barratt F M

 Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8817

20

Pte Bateman F

1st/4th Yorks & Lancs Regiment

IMG_8816

21

Pte Bateman J H

2nd Bn. South Staffordshire Regiment

IMG_8815

22

Pte Beaumont E A

2nd Bn Leicestershire Regiment

IMG_8814

23

Sapper Beeby E

212th Company, Royal Engineers

IMG_8813

24

Driver Bell J

57th Bty Royal Field Artillery

IMG_8812

25

Rfn Bellamy W

King’s Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8811

26

Pte Benham W

1st/3rd Bn. Royal Fusiliers

IMG_8810

27

Pte Bennett J

1st Bn. Hampshire Regiment

IMG_8809

28

Pte Black P

1/4th Bn The Black Watch

IMG_8808

29

Pte Bladen F C H

10th Bn Yorks and Lancs Regt

IMG_8807

30

Pte Blakemore D J

8th Bn North Staffordshire Regiment

IMG_8823

31

Pte Bolton E

1st Bn Cheshire Regiment

IMG_8824

32

Pte Botfield A

9th Bn. South Staffordshire Regiment

IMG_8825

33

 Pte Bowerman W

1st Bn. Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regiment

IMG_8826

34

Pte Brennan J

1st/8th King’s Liverpool Regiment

IMG_8827

35

Pte Briggs A

Sherwood Forresters, Notts and Derby Regiment

IMG_8828

36

Pte Briggs J

2nd Bn Border Regiment

IMG_8829

37

Pte Brigham T

1st/10th Bn. Manchester Regiment

38

Pte Britton C

1st/5th Bn. Royal Warwickshire Regiment

39

Pte Broadrick F

1th Bn Royal Warwickshire Regiment

IMG_8832

40

Pte Brown A

Black Watch (Royal Highlanders)

IMG_8833

41

Pte Browne A

2nd Bn. Essex Regiment

IMG_8834

42

Pte Bryant E

10th Bn. Cheshire Regiment

IMG_8835

43

Pte Burden H F

1st Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_8836

44

Pte Burrell W H

2nd Bn Royal Sussex Regiment

IMG_8837

45

Pte Burton R

South Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8838

46

Pte Butcher F C

7th Bn. The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)

IMG_8839

47

Pte Byers J

1st Bn. Royal Scots Fusiliers

IMG_8840

48

Private Byrne S / Served as Monaghan M

1st Bn. Royal Dublin Fusiliers

IMG_8841

49

Pte Cairnie P

1st Bn. Royal Scots Fusiliers

IMG_8842

50

Pte Cameron J

1st/5th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_8843

51

Pte Card E A

 Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8870

52

Pte Carey J

7th Bn. Royal Irish Fusiliers

IMG_8869

53

Pte Carr J G

2nd Bn. Welsh Regiment

IMG_8868

54

Pte Carter H G

73rd Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_8867

55

Pte Carter H

11th Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_8866

56

Pte Cassidy J

1st Bn Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers

IMG_8865

57

Pte Chase H H

2nd Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_8864

58

 Rfn Cheeseman F W

 Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8863

59

Pte Clarke H A

2nd Bn. British West Indies Regiment

IMG_8862

60

Pte Clarke W

2nd Bn. Durham Light Infantry

IMG_8861

61

Pte Collins G E

1st Bn Lincolnshire Regiment

IMG_8860

62

Pte Comte G

22nd Bn Canadian Infantry

IMG_8859

63

Pte Crampton J

9th Bn Yorks & Lancs Regiment

IMG_8855

64

Pte Crimmins H

18th Bn. West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8854

65

Pte Crozier J

9th Bn Royal Irish Rifles

IMG_8853

66

Pte Cummings T

1st Bn Irish Guards

IMG_8852

67

Pte Cunnington S H

2nd Bn Royal Warwickshire Regiment

IMG_8851

68

Pte Cuthbert J

9th Bn Cheshire Regiment

IMG_8850

69

Pte Cutmore G

2nd Bn Blackwatch (Royal Highlanders) 

IMG_8849

70

Pte Dalande H

8th Bn. Seaforth Highlanders

IMG_8848

71

Pte Davis R M

11th Bn Sherwood Foresters

IMG_8847

72

Pte Davis T

1st Bn Royal Munster Fusiliers

IMG_8846

73

Pte Degesse A C

22nd Bn Canadian Infantry

IMG_8845

74

Pte De Largey E

1st/8th Bn Royal Scots

IMG_8844

75

Pte De  Lisle L

22nd Bn. Canadian Infantry

IMG_8871

76

Pte Dennis J J

1st Bn Northamptonshire Regiment

IMG_8872

77

Pte Depper C

1st/4th Bn Royal Berkshire Regiment

IMG_8873

78

Pte Docherty J

9th Bn Black Watch

IMG_8874

79

Pte Docherty T

2nd Bn. King’s Own Scottish Borderers

IMG_8875

80

Rfn Donovan T

 Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8876

81

Private Duncan / Served as  Sinclair J

1st Bn. Cameron Highlanders

IMG_8877

82

Pte Dossett W

1st/4th Bn York and Lancaster Regiment

IMG_8878

83

Pte Downey P J

6th Bn Leinster Regiment 

IMG_8879

84

Pte Downing T

6th Bn South Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8880

85

Sub Lt Dyett E L A (RNVR)

Nelson Bn Royal Naval Division

IMG_8881

86

Pte Earl W J

1st/7th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_8882

87

Pte Earp A G

1/5th Bn Royal Warwickshire Regiment

IMG_8883

88

Pte Elford L D

7th/8th Bn King’s Own Scottish Borderers

IMG_8884

89

Pte Evans A

1st Bn Royal Scots Fusiliers

IMG_8885

90

Pte Eveleigh A E

1st Bn The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)

IMG_8886

91

Pte Everill G

1st Bn North Staffordshire Regiment

IMG_8887

92

Pte Fairburn E

18th Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_8888

93

Pte Farr H T

1st Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8889

94

Pte Fatoma A

West Africa Regiment

IMG_8890

95

Pte Fellows E

3rd Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_8891

96

Pte Ferguson J

1st Bn. Royal Scots Fusiliers att Royal Engineers

IMG_8892

97

Pte Flynn H

18th Bn Highland Light Infantry

IMG_8893

98

Pte Foulkes T

1st/10th Bn Manchester Regiment

IMG_8894

99

Private Fowles S McD

44th Bn. Canadian Expeditionary Force,

(New Brunswick Regiment)

IMG_8895

100

Pte Fox J

2nd Bn. Highland Light Infantry

IMG_8896

101

L/Cpl Fox J S V

1st Bn Wiltshire Regiment

IMG_8897

102

Pte Frafra A

Gold Coast Regiment, German East Africa

IMG_8898

103

Pte Fraser E

2nd Bn Royal Scots

IMG_8899

104

Pte Fryer J W

12th Bn Queen’s (Royal West Surrey) Regiment

IMG_8931

105

Pte Gawler R

1st Bn. The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)

IMG_8930

106

Pte Gibson D

C” Coy 12th Bn Royal Scots

IMG_8929

107

Pte Giles P

14th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_8928

108

Sgt Gleadow G E

1st Bn. West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8927

109

L/Cpl Goggins P

19th Bn. Durham Light Infantry

IMG_8926

110

Pte Gore F C

7th Bn The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)

IMG_8925

111

Pte Graham J

2nd Bn Royal Munster Fusiliers

IMG_8924

112

Pte Haddock A J

12th Bn Yorks & Lancs Regiment

IMG_8923

113

Dvr Hamilton T G

72nd Battery, 38th Brigade, Royal Field Artillery

IMG_8922

114

Pte Hamilton /  Served as Blanchard A

14th Bn Durham Light Infantry

IMG_8921

115

Pte Hanna G

1st Bn Royal Irish Fusiliers

IMG_8920

116

Rfn Harding F

Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8919

117

Private Harris E W J

10th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_8918

118

Pte Harris L

10th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment (Prince of Wales’s Own)

IMG_8917

119

Pte Harris T

1st Bn Queen’s Own (Royal West Kent Regiment)

IMG_8916

120

   A Harris / Served as Bevistein A H

11th Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_8915

121

Pte Hart B A

1st/4th Bn Suffolk Regiment

IMG_8914

122

Pte Hartells H H

3rd Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_8913

123

Dvr Hasemore J W

Royal Field Artillery, “A” Bty. 180th Brigade

IMG_8912

124

Pte Hawkins T

7th Bn The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment)

IMG_8911

125

L/Cpl Hawthorne F

1st/5th Bn South Staffordshire Regiment

IMG_8910

126

Pte Hendricks A

2nd Bn Leinster Regiment

IMG_8909

127

Pte Higgins J

1st/9th Bn Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders

IMG_8908

128

Pte Higgins J M

1st Bn Canadian Infantry

IMG_8907

129

Pte Highgate T J

1st Bn Royal West Kent Regiment

IMG_8906

130

Pte Hodgetts O W

1st Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_8905

131

L/Cpl Holland J

10th Bn Cheshire Regiment

IMG_8904

132

Pte Holmes A

8th Bn King’s Own (Royal Lancaster Regiment)

IMG_8903

133

Pte Holt E

19th Bn Manchester Regiment

 IMG_8902

134

Pte Hope R

a.k.a. Heppel/Hepple) (Served as Hepple,)

“D” Coy 1st Bn Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers

IMG_8901

135

Pte Hope T

2nd Bn Leinster Regiment

IMG_8900

136

Pte Hopkins T

1st/8th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_8932

137

Pte Horler E

12th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8933

138

Pte Hughes F

2nd Bn Canterbury Regiment New Zealand Expeditionary Force

IMG_8934

139

L/Cpl Hughes G E

7th Bn King’s Own (Royal Lancaster) Regiment

IMG_8935

140

Pte Hughes J H

1st/5th Bn Yorks and Lancs Regiment

IMG_8936

141

Pte Hunt W G

18th Bn Manchester Regiment

IMG_8937

142

Pte Hunter G

2nd Bn Durham Light Infantry

IMG_8938

143

Pte Hunter W

1st Bn Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8939

144

Rfn Hyde J J

10th Bn Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_8940

145

Pte Ingham A

18th Bn Manchester Regiment

IMG_8941

146

Rifleman Irish/ a.k.a. Lee, Arthur James

2nd Bn Rifle Brigade

 

