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3rd The King's Own Hussars

The 3rd (The King's Own) Hussars was a cavalry regiment of the British Army, first raised in 1685. It saw service for three centuries, including the First and the Second World Wars, before being amalgamated with the 7th Queen's Own Hussars, to form the Queen's Own Hussars in November 1958.

3rd The King's Own Hussars
3rd The King's Own Hussars Cap Badge
Active1685–1958
CountryKingdom of England (1685–1707)
 Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1800)
 United Kingdom (1801–1958)
Branch British Army
TypeCavalry of the Line/Royal Armoured Corps
RoleLight Cavalry
Size1 Regiment
Nickname(s)The Moodkee Wallahs, Bland's Dragoons
Motto(s)Nec Aspera Terrent (Latin Nor do difficulties deter)
March(Quick) Robert the Devil
(slow) The 3rd Hussars
AnniversariesDettingen Day, El Alamein Day.

History

The Glorious Revolution

The origins of the King's Own Hussars lie in the 1685 Monmouth and Argyll rebellions which forced James II to borrow the Scots Brigade from his son-in-law William of Orange, later William III. On 16 June, three troops were detached from the Duke of Somerset's Royal Dragoons and their captains ordered to recruit additional volunteers from the London area, including Middlesex and Essex.[1] The unit was based in Acton, West London to guard approaches to the City of London but the rebellion collapsed after defeat at Sedgemoor on 6 July without the regiment seeing action. Three new troops, one independent and two newly raised were now added to the original three to form The Queen Consort's Regiment of Dragoons.[2]

Alexander Cannon a Scot who previously served in the Dutch Scots Brigade was appointed Colonel in August 1687.[3] On 5 November 1688, William III landed at Torbay in the invasion later known as the Glorious Revolution and James assembled his army on Salisbury Plain to block an advance on London. However, many now changed sides; the majority of the Queen Consort's Regiment followed Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Leveson into William's camp while Cannon and his own troop remained loyal, staying with James as he retreated to London.[4] On 31 December, Leveson replaced Cannon as Colonel and as was customary, the regiment now took his name and became Leveson's Dragoons.[a]

The Williamite War in Ireland

In August 1689, the regiment, numbering approximately 400 officers and men organised into six troops, was transported to Ireland to take part in the Williamite War. James had fled from England to France in December 1688, but had returned with an army in March 1689 and landed at Cork, Ireland, where he found that he had the support of a majority of the Catholic population.[5] William's expeditionary force had landed south of Belfast on 13 August, encountering little resistance from the local Catholic forces, and entered the city on 17 August; Leveson's Dragoons landed in Ireland four days later, taking up position just outside Belfast.[6] Early records of the activities of the regiment are scarce, but it appears that it advanced with the rest of the Williamite forces southwards on 2 September, advancing to the town of Newry, but failing to catch the garrison of the town as it retreated. The Williamite army moved south to Dundalk, which they fortified. They did not advance any further, as a Catholic army, estimated 35,000 strong, was reportedly encamped nearby at Ardee. The regiment encountered a small Catholic force and killed five men on 20 September, but was forced to wait until October to take part in its first major action. On 27 October, 200 troopers from the regiment, along with a detachment from the 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons, raided Ardee, killing a number of sentries and capturing a large number of cattle and horses.[7] In November, the Williamite army moved northwards and the regiment saw action one last time before entering winter quarters at Lisburn; on 26 November, 60 troopers from the regiment were reconnoitring near Charlemont when they encountered a detachment from the town's garrison; they engage it, taking several prisoners. The regiment then retired to its winter quarters to rest and took on approximately 200 recruits shipped from England to replace losses from disease; whilst the exact casualty figures for the regiment are unknown, the entire army had suffered approximately 6,000 casualties as a result of fever, ague and dysentery by November.[8][9] The regiment emerged from winter quarters in mid-February 1690 and immediately saw action; a gazette issued from Belfast on 14 February announced that a squadron from the regiment had formed part of a raiding force that had crossed enemy lines and burnt down a castle and looted a town, killing ten men and taking 20 prisoners. The next recorded action by the regiment took place on 22 June, when a squadron and a company of infantry from the Tangier Regiment encountered a fort garrisoned by a force of infantry and approximately 500 cavalry; the enemy force stood its ground and fought a pitched battle until its commanding officer was killed and the Catholic force retreated.[10]

 
Battle of the Boyne between James II and William III, 11 June 1690, Jan van Huchtenburg.

The regiment was present for the Battle of the Boyne on 1 July, forming part of the 36,000-strong Williamite army that engaged the 25,000-strong Catholic army commanded by James II.[11] During the closing stages of the battle, a large portion of James' cavalry repeatedly charged the advancing Williamite infantry to provide protection for the retreating Catholic infantry, and were able to reach the village of Donore. The village was sited on an area of high ground from which the dismounted cavalrymen were able to fire down on the advancing Williamite troops. To counter this move, a squadron from the regiment charged up the hill and engaged the dismounted cavalry whilst the remainder of the regiment outflanked the village and attacked the Catholic force from the rear, inflicting a large number of casualties.[12] After routing this force, the regiment joined up with a Dutch cavalry unit and advanced. Sighting another Catholic cavalry force, the Dutch cavalry attacked, but were repelled with heavy losses and retreated down a narrow lane. As the Dutch regrouped, Leveson's men dismounted and took up position amongst the hedgerows lining the lane, as well as a nearby house; when the Catholic cavalry advanced down the lane, they came under fire from the regiment, inflicting heavy losses and forcing the survivors to retreat.[13] The battle was a decisive victory for the Williamite forces, with James forced to retire first to Dublin and then to France as the Williamite army advanced south and captured Dublin on 4 July. The regiment did not take part in the capture of Dublin, instead it was ordered to advance to the city of Waterford, where it accepted the surrender of the city's garrison (as well as the garrison of the nearby port of Youghal) and remained for the rest of the summer.[14] One of the regiment's troops patrolled the surrounding area, with a detachment engaging a large band of armed Catholic citizens who had been attacking Protestant settlements in the area; the detachment killed 60 and took 12 civilian prisoners, as well as attacking the village of Castlemartyr and taking its Catholic garrison prisoner. The remainder of the regiment moved to Limerick and took part in the failed siege of that city, although the specifics of what the regiment did are unknown.[15] Before the regiment retired to its winter quarters in December, it engaged and dispersed several more armed bands of civilians and came to the aid of a detachment from the 27th (Inniskilling) Regiment of Foot, who had been ambushed by Catholic infantry and had taken shelter in a ruined castle; a troop from the regiment drove off the infantry and escorted the Inniskilling detachment to safety.[16]

