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12th Cavalry (Frontier Force)

The 12th Cavalry Sam Browne's Cavalry (Frontier Force) is an armoured regiment of Pakistan Army. It was formed in the British Indian army in 1922 by the amalgamation of 22nd Sam Browne's Cavalry (Frontier Force) and 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force).[2][3]

12th Cavalry (Frontier Force)
Active1849 – 1937; 1955 – Present
Country British India
Pakistan
Branch British Indian Army
 Pakistan Army
TypeArmoured Regiment
Nickname(s)Sam Browne's Cavalry
EngagementsNorth West Frontier of India
Indian Mutiny of 1857
Second Afghan War 1878–80
First World War 1914–18
Third Afghan War 1919
Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971
Battle honoursDelhi 1857, Lucknow, Charasiah, Kabul 1879, Ahmad Khel, Afghanistan 1878–80, Kut al Amara 1917, Baghdad, Mesopotamia 1916–18, North West Frontier, India 1914–15, East Africa 1917, Afghanistan 1919, Khem Karan 1965.[1]
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Sam Browne
Dighton Probyn
William Vousden
Guy Melfort Baldwin

22nd Sam Browne's Cavalry (Frontier Force) edit

The 22nd Sam Browne's Cavalry (Frontier Force) was raised in 1849 at Lahore by Lieutenant Samuel J. Browne as the 2nd Punjab Irregular Cavalry. It was one of five regiments of Punjab Cavalry raised to guard the North West Frontier of India, soon part of the Punjab Frontier Force or the "Piffers". Over the next decades, the regiment saw extensive service on the Frontier.[4] During the Indian Mutiny of 1857, the regiment was engaged in the Siege of Delhi, Relief of Lucknow, the Battle of Agra and the Campaign in Rohilkhand. In one of the actions, their commandant, Captain Sam Browne was awarded the Victoria Cross. His citation reads:

In an engagement with the rebels, Captain Browne, whilst advancing upon the enemy's position, pushed on with one orderly sowar upon a 9-pounder gun and attacked the gunners, preventing them from re-loading and attacking the infantry who were advancing to the attack. In the conflict which ensued, Captain Browne received two sword cuts, one on the left knee and one which severed his left arm at the shoulder, but not before he had cut down one of his assailants. The gun was eventually captured and the gunner killed.

It was the loss of his arm that caused Browne to invent the famous Sam Browne belt, still in the use of many of today's armies. The original belt is on display in the India Room at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.

Meanwhile, Captain Dighton Probyn was also awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry, while serving with the 2nd Punjab Cavalry. His citation reads:

On many occasions during the period 1857–1858 in India, Captain Probyn performed gallant and daring acts. On one occasion, at the Battle of Agra, when his squadron charged the rebel infantry, he was sometimes separated from his men and surrounded by five or six sepoys. He defended himself and, before his own men had joined him, had cut down two of his assailants.
 
Officers of the 2nd Punjab Cavalry, 1880.

During the Second Anglo-Afghan War of 1878–80, the 2nd Punjab Cavalry was with the Kandahar Field Force, and fought at the Battle of Ahmed Khel in April 1880. During the First World War, the regiment served in the Mesopotamia Campaign.[3][4]

Name changes edit

  • 1849 2nd Punjab Irregular Cavalry
  • 1851 2nd Regiment of Cavalry, Punjab Irregular Force
  • 1861 2nd Regiment of Punjab Cavalry, Punjab Frontier Force
  • 1901 2nd Punjab Cavalry
  • 1903 22nd Cavalry (Frontier Force)
  • 1904 22nd Sam Browne's Cavalry (Frontier Force)