IMG_8942

147

L/Cpl Irvine W J

1st Bn King’s Own (Royal Lancaster) Regiment

IMG_8943

148

Cpl Ives F

3rd Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_8944

149

Pte Jackson E

24th Bn Royal Fusiliers

IMG_8945

150

Pte Jeffries A L

6th Bn Somerset Light Infantry

IMG_8946

151

Pte Jennings J

2nd Bn South Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8947

152

Pte Johnson F/  Served as Charlton J

2nd Bn Border Regiment

IMG_8948

153

Pte Jones J T

1st Bn Northamptonshire Regiment

IMG_8949

154

Pte Jones R M

 6th Bn South Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8950

155

Pte Jones W

9th Bn Royal Welsh Fusiliers

IMG_8951

156

Gunner Jones / served as Fox W

43rd Bty Royal Field Artillery

IMG_8952

157

Pte Kerr H H

7th Bn Canadian Infantry

IMG_8953

158

Pte Kershaw J

1st Bn King’s Own (Royal Lancaster) Regiment

IMG_8954

159

Pte King J

1st Bn Canterbury Regiment (New Zealand Expeditionary Force)

IMG_8955

160

Pte Kirk E

1st Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8956

161

Pte Kirman C H

7th Bn Lincolnshire Regiment

IMG_8957

162

Pte Knight H J

1st Bn The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment)

IMG_8958

163

Pte La Lancette J

22nd Bn Canadian Infantry

IMG_8959

164

Pte La Liberte C

3rd Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_8960

165

Dvr Lamb A

21st Battery 2nd Brigade Royal Field Artillery

IMG_8961

166

Cpl Latham G W

2nd Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_8962

167

Pte Lawrence E A

2nd Bn Devonshire Regiment

IMG_8963

168

Cpl Lewis C

12th Bn Highland Light Infantry

IMG_8964

169

Pte Lewis G

2nd Bn South Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8965

170

Pte Lewis J

5th Bn. Dorset Regiment

IMG_8966

171

Pte Ling W N

2nd Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_8967

172

Pte Loader F

1st/22nd Bn London Regiment

173

Pte Lodge H E J

19th Bn Canadian Infantry

IMG_9008

174

Pte Longshaw A

18th Bn Manchester Regiment

IMG_9007

175

Pte Lawton G H

17th (S) Bn Sherwood Foresters (Welbeck Rangers)

IMG_9006

176

Pte MacDonald H

12th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_9005

177

L/Cpl MacDonald J

12th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_9004

178

Pte Mackness E

1st Bn Cameronians

IMG_9003

179

Sapper Malyon F

12th Field Company Royal Engineers attached Royal Field Artillery

IMG_9002

180

L/Cpl Mamprusi A

Gold Coast

IMG_9001

181

Pte Martin H

9th Bn Essex Regiment

IMG_9000

182

Pte Mayers J

1st/13th Kensington Bn Royal Fusiliers

IMG_8999

183

Rfn McBride S

2nd Bn Royal Irish Rifles

IMG_8998

184

Private McClair H/  Served as Rowland

2nd Bn. Border Regiment

IMG_8997

185

Pte McColl C F

1st/4th Bn East Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_8996

186

Rfn McCracken J E

15th Bn Royal Irish Rifles

IMG_8995

187

Pte McCubbin B

17th Bn Sherwood Foresters (Notts & Derby Regiment)

IMG_8994

188

Pte McFarlane  J

4th Bn King’s Liverpool Regiment

IMG_8993

189

Pte McGeehan B

1/8th Bn King’s Liverpool Regiment

IMG_8992

190

Pte McQuade J

18th Bn. Highland Light Infantry

IMG_8991

191

Pte Michael J S

10th Bn Cameronians

IMG_8990

192

Pte Milburn J B

24th/27th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_8989

193

Pte Milligan C M

10th Bn Cameronians (Scottish Rifles)

IMG_8988

194

Pte Mills G

2nd Bn. Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry

IMG_8987

195

Pte Mitchell A H

1st/6th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_8986

196

Pte Mitchell L

8th Bn Yorks & Lancs Regiment

IMG_8985

197

Pte Moles T L

54th Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_8984

198

Pte Molyneaux J

1st Bn. Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

IMG_8983

199

L/Cpl Moon W A

11th Bn Cheshire Regiment

IMG_8982

200

Pte Morris H

6th Bn British West Indies Regiment

IMG_8981

201

Dvr Mullany J

72nd Battery 38th Brigade Royal Field Artillery

IMG_8980

202

Pte Murphy H T

Inniskillings

IMG_8979

203

Pte Murphy A

9th Bn Cameronians (Scottish Rifles)

IMG_8978

204

Pte Murphy P

47th Bn. Machine Gun Corps

IMG_8977

205

Rfn Murphy W

1st/5th Bn Royal Scots

IMG_8976

206

Pte Murray R

81st Brigade Royal Field Artillery

IMG_8975

207

Pte Neave W

10th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment (Prince of Wales’s Own)

IMG_8974

208

Pte Nelson W B

14th Bn Durham Light Infantry

IMG_8973

209

Pte Nicholson C B

8th Yorkshire and Lancaster Regiment

IMG_8972

210

Pte Nisbet J

1st Bn Leicestershire Regiment

IMG_8971

211

Pte O’Connell B

1st Bn Irish Guards

IMG_8970

212

Pte O’Neill F

1st Bn. Sherwood Foresters

IMG_8969

213

Pte O’Neill A V

1st Bn South Wales Borderers 

IMG_9009

214

Pte Palmer H

1st/5th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_9010

215

Rfn Parker A E

7th Bn Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_9011

216

Pte Parry A

2nd Bn West Yorkshire Regiment (Prince of Wales’s Own)

IMG_9012

217

Pte Pattison R G

7th Bn East Surrey Regiment

IMG_9013

218

Private Penn (A or M)

1st Bn. Royal Welch Fusiliers

IMG_9014

219

Pte Perry E

22nd Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_9015

220

Pte Phillips L R

6th Bn Somerset Light Infantry

IMG_9016

 

221

Pte Phillips W T H

1st Bn Coldstream Guards

IMG_9017

222

Pte Pitts A H

2nd Bn Royal Warwickshire Regiment

IMG_9018

223

2nd Lt Poole E S

11th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_9019

224

Pte Poole H

7th Bn Yorkshire Regiment (Green Howards)

IMG_9020

225

Cpl Povey G H

1st Bn Cheshire Regiment

IMG_9021

226

Pte Randle W H

10th Bn Sherwood Foresters

IMG_9022

227

Cpl Reid J

6th Bn Cameron Highlanders

IMG_9023

228

Pte Reid I

2nd Bn Scots Guards

IMG_9024

229

Pte Reynolds E J

3rd Bn Canadian Infantry CEF

IMG_9025

230

Pte Richmond M R

1st/6th Bn Gordon Highlanders

IMG_9026

231

Pte Rickman A

1st Bn Royal Dublin Fusiliers

IMG_9027

232

Pte Rigby T H B

10th Bn South Wales Borderers

IMG_9028

233

Pte Roberts J W

2nd Bn Canadian Mounted Rifles

IMG_9029

234

Pte Roberts W T

4th Bn. Royal Fusiliers

IMG_9030

235

Sgt Robins J

5th Bn Wiltshire Regiment 

IMG_9031

236

Pte Robinson A H

9th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_9032

237

Pte Robinson J

3rd Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_9033

238

Pte Robinson W

1st Bn Sherwood Foresters (Notts and Derby Regiment)

IMG_9034

239

Pte Roe G E

2nd Bn King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry

IMG_9035

240

Pte Rogers J

2nd Bn South Lancashire Regiment

IMG_9036

241

Drummer Rose F

2nd Bn Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_9037

242

Pte Sabongida S

3rd Bn Nigerian Regiment WAFF 

IMG_9038

243

Pte Salter H

6th Bn East Lancashire regiment

IMG_9039

244

L/Cpl Sands P

1st Bn Royal Irish Rifles

IMG_9040

245

Pte Scholes W

2nd Bn South Wales Borderers

IMG_9041

246

Pte Scotton W

4th Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_9042

247

Pte Seymour J

2nd Bn Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers

IMG_9043

248

Pte Sheffield F

2nd Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_9044

249

Pte Simmonds W H

23rd Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_9045

250

Pte Sims R W

2nd Bn Royal Scots

IMG_9046

251

Pte Siniski D

52nd Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_9047

252

Pte Skilton C W F

22nd Bn Royal Fusiliers

IMG_9048

253

Pte Slade F W

2/6th Bn London Regiment

IMG_9049

254

Pte Sloane J

1st /4th King’s Own (Royal Lancaster) Regiment

IMG_9050

255

Pte Smith J C

King’s (Liverpool Regiment)

IMG_9051

256

Rfn Smith John

1st Bn Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

IMG_9052

257

Pte Smith William

2nd Bn Rifle Brigade

IMG_9053

258

Pte Smith William

3rd/5th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_9103

259

Pte Smythe A

1st Bn Irish Guards

IMG_9102

260

Dvr Spencer J

65th Battery 8th Brigade Royal Field Artillery

IMG_9101

261

Pte Spencer V M

1st Bn (Otago) New Zealand Regiment

IMG_9100

262

Pte Spry W T

2nd Bn Royal Fusiliers

IMG_9099

263

Pte Stead F

2nd Bn Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment)

IMG_9098

264

Pte Steadman J B

Machine Gun Corps

IMG_9097

265

Pte Stevenson D

13th Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_9096

266

Pte Stevenson R

1/4th Bn Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

IMG_9095

267

Pte Stewart S

2nd Bn Royal Scots Fusiliers

IMG_9094

268

L/Sgt Stones J W

19th Bn Durham Light Infantry

IMG_9093

269

Pte Swain J

5th Bn Royal Berkshire Regiment

IMG_9092

270

Dvr Swaine J W

54th Battery 39th Brigade Royal Field Artillery

IMG_9091

271

Trooper Sweeney J J

1st Bn Otago Regiment (New Zealand Expeditionary Force)

IMG_9090

272

Pte Tanner E

1st Bn Wiltshire Regiment

IMG_9089

273

Pte Taylor John

15th Bn Lancashire Fusiliers

IMG_9088

274

Pte Taylor John

2nd Bn South Staffordshire Regiment

IMG_9087

275

Pte Taysum N H

9th Bn The Black Watch (Royal Highlanders)

IMG_9086

276

Rfn Templeton J

15th Bn Royal Irish Rifles

IMG_9085

277

Pte Thomas J

2nd Bn Welsh Regiment

IMG_9084

278

Pte Thompson A D

3rd Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_9083

279

Pte Thompson W L

6th Bn The Buffs (East Kent Regiment)