The regiment left its winter quarters in February 1691 and immediately saw action, forming part of a combined force of infantry and cavalry that engaged a 2,000-strong Catholic force near Streamstown and forced it to retreat; the role that the regiment played in this action led to Leveson being promoted to Brigadier-General. In May, the majority of the Williamite army moved north and besieged the town of Athlone, which fell after eleven days, but the regiment took no part in the siege, having been ordered to encamp in the county of Mullingar. At the beginning of July, the regiment formed part of the 12,000-strong Williamite army that defeated an 8,000-strong Catholic army during the Battle of Aughrim, taking part in a massed cavalry charge that breached the Catholic positions around the village of Aughrim. The Battle of Aughrim was a decisive victory for King William, with a number of leading Catholic generals being killed, and the Williamite forces pressed their advantage; they forced the surrender of Galway on 20 July and then began a second siege of Limerick in August.[17] The regiment did not take part directly in the siege, instead being detached in late August and ordered to advance south-west into Kerry to reconnoitre and harass Catholic forces in the area around Limerick. On 2 September, the regiment ambushed and routed two regiments of Catholic cavalry, and several days later subdued a number of Catholic garrisons between Cork and Limerick. The regiment inflicted a number of casualties, but more importantly captured thousands of cattle and oxen; one contemporary source states that the majority of the army's provisions for the siege of Limerick were provided by the regiment. On 22 September, Limerick fell to the Williamite forces, effectively ending the conflict in Ireland; the regiment was withdrawn to its winter quarters and was then transported to England in the spring of 1692.[18]

Nine Years' War

The regiment remained in England for nearly three years before it saw battle again. During this period, in which it recruited to refill its ranks, it lost Colonel Leveson when he was promoted to the rank of Major-General by King William. (Leveson was dispatched to command forces fighting in the Spanish Netherlands as part of the English contribution to the Nine Years' War before dying in March 1699 at Belvoir Castle). He was replaced by Thomas, 5th Baron Fairfax of Cameron in January 1694; as a consequence, the regiment lost the title of Leveson's Dragoons and reverted to its previous title of The Queen's Dragoons.[19]

In the spring of 1694, the regiment was reviewed by King William, along with a number of other English units, and was then transported to the Netherlands, landing at Willemstad, (nowadays in North Brabant) on 16 April. After two months, the regiment marched to join the main body of the English Army at Tirlemont in Flanders, encamping to the rear of the Army's positions in order 'to cover His Majesty's quarters'.[20] The regiment spent the summer of 1694 as part of a brigade with the Royal Horse Guards and Royal Scots Greys, taking part in manoeuvres and skirmishing with enemy troops before retiring to winter quarters in October near Ghent. By February 1695, the strength of the regiment had increased from six to eight troops, and the regiment had also gained another new commander, with Lord Fairfax being replaced by William Lloyd, previously the Lieutenant-Colonel of Essex's Dragoon's.[20]

During the summer of 1695, while the majority of the English forces were occupied with the second siege of Namur, the regiment formed part of a force that occupied the city of Diksmuide with the intention of luring away French forces that were seeking to relieve the siege of Namur. The force was successful, luring a large number of French troops away from Namur who proceeded to besiege the city; instead of holding Diksmuide as intended, however, the Danish general commanding the force surrendered the city on 18 July and, as a consequence, the regiment became prisoners of war. The officer commanding the regiment demanded that the regiment be allowed to attempt to break the siege of the city and escape, but the general denied the request.[21][22] Although the request was denied, many of the officers and troopers broke their weapons to deny them to the French before they surrendered. The regiment remained in captivity for several weeks, only being released when the siege of Namur was successful and the commander of the French forces there, the Duke of Boufflers, surrendered the city; after a period of negotiation with Louis XIII, Boufflers was exchanged for all English prisoners of war.[21]

After its release, the regiment retired to winter quarters and received reinforcements. Then, during the summer of 1696, it formed part of a detached Corps encamped near Nieuwpoort, Belgium, skirmishing several times with French forces when they attempted to attack the region, but never being committed to a major battle. The regiment also appears to have seen little combat during 1697, moving to Brussels sometime during the year to protect the approaches to the city and remaining there until the Treaty of Ryswick was signed in September 1697. Once the treaty was signed, signalling the end of the Nine Years' War, the regiment returned to England.[23]

War of the Spanish Succession

 
The Battle of Vigo Bay, by Ludolf Backhuysen.

The huge expense incurred by England during William III's prosecution of the Nine Years' War angered Parliament, leading to large cuts in funding for the military; these primarily affected soldiers pay, which was drastically reduced, and the withholding of gratuities that soldiers were often promised prior to going into battle. Many regiments had their strengths reduced, including The Queen's Own Dragoon's, which had its strength reduced by half. During the period of peace between the end of the Nine Years' War in 1697 and the beginning of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1702, the regiment performed a number of small tasks befitting its reduced size; it conducted coastal revenue duty, confronted smugglers, and escorted the King when he travelled to Holland.[24] The War of the Spanish Succession began in May 1702, and in June an English expeditionary force was assembled at Cowes on the Isle of Wight under the command of the Earl of Ormond, tasked with landing in Cadiz, Spain and capturing the surrounding area; 18 officers, 24 non-commissioned officers and 186 troopers from the regiment formed part of the force. It sailed from Cowes on 23 June and landed in Cadiz on 15 August, where it soon engaged Spanish forces. As the only cavalry formation with the expeditionary force, the regiment was constantly employed as picquets at the forefront of the English advance, as well as being used to guard and protect outposts.[25] The regiment skirmished with Spanish forces throughout September, but an attempt to besiege Cadiz was far more difficult than was expected, ending in a Spanish victory and, as a result, the regiment was embarked on transports destined for England. During the voyage, however, the transports received word that a Spanish naval force had been sighted attempting to land near the city of Vigo. The transports turned back towards Spain, reaching Vigo on 12 October, and off-loaded the regiment. There are few details about the regiment's involvement in the ensuing Battle of Vigo Bay, but records indicate that all of the Spanish vessels involved in the attempted landing were either destroyed or burnt, and the regiment received a considerable amount of prize money for its part in the action.[26]

After the battle, the regiment did not return to Spain to rejoin the English expeditionary force, but was instead ordered back to England; for a period of nearly four years the regiment remained in England, being quartered in Kent and the Isle of Wight as a garrison force, mustering for occasional parades and reviews. In December 1703, William Lloyd sold the colonelcy of the regiment to George Carpenter, who then assumed command.[27] In 1706, the regiment was once again transferred to the Isle of Wight, where 240 officers, non-commissioned officers and troopers were attached to an 8,000 strong force assembling there. The force was tasked with landing on the coast of France near Charente and fighting its way inland, aided by local Protestant civilians. The fleet left England on 30 July, but the operation was cancelled due to poor weather and the failure of Dutch naval forces, who were to rendezvous with the transports and escort them to the French coast. The transports were then ordered to head for Spain, where they would land at Cadiz and reinforce English forces in the area; however, poor weather forced the ships to remain in Torbay for eleven weeks, with the troops remaining on board, until mid-August, when they attempted to sail for Lisbon. Even more severe weather meant that the ships could not be unloaded at Lisbon either, however, and they remained there for a further two months; during this time the regiment and the other English troops on board the ships suffered hundreds of casualties from a lack of proper food and water, and outbreaks of disease.[28] By January 1707, the weather calmed down enough for the ships to leave Lisbon harbour and, in February, they reached Alicante, where the troops were off-loaded; of the 8,000 troops who had boarded the transports in July 1706, only 4,400 had survived.[29]