25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) edit

The 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) was raised by Captain Robert Fitzgerald as the 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry at Multan in 1849, with Risaldar Gurmukh Singh Dhillon of Bahmaniwala village, Patti Sub Division of Amritsar district of the Punjab, as the first native Commandant of 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry. The troops of the Sikh Squadron were mostly taken from the disbanded Khalsa Army which was recently defeated by the British in the Second Anglo-Sikh War of 1848. During the Indian Mutiny they were part of the besieging army at Delhi and took part in the Relief of Lucknow. The troops of 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry were now avenging themselves on the mutinous Bengal Army for the defeat of the Khalsa's Sikh Army in the Anglo Sikh Wars. One squadron fought at Bareilly, where two of its Indian officers won the Order of British India and nine other ranks received the Indian Order of Merit. The regiment was involved in a number of small actions on the North West Frontier with the Punjab Frontier Force. In March 1860, 150 men under an Indian officer attacked a 3,000 strong armed force of Mahsuds and Waziris at Tank, killing 300 and dispersing the others. In January 1867, an Indian officer with 27 sowars charged a body of 1,000 tribesmen, killed 150 and captured most of the rest. During the Second Afghan War, the 5th Punjab Cavalry were present at the capture of Charasiah and Frederick Roberts the Commanding General ordered that they and the 9th Lancers should have the honour of escorting him into Kabul. During the attack on the Asmai Heights in December 1879, near Kabul, Captain William John Vousden made repeated charges with a small body of men of the 5th Punjab Cavalry, passing through the ranks of an overwhelming force again and again until the enemy fled. Vousden received a Victoria Cross and his ten surviving men the Indian Order of Merit.

For their excellent record in the Indian Mutiny and the Second Afghan War, the 5th Punjab Cavalry was among the units honoured during the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria's celebrations in London in June and July 1897. Risaldar-Major Kesar Singh Dhillon of Bahmaniwala Dhillons represented the 5th Punjab Cavalry as part of Indian Native Cavalry.[5] For the acts of valour during the Indian Mutiny and during the Second Afghan War, the troops of 5th Punjab Cavalry were awarded grants of agricultural land in Lyallpur District in 1904. Most of the Sikh troops of Kanhayia Misl shifted from Amritsar District to Lyallpur on being granted lands there. During the First World War, it served in German East Africa, followed by service in the Third Afghan War of 1919.[3][4]

 
A Pathan Daffadar of 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force). Watercolour by AC Lovett, 1910.

Name changes edit

  • 1849 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry
  • 1851 5th Regiment of Cavalry, Punjab Irregular Force
  • 1861 5th Regiment of Punjab Cavalry, Punjab Frontier Force
  • 1901 5th Punjab Cavalry
  • 1903 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force)

12th Cavalry (Frontier Force) edit

After the First World War, the number of Indian cavalry regiments was reduced from thirty-nine to twenty-one. However, instead of disbanding the surplus units, it was decided to amalgamate them in pairs. This resulted in renumbering and renaming of the entire cavalry line. The 22nd Sam Browne's Cavalry (Frontier Force) and 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) were amalgamated in 1921 to form 12th Cavalry. The uniform of 12th Cavalry was scarlet with blue facings. The badge showed a mounted figure within a circle carrying the title 'Sam Browne's Cavalry XII FF' with a crown above. Its class composition was one squadron each of Punjabi Muslims, Sikhs and Dogras. In 1937, 12th Cavalry became the training regiment of 2nd Indian Cavalry Group at Ferozepur. It was converted into a training centre in 1940 by amalgamating it with 15th Lancers.[3]

On the partition of India in 1947, this training centre was transferred to Pakistan. On 15 January 1955, 12th Cavalry (Frontier Force) was re-raised at Rawalpindi as a Reconnaissance Regiment of Pakistan Armoured Corps. The regiment served with distinction during the 1965 and 1971 Indo-Pakistani Wars. During the 1965 War, the regiment fought in four different sectors simultaneously when all four squadrons of the regiment operated independently at Chawinda, Bedian, Khemkaran and Sialkot.[6] Lt.Col Muhammad Asaf Hussain Khan was awarded the Sitara-e-Jurat for outstanding gallantry in the Khemkaran sector during the 1965 war.

Captains Ahmed Arsalan Asaf and Nadeem Ahmad Raja were the Siachin Warriors of 12th Cavalary, Asaf participating in Operation Naveed Top during the Siachen conflict in April 1989.

Captain Mearaj Muhammad of the 12th Cavalary was killed on 4 June 2009 while fighting with Taliban militants in Buner District. He was awarded the Sitara-e-Basalat by the Government of Pakistan for his bravery and sacrifice.

 
General Sir Sam Browne, VC, GCB, KCSI, 1897.