IMG_9082

280

Pte Tite R T

13th Bn Royal Sussex Regiment

IMG_9081

281

Pte Tongue J

1st Bn King’s (Liverpool Regiment)

IMG_9080

282

Pte Troughton A

1st Bn Royal Welch Fusiliers

IMG_9079

283

Pte Turner F

6th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_9078

284

Pte Turpie W J

2nd Bn East Surrey Regiment

IMG_9077

285

Sgt Wall J T

3rd Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_9076

286

L/Sgt Walton W

2nd Bn King’s Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_9075

287

Pte Ward G

1st Bn Royal Berkshire Regiment

IMG_9074

288

Pte Ward T

8th/10th Bn Gordon Highlanders

IMG_9073

289

Pte Watkins G

13th Bn Welsh Regiment

IMG_9072

290

Pte Watts T W

7th Bn East Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_9071

291

Pte Watts W

1st Bn Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

IMG_9070

292

Pte Webb H J

2nd Bn King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry

IMG_9069

293

Pte Welsh C

8th Bn Canadian Infantry

 

294

Pte Westwood A H

8th Bn East Surrey Regiment

IMG_9067

295

Pte Wild A

18th Bn West Yorkshire Regiment

IMG_9066

296

Pte Williams H

1/9th Bn Royal Fusiliers (Queen Victoria’s Rifles)

297

Pte Wilson J H

4th Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_9064

298

Cpl Wilton J

15th Bn Sherwood Foresters (Notts and Derby Regiment)

IMG_9063

299

Pte Wishard J

7th Bn Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers

IMG_9062

300

Rfn Woodhouse J

12th Bn Kings Royal Rifle Corps

IMG_9061

301

Pte Worsley E

2nd Bn Middlesex Regiment

IMG_9060

302

Pte Wright F

1st Bn Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment)

IMG_9059

303

Pte Wycherley W

2nd Bn Manchester Regiment

IMG_9058

304

Rfn Yeoman W

1st/12th Bn London Regiment (The Rangers)

IMG_9057

305

Pte Young E

25th Bn Canadian Expeditionary Force

IMG_9056

306

Pte Young R

11th Bn Worcestershire Regiment

IMG_9055

307

Lcpl  J R Short

24th Bn Northumberland Fusiliers

IMG_9054

 ( Post Pictures by Steve Barrett from the NMA )

Combat Stress 

World War I The soldiers returning home from World War I suffered greatly from the horrors they had witnessed. Many returning veterans suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, called shell shock at the time.

Main article: Combat stress reaction In 1915 The British Army in France was instructed that: “Shell-shock and shell concussion cases should have the letter ‘W’ prefixed to the report of the casualty, if it were due to the enemy; in that case the patient would be entitled to rank as ‘wounded’ and to wear on his arm a ‘wound stripe’. If, however, the man’s breakdown did not follow a shell explosion, it was not thought to be ‘due to the enemy’, and he was to [be] labelled ‘Shell-shock’ or ‘S’ (for sickness) and was not entitled to a wound stripe or a pension. ” In the August of 1916 Charles Myers was made Consulting Psychologist to the Army. He hammered home the notion that it was necessary to create special centres near the line using treatment based on: Promptness of action. Suitable environment. Psychotherapeutic measures. He also used hypnosis with limited success. In the December of 1916 Gordon Holmes was put in charge of the northern, and more important, part of the western front. He had much more of the tough attitudes of the Army and suited the prevailing military mindset and so his view prevailed. By the June of 1917 all British cases of “Shell-shock” were evacuated to a nearby neurological centre and were labelled as NYDN–Not Yet Diagnosed Nervous”. “But, because of the Adjutant-General’s distrust of doctors, no patient could receive that specialist attention until Form AF 3436 had been sent off to the man’s unit and filled in by his commanding officer.” This created significant delays but demonstrated that between 4 -10% of Shell-shock W cases were “commotional” (due to physical causes) and the rest were “emotional”. This killed off shell-shock as a valid disease and it was abolished in September 1918. During the war, 306 British soldiers were executed for cowardice, many of them victims of shell shock On the 7th of  November 2006 the government of the United Kingdom gave them all a posthumous conditional pardon.

This transcript sourced from Wikipedia.

10555107_10203719359041937_1247254293_n_____________________________

The Grave of Private Ingham

Picture from Facebook and Google and Paul Kneller.

Special thanks also go to

Monica Kershaw and Janet Tattershall

and an unknown male from Nuneaton

who all helped with the pictures taken at the NMA  Alrewas.

Sir John Moore

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May 092014
 

Sir John Moore

Lieutenant-General Sir John Moore, KB, (13th of November 1761 – 16th of January 1809 ) was a British soldier and General, also known as Moore of Corunna. He is best known for his military trai220px-JohnMooreGlasgowning reforms and for his death at the Battle of Corunna, in which he defeated a French army under Marshal Soult during the Peninsular War.

Early Years

He was born in Glasgow, the son of John Moore, a doctor and writer, and the older brother of Vice Admiral Sir Graham Moore. He attended Glasgow High School, but at the age of eleven joined his father and Douglas, the young 16-year-old 8th Duke of Hamilton, (1756–1799), his father’s pupil, on a grand tour of France, Italy and Germany. This included a two-year stay in Geneva, where Moore’s education continued.

Military and political career 1776 – 90

He joined the British Army in 1776 as an ensign in the 51st Regiment of Foot then based in Minorca. He first saw action in 1778 during the American War of Independence as a lieutenant in the 82nd Regiment of Foot, which was raised in Lanarkshire for service in North America by 8th Duke of Hamilton. From 1779-1781 he was garrisoned at Halifax, Nova Scotia. In 1779, he distinguished himself in action during the Penobscot Expedition in present-day Maine, when a small British detachment held off a much larger rebel American force until reinforcements arrived.

After the war, in 1783, he returned to Britain and in 1784 was elected to Parliament as the Member for Lanark Burghs, a seat he held until 1790.

In 1787, he was made Major and joined the 60th briefly before returning to the 51st. In 1791 his unit was assigned to the Mediterranean and he was involved in campaigning in Corsica and was wounded at Calvi. He was given a Colonelcy and became Adjutant-General to Sir Charles Stuart. Friction between Moore and the new British viceroy of Corsica led to his recall and posting to the West Indies under Sir Ralph Abercromby.

Moore in Ireland 1798

In 1798, he was made Major-General and served in the suppression of the republican rebellion raging in Ireland. His personal intervention was credited with turning the tide at the battle of Foulksmills on the 20th of June and he regained control of Wexford town before the ruthless General Lake, thereby possibly preventing its sacking. Although the rebellion was crushed with great brutality, Moore stood out from most other commanders for his humanity and refusal to perpetrate atrocities.

Moore and military training

In 1799, he commanded a brigade in the expedition to Egmont-op-Zee, where the British force was badly defeated and he himself was seriously injured. He recovered to lead the 52nd regiment during the British campaign in Egypt against the French, having become colonel of that regiment in 1801 on the death of General Cyrus Trapaud.

He returned to the UK in 1803 to command a brigade at Shorncliffe Army Camp near Folkestone, where he established the innovative training regime that produced Britain’s first permanent light infantry regiments. He had a reputation as an exceptionally humane leader and trainer of men; it is said that when new buildings were being constructed at the camp and the architect asked him where the paths should go, he told him to wait some months and see where the men walked, then put the paths there. Sir John Moore Barracks at Winchester, home of the Army Training Regiment, is called after him. Sir Arthur Bryant wrote, “Moore’s contribution to the British Army was not only that matchless Light Infantry who have ever since enshrined his training, but also the belief that the perfect soldier can only be made by evoking all that is finest in man – physical, mental and spiritual”.

War with France 1803 – 1808

When it became clear that Napoleon was planning an invasion of Britain, Moore was put in charge of the defence of the coast from Dover to Dungeness. It was on his initiative that the Martello Towers were constructed (complementing the already constructed Shorncliffe Redoubt), following a pattern he had been impressed with in Corsica, where the prototype tower, at Mortella Point, had offered a stout resistance to British land and sea forces. He also initiated the cutting of the Royal Military Canal in Kent and Sussex, and recruited about 340,000 volunteers to a militia that would have defended the lines of the South Downs if an invading force had broken through the regular army defences. In 1804 Moore was knighted and promoted to Lieutenant-General. In 1806 he returned to active duty in the Mediterranean and then in 1808 in the Baltic to assist the Swedish. Disagreements with Gustavus IV led to his being soon sent home where he was ordered to Portugal.

Spanish War 1808 – 09

Moore took command of the British forces in the Iberian peninsula following the recall of Harry Burrard of Lymington (1st of June 1755 – 17th of October 1813), Hew Dalrymple (1750–1830), Governor of Gibraltar from November 1806 to August 1808, and Arthur Wellesley (1769–1852), later Duke of Wellington, who all faced an inquiry over the Convention of Cintra on the French troops’ evacuation from Portugal. When Napoleon arrived in Spain with 200,000 men, Moore drew the French northwards while retreating to his embarkation ports of A Coruña and Vigo.

Moore established a defensive position on hills outside the town, while being guarded by the 15th Hussars, and was fatally wounded at the Battle of Corunna, being “struck in his left breast and shoulder by a cannon shot, which broke his ribs, his arm, lacerated his shoulder and the whole of his left side and lungs”. He remained conscious, and composed, throughout the several hours of his dying, amongst his final words being “Remember me to your sister, Stanhope”, referring to his friend, the intrepid Near East Asia traveler Lady Hester Stanhope. (Her niece suspected they might have considered marrying.

Like Nelson he was mortally wounded in battle, and also like the admiral lived long enough to be assured that he had gained a victory. He said to his old friend Colonel Anderson “You know I always wished to die this way”. His last words were “I hope the people of England will be satisfied! I hope my country will do me justice!” He was buried wrapped in a military cloak in the ramparts of the town; the funeral is celebrated in a well known poem by Charles Wolfe (1791–1823), “The Burial of Sir John Moore after Corunna”, which begins:

Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note,
As his corse to the rampart we hurried;
Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot
O’er the grave where our hero we buried.
and ends, six verses later, with:
Slowly and sadly we laid him down,
From the field of his fame fresh and gory;
We carved not a line, and we raised not a stone,
But we left him alone with his glory.