 
The Battle of Almansa, by Filippo Pallotta and Buonaventura Ligli. (detail)

The remnants of the force, including the regiment, then marched 40 miles to Caudete to link up with an Allied army composed of English, Dutch, German and Portuguese troops under the command of the Earl of Galway. This army was to support Spanish forces loyal to Charles of Austria, who claimed that he was the legitimate heir to the Spanish throne; however, this claim was contested by his opponent, Philip of Anjou, who had gathered his own army and was determined to defeat Charles in battle.[29] The campaign against Anjou's forces began in March, with the Allies advancing, destroying several magazines and besieging the city of Villena; soon after beginning the siege, however, they were alerted by several French deserters that a large Franco-Spanish force was advancing towards Almansa to the north-east. The Earl of Galway was also informed that a second enemy force under the command of Philippe II, Duke of Orléans was marching to reinforce the first force; in response to this information the Earl advanced immediately in an attempt to prevent the two forces from linking up. However, the manoeuvre failed, leading to the 15,000-strong Allied army being opposed by 25,000 French and Spanish troops who also possessed a superior number of artillery pieces.[30] The two forces clashed during the Battle of Almansa, which began on the afternoon of 25 April. The battle began with both sides bombarding the others positions with artillery fire. After this general bombardment had ended, the Allied cavalry were dispatched to attack the centre of the Franco-Spanish positions; The Queen's Own Dragoon's were committed alongside Essex's Dragoons to attack an enemy artillery battery that was bombarding the Allied line. The regiment charged the battery and forced it to withdraw, but were then engaged by a force of Spanish cavalry that outnumbered them by approximately three to one according to regimental records, the ensuing battle 'nearly annihilated' the regiment, with its Colonel being killed along with a large number of officers and troopers.[31] The remnants of the two cavalry regiments retreated to the Allied lines, where volley-fire from the Allied infantry was beginning to inflict significant casualties on the Franco-Spanish forces; it was at this point, however, that the 7,000 Portuguese troops belonging to the Allied army suddenly deserted, starting with their cavalry and rapidly followed by the infantry. The desertion turned the tide of the battle and led to a Franco-Spanish victory, with 2,000 Allied infantrymen being taken prisoner and the remnants of the Allied army being routed.[31] The Allied army suffered approximately 4,000 killed and wounded and another 3,000 taken prisoner; whilst there are no specific casualty numbers for the regiment, when it returned to England in the spring and began recruiting, it could only muster 150 troopers and officers.[32]

Jacobite Rising and Regimental Name Change

 
Member of the 3rd The King's Own Hussars (on the right) 1815

When the regiment had finished recruiting in England, it was dispatched north to Scotland. There, it formed part of the Government garrison.[33] When George I ascended to the British throne in 1714, the regiment's title was once again altered, and that same year became The King's Own Regiment of Dragoons.[34] Shortly after his ascension, a major Jacobite uprising occurred; the regiment was amongst the Government troops assembled in Scotland to bar the advance of the Jacobite forces. At the Battle of Sheriffmuir on 13 November, a Government army commanded by the Duke of Argyll, which included the regiment, defeated a larger Jacobite army; sources are vague on the exact details of the regiment's involvement, but it is known that it formed part of the army's left wing, supporting several infantry regiments. The wing was struck by a Jacobite infantry assault, which inflicted significant casualties, but three squadrons from the regiment charged the infantry and forced it to retreat; this allowed the Government forces to retire and reassemble without further loss.[35] The regiment did not see any further action during the uprising, remaining with the Duke of Argyll's army, which pursued Jacobite forces as they retreated northwards. The army garrisoned Aberdeen on 8 February; shortly after the rebellion came to an end.[36] For a short period, the regiment was stationed at Elgin, and then was transferred to southern England, where it remained for more than 20 years; it became an understrength garrison force and did little apart from conduct occasional raids against smugglers on the English coast.[37]

War of the Austrian Succession

On 20 October 1740, Charles VI died and his daughter, Maria Theresa of Austria, took his place on the Habsburg throne; the ascendancy caused a great deal of political controversy, which resulted in The War of the Austrian Succession. King George II pledged the support of Great Britain to Maria Theresa and, in May 1742, a 16,000 strong British army sailed to Ostend to link up with military forces of the Dutch Republic, which had also decided to support Maria Theresa. The King's Own Dragoons formed part of the army.[38]

The British forces arrived in the Dutch Republic, but did not immediately go on campaign, instead moving into winter quarters in Bruges and Ghent. The army finally departed in February 1743 and advanced towards the Rhine Valley; the regiment was chosen to form part of the advance guard.[39] By June, the British army had joined Hanoverian and Austrian forces by the river Main. The Allied forces, which totalled approximately 44,000 troops, were opposed by some 70,000 French troops. After a period of marching and counter-marching, and the arrival of King George II who took personal command of the Allied forces, the French army engaged the Allies at the Battle of Dettingen on 27 June. The King's Own Dragoons were placed on the left flank of the Allied army, with instructions to protect an infantry force as it advanced. Exposed to French artillery fire for three hours, suffering heavy casualties, the regiment was eventually ordered to advance, and then clashed with a larger force of French Household Cavalry; after a fierce engagement, and more casualties, it drove off the French cavalry. Shortly after this, the French army was forced to retreat, and the remnants of the regiment participated in a general cavalry pursuit of the French forces, which inflicted further casualties.[40] The regiment suffered 42 officer and other ranks killed, and 106 wounded, shrinking its size considerably; this provoked a comment from George II when he reviewed the Allied forces after the end of the battle. He asked an aide to whom the regiment belonged in a sharp tone, to which its commanding officer replied, 'Please, your Majesty, it is my regiment, and I believe the remainder of it is at Dettingen.'[41]

The Battle of Dettingen had brought the French advance towards the Dutch Republic to a halt, and the conflict devolved into a long series of small and indecisive battles in the Southern Netherlands. In late 1743, the regiment moved to winter quarters in Ghent and received a shipment of recruits to bolster its ranks; however, the regiment did not move from the Southern Netherlands until May 1745, when the Duke of Cumberland was dispatched to the continent to take command of the Allied army.[42] Cumberland advanced towards the city of Tournai in early May, but failed to besiege it due to its strengthened defences; a few days later, the Allied army was engaged at the Battle of Fontenoy, where it was decisively defeated by superior French forces. Unfortunately, there are no detailed records that describe the King's Own Dragoons's participation in the battle; the regiments commanding officer only noted that the regiment had launched several cavalry charges against the French line, but had been forced to retreat with the rest of the Allied army after suffering nine killed and 18 missing.[43] The Allied Army retreated back towards the Southern Netherlands, pursued by the French, but the regiment did not engage in any further fighting; instead, it was dispatched northwards to receive more recruits, and then ordered to prepare to be transported to England. On 25 July, taking advantage of the British defeat at the Battle of Fontenoy, Prince Charles Edward Stuart landed in Invernessshire and began to organise another Jacobite uprising.[44]