Name changes edit

  • 1921 22nd/25th Cavalry (amalgamation)
  • 1922 12th Cavalry (Frontier Force)
  • 1927 Sam Browne's Cavalry (12th Frontier Force)
  • 1940 1st Indian Armoured Corps Centre
  • 1947 Pakistan Armoured Corps Centre
  • 1955 12th Cavalry (Frontier Force) (re-raised)

Affiliations & Alliances edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rodger, Alexander. (2003). Battle Honours of the British Empire and Commonwealth Land Forces 1662-1991. Ramsbury: The Crowood Press.
  2. ^ . Defense Journal. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d Gaylor, John (1991). Sons of John Company: The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903–91. Stroud: Spellmount.
  4. ^ a b c North, REFG. (1934). The Punjab Frontier Force: A Brief Record of Their Services 1846-1924. DI Khan: Commercial Steam Press
  5. ^ "No. 26947". The London Gazette. 14 March 1898. p. 1638.
  6. ^ The Sabre & Lance: Journal of the Pakistan Armoured Corps. (1997). Nowshera: The School of Armour & Mechanised Warfare.

Further reading edit

  • Regimental Record, 5th Regiment, Punjab Cavalry. (1886). Lahore: W. Ball & Co.
  • Regimental Record, 25th Cavalry (FF), 1886–1912. (1912).
  • Journal of the late General Sir Sam Browne, VC, GCB, KCSI 1849–98. (1937). Edinburgh: William Blackwood & Sons.
  • Dey, RSBN. (1905). A Brief Account of the Late Punjab Frontier Force, From its Organization in 1849 to its Re-distribution on 31st March 1903. Calcutta.
  • Elliott, Maj Gen JG. (1968). The Frontier 1839–1947: The Story of the North-West Frontier of India. London: Cassell.
  • Gaylor, John. (1991). Sons of John Company: The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903–1991. Stroud: Spellmount Publishers Ltd. ISBN 978-0-946771-98-1
  • Hayauddin, Maj Gen M. (1950). One Hundred Glorious Years: A History of the Punjab Frontier Force, 1849–1949. Lahore: Civil and Military Gazette Press.
  • Kempton, C. (1996). A Register of Titles of the Units of the H.E.I.C. & Indian Armies 1666–1947. Bristol: British Empire & Commonwealth Museum. ISBN 978-0-9530174-0-9
  • North, REFG. (1934). The Punjab Frontier Force: A Brief Record of Their Services 1846–1924. Dera Ismail Khan: Commercial Steam Press, HQ Waziristan District.
  • Trench, CC. (1988). The Indian Army and the King’s Enemies, 1900–1947. London: Thames and Hudson.

External links edit

  • Sam Browne's Cavalry (12th Frontier Force) by John Gaylor at The Defence Journal
  • 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) at The British Empire