When the French took the town, a monument was built over his grave by the orders of Marshal Soult. The monument was rebuilt and made more permanent in 1811. In his native Glasgow he is commemorated by a statue in George Square, and in England by a monument in St Paul’s Cathedral. Houses are named for him at The High School of Glasgow and HM Queen Victoria School, Dunblane.

Sourced from Wikipedia

The Rifles

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Apr 152014
 

The Rifles (RIFLES)

images (5)The Rifles (RIFLES) is an infantry regiment the British Army. Formed in 2007, it consists of five regular and two territorial battalions, plus a number of companies in other TA battalions, Each battalion of the Rifles was formerly an individual battalion of one of the two large regiments of the Light Division [with the exception of the 1st Battalion, which is an amalgamation of two individual regiments]. Since formation the regiment has been involved in combat operations, first in the later stages of the Iraq War and currently in the War in Afghanistan.

History

The Rifles was created as a result of the Future Army Structure. Under the original announcement, the Light Division would have remained essentially unchanged, with the exception of the Light Infantry gaining a new battalion through the amalgamation of two other regiments, and both gaining a TA battalion. However, on the 24th November 2005, the Ministry of Defence announced that the four regiments would amalgamate into a single five-battalion regiment. The Rifles was formed on the 1st of February 2007 by the amalgamation of the four Light Infantry and Rifle Regiments of the Light Division:

The Devonshire and Dorset Light Infantry
The Light Infantry
The Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry
The Royal Green Jackets
The two existing battalions each of the Light Infantry and the Royal Green Jackets were renamed, while the single battalions of the DDLI and the RGBWLI were merged into one battalion. This brought the whole of the Light Division under a single cap badge.

Active 1st of February 2007 – Country United Kingdom
Branch-  Army

Type – Rifles

Role

1st Battalion—Light Infantry
2nd Battalion—Light Infantry
3rd Battalion—Light Infantry
4th Battalion—Mechanised Infantry
5th Battalion—Armoured Infantry
6th Battalion—TA Reserve
7th Battalion—TA Reserve
Size Seven- battalions
Garrison/HQ RHQ—Winchester
1st Battalion—Beachley
2nd Battalion—Ballykinler
3rd Battalion—Edinburgh
4th Battalion— Bulford
5th Battalion—Paderborn, Germany
6th Battalion—Exeter
7th Battalion—Reading
Motto “Celer et Audax” [Latin]
“Swift and Bold”
March Quick: Mechanised Infantry
Double Past: Keel Row/Road to the Isles
Slow: Old Salamanca
Commanders
Colonel in Chief HRH The Duke of Edinburgh
Colonel Commandant General Sir Nicholas Parker KCB CBE

Arm Badge – Croix de Guerre
From Devonshire and Dorset Light Infantry
Abbreviation – RIFLES

As a rifle regiment, a private soldier in The Rifles is known as a Rifleman and Serjeant is spelt in the archaic fashion; the regiment wears a Rifle green beret. A number of golden threads have been brought into the new regiment from each of its founder regiments:

Croix de Guerre – the French Croix de Guerre ribbon awarded to the Devonshire Regiment in World War I, and subsequently worn by the Devonshire and Dorset Light Infantry, and also awarded to the King’s Shropshire Light Infantry in 1918, is worn on both sleeves of No. 1 and No. 2 dress.

Back Badge – the badge worn on the back of headdress reads Egypt. This was awarded as an honour to the 28th Foot and subsequently worn by the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry. It is worn on the forage cap and side hat; and on the shako of the regimental band and bugles.

Bugle Horn – the bugle horn badge of the Light Infantry, now surmounted by St. Edward’s Crown, is the regiment’s cap badge.
Maltese Cross – the Maltese Cross of the Royal Green Jackets is worn as a buckle on the cross belt, and will contain the regiment’s representative battle honours; currently one space is kept free for future honours. In accordance with the tradition of rifle regiments, the regiment does not carry colours.

Black Buttons – the traditional black buttons of a rifle regiment are worn on all forms of dress with the exception of combat dress.
In addition, the new regiment’s “Double Past” march (the music used when marching past at the double) is an amalgam of the Light Infantry’s (Keel Row) and the Royal Green Jackets’ (Road to the Isles). In addition to the uniform distinctions the Rifles march at a faster pace than the rest of the infantry, 140 paces per minute rather than 120.(RGJ 160 ppm DLI 140 ppm).

Organisation

The regiment has 5 regular and 2 Territorial Army battalions, each configured for a specific infantry role:
1st Battalion, an amalgamation of the 1st Battalion, Devonshire and Dorset Light Infantry and the 1st Battalion, Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Light Infantry. Configured in the light role the Battalion was attached to 3 Commando Brigade as a fourth manoeuvre unit alongside three Commandos of Royal Marines. Personnel are based at Beachley Barracks, Chepstow. Under Army 2020, it has moved from 3 Commando Brigade to the Army’s 160th Brigade.

2nd Battalion, a redesignation of the 1st Battalion, Royal Green Jackets and was configured in the light role as part of 19 Light Brigade. Personnel are based at Abercorn Barracks, Ballykinler. In the future, it will fall under 38th Brigade.

3rd Battalion, a redesignation of the 2nd Battalion, The Light Infantry and configured in the light role as part of 52nd Infantry Brigade. Personnel are based at Redford Barracks, Edinburgh. Under Army 2020, it will be mounted on Foxhound/Bulldog vehicles and be part of the Adaptable Force under 51st Infantry Brigade.

4th Battalion, a redesignation of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Green Jackets and configured in the mechanised role as part of 1 Mechanised Brigade. Personnel are based at Kiwi Barracks, Bulford. Under the Army 2020, concept, this battalion will be mounted on Mastiff vehicles.
5th Battalion – redesignation of the 1st Battalion, The Light Infantry and configured in the armoured role as part of 20th Armoured Brigade. Personnel are based at Alanbrooke Barracks, Paderborn, Germany. It will remain as a Warrior battalion under Army 2020.
6th (V) Battalion – redesignation of the Rifle Volunteers with sub-units at Gloucester, Taunton, Dorchester, Truro and Exeter. Under Army 2020, it will be under 160th Brigade and paired with 1 RIFLES.

7th (V) Battalion – redesignation of the Royal Rifle Volunteers, minus the Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment company, plus the Royal Green Jacket companies of the London Regiment (the descendants of the 4th (V) Battalion the Royal Green Jackets). The Battalion has sub-units at Abingdon, Reading (Brock Barracks), Milton Keynes, Mayfair, West Ham, High Wycombe, Swindon, Windsor and Aylesbury. Under Army 2020, it will be under 38th Brigade and paired with 2 RIFLES.

In addition to the seven battalions above, a further two companies are also cap badged as The Rifles but are attached to other TA infantry Battalions:
D (RIFLES) Company, 5th (V) Battalion Royal Regiment of Fusiliers (includes Y (RIFLES) Platoon), a redesignation of C (Light Infantry) Company, Tyne-Tees Regiment and Minden (Light Infantry) Company, East and West Riding Regiment. Designated to reflect the historic relationship with Durham, and Yorkshire, the Company has a presence at Bishop Auckland, Consett, Sunderland, Washington, Doncaster and Pontefract.

E (RIFLES) Company, 4th (V) Battalion, Mercian Regiment, a redesignation of E (Light Infantry) Company, West Midlands Regiment, based at Shrewsbury.
Approximately one third of all cadets now wear The Rifles cap badge. There is one Combined Cadet Force unit that still carries the RGJ cap badge and that is Pangbourne College, Berkshire.

HRH The Duke of Edinburgh (ex-Colonel-in-Chief, RGBWLI) is the Colonel-in-Chief of the Regiment whilst each battalion has its own Royal Colonel:

1st Battalion, The Rifles – HRH The Duke of Kent (ex-Colonel-in-Chief, DDLI)
2nd Battalion, The Rifles – HRH The Earl of Wessex
3rd Battalion, The Rifles – HRH Princess Alexandra, The Hon Lady Ogilvy (ex-Colonel-in-Chief, LI)
4th Battalion, The Rifles – HRH The Duchess of Cornwall
5th Battalion, The Rifles – HRH The Countess of Wessex
6th (V) Battalion, The Rifles – HRH The Duke of Gloucester
7th (V) Battalion, The Rifles – HRH The Duchess of Gloucester

The Band and Bugles

The Rifles maintains a single regular regimental band, the Band and Bugles of The Rifles. This was formed by renaming the Band and Bugles of the Light Division, which in itself was an amalgamation of four separate bands:

The Corunna Band of the Light Infantry
The Salamanca Band of the Light Infantry
The Peninsula Band of the Royal Green Jackets
The Normandy Band of the Royal Green Jackets

In addition, the two TA Battalions maintain their own bands:

The Salamanca Band of the Rifles – 6th Battalion (formerly the Band of the Rifle Volunteers)
The Waterloo Band of the Rifles – 7th Battalion (formerly the Band of the Royal Rifle Volunteers)

There are also a number of Cadet Force Bands including The Silver Bugles Band of the Somerset Cadet Battalion (The Rifles) Army Cadet Force, The Corunna Band & Bugles of Oxfordshire (The Rifles) Army Cadet Force and The Borneo band of Durham Army Cadet Force, as well as the Peninsula Band and Bugles of the Cornwall Army Cadet Force Battalion (The Rifles) and the Wiltshire Army Cadet Force trowbridge Band and Bugles. Robin Hood Rifles Corps of Drums of the Nottinghamshire Army Cadet Force.
More recently E (The Rifles) Company (Yorkshire N&W) ACF have formed a Bugle & Drum section – Minden Bugles & Drums. Bands also exist in Combined Cadet Forces including the Band and Bugles of The Thomas Hardye School, and The Band and Drums of Adams’ Grammar School CCF. For a number of years from just after the Second World war until the early 80’s Kings College, Taunton in Somerset had a Combined Cadet Force Drum and Bugle Corps with the CCF associated with the Somerset Light Infantry.

In the period 1968-1970, the Drum & Bugle Corps had a particularly active period beating retreat in places such as Honiton Barracks (then home of one of the Light Infantry Battalions), Ottery St Mary, Sidmouth and in Taunton itself, where for two years it was given permission to form up and then marched from Kings Taunton to the St Mary Magdalene Church in the town centre to participate in the Annual Remembrance Day services where it was one of the bands that led the parade. The Drum & Bugle Corps consisted of 12 side drummers, two tenor drums, a bass drum, a cymbals player and 12 buglers.