Within a month of landing, Stuart had raised a force of 1,600 men from various Scottish clans, and began to march south, increasing his numbers to 2,500 by mid-September, when he entered Edinburgh. As the Prince advanced, the Duke of Cumberland assembled his regiments in Flanders and then had them transported to England, arriving in London on 25 October and joining the rest of the Government army at Lichfield.[44] However, the advice of several of his senior officers, combined with a lack of support from the French and English Jacobites, prompted Stuart to order a retreat, his forces moving back north towards Scotland with the Government army in pursuit. On 16 December, the advance guard of the Government army, which included the King's Own Dragoons, managed to overtake the Jacobite rearguard and laid an ambush. The ambush did not completely succeed due to it being performed in the dark, and the Government forces suffered more casualties than they inflicted. The regiment dismounted and fought as infantry during the ambush, clashing repeatedly with the Jacobite forces and engaging in hand-to-hand fighting, suffering a number of casualties.[45] The regiment then re-mounted and pursued the Jacobite rearguard to Carlisle, being stationed near the town until it surrendered on 30 December. The records for the regiment for the next year are vague; it appears that it did see action during the Battle of Culloden in 1746, but there are no details. After the Government victory at Culloden, the regiment advanced into the Highlands with the rest of the Government army, before being detached to Dundee; after the rebellion had been suppressed, it moved to York, where it guarded Jacobite prisoners.[46]

Seven Years' War

 
Uniform of the 3rd Light Dragoons, 1840s

The regiment next saw action during the Raid on St Malo, destroying much of the French stores, in June 1758 during the Seven Years' War.[47] It went on to equal success, destroying the vessels in the harbour, at the Raid on Cherbourg in August 1758.[47] The regiment was stationed in Islington and was placed on guarding duties at Apsley House, the home of Lord Bathurst, during the Gordon Riots in 1780.[48]

Napoleonic Wars

In July 1809, the regiment departed for the Netherlands and took part in the disastrous Walcheren Campaign: many of the men caught a disease called "Walcheren Fever", thought to be a combination of malaria and typhus, before returning home in September.[49] In April 1810 the regiment was tasked with restoring order after the riots caused by protesters objecting to the incarceration of Sir Francis Burdett in the Tower of London.[50] The regiment landed in Lisbon in August 1811 for service in the Peninsular War.[51] It took part in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo in January 1812 and the Siege of Badajoz in March 1812[52] and then undertook successful charges at the Battle of Villagarcia in April 1812[53] and at the Battle of Salamanca in July 1812.[54] The regiment next saw action at the Battle of Vitoria in June 1813[55] and then, having pursued the French Army into France, at the Battle of Toulouse in April 1814.[56] The regiment returned home in July 1814.[57]

Victorian era

 
The 3rd (King's Own) Hussars were stationed at Mhow and installed this brass plaque inside Christ Church, Mhow

The regiment was renamed the 3rd (The King's Own) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons in 1818.[58] It served in Ireland between January 1820 and June 1822[59] and between March 1826 and April 1829.[60] It was dispatched in India in July 1837[61] and, having moved on to Afghanistan, saw action at the Battle of Kabul in September 1842 during the First Anglo-Afghan War.[62] It fought again at the Battle of Mudki and at the Battle of Ferozeshah in December 1845 and at the Battle of Sobraon in February 1846 during the First Anglo-Sikh War.[63] It then went on to fight at the Battle of Chillianwala in January 1849 and the Battle of Gujrat in February 1849 during the Second Anglo-Sikh War.[64] The regiment was renamed the 3rd (The King's Own) Hussars in 1861.[58] It was posted to India in 1868, was back in England in 1879, then had a brief posting to Scotland from 1887 before they were stationed in Ireland from 1889 to 1894. The regiment was back in India in 1898.[65] It was deployed to South Africa in December 1901 for service in the Second Boer War and was involved in the last great drives, capturing the boers, in the north-east of the Orange River Colony.[66] Following the end of the war in South Africa, 507 officers and men of the regiment returned to India on the SS Ionian in October 1902, where they were stationed in Sialkot in Punjab Province.[67]

First World War

 
Commemorative scroll given to the family of a Lieutenant in the 3rd Hussars (1915)

On the outbreak of the First World War, the regiment was stationed at Shorncliffe as part of the 4th Cavalry Brigade. On mobilisation, the brigade was assigned to the Cavalry Division of the British Expeditionary Force, and was sent to France. The 4th Brigade was assigned to the 2nd Cavalry Division in October, with which it remained for the remainder of the war, serving on the Western Front.[68]

Inter-War period

 
Crewmembers with Light Tank Mk.VIA of the 3rd King's Own Hussars. circa. 1937

The regiment was renamed the 3rd The King's Own Hussars in January 1921.[58] It was deployed to Turkey in November 1921 as part of the British intervention force, remaining there until 24 August 1923, when it sailed to Egypt.[69] In 1926, the regiment was stationed in Lucknow, India. Returning to England in 1932, the regiment was initially garrisoned in York, but moved to Tidworth in 1934. The regiment began mechanising in 1935, when it began receiving lorries, followed by armoured cars in the following year. In 1937, the regiment moved to Aldershot, where it served as the reconnaissance unit of the 2nd Infantry Division.[70]

Second World War

 
A light tank MkV1B from a Light Tank Squadron of the 3rd King's Own Hussars, Oosthaven, Sumatra, Netherlands East Indies. circa. 1942.

The 3rd The King's Own Hussars was brigaded with the 4th Hussars in the 1st Armoured Brigade in 1939. After the fall of France, the 3rd The King's Own Hussars was shipped to North Africa and assigned to the 7th Armoured Brigade. The regiment served in the North African Campaign. In 1941, B Squadron was sent to Singapore as reinforcements, but with the fall of Singapore, it was diverted to Java where, after a brief fight, it was ordered to surrender and the men spent the rest of the war as Prisoners of War.[71] Fifty four members of B Squadron died as prisoners of the Japanese Army. The few survivors returned to the regiment in 1945 after the war ended.[72] The remainder of the regiment fought as part of 9th Armoured Brigade in the Battle of El Alamein. After the campaign in North Africa, the 3rd The King's Own Hussars next saw action in the Italian campaign, serving through 1944 and 1945.[72]

Post-War period and amalgamation

The regiment was posted to Palestine in October 1945.[73] It moved to Kingsway Barracks in Rendsburg in summer 1948 before transferring to Ripon Barracks in Bielefeld in 1951, to Epsom Barracks in Iserlohn in July 1953 and York Barracks in Munster in September 1957.[73] It returned home in October 1958 to Tidworth Camp, where it amalgamated with the 7th Queen's Own Hussars, to form the Queen's Own Hussars in November 1958.[73]

Regimental museum

The regimental collection is moving to a new facility in Warwick known as "Trinity Mews": it is due to open in 2018.[74]

Battle honours

The regiment's battle honours were as follows:[58]

Colonel-in-Chief

Colonels of the Regiment

Colonels of the Regiment were:[58]

Duke of Somerset's Regiment of Dragoons
The Queen Consort's Own Regiment of Dragoons (1694)
The King's Regiment of Dragoons (1714)
3rd (King's Own) Regiment of Dragoons (1751)
3rd (The King's Own) Regiment of (Light) Dragoons (1818)
3rd (King's Own) Hussars (1861)
3rd The King's Own Hussars (1921)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This was deliberate policy to prevent regiments owing primary allegiance to the Crown and a response to the perceived use of a standing army by Cromwell, Charles and James as a tool of domestic oppression.