12th, cavalry, frontier, force, 12th, cavalry, browne, cavalry, frontier, force, armoured, regiment, pakistan, army, formed, british, indian, army, 1922, amalgamation, 22nd, browne, cavalry, frontier, force, 25th, cavalry, frontier, force, active1849, 1937, 19. The 12th Cavalry Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force is an armoured regiment of Pakistan Army It was formed in the British Indian army in 1922 by the amalgamation of 22nd Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force and 25th Cavalry Frontier Force 2 3 12th Cavalry Frontier Force Active1849 1937 1955 PresentCountryBritish India PakistanBranch British Indian Army Pakistan ArmyTypeArmoured RegimentNickname s Sam Browne s CavalryEngagementsNorth West Frontier of IndiaIndian Mutiny of 1857Second Afghan War 1878 80First World War 1914 18Third Afghan War 1919 Indo Pakistani War of 1965Indo Pakistani War of 1971Battle honoursDelhi 1857 Lucknow Charasiah Kabul 1879 Ahmad Khel Afghanistan 1878 80 Kut al Amara 1917 Baghdad Mesopotamia 1916 18 North West Frontier India 1914 15 East Africa 1917 Afghanistan 1919 Khem Karan 1965 1 CommandersNotablecommandersSam BrowneDighton ProbynWilliam VousdenGuy Melfort Baldwin Contents 1 22nd Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force 1 1 Name changes 2 25th Cavalry Frontier Force 2 1 Name changes 3 12th Cavalry Frontier Force 3 1 Name changes 4 Affiliations amp Alliances 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External links22nd Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force editThe 22nd Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force was raised in 1849 at Lahore by Lieutenant Samuel J Browne as the 2nd Punjab Irregular Cavalry It was one of five regiments of Punjab Cavalry raised to guard the North West Frontier of India soon part of the Punjab Frontier Force or the Piffers Over the next decades the regiment saw extensive service on the Frontier 4 During the Indian Mutiny of 1857 the regiment was engaged in the Siege of Delhi Relief of Lucknow the Battle of Agra and the Campaign in Rohilkhand In one of the actions their commandant Captain Sam Browne was awarded the Victoria Cross His citation reads In an engagement with the rebels Captain Browne whilst advancing upon the enemy s position pushed on with one orderly sowar upon a 9 pounder gun and attacked the gunners preventing them from re loading and attacking the infantry who were advancing to the attack In the conflict which ensued Captain Browne received two sword cuts one on the left knee and one which severed his left arm at the shoulder but not before he had cut down one of his assailants The gun was eventually captured and the gunner killed It was the loss of his arm that caused Browne to invent the famous Sam Browne belt still in the use of many of today s armies The original belt is on display in the India Room at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Meanwhile Captain Dighton Probyn was also awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry while serving with the 2nd Punjab Cavalry His citation reads On many occasions during the period 1857 1858 in India Captain Probyn performed gallant and daring acts On one occasion at the Battle of Agra when his squadron charged the rebel infantry he was sometimes separated from his men and surrounded by five or six sepoys He defended himself and before his own men had joined him had cut down two of his assailants nbsp Officers of the 2nd Punjab Cavalry 1880 During the Second Anglo Afghan War of 1878 80 the 2nd Punjab Cavalry was with the Kandahar Field Force and fought at the Battle of Ahmed Khel in April 1880 During the First World War the regiment served in the Mesopotamia Campaign 3 4 Name changes edit 1849 2nd Punjab Irregular Cavalry 1851 2nd Regiment of Cavalry Punjab Irregular Force 1861 2nd Regiment of Punjab Cavalry Punjab Frontier Force 1901 2nd Punjab Cavalry 1903 22nd Cavalry Frontier Force 1904 22nd Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force 25th Cavalry Frontier Force editThe 25th Cavalry Frontier Force was raised by Captain Robert Fitzgerald as the 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry at Multan in 1849 with Risaldar Gurmukh Singh Dhillon of Bahmaniwala village Patti Sub Division of Amritsar district of the Punjab as the first native Commandant of 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry The troops of the Sikh Squadron were mostly taken from the disbanded Khalsa Army which was recently defeated by the British in the Second Anglo Sikh War of 1848 During the Indian Mutiny they were part of the besieging army at Delhi and took part in the Relief of Lucknow The troops of 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry were now avenging themselves on the mutinous Bengal Army for the defeat of the Khalsa s Sikh Army in the Anglo Sikh Wars One squadron fought at Bareilly where two of its Indian officers won the Order of British India and nine other ranks received the Indian Order of Merit The regiment was involved in a number of small actions on the North West Frontier with the Punjab Frontier Force In March 1860 150 men under an Indian officer attacked a 3 000 strong armed force of Mahsuds and Waziris at Tank killing 300 and dispersing the others In January 1867 an Indian officer with 27 sowars charged a body of 1 000 tribesmen killed 150 and captured most of the rest During the Second Afghan War the 5th Punjab Cavalry were present at the capture of Charasiah and Frederick Roberts the Commanding General ordered that they and the 9th Lancers should have the honour of escorting him into Kabul During the attack on the Asmai Heights in December 1879 near Kabul Captain William John Vousden made repeated charges with a small body of men of