Battle honours

The following battle honours are a representation of the total honours awarded to the regiments which formed The Rifles. These are inscribed on the regiment’s belt badge:

Gibraltar, Copenhagen, Plassey, Dettingen, Minden, Quebec, Martinique, Marabout, Peninsula, Waterloo, Afghanistan, Jellalabad, Ferozeshah, Delhi, Lucknow, New Zealand, Pekin, South Africa, Inkerman
Great War: Nonne Boschen, Ypres, Somme, Vittorio Veneto, Megiddo
Second World War: Calais, First Battle of El Alamein, Second Battle of El Alamein, Kohima, Pegasus Bridge, Normandy, Italy 1943–45, Anzio
Imjin, Korea, Iraq 2003

Linage to The Rifles

1278370_10151938719669187_2023736359_nSourced unknown chart from the www.

Sourced from Wikipedia and You-Tube

Churchill and Eisenhower 70 years on

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Apr 032014
 

Sir Winston Churchill and Dwight D Eisenhower outside Long Block

Peninsula Barracks

ChurchillChurchill and Eisenhower

Reviewing American troops in the spring of 1944 prior the D. Day Landings.

70 Years On 

f526b3_1ed959031fc940d09667582041e4bd6aSir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, KG, OM, CH, TD, DL, FRS, RA (30th of November 1874 – 24th of January 1965) was a British politician who was the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 and again from 1951 to 1955. Widely regarded as one of the greatest wartime leaders of the 20th century, Churchill was also an officer in the British Army, a historian, a writer, and an artist. He is the only British Prime Minister to have won the Nobel Prize in Literature, and was the first person to be made an honorary citizen of the United States.
Churchill was born into the aristocratic family of the Dukes of Marlborough, a branch of the Spencer family. His father, Lord Randolph Churchill, was a charismatic politician who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer; his mother, Jennie Jerome, was an American socialite. As a young army officer, he saw action in British India, the Sudan, and the Second Boer War. He gained fame as a war correspondent and wrote books about his campaigns.
At the forefront of politics for fifty years, he held many political and cabinet positions. Before the First World War, he served as President of the Board of Trade, Home Secretary, and First Lord of the Admiralty as part of the Asquith Liberal government. During the war, he continued as First Lord of the Admiralty until the disastrous Gallipoli Campaign caused his departure from government. He then briefly resumed active army service on the Western Front as commander of the 6th Battalion of the Royal Scots Fusiliers. He returned to government as Minister of Munitions, Secretary of State for War, and Secretary of State for Air. After the War, Churchill served as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Conservative (Baldwin) government of 1924–29, controversially returning the pound sterling in 1925 to the gold standard at its pre-war parity, a move widely seen as creating deflationary pressure on the UK economy. Also controversial were his opposition to increased home rule for India and his resistance to the 1936 abdication of Edward VIII.
Out of office and politically “in the wilderness” during the 1930s, Churchill took the lead in warning about Nazi Germany and in campaigning for rearmament. On the outbreak of the Second World War, he was again appointed First Lord of the Admiralty. Following the resignation of Neville Chamberlain on the 10th of May 1940, Churchill became Prime Minister. His steadfast refusal to consider defeat, surrender, or a compromise peace helped inspire British resistance, especially during the difficult early days of the War when Britain stood alone in its active opposition to Adolf Hitler. Churchill was particularly noted for his speeches and radio broadcasts, which helped inspire the British people. He led Britain as Prime Minister until victory over Nazi Germany had been secured.
After the Conservative Party lost the 1945 election, he became Leader of the Opposition to the Labour Government. After winning the 1951 election, he again became Prime Minister, before retiring in 1955. Upon his death, Elizabeth II granted him the honour of a state funeral, which saw one of the largest assemblies of world statesmen in history. Named the Greatest Briton of all time in a 2002 poll, Churchill is widely regarded as being among the most influential people in British history, consistently ranking well in opinion polls of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom.

eisenhower2Dwight David “Ike” Eisenhower (pronounced /ˈaɪzənhaʊər/, eye-zən-how-ər; October 14th , 1890 – March 28th, 1969) was the 34th President of the United States from 1953 until 1961. He was a five-star general in the United States Army during World War II and served as Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in Europe; he had responsibility for planning and supervising the invasion of North Africa in Operation Torch in 1942–43 and the successful invasion of France and Germany in 1944–45 from the Western Front. In 1951, he became the first supreme commander of NATO.
Eisenhower was of Pennsylvania Dutch ancestry and was raised in a large family in Kansas by parents with a strong religious background. He attended and graduated from West Point and later married and had two sons. After World War II, Eisenhower served as Army Chief of Staff under President Harry S. Truman then assumed the post of President at Columbia University.
Eisenhower entered the 1952 presidential race as a Republican to counter the non-interventionism of Senator Robert A. Taft and to crusade against “Communism, Korea and corruption”. He won by a landslide, defeating Democrat Adlai Stevenson and ending two decades of the New Deal Coalition. In the first year of his presidency, Eisenhower deposed the leader of Iran in the 1953 Iranian coup d’état and used nuclear threats to conclude the Korean War with China. His New Look policy of nuclear deterrence gave priority to inexpensive nuclear weapons while reducing the funding for conventional military forces; the goal was to keep pressure on the Soviet Union and reduce federal deficits. In 1954, Eisenhower first articulated the domino theory in his description of the threat presented by the spread of communism. The Congress agreed to his request in 1955 for the Formosa Resolution, which enabled him to prevent Chinese communist aggression against Chinese nationalists and established the U.S. policy of defending Taiwan. When the Soviets launched Sputnik in 1957, he had to play catch-up in the space race. Eisenhower forced Israel, the UK, and France to end their invasion of Egypt during the Suez Crisis of 1956. In 1958, he sent 15,000 U.S. troops to Lebanon to prevent the pro-Western government from falling to a Nasser-inspired revolution. Near the end of his term, his efforts to set up a summit meeting with the Soviets collapsed because of the U-2 incident. In his 1961 farewell address to the nation, Eisenhower expressed his concerns about future dangers of massive military spending, especially deficit spending, and coined the term “military–industrial complex”.
On the domestic front, he covertly opposed Joseph McCarthy and contributed to the end of McCarthyism by openly invoking the modern expanded version of executive privilege. He otherwise left most political activity to his Vice President, Richard Nixon. He was a moderate conservative who continued New Deal agencies and expanded Social Security.
Among his enduring innovations, he launched the Interstate Highway System; the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which led to the internet, among many invaluable outputs; the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), driving peaceful discovery in space; the establishment of strong science education via the National Defense Education Act; and encouraging peaceful use of nuclear power via amendments to the Atomic Energy Act.
In social policy, he sent federal troops to Little Rock, Arkansas, for the first time since Reconstruction to enforce federal court orders to desegregate public schools. He also signed civil rights legislation in 1957 and 1960 to protect the right to vote. He implemented desegregation of the armed forces in two years and made five appointments to the Supreme Court. He was the first term-limited president in accordance with the 22nd Amendment. Eisenhower’s two terms were peaceful ones for the most part and saw considerable economic prosperity except for a sharp recession in 1958–59. Eisenhower is often ranked highly among the U.S. presidents.

Hampshire and D-Day – The 60th Anniversary from Hampshire Cam

In the early hours of 6 June 1944, allied troops landed in Normandy. So began the greatest invasion in history and the eventual liberation of Europe and the end of the Second World War. Located directly opposite Normandy, Hampshire was the springboard for Operation Overlord – the codename for the allied invasion of Europe.
Hampshire became a vast armed camp, full of allied troops encamped in the towns, villages and the forests of the county. Winchester’s newly built bypass was requisitioned and became a giant tank park and camp for British and American troops, even Peninsula Barracks in the city was taken over by the 9th US Infantry Division. It was here the American troops were reviewed by Prime Minister Winston Churchill and General Eisenhower.

southwick_goldenlionThe Golden Lion

Plaque on the outer wall

southwick_goldenlion2Pictures by David Packman

http://hampshirecam.co.uk

http://www.hampshirecam.co.uk/dday/dday.html

ALL GAVE SOME-SOME GAVE ALL

And all our Allies

604

Lest We Forget

www.churchillsociety.com (Pic of Churchill)

pixgood.comike-eisenhower-d-day

Sourced from Wikipedia and Goole

Poems by P. Pickford

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Mar 122014
 

philip-pickford

Fellow Rifleman Philip Pickford

“My Badge”

When the rag was a flag, and the staff was a Pole, As a youth I would think of when they were whole.

But now I’m a man and old I might be. But my BADGE is still here for all to see.

By fellow Rifleman

P. Pickford

” Recruit “

Bugles, Bugles, Marching quick
Who’s that Corporal with a little black stick?

Move to the left, move to the right
If we don’t get this done
We’ll be here all night.

“Move to the right in three’s Quick March”
Move to the right, and off we go
One forty a minute, we’re not Marching slow.

Down to the ranges
What a good shot
Here comes the stew, and it’s not very hot.

Out on the Beacons
With one week to go,
The going is hard in this deep cold snow.

The Band marches on
This is my proud day
Leaves coming up,
I’ll be home with some pay.

By fellow Rifleman

P. Pickford

The Chairs “

(To sit and think a bit)

A memorial to stand so proud,
To catch the eye of the passing crowd.

Take a rest have a seat,
See who passes, who you meet.

And while you sit in the cool day air,
Think about these stone carved chairs.

To some it’s just a piece of stone,
To others, a symbol that this was once, their home.

And when you leave here, And Leave you must.
Remember those Riflemen, who now are Dust,

R.I.P

In memory of all Riflemen.
Who have passed through Peninsula Barracks
And called It “Home”.

By fellow Rifleman

P. Pickford

” Grandad WW1 “

Grandad made me laugh, He also made me cry.
Often he would ramble, and I often wondered why

Told me he had nightmares, and was frightened of the dark,
Also said he hated, walking in the park.

He mentioned “ Knoddys Washing”
And I said “Love kids TV”
But I shut up rather quickly, when he turned and glared at me.

Then came that sad September, When Grandad passed away.
When Friends and Family gathered to send him on his way.

Then late in December, A parcel came for me.
With some of Grandads possessions.
So it didn’t go under the tree.

One photo and letters,
Paper cuttings to.
A Brass belt buckle
And a Cap badge,
With a bullet hole right through.

The cracked and faded photo was of a group of men.
Sitting in a dugout that looked just like a den,

I turned it over slowly,and began to read.
These words they still haunt me
His ramblings, I didn’t heed.

My best Pals
RFN “chalky” White.
Cpl Charlie Oaks.