References

  1. ^ Bolitho, Hector (1963). The Galloping Third: The Story of the 3rd the King's Own Hussars. Murray. p. 3. ISBN 1135540497.
  2. ^ Chant, Christopher (1988). Handbook of British Regiments (2014 ed.). Routledge. p. 27. ISBN 0415710790.
  3. ^ Cannon, Richard (1846). Historical Record of the Third, or the King's Own Regiment of Light Dragoons (2015 ed.). Forgotten Books. ISBN 1-330-44220-2.
  4. ^ Bolitho, Hector (1963). The Galloping Third: The Story of the 3rd the King's Own Hussars. Murray. pp. 10–11. ISBN 1135540497.
  5. ^ Bolitho, p. 11
  6. ^ Bolitho, pp. 13–14
  7. ^ Bolitho, p. 15
  8. ^ Bolitho, p. 16
  9. ^ Childs, John. (1997). "The Williamite War 1689–1691". In Thomas Bartlett & Keith Jeffery (Eds.), A Military History or Ireland, p.125. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  10. ^ Bolitho, pp. 17–18
  11. ^ Bolitho, p. 19
  12. ^ Bolitho, p. 21
  13. ^ Bolitho, p. 22
  14. ^ Bolitho, p. 23
  15. ^ Bolitho, p. 24
  16. ^ Bolitho, pp. 24–25
  17. ^ Bolitho, pp. 26–27
  18. ^ Bolitho, pp. 27–28
  19. ^ Bolitho, p. 31
  20. ^ a b Bolitho, p. 32
  21. ^ a b Bolitho, p. 33
  22. ^ Childs, p. 287
  23. ^ Bolitho, pp. 34–35
  24. ^ Bolitho, p. 36
  25. ^ Bolitho, pp. 37–38
  26. ^ Bolitho, p. 38
  27. ^ Bolitho, pp. 38–40
  28. ^ Bolitho, pp. 40–41
  29. ^ a b Bolitho, p. 41
  30. ^ Bolitho, pp. 41–42
  31. ^ a b Bolitho, p. 43
  32. ^ Bolitho, p. 44
  33. ^ Bolitho, p. 46
  34. ^ Bolitho, p. 47
  35. ^ Bolitho, pp. 49–50
  36. ^ Bolitho, p. 51
  37. ^ Bolitho, pp. 52–53
  38. ^ Bolitho, pp. 56–57
  39. ^ Bolitho, pp. 57–58
  40. ^ Bolitho, pp. 59–60
  41. ^ Boolitho, pp. 61–62
  42. ^ Bolitho, p. 69
  43. ^ Bolitho, p. 71
  44. ^ a b Bolitho, p. 72
  45. ^ Bolitho, pp. 73–74
  46. ^ Bolitho, p. 74
  47. ^ a b Cannon, p. 42
  48. ^ Cannon, p. 46
  49. ^ Cannon, p. 52
  50. ^ Cannon, p. 53
  51. ^ Cannon, p. 54
  52. ^ Cannon, p. 55
  53. ^ Cannon, p. 57
  54. ^ Cannon, p. 61
  55. ^ Cannon, p. 69
  56. ^ Cannon, p. 71
  57. ^ Cannon, p. 74
  58. ^ a b c d e . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 9 June 2007. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  59. ^ Cannon, p. 81
  60. ^ Cannon, p. 85
  61. ^ Cannon, p. 88
  62. ^ Cannon, p. 93
  63. ^ Cannon, p. 101
  64. ^ "3rd The King's Own Hussars". National Army Museum. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  65. ^ Hart′s Army list, 1903
  66. ^ "3rd Hussars". Anglo-Boer War. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  67. ^ "The Army in South Africa - Troops returning Home". The Times. No. 36893. London. 8 October 1902. p. 8.
  68. ^ Baker, Chris. "The Hussars". The Long, Long Trail;The British Army of 1914–1918. from the original on 24 March 2009. Retrieved 29 March 2009.
  69. ^ Locations of British cavalry, infantry and machine gun units, 1914–1924. Robert W. Gould, Heraldene, 1977
  70. ^ Graham Watson & T F Mills (5 March 2005). . regiments.org. Archived from the original on 15 July 2007.
  71. ^ L, Klemen (1999–2000). "The conquest of Java Island, March 1942". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942. from the original on 26 July 2011.
  72. ^ a b . Queen's Own Hussars Museum Site. Archived from the original on 12 December 2009. Retrieved 28 September 2009.
  73. ^ a b c "3rd The King's Own Hussars". British Army units 1945 on. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  74. ^ "More about the New Museum". The Queen's Own Hussars Museum. Retrieved 11 June 2018.

Bibliography

  • Anonymous (1985). The Queen's Own Hussars: Tercentenary Edition. The Queen's Own Hussar's Regimental Museum. ISBN 0-9510300-0-0.
  • Bartlett, Thomas; Keith Jeffrey (1997). A Military History of Ireland. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-62989-6.
  • Bolitho, Hector (1963). The Galloping Third: The Story of the 3rd the King's Own Hussars. John Murray Ltd.
  • Burnside, Lieutenant-Colonel F.R. (1945). A Short History of 3rd the King's Own Hussars 1685–1945. Gale and Polden Ltd.
  • Cannon, Richard (1847). The Third or The King's Own Regiment of Light Dragoons containing an account of the formation of the regiment in 1865 and its subsequent services to 1846. Parker, Furnivall and Parker.
  • Chant, Christopher (1988). The Handbook of British Regiments. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-00241-9.
  • Childs, John (1991). The Nine Years' War and the British Army, 1688–1697: The Operations in the Low Countries. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-3461-2.
  • Latimer, Jon (2002). Alamein. John Murray Ltd. ISBN 0-7195-6213-9.