the 5th Punjab Cavalry passing through the ranks of an overwhelming force again and again until the enemy fled Vousden received a Victoria Cross and his ten surviving men the Indian Order of Merit For their excellent record in the Indian Mutiny and the Second Afghan War the 5th Punjab Cavalry was among the units honoured during the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria s celebrations in London in June and July 1897 Risaldar Major Kesar Singh Dhillon of Bahmaniwala Dhillons represented the 5th Punjab Cavalry as part of Indian Native Cavalry 5 For the acts of valour during the Indian Mutiny and during the Second Afghan War the troops of 5th Punjab Cavalry were awarded grants of agricultural land in Lyallpur District in 1904 Most of the Sikh troops of Kanhayia Misl shifted from Amritsar District to Lyallpur on being granted lands there During the First World War it served in German East Africa followed by service in the Third Afghan War of 1919 3 4 nbsp A Pathan Daffadar of 25th Cavalry Frontier Force Watercolour by AC Lovett 1910 Name changes edit 1849 5th Punjab Irregular Cavalry 1851 5th Regiment of Cavalry Punjab Irregular Force 1861 5th Regiment of Punjab Cavalry Punjab Frontier Force 1901 5th Punjab Cavalry 1903 25th Cavalry Frontier Force 12th Cavalry Frontier Force editAfter the First World War the number of Indian cavalry regiments was reduced from thirty nine to twenty one However instead of disbanding the surplus units it was decided to amalgamate them in pairs This resulted in renumbering and renaming of the entire cavalry line The 22nd Sam Browne s Cavalry Frontier Force and 25th Cavalry Frontier Force were amalgamated in 1921 to form 12th Cavalry The uniform of 12th Cavalry was scarlet with blue facings The badge showed a mounted figure within a circle carrying the title Sam Browne s Cavalry XII FF with a crown above Its class composition was one squadron each of Punjabi Muslims Sikhs and Dogras In 1937 12th Cavalry became the training regiment of 2nd Indian Cavalry Group at Ferozepur It was converted into a training centre in 1940 by amalgamating it with 15th Lancers 3 On the partition of India in 1947 this training centre was transferred to Pakistan On 15 January 1955 12th Cavalry Frontier Force was re raised at Rawalpindi as a Reconnaissance Regiment of Pakistan Armoured Corps The regiment served with distinction during the 1965 and 1971 Indo Pakistani Wars During the 1965 War the regiment fought in four different sectors simultaneously when all four squadrons of the regiment operated independently at Chawinda Bedian Khemkaran and Sialkot 6 Lt Col Muhammad Asaf Hussain Khan was awarded the Sitara e Jurat for outstanding gallantry in the Khemkaran sector during the 1965 war Captains Ahmed Arsalan Asaf and Nadeem Ahmad Raja were the Siachin Warriors of 12th Cavalary Asaf participating in Operation Naveed Top during the Siachen conflict in April 1989 Captain Mearaj Muhammad of the 12th Cavalary was killed on 4 June 2009 while fighting with Taliban militants in Buner District He was awarded the Sitara e Basalat by the Government of Pakistan for his bravery and sacrifice nbsp General Sir Sam Browne VC GCB KCSI 1897 Name changes edit 1921 22nd 25th Cavalry amalgamation 1922 12th Cavalry Frontier Force 1927 Sam Browne s Cavalry 12th Frontier Force 1940 1st Indian Armoured Corps Centre 1947 Pakistan Armoured Corps Centre 1955 12th Cavalry Frontier Force re raised Affiliations amp Alliances edit nbsp The Frontier Force Regiment nbsp 9th 12th Royal LancersReferences edit Rodger Alexander 2003 Battle Honours of the British Empire and Commonwealth Land Forces 1662 1991 Ramsbury The Crowood Press SAM BROWNE S CAVALRY 12th Frontier Force Defense Journal Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 a b c d Gaylor John 1991 Sons of John Company The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903 91 Stroud Spellmount a b c North REFG 1934 The Punjab Frontier Force A Brief Record of Their Services 1846 1924 DI Khan Commercial Steam Press No 26947 The London Gazette 14 March 1898 p 1638 The Sabre amp Lance Journal of the Pakistan Armoured Corps 1997 Nowshera The School of Armour amp Mechanised Warfare Further reading editRegimental Record 5th Regiment Punjab Cavalry 1886 Lahore W Ball amp Co Regimental Record 25th Cavalry FF 1886 1912 1912 Journal of the late General Sir Sam Browne VC GCB KCSI 1849 98 1937 Edinburgh William Blackwood amp Sons Dey RSBN 1905 A Brief Account of the Late Punjab Frontier Force From its Organization in 1849 to its Re distribution on 31st March 1903 Calcutta Elliott Maj Gen JG 1968 The Frontier 1839 1947 The Story of the North West Frontier of India London Cassell Gaylor John 1991 Sons of John Company The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903 1991 Stroud Spellmount Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 0 946771 98 1 Hayauddin Maj Gen M 1950 One Hundred Glorious Years A History of the Punjab Frontier Force 1849 1949 Lahore Civil and Military Gazette Press Kempton C 1996 A Register of Titles of the Units of the H E I C amp Indian Armies 1666 1947 Bristol British Empire amp Commonwealth Museum ISBN 978 0 9530174 0 9 North REFG 1934 The Punjab Frontier Force A Brief Record of Their Services 1846 1924 Dera Ismail Khan Commercial Steam Press HQ Waziristan District Trench CC 1988 The Indian Army and the King s Enemies 1900 1947 London Thames and Hudson External links editSam Browne s Cavalry 12th Frontier Force by John Gaylor at The Defence Journal 25th Cavalry Frontier Force at The British Empire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 12th Cavalry Frontier Force amp oldid 1128703284 2, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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