Killed 11th November 1914
At the Battle of “NONNE BOSSCHEN ”

By Fellow Rifleman

P. Pickford

” Reunion “

Could I, Should I, Will I or not,
Travel to Winchester to see my Old Lot.
Thirty years since I’ve been down there.
Could I, should I, Will I Dare.
Old and Fat, With Greying Hair
Got a Limp, and use a stick.
Still look smart, But not as quick.
Hotel booked, Train ticket to.
More spit and polish on this other shoe.
Brand new Blazer, And Regi Tie
Better go before I die….

By fellow Rifleman

P. Pickford

“ On Patrol ”

Cold and windy on Patrol
Gets right through to one’s poor soul
Much, much, better than the dreaded dole.

Move to the left, Move to the right
Don’t bunch up, but keep it tight

Watch that window, Watch that car
Not much longer, we’re not going far

Who’s that person, I know that face
Come on guys lets pick up the pace

ID. checked, and we know it’s him
Call for a vehicle and let’s get him in
The people are gathering
They’ll soon start a din.

Here come the stones, the verbal abuse
Hate this place, it’s so obtuse
One man down, But he’s ok
We’ve got to move on; it’s no place to stay.

Back at base, a warmer place
The man is known and arrested
Weapons checked, now we get rested.

Boots come off, face is cleaned
Head on the pillow. Let’s see whats dreamed.

By fellow Rifleman

P.Pickford

” Mucker ” !

Saw my mucker the other day
Down the road Fazakerley way
Found the ward, found the bed
..Jesus Christ !!!!!.
I thought he was dead.
Tubes in here tubes in there ..
Then the bugger rose up and got me a chair.

By Fellow Rifleman

P.Pickford

Short Poem [untitled]

Snipers, Nail Bombs, Bottles and stones.
None of these things Broke my bones.

The damage is here, All in my head.

When the cold hearted Bastards
…… shot my friend Dead.

By Fellow Rifleman

P.Pickford

” Wasted years wasted lives “
Lots of tears from mothers and wives
Sons are gone fathers to, blown to bits by God knows who
The “Troubles” Insurgency, Civil war, All of this the soldiers saw
To many dead, so many bled, others with memories trapped in there head
Wasted years wasted lives”

By Fellow Rifleman

P.Pickford

” Mechanised ” 432

[I Love my APC]

All aboard hold on tight
Going to take you on a ride of fright!!!!
[These few words will haunt me later]

15 tons of snarling steel
2 white tillers and no steering wheel

Rubber pads on the tracks
Lots of kit on all the racks

Sat up straight in the Cupola
Wearing my new Battle bowler

Bang you head cut your thumb
Even makes your bottom numb

Then came the day it flew away
And the dead man’s pedal, didn’t work

Up went the revs
Off like a dart
Fluttering stomach
Great beating Heart
Lucky for me it was only a F..t

40, 50, 60, K the roads quite straight
If we stay this way…

Then from the rear
A word in my ear
“We’ve found the shut off tap”

Crabbing, crabbing,
Yes, slowing down
Feel quite sick after that last town.

From the corporal just above
Comes a Knee, a gentle shove

“Not your fault Driver”, Bloody well done
As we come to a halt in the afternoon Sun.

[ I HATE MY APC ]

By Fellow Rifleman

P.Pickford

” The Bakery “

Pipes and Ovens, Rollers to” What a place to Fight your way through”.
The smell of warm rotting bread,
A Walk-in the Park the Boss man said.
See a Gunman take a shot, Back it came just as Hot,was it a ricochet…I think not.
Moving forward bit by bit…Jesus Christ this place is Shit.
Along a Gantry,Down some stairs….Made it through…I’ll say some Prayers.

By fellow Rifleman
P. Pickford

Roger Courtney SBS

 Articles  Comments Off on Roger Courtney SBS
Mar 112014
 

index

Lieutenant Roger Courtney
The King’s Royal Rifle Corps and SBS

Roger James Allen Courtney MC, known as Jumbo, was influential in the establishment of the Special Boat Section’s which saw action in World War II. They would eventually lead to the formation of the UK Special Boat Service.
When World War II began, he travelled from Africa (where he was big-game hunting) to England to join the Army as a “commando folding kayaker”. When his ideas were rebuffed, he joined the King’s Royal Rifle Corps as a Rifleman. Soon promoted to Corporal, he was commissioned in November 1939.
Courtney became an Army Commando recruit in mid-1940, and was sent to the Combined Training Center in Scotland. He was unsuccessful in his initial attempts to convince Admiral of the Fleet Roger Keyes and later Admiral Theodore Hallett, commander of the Combined Training Center, that his idea of a folding kayak brigade would be effective. He decided to infiltrate the HMS Glengyle, a Landing Ship, Infantry anchored in the River Clyde. Courtney paddled to the ship, climbed aboard undetected, wrote his initials on the door to the captain’s cabin, and stole a deck gun cover. He presented the soaking cover to a group of high ranking Royal Navy officers meeting at a nearby Inveraray hotel. He was promoted to Captain, and given command of twelve men, the first Special Boat Section.

By Peter Deane

 

 

This post is attributed to Peter Deane for all of his hard work and research on Roger James Allen Courtney.

For more reading…..

http://www.krrcassociation.com/swiftandbold/wulfsohn_lt_r_courtney_krrcandsbs.pdf

The Special Boat Service

The Special Boat Service (SBS) is the special forces unit of the Naval Service of the United Kingdom. Together with the Special Air Service, Special Reconnaissance Regiment and the Special Forces Support Group, they form the United Kingdom Special Forces and come under joint control of the same Director Special Forces.

The Special Boat Service is described as the naval special forces of the United Kingdom and the sister unit of the SAS. The operational capabilities of both units are broadly similar.

However, the SBS (being the principal Royal Navy contribution to UKSF) has the additional training and equipment to lead in the maritime, amphibious and riverine environments. Both units come under the operational command of HQ Directorate of Special Forces (DSF) and undergo an identical selection process, enjoy significant interoperability in training and on operations.

In times of armed conflict and war, the Special Boat Service (SBS) and 22 Special Air Service Regiment (22 SAS) are required to operate in small parties in enemy-controlled territory.

Operations of this nature require men of courage and high morale who have excellent tactical awareness be it knowledge of special tactics or simply knowing one’s place in a polyvalent unit.

Self-discipline neatly ties into this. Intelligence, reliability, determination and also being physically fit are key skills.

Principal roles of the SBS are Surveillance Reconnaissance (SR), including information reporting and target acquisition; Offensive Action (OA), including direction of air strikes, artillery and naval gunfire, designation for precision guided munitions, use of integral weapons and demolitions; and Support and Influence (SI), including overseas training tasks.

The SBS also provide immediate response Military Counter Terrorism (CT) and Maritime Counter Terrorism (MCT) teams.

The SBS can trace its origins to the Second World War, when they were formed as the Special Boat Section in 1940. They became the Special Boat Squadron after the Second World War and the Special Boat Service in the 1980s.

The SBS is manned by ranks drawn mostly from the Royal Marines and carries out a role that is similar to the Special Air Service, but with a traditionally stronger focus on amphibious operations.

Their training involves parachute exercises, helicopter training and boat training, which recruits will get the chance to earn their licence for.

All of the SBS’s four squadrons, C, Z, M and X, are configured for general operations, and rotate through the Maritime Counter Terrorism Role, also known as Black Role. The SBS also operates on land, with recent operations in the mountains of landlocked Afghanistan and in the deserts of Iraq.

Their main tasks include intelligence gathering, counter-terrorism operations (surveillance or offensive action), sabotage and the disruption of enemy infrastructure, capture of specific individuals, close protection of senior politicians and military personnel, plus reconnaissance and direct action in foreign territory.

History
Second World War

The Special Boat Section was founded in July of 1940 by a Commando officer, Roger Courtney. Courtney became a commando recruit in mid-1940, and was sent to the Combined Training Centre in Scotland.

He was unsuccessful in his initial attempts to convince Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Keyes and later Admiral Theodore Hallett, commander of the Combined Training Centre, that his idea of a folding kayak brigade would be effective.

He decided to infiltrate HMS Glengyle, a Landing Ship, Infantry anchored in the River Clyde. Courtney paddled to the ship, climbed aboard undetected, wrote his initials on the door to the captain’s cabin, and stole a deck gun cover.

He presented the soaking cover to a group of high-ranking Royal Navy officers meeting at a nearby Inveraray hotel. He was promoted to captain, and given command of twelve men, the first Special Boat Service/Special Boat Section.
It was initially named the Folboat Troop, after the type of folding canoe employed in raiding operations, and then renamed No. 1 Special Boat Section in early 1941.

Attached to Layforce, they moved to the Middle East.

They worked with the 1st Submarine Flotilla based at Alexandria and carried out beach reconnaissance of Rhodes, evacuated troops left behind on Crete and a number of small-scale raids and other operations.

In the December of 1941 Courtney returned to the United Kingdom where he formed No2 SBS, and No1 SBS became attached to the Special Air Service (SAS) as the Folboat Section.

In June 1942, they took part in the Crete airfield raids.

In the September of 1942, they carried out Operation Anglo, a raid on two airfields on the island of Rhodes, from which only two men returned. Destroying three aircraft, a fuel dump and numerous buildings, the surviving SBS men had to hide in the countryside for four days before they could reach the waiting submarine.
After the Rhodes raid, the SBS was absorbed into the SAS due to the casualties they had suffered.

In April 1943, 1st SAS was divided into two with 250 men from the SAS and the Small Scale Raiding Force, forming the Special Boat Squadron under command Major the Earl Jellicoe.

They moved to Haifa and trained with the Greek Sacred Regiment for operations in the Aegean.

They later operated among the Dodecanese and Cyclades groups of islands in the Dodecanese Campaign and took part in the Battle of Leros and the Battle of Kos.

They with Greek Sacred Band took part in the successful Raid on Symi in July 1944 in which the entire German garrison was either killed or captured.

In August 1944, they joined with the Long Range Desert Group in operations in the Adriatic, on the Peloponnese, in Albania, and, finally, Istria. So effective were they that, by 1944, 200–300 SBS men held down six German divisions.

Throughout the war, No.2 SBS did not use the Special Boat Squadron name, but instead retained the name Special Boat Section. They accompanied Major General Mark Clark ashore before the Operation Torch landings in November 1942.

Later, one group, Z SBS, which was based in Algiers from March 1943, carried out the beach reconnaissance for the Salerno landings and a raid on Crete, before moving to Ceylon to work with the Special Operations Executives, Force 136 and later with Special Operations Australia.