External links

  • British Army Locations from 1945

king, hussars, this, article, about, british, military, unit, german, military, unit, zieten, hussars, king, hussars, cavalry, regiment, british, army, first, raised, 1685, service, three, centuries, including, first, second, world, wars, before, being, amalga. This article is about the British military unit For the German military unit see Zieten Hussars The 3rd The King s Own Hussars was a cavalry regiment of the British Army first raised in 1685 It saw service for three centuries including the First and the Second World Wars before being amalgamated with the 7th Queen s Own Hussars to form the Queen s Own Hussars in November 1958 3rd The King s Own Hussars3rd The King s Own Hussars Cap BadgeActive1685 1958CountryKingdom of England 1685 1707 Kingdom of Great Britain 1707 1800 United Kingdom 1801 1958 Branch British ArmyTypeCavalry of the Line Royal Armoured CorpsRoleLight CavalrySize1 RegimentNickname s The Moodkee Wallahs Bland s DragoonsMotto s Nec Aspera Terrent Latin Nor do difficulties deter March Quick Robert the Devil slow The 3rd HussarsAnniversariesDettingen Day El Alamein Day Contents 1 History 1 1 The Glorious Revolution 1 2 The Williamite War in Ireland 1 3 Nine Years War 1 4 War of the Spanish Succession 1 5 Jacobite Rising and Regimental Name Change 1 6 War of the Austrian Succession 1 7 Seven Years War 1 8 Napoleonic Wars 1 9 Victorian era 1 10 First World War 1 11 Inter War period 1 12 Second World War 1 13 Post War period and amalgamation 2 Regimental museum 3 Battle honours 4 Colonel in Chief 5 Colonels of the Regiment 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory EditThe Glorious Revolution Edit See also the Glorious Revolution The origins of the King s Own Hussars lie in the 1685 Monmouth and Argyll rebellions which forced James II to borrow the Scots Brigade from his son in law William of Orange later William III On 16 June three troops were detached from the Duke of Somerset s Royal Dragoons and their captains ordered to recruit additional volunteers from the London area including Middlesex and Essex 1 The unit was based in Acton West London to guard approaches to the City of London but the rebellion collapsed after defeat at Sedgemoor on 6 July without the regiment seeing action Three new troops one independent and two newly raised were now added to the original three to form The Queen Consort s Regiment of Dragoons 2 Alexander Cannon a Scot who previously served in the Dutch Scots Brigade was appointed Colonel in August 1687 3 On 5 November 1688 William III landed at Torbay in the invasion later known as the Glorious Revolution and James assembled his army on Salisbury Plain to block an advance on London However many now changed sides the majority of the Queen Consort s Regiment followed Lieutenant Colonel Richard Leveson into William s camp while Cannon and his own troop remained loyal staying with James as he retreated to London 4 On 31 December Leveson replaced Cannon as Colonel and as was customary the regiment now took his name and became Leveson s Dragoons a The Williamite War in Ireland Edit In August 1689 the regiment numbering approximately 400 officers and men organised into six troops was transported to Ireland to take part in the Williamite War James had fled from England to France in December 1688 but had returned with an army in March 1689 and landed at Cork Ireland where he found that he had the support of a majority of the Catholic population 5 William s expeditionary force had landed south of Belfast on 13 August encountering little resistance from the local Catholic forces and entered the city on 17 August Leveson s Dragoons landed in Ireland four days later taking up position just outside Belfast 6 Early records of the activities of the regiment are scarce but it appears that it advanced with the rest of the Williamite forces southwards on 2 September advancing to the town of Newry but failing to catch the garrison of the town as it retreated The Williamite army moved south to Dundalk which they fortified They did not advance any further as a Catholic army estimated 35 000 strong was reportedly encamped nearby at Ardee The regiment encountered a small Catholic force and killed five men on 20 September but was forced to wait until October to take part in its first major action On 27 October 200 troopers from the regiment along with a detachment from the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons raided Ardee killing a number of sentries and capturing a large number of cattle and horses 7 In November the Williamite army moved northwards and the regiment saw action one last time before entering winter quarters at Lisburn on 26 November 60 troopers from the regiment were reconnoitring near Charlemont when they encountered a detachment from the town s garrison they engage it taking several prisoners The regiment then retired to its winter quarters to rest and took on approximately 200 recruits shipped from England to replace losses from disease whilst the exact casualty figures for the regiment are unknown the entire army had suffered approximately 6 000 casualties as a result of fever ague and dysentery by November 8 9 The regiment emerged from winter quarters in mid February 1690 and immediately saw action a gazette issued from Belfast on 14 February announced that a squadron from the regiment had formed part of a raiding force that had crossed enemy lines and burnt down a castle and looted a town killing ten men and taking 20 prisoners The next recorded action by the regiment took place on 22 June when a squadron and a company of infantry from the Tangier Regiment encountered a fort garrisoned by a force of infantry and approximately 500 cavalry the enemy force stood its ground and fought a pitched battle until its commanding officer was killed and the Catholic force retreated 10 Battle of the Boyne between James II and William III 11 June 1690 Jan van Huchtenburg The regiment was present for the Battle of the Boyne on 1 July forming part of the 36 000 strong Williamite army that engaged the 25 000 strong Catholic army commanded by James II 11 During the closing stages of the battle a large portion of James cavalry repeatedly charged the advancing Williamite infantry to provide protection for the retreating Catholic infantry and were able to reach the village of Donore The village was sited on an area of high ground from which the dismounted cavalrymen were able to fire down on the advancing Williamite troops To counter this move a squadron from the regiment charged up the hill and engaged the dismounted cavalry whilst the remainder of the regiment outflanked the village and attacked the Catholic force from the rear inflicting a large number of casualties 12 After routing this force the regiment joined up with a Dutch cavalry unit and advanced Sighting another Catholic cavalry force the Dutch cavalry attacked but were repelled with heavy losses and retreated down a narrow lane As the Dutch regrouped Leveson s men dismounted and took up position amongst the hedgerows lining the lane as well as a nearby house when the Catholic cavalry advanced down the lane they came under fire from the regiment inflicting heavy losses and forcing the survivors to retreat 13 The battle was a decisive victory for the Williamite forces with James forced to retire first to Dublin and then to France as the Williamite army advanced south and captured Dublin on 4 July The regiment did not take part in the capture of Dublin instead it was ordered to advance to the city of Waterford where it accepted the surrender of the city s garrison as well as the garrison of the nearby port of Youghal and remained for the rest of the summer 14 One of the regiment s troops patrolled the surrounding area with a detachment engaging a large band of armed Catholic citizens who had been attacking Protestant settlements in the area the detachment killed 60 and took 12 civilian prisoners as well as attacking the village of Castlemartyr and taking its Catholic garrison prisoner The remainder of the regiment moved to Limerick and took part in the failed siege of that city although the specifics of what the regiment did are unknown 15 Before the regiment retired to its winter quarters in December it engaged and dispersed several more armed bands of civilians and came to the aid of a detachment from the 27th Inniskilling Regiment of Foot who had been ambushed by Catholic infantry and had taken shelter in a ruined castle a troop from the regiment drove off the infantry and escorted the Inniskilling detachment to safety 16 The regiment left its winter quarters in February 1691 and immediately saw action forming part of a combined force of infantry and cavalry that engaged a 2 000 strong Catholic force near Streamstown and forced it to retreat the role that the regiment played in this action led to Leveson being promoted to Brigadier General In May the majority of the Williamite army moved north and besieged the town of Athlone which fell after eleven days but the regiment took no part in the siege having been ordered to encamp in the county of Mullingar At the beginning of July the regiment formed part of the 12 000 strong Williamite army that defeated an 8 000 strong Catholic army during the Battle of Aughrim taking part in a massed cavalry charge that breached the Catholic positions around the village of Aughrim The Battle of Aughrim was a decisive victory for King William with a number of leading Catholic generals being killed and the Williamite forces pressed their advantage they forced the surrender of Galway on 20 July and then began a second siege of Limerick in August 17 The regiment did not take part directly in the siege instead being detached in late August and ordered to advance south west into Kerry to reconnoitre and harass Catholic forces in the area around Limerick On 2 September the regiment ambushed and routed two regiments of Catholic cavalry and several days later subdued a number of Catholic garrisons between Cork and Limerick The regiment inflicted a number of casualties but more importantly captured thousands of cattle and oxen one contemporary source states that the majority of the army s provisions for the siege of Limerick were provided by the regiment On 22 September Limerick fell to the Williamite forces effectively ending the conflict in Ireland the regiment was withdrawn to its winter quarters and was then transported to England in the spring of 1692 18 Nine Years War Edit The regiment remained in England for nearly three years before it saw battle again During this period in which it recruited to refill its ranks it lost Colonel Leveson when he was promoted to the rank of Major General by King William Leveson was dispatched to command forces fighting in the Spanish Netherlands as part of the English contribution to the Nine Years War before dying in March 1699 at Belvoir Castle He was replaced by Thomas 5th Baron Fairfax of Cameron in January 1694 as a consequence the regiment lost the title of Leveson s Dragoons and reverted to its previous title of The Queen s Dragoons 19 In the spring of 1694 the regiment was reviewed by King William along with a number of other English units and was then transported to the Netherlands landing at Willemstad nowadays in North Brabant on 16 April After two months the regiment marched to join the main body of the English Army at Tirlemont in Flanders encamping to the rear of the Army s positions in order to cover His Majesty s quarters 20 The regiment spent the summer of 1694 as part of a brigade with the Royal Horse Guards and Royal Scots Greys taking part in manoeuvres and skirmishing with enemy troops before retiring to winter quarters in October near Ghent By February 1695 the strength of the regiment had increased from six to eight troops and the regiment had also gained another new commander with Lord Fairfax being replaced by William Lloyd previously the Lieutenant Colonel of Essex s Dragoon s 20 During the summer of 1695 while the majority of the English forces were occupied with the second siege of Namur the regiment formed part of a force that occupied the city of Diksmuide with the intention of luring away French forces that were seeking to relieve the siege of Namur The force was successful luring a large number of French troops away from Namur who proceeded to besiege the city instead of holding Diksmuide as intended however the Danish general commanding the force surrendered the city on 18 July and as a consequence the regiment became prisoners of war The officer commanding the regiment demanded that the regiment be allowed to attempt to break the siege of the city and escape but the general denied the request 21 22 Although the request was denied many of the officers and troopers broke their weapons to deny them to the French before they surrendered The regiment remained in captivity for several weeks only being released when the siege of Namur was successful and the commander of the French forces there the Duke of Boufflers surrendered the city after a period of negotiation with Louis XIII Boufflers was exchanged for all English prisoners of war 21 After its release the regiment retired to winter quarters and received reinforcements Then during the summer of 1696 it formed part of a detached Corps encamped near Nieuwpoort Belgium skirmishing several times with French forces when they attempted to attack the region but never being committed to a major battle The regiment also appears to have seen little combat during 1697 moving to Brussels sometime during the year to protect the approaches to the city and remaining there until the Treaty of Ryswick was signed in September 1697 Once the treaty was signed signalling the end of the Nine Years War the regiment returned to England 23 War of the Spanish Succession Edit The Battle of Vigo Bay by Ludolf Backhuysen The huge expense incurred by England during William III s prosecution of the Nine Years War angered Parliament leading to large cuts in funding for the military these primarily affected soldiers pay which was drastically reduced and the withholding of gratuities that soldiers were often promised prior to going into battle Many regiments had their strengths reduced including The Queen s Own Dragoon s which had its strength reduced by half During the period of peace between the end of the Nine Years War in 1697 and the beginning of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1702 the regiment performed a number of small tasks befitting its reduced size it conducted coastal revenue duty confronted smugglers and escorted the King when he travelled to Holland 24 The War of the Spanish Succession began in May 1702 and in June an English expeditionary force was assembled at Cowes on the Isle of Wight under the command of the Earl of Ormond tasked with landing in Cadiz Spain and capturing the surrounding area 18 officers 24 non commissioned officers and 186 troopers from the regiment formed part of the force It sailed from Cowes on 23 June and landed in Cadiz on 15 August where it soon engaged Spanish forces As the only cavalry formation with the expeditionary force the regiment was constantly employed as picquets at the forefront of the English advance as well as being used to guard and protect outposts 25 The regiment skirmished with Spanish forces throughout September but an attempt to besiege Cadiz was far more difficult than was expected ending in a Spanish victory and as a result the regiment was embarked on transports destined for England During the voyage however the transports received word that a Spanish naval force had been sighted attempting to land near the city of Vigo The transports turned back towards Spain reaching Vigo on 12 October and off loaded the regiment There are few details about the regiment s involvement in the ensuing Battle of Vigo Bay but records indicate that all of the Spanish vessels involved in the attempted landing were either destroyed or burnt and the regiment received a considerable amount of prize money for its part in the action 26 After the battle the regiment did not return to Spain to rejoin the English expeditionary force but was instead ordered back to England for a period of nearly four years the regiment remained in England being quartered in Kent and the Isle of Wight as a garrison force mustering for occasional parades and reviews In December 1703 William Lloyd sold the colonelcy of the regiment to George Carpenter who then assumed command 27 In 1706 the regiment was once again transferred to the Isle of Wight where 240 officers non commissioned officers and troopers were attached to an 8 000 strong force assembling there The force was tasked with landing on the coast of France near Charente and fighting its way inland aided by local Protestant civilians The fleet left England on 30 July but the operation was cancelled due to poor weather and the failure of Dutch naval forces who were to rendezvous with the transports and escort them to the French coast The transports were then ordered to head for Spain where they would land at Cadiz and reinforce English forces in the area however poor weather forced the ships to remain in Torbay for eleven weeks with the troops remaining on board until mid August when they attempted to sail for Lisbon Even more severe weather meant that the ships could not be unloaded at Lisbon either however and they remained there for a further two months during this time the regiment and the other English troops on board the ships suffered hundreds of casualties from a lack of proper food and water and outbreaks of disease 28 By January 1707 the weather calmed down enough for the ships to leave Lisbon harbour and in February they reached Alicante where the troops were off loaded of the 8 000 troops who had boarded the transports in July 1706 only 4 400 had survived 29 The Battle of Almansa by Filippo Pallotta and Buonaventura Ligli detail The remnants of the force including the regiment then marched 40 miles to Caudete to link up with an Allied army composed of English Dutch German and Portuguese troops under the command of the Earl of Galway This army was to support Spanish forces loyal to Charles of Austria who claimed that he was the legitimate heir to the Spanish throne however this claim was contested by his opponent Philip of Anjou who had gathered his own army and was determined to defeat Charles in battle 29 The campaign against Anjou s forces began in March with the Allies advancing destroying several magazines and besieging the city of Villena soon after beginning the siege however they were alerted by several French deserters that a large Franco Spanish force was advancing towards Almansa to the north east The Earl of Galway was also informed that a second enemy force under the command of Philippe II Duke