The rest of No. 2 SBS became part of South-East Asia Command’s Small Operations Group, operating on the Chindwin and Irrawaddy rivers, and in the Arakan, during the Burma campaign.

Postwar

In 1946, the SBS, whether of Commando or SAS parentage, were disbanded. The functional title SBS was adopted by the Royal Marines.

It became part of the school of Combined Operations under the command of “Blondie” Hasler.
Their first missions were in Palestine (ordnance removal) and in Haifa (limpet mine removal from ships).

The SBS went on to serve in the Korean War deployed on operations along the North Korean coast as well as operating behind enemy lines destroying lines of communication, installations and gathering intelligence.

It was during the Korean War that the SBS first started operating from submarines. In 1952, SBS teams were held at combat readiness in Egypt in case Gamal Abdel Nasser’s revolution turned more violent than it did.

The SBS were also alerted during the Suez Crisis of 1956 and coup against King Idris I of Libya (1959), but in both cases they did not see action. In 1961, SBS teams carried out reconnaissance missions during the Indonesian Confrontation (see Operation Claret).

In the same year, Iraq threatened to invade Kuwait for the first time, and the SBS put a detachment at Bahrain. In 1972, the SBS and SAS came into prominence when members of a combined SBS and SAS team parachuted into the Atlantic Ocean after a bomb threat on board the cruise liner RMS Queen Elizabeth 2.

A thorough search of the ship found no evidence of any device drawing the conclusion that it was a hoax. The SBS conducted operations in Northern Ireland during the The Troubles including with submarines.

In January 1975, two SBS kayak teams were inserted from HMS Cachalot to conduct an anti gun running operation in the area between Torr Head and Garron.

Special Boat Squadron

In 1977, their name was changed to the Special Boat Squadron and in 1980 the SBS relinquished North Sea oil rig protection to Comacchio Company.

In 1982, after the Argentinian invasion of the Falkland Islands, they deployed to South Georgia.
The only losses to the SBS during the Falklands War occurred when the SBS and SAS were operating behind the lines and two members of the SBS were shot by an SAS patrol, who had mistaken them for Argentinians. 

Special Boat Service

In 1987, they were renamed Special Boat Service, and became part of the United Kingdom Special Forces Group alongside the Special Air Service and 14 Intelligence Company.

In the Gulf War, there was no amphibious role assigned to the SBS, an “area of operations line” was drawn down the middle of Iraq, the SAS would operate west of the line and the SBS to the east.

As well as searching for mobile scuds, their area contained a mass of fibre-optic cable that provided Iraq with intelligence, the location of the main junction was 32 miles from Baghdad;

On 22nd January 1991, 36 SBS members were inserted by 2 chinook helicopters from No. 7 Squadron RAF, into an area full of Iraqi ground and air forces as well as spies and nomands, they avoided them and destroyed a 40-yard section of the cable with explosives-destroying what was left of the Iraqi communication grid.

The SBS carried out one of its most high-profile operations when it liberated the British Embassy in Kuwait, abseiling from helicopters hovering above the embassy.

They were also responsible for carrying out diversionary raids along the Kuwaiti coast which in effect diverted a number of Iraqi troops to the SBS area of operations and away from the main thrust of the coalition build up.

In September 1999, about 20 SBS members were involved in the Australian led International Force for East Timor (INTERFET) in East Timor.

Together with the Australian Special Air Service Regiment and the New Zealand Special Air Service they formed INTERFET’s special forces element named Response Force.

Response Force departed from Darwin by C-130 Hercules transport aircraft and flew into Dili tasked with securing the airport, a seaport and a heli-port to enable regular forces to land and deploy with the SBS filmed driving a Land Rover Defender out of a Hercules.

Response Force was then utilised to perform to a variety of tasks including direct action and special reconnaissance through out East Timor. The British forces withdrew in December 1999, including the SBS.
A Sergeant was awarded the Military Cross after his patrol came under fire from pro-Indonesian militia.

21st century

In September 2000, the SBS was involved in Operation Barras, a hostage rescue operation in Sierra Leone.

In November 2001, C and M squadron SBS had an extensive role in the invasion of Afghanistan at the start of the War in Afghanistan and were involved in the Battle of Tora Bora.

The SBS was integrated directly into Task Force Sword – a Black SOF, under direct command of JSOC, this was a so-called hunter-killer force whose primary objective was of capturing or killing senior leadership and HVT within both al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

Troops from C squadron (with at least one SEAL attached to them) were tasked with several missions, some with General Dostum’s Northern Alliance forces at Mazar-e-Sharif.

On November 10, C squadron inserted into the recently captured Bagram Airbase, which caused an immediate political quandary with the Northern Alliance leadership which claimed that the British had failed to consult them on it before the deployment.

Members of C squadron SBS, were involved in a prison revolt during the Battle of Qala-i-Jangi, members of the SBS along with US and Northern Alliance troops enetually quelled the uprising, however during one CAS mission, a misdirected JDAM bomb wounded 4 SBS personnel to various degrees.

In appreciation for the SBS contribution to the battle, the CIA attempted to recognise the personnel with US decorations, but due to Military and political bureaucracy, the decorations were never awarded. The SBS continued to work with Task Force Sword and the CIA.

In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, M Squadron deployed to Jordan as Task Force 7, which was part of CJSOTF-West (Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force – West) and were earmarked for a heliborne assault on several Iraqi oil facilities that had their own desert airstrips that once captured would be used for SOF staging areas.

In northern Iraq in early March, a small reconnaissance team from M Squadron mounted on Honda ATVs inserted into Iraq from Jordan, its first mission was to conduct reconnaissance of an Iraqi air base at al-Sahara.

The team was compromised by an anti-special forces Fedayeen unit and barley escaped thanks to a U.S. F-15E that flew air cover for the team and the bravery of an RAF Chinook that extracted the team under the Fedayeen’s ‘noses’.

M Squadron launched a second operation at full strength in a mix of land rovers and ATVs into northern Iraq from H-2 Air Base, the objective was to locate, make contact and take the surrender of the Iraqi 5th Army Corps somewhere past Tikrit and to survey and mark viable temporary landing zones for follow-on forces.

However the Squadron was compromised by a goat herder; the SBS drove for several days whilst unknown to them anti-special forces Fedayeen units followed them.

At an overnight position near Mosul the Fedayeen ambushed the Squadron with DShK heavy machine guns and RPGs, the SBS returned fire and began taking fire from a T-72, the Squadron scattered and escaped the well-constructed trap.

A number of Land Rovers became bogged down in a nearby wadi, so the troops mined the vehicles and abandoned them – though several did not detonate and were captured and exhibited on Iraqi television.

The SBS was now in three distinct groups: one with several operational Land Rovers was being pursued by the Iraqi hunter force, a second mainly equipped with ATVs was hunkered down and trying to arrange extraction, the third with just 2 personnel on an ATV raced for the Syrian border.

The first group tried to call in coalition strike aircraft but the aircraft couldn’t identify friendly forces because the SBS were not equipped with infra-red strobes – although their vehicles did have Blue Force Tracker units, they eventually made it to an emergency rendezvous point and were extracted by an RAF Chinook.

The second group was also extracted by an RAF Chinook and the third group made it to Syria and was held there until their release was negotiated, there were no SBS casualties.

The incident has since been commended by senior British officials. M squadron also had a 3-month tour in early 2003.

Corporal Ian Plank, an SBS member attached to the SAS was killed by Iraqi insurgents during a house-to-house search for a wanted high-ranking Islamist terrorist in an insurgent compound in Ramadi on 31st October 2003, he was the first UKSF combat casualty of the Iraq War.

The SBS was also very active as part of Task Force Black, C squadron deployed to Baghdad as part of the task force in 2004, in its four-month deployment it mounted 22 raids.
On 23rd July 2005, M squadron, supported by troops from the SAS and US forces carried out Operation Marlborough, killing 3 members of AQI.

In Spring 2005, the Director of Special Forces re-balanced British special forces deployments so that Afghanistan would be the responsibility of the SBS and Iraq would be the 22nd SAS Regiment’s.

In Spring 2006, the British military deployed over 4,000 troops to southern Afghanistan and the SBS were assigned to take the lead in supporting the deployment.

The SBS were part of Task Force 42[42]/84: the British contingent in the Joint Special Forces command; their deployment with other British special forces units was codenamed Operation Kindle (similar to the SAS and other British SF deployment in Iraq, known as Operation Crichton); the SBS carried out missions all over southern Afghanistan with US Apache helicopters.

Along with training and mentoring Afghan Provincial Response Companies, Afghan police tactical units the operated jointly with Coalition SOF, TF 42 conducted operations in direct support of the British Battle Group deployed in Helmand Province and for ISAF SOF Command and operations directly for the Americans in pursuit of high-value targets.

The main objective of the SBS (and later on other British special forces units with Afghan forces) was targeting Taliban leaders and drug barons using “Carrot and stick” tactics.

On 27th June 2006, a 16-man unit from C Squadron and members of the SRR carried out Operation Ilois: an operation that silently captured 4 Taliban leaders in compounds on the outskirts of Sangin, Helmand province.

As they returned to their Land Rover vehicles, they were ambushed by an estimated 60-70 Taliban insurgents, with one vehicle disabled by RPG fire, the team took cover in an irrigation ditch and requested assistance whilst holding off against the Taliban force.

The Helmand Battle Group had not been informed of the operation until it went wrong; a QRF made up of a platoon of Gurkhas responded but ran into another insurgent ambush; one SBS member was seriously injured in the ambush.

After an hour (some sources say 3)-long gunfight, Apache attack helicopters, the Gurkha QRF and the 16-man unit, supported by a U.S. A-10 Thunderbolt and 2 Harrier GR7s managed to break contact and return to the closest FOB; 2 of the 4 Taliban leaders were killed in the firefight whilst the other 2 escaped in the chaos.

Upon reaching the FOB it was discovered that Captain David Patten, SRR, and Sergeant Paul Bartlett, SBS were missing – one was helping wounded out of a vehicle when he was shot and assumed killed, whilst the second went missing during the firefight.

An RAF Chinook carrying a company from the Parachute Regiment took off to find them, a pair of Apaches spotted the bodies and the Paras recovered them. One SBS member was awarded the MC for his actions in the ambush.

On the 12th May 2007, an SBS team killed the Taliban leader Mullah Dadullah after JSOC and the ISA tracked him to a compound – where his associates were meeting – near Bahram Chah, Helmand province.

The ISA confirmed he was there and an SBS reconnaissance element carried out reconnaissance of the compound which showed that Dadullah was protected 20 insurgents.

That night, with the ISA monitoring the target, the majority of C Squadron were inserted by RAF CH-47D Chinooks whilst covered by Apache helicopters, the troops stormed the compound and a one hour long firefight took place as small groups of Taliban were hunted down and killed.

4 SBS personnel were wounded (one seriously), eventually Dadullah was shot in the chest and head, quick SSE was conducted and before the assault force was picked up by helicopter.

On 24th September 2007, members of C squadron SBS and the Italian SOF unit Col Moschin rescued two Italian intelligence agents who were kidnapped by the Taliban in Herat province near Farah, they had been kidnapped 2 days before.

Col Moschin parachuted onto a drop zone and marched overnight to surround the target compound, whilst the SBS were standing by in Lynx and Chinook helicopters to provide cut off groups in-case the insurgents attempted to escape, whilst a US Predator drone supported the British and Italians.

The insurgents brought the hostages out of the compound and loaded them into vehicles before the Italians were in position to rescue them, the SBS closed in on the vehicles: aerial snipers using M82A1 antimaterial rifles forced the vehicles to stop.

A Chinook dropped off more than a dozen SBS personnel who engaged the Taliban who were disembarking the vehicles, 8 Taliban insurgents were killed and the hostages were rescued, however one died of gunshot wounds.

On 18th February 2008, Taliban leader Mullah Abdul Matin and one of his sub-commanders, Mullah Karim Agha, along with several bodyguards were travelling through the desert near Gereshk, Helmand province on motorbikes when they were ambushed and killed by an SBS unit dropped into his path by helicopter.

In February 2009, members of the SBS took part in Operation Diesel, which resulted in the seizure of £50 million of heroin and the killing of at least 20 Taliban insurgents.

On 9th September 2009, an SBS team supported by the SFSG rescued Times journalist Stephen Farrell after he and his Afghan interpreter were captured by the Taliban whilst reporting on the Kunduz airstrike and were held at a Taliban safe house in Char Dara District, Kunduz Province.

The British special forces were forced to act when signal intercepts of Taliban leader showed them discussing moving the hostages into Pakistan.

They were inserted by 160th SOAR helicopters at pre-dawn directly onto the target building, whilst the SFSG set up a cordon, the Afghan interpreter was accidentally shot and killed as was two civilians by an explosive breaching charge on the compound, whilst a soldier from the SFSG was killed, Farrell was rescued.

On 1st July 2010 whilst carrying out an operation against insurgents in Haji Wakil, Helmand Province, Corporal Seth Stephens of the SBS was killed during a heavy firefight whilst clearing a compound, as a result of his actions during that operation, he was awarded the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross.

On 15th April 2012, during the Taliban attack on Kabul SBS member cleared Taliban militants from a central location overlooking foreign embassies.

On 27th February 2011, during the Libyan Civil War, the BBC reported that C Squadron assisted in the evacuation of 150 oil workers in three flights by RAF C-130 Hercules from an airfield near Zella to Valletta.

On 8th March 2012, a small Special Boat Service (SBS) team, attempted to rescue two hostages, Chris McManus (British) and Franco Lamolinara (Italian), being held in Nigeria by members of the Boko Haram terrorist organisation loyal to al-Qaeda.

The two hostages were killed before or during the rescue attempt. All the hostage takers were reportedly killed.

On 23rd December 2013, Captain Richard Holloway was serving with the SBS when he was killed by Taliban small arms fire while conducting an operation to suppress the Taliban in a joint SBS-Afghan forces raid (with air support) on Taliban insurgents in a valley east of Kabul ahead of the Afghanistan elections.

Present day
Organisation

The Ministry of Defence does not comment on special forces matters, therefore little verifiable information exists in the public domain.

The SBS is under the Operational Command of Director Special Forces and are based in Hamworthy barracks, Poole, Dorset.

In 1987, when renamed the Special Boat Service, the SBS was also reformed along SAS lines, with 16 man troops instead of the traditional sections.

About 200–250 men make up the SBS at any one time, and once qualified, personnel are known as “Swimmer Canoeists”. They are experts in swimming, diving, parachuting, navigation, demolition and reconnaissance.

There are four active squadrons and a reserve unit:

Since the SBS joined the UKSF Group in the 1980s it has been restructured. Instead of one squadron being tasked with a permanent role the unit adopted the same system of squadron rotation as the SAS.

Each Squadron rotates through Counter Terrorism Duties and Conventional Operations and tasking. For example, in December 2001 it was C squadron who were on MCT Role and were called in to intercept the MV Nisha while M and Z Squadron were deployed in Afghanistan.

C Squadron

X Squadron

Z Squadron

M Squadron

SBS Reserve or SBS(R) – provides individual reservists to augment the regular SBS, rather than forming independent teams. Only candidates with previous military experience are eligible to enlist.

The SBS(R) is located at locations throughout the United Kingdom, but training is carried out in the South of England.

United Kingdom Special Forces Selection

In the past, the SBS was staffed almost entirely by the Royal Marines. Volunteers for the SBS are now taken from all branches of the British Armed Forces, although volunteers still predominantly come from the Royal Marines Commandos. Candidates wishing to serve with the SBS must have completed two years regular service and will only be accepted into the SBS after completion of the selection process.

Until recently, the SBS had its own independent selection programme in order to qualify as a Swimmer Canoeist, but its selection programme has now been integrated into a joint UKSF selection alongside candidates for the SAS. All male members of the United Kingdom armed forces can be considered for special forces selection, but historically the majority of candidates have an airborne forces background.

There are two selections a year, one in winter and the other in summer, and all the instructors are full members of the Special Air Service Regiment.

Before being loaded on to a UKSF Selection course, a candidate must complete a two-week Special Forces Briefing Course. The course tests the candidates physical fitness and looks of their willingness to conduct water-borne operations.

The UKSF course is broken down into two main parts, Selection and Continuation Training.

Selection

Aptitude Phase (hill phase) – 4 weeks. This phase is conducted in the Brecon Beacons, South Wales.
The Aptitude Phase is designed to select those individuals who are suitable for Special Forces training.

The initial three weeks are devoted to gradual physical training and progressive exercises designed to develop physical and navigational ability.

Volunteers will be expected to complete the Basic Combat Fitness Test (Infantry) on the first day of the course. Exercise HIGH WALK (Fan dance) will take place on Day 6 and takes the form of an escorted hill march over approximately 23 km (14 mi).

As with all assessment marches, additional time may be added for inclement weather conditions. Exercise HIGH WALK identifies those individuals that are not adequately prepared to continue on the course.

All other training during this initial period is directed at preparing volunteers for “Test Week” which is the fourth and final week of Aptitude.

“Test Week” consists of five timed marches of between 23–28 km (14–17 mi) conducted on consecutive days followed by a final Endurance march of 64 km (40 mi); this must be completed within 20 hours. Bergen weights carried during “Test Week” increase from 40 lb (18 kg) to 55 lb (25 kg) for the Endurance march; in addition a rifle is carried on all marches.

Volunteers are also required to pass the UKSF swimming test that consists of; high water entry (3 m (9.8 ft)), treading water for nine minutes followed immediately by a swim of 500 m (1,600 ft) wearing Combat 95.

The test finishes with an underwater swim of 10 m (33 ft) including a retrieval of a small weight.

Continuation Training
Tactics, Techniques and Procedures (TTPs) – 9 weeks

Those who pass the Aptitude Phase will undertake an intensive period of instruction and assessment of Special Forces Tactics, Techniques and Procedures (TTPs), including SF weapons and Standard Operation Procedures.

The majority of this period is spent in the jungle, an environment that is suitable for SF training and ideal to achieve the purpose of this phase. Much of the training is aimed at discovering an individual’s qualities.

Continuation training, which consists of SOP and Tactical training in temperate and jungle environments, lasts nine weeks. This is conducted in the UK and Brunei.

Employment Training – 14 weeks

Employment Training consists of surveillance and reconnaissance training (2 weeks), army combat survival (2 weeks), SF parachute training (4 weeks), counter terrorist course (3 weeks), signals training (1 week), patrol training and squadron induction training (2 weeks), and 1 week officers week for potential officers. At the end of the resistance to interrogation phase the surviving candidates are transferred to an operational squadron.

When accepted into an operational squadron, the candidates must complete the SBS Swimmer Canoeist Course, SC3 Course. The course lasts for several months and covers long distance Dives, Swims and Kayaks in open sea, often in poor weather.

Underwater demolitions, Maritime counter terrorism, are also practised. On completing SBS troopers will be put on one year probation.

Reserve selection

For SBS(R) selection, only candidates with previous military experience are eligible to enlist. Training is carried out in the South of England and candidates are required to complete the following tests over the four-day initial selection course:

Combat Fitness Test (CFT) – 12.8 km (8 mi) carrying 25 kg (55 lb) within 1 hour 50 minutes.

Swim test – 500 m (1,600 ft) using any stroke in uniform and retrieve an object from 5 m (16 ft).

Gym tests.

Advanced CFT 1 – 15 km (9.3 mi) carrying 25 kg (55 lb).

Advanced CFT 2 – 24 km (15 mi) carrying 30 kg (66 lb).

The Special Boat Service wear the green commando beret, but with their own cap badge.

Sourced from Wikipedia

Dark is the night (Poem)

 Articles  Comments Off on Dark is the night (Poem)
Mar 082014
 

This Poem is Dedicated to L/cpl David Card Aged 21. (1 R.G.J.)

 Shot dead while on foot patrol in Andersonstown West Belfast on the 04.08.1972.

Dark is the night
Dark are the people
Dark is my face for a bloody good reason.

Dark is the night
Dark are the people
Dark is my rifle for another good reason.

Dark is the night
Dark are the people
Darkness is good I can not be seen
Dark is my Beret of good rifle green.

Dark is the Night
Dark are the people
Rioting at night for no good reason.
Been out to long, for this cold season.

Dark is the night
Dark are the people
Still on patrol without any vehicles
Seems like were lost and going in circles.

Dark is the night
Dark are the people
Patrol nearly over, we have travelled quite far
No where to hide from the lights of the car.

Dark is the night
Dark are the people
What was that noise, what was that light..
Down on my back and I don’t feel quite right.

Dark is the night…………

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Written By fellow Rifleman P Pickford.

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