of Orleans was marching to reinforce the first force in response to this information the Earl advanced immediately in an attempt to prevent the two forces from linking up However the manoeuvre failed leading to the 15 000 strong Allied army being opposed by 25 000 French and Spanish troops who also possessed a superior number of artillery pieces 30 The two forces clashed during the Battle of Almansa which began on the afternoon of 25 April The battle began with both sides bombarding the others positions with artillery fire After this general bombardment had ended the Allied cavalry were dispatched to attack the centre of the Franco Spanish positions The Queen s Own Dragoon s were committed alongside Essex s Dragoons to attack an enemy artillery battery that was bombarding the Allied line The regiment charged the battery and forced it to withdraw but were then engaged by a force of Spanish cavalry that outnumbered them by approximately three to one according to regimental records the ensuing battle nearly annihilated the regiment with its Colonel being killed along with a large number of officers and troopers 31 The remnants of the two cavalry regiments retreated to the Allied lines where volley fire from the Allied infantry was beginning to inflict significant casualties on the Franco Spanish forces it was at this point however that the 7 000 Portuguese troops belonging to the Allied army suddenly deserted starting with their cavalry and rapidly followed by the infantry The desertion turned the tide of the battle and led to a Franco Spanish victory with 2 000 Allied infantrymen being taken prisoner and the remnants of the Allied army being routed 31 The Allied army suffered approximately 4 000 killed and wounded and another 3 000 taken prisoner whilst there are no specific casualty numbers for the regiment when it returned to England in the spring and began recruiting it could only muster 150 troopers and officers 32 Jacobite Rising and Regimental Name Change Edit Member of the 3rd The King s Own Hussars on the right 1815 When the regiment had finished recruiting in England it was dispatched north to Scotland There it formed part of the Government garrison 33 When George I ascended to the British throne in 1714 the regiment s title was once again altered and that same year became The King s Own Regiment of Dragoons 34 Shortly after his ascension a major Jacobite uprising occurred the regiment was amongst the Government troops assembled in Scotland to bar the advance of the Jacobite forces At the Battle of Sheriffmuir on 13 November a Government army commanded by the Duke of Argyll which included the regiment defeated a larger Jacobite army sources are vague on the exact details of the regiment s involvement but it is known that it formed part of the army s left wing supporting several infantry regiments The wing was struck by a Jacobite infantry assault which inflicted significant casualties but three squadrons from the regiment charged the infantry and forced it to retreat this allowed the Government forces to retire and reassemble without further loss 35 The regiment did not see any further action during the uprising remaining with the Duke of Argyll s army which pursued Jacobite forces as they retreated northwards The army garrisoned Aberdeen on 8 February shortly after the rebellion came to an end 36 For a short period the regiment was stationed at Elgin and then was transferred to southern England where it remained for more than 20 years it became an understrength garrison force and did little apart from conduct occasional raids against smugglers on the English coast 37 War of the Austrian Succession Edit On 20 October 1740 Charles VI died and his daughter Maria Theresa of Austria took his place on the Habsburg throne the ascendancy caused a great deal of political controversy which resulted in The War of the Austrian Succession King George II pledged the support of Great Britain to Maria Theresa and in May 1742 a 16 000 strong British army sailed to Ostend to link up with military forces of the Dutch Republic which had also decided to support Maria Theresa The King s Own Dragoons formed part of the army 38 The British forces arrived in the Dutch Republic but did not immediately go on campaign instead moving into winter quarters in Bruges and Ghent The army finally departed in February 1743 and advanced towards the Rhine Valley the regiment was chosen to form part of the advance guard 39 By June the British army had joined Hanoverian and Austrian forces by the river Main The Allied forces which totalled approximately 44 000 troops were opposed by some 70 000 French troops After a period of marching and counter marching and the arrival of King George II who took personal command of the Allied forces the French army engaged the Allies at the Battle of Dettingen on 27 June The King s Own Dragoons were placed on the left flank of the Allied army with instructions to protect an infantry force as it advanced Exposed to French artillery fire for three hours suffering heavy casualties the regiment was eventually ordered to advance and then clashed with a larger force of French Household Cavalry after a fierce engagement and more casualties it drove off the French cavalry Shortly after this the French army was forced to retreat and the remnants of the regiment participated in a general cavalry pursuit of the French forces which inflicted further casualties 40 The regiment suffered 42 officer and other ranks killed and 106 wounded shrinking its size considerably this provoked a comment from George II when he reviewed the Allied forces after the end of the battle He asked an aide to whom the regiment belonged in a sharp tone to which its commanding officer replied Please your Majesty it is my regiment and I believe the remainder of it is at Dettingen 41 The Battle of Dettingen had brought the French advance towards the Dutch Republic to a halt and the conflict devolved into a long series of small and indecisive battles in the Southern Netherlands In late 1743 the regiment moved to winter quarters in Ghent and received a shipment of recruits to bolster its ranks however the regiment did not move from the Southern Netherlands until May 1745 when the Duke of Cumberland was dispatched to the continent to take command of the Allied army 42 Cumberland advanced towards the city of Tournai in early May but failed to besiege it due to its strengthened defences a few days later the Allied army was engaged at the Battle of Fontenoy where it was decisively defeated by superior French forces Unfortunately there are no detailed records that describe the King s Own Dragoons s participation in the battle the regiments commanding officer only noted that the regiment had launched several cavalry charges against the French line but had been forced to retreat with the rest of the Allied army after suffering nine killed and 18 missing 43 The Allied Army retreated back towards the Southern Netherlands pursued by the French but the regiment did not engage in any further fighting instead it was dispatched northwards to receive more recruits and then ordered to prepare to be transported to England On 25 July taking advantage of the British defeat at the Battle of Fontenoy Prince Charles Edward Stuart landed in Invernessshire and began to organise another Jacobite uprising 44 Within a month of landing Stuart had raised a force of 1 600 men from various Scottish clans and began to march south increasing his numbers to 2 500 by mid September when he entered Edinburgh As the Prince advanced the Duke of Cumberland assembled his regiments in Flanders and then had them transported to England arriving in London on 25 October and joining the rest of the Government army at Lichfield 44 However the advice of several of his senior officers combined with a lack of support from the French and English Jacobites prompted Stuart to order a retreat his forces moving back north towards Scotland with the Government army in pursuit On 16 December the advance guard of the Government army which included the King s Own Dragoons managed to overtake the Jacobite rearguard and laid an ambush The ambush did not completely succeed due to it being performed in the dark and the Government forces suffered more casualties than they inflicted The regiment dismounted and fought as infantry during the ambush clashing repeatedly with the Jacobite forces and engaging in hand to hand fighting suffering a number of casualties 45 The regiment then re mounted and pursued the Jacobite rearguard to Carlisle being stationed near the town until it surrendered on 30 December The records for the regiment for the next year are vague it appears that it did see action during the Battle of Culloden in 1746 but there are no details After the Government victory at Culloden the regiment advanced into the Highlands with the rest of the Government army before being detached to Dundee after the rebellion had been suppressed it moved to York where it guarded Jacobite prisoners 46 Seven Years War Edit Uniform of the 3rd Light Dragoons 1840s The regiment next saw action during the Raid on St Malo destroying much of the French stores in June 1758 during the Seven Years War 47 It went on to equal success destroying the vessels in the harbour at the Raid on Cherbourg in August 1758 47 The regiment was stationed in Islington and was placed on guarding duties at Apsley House the home of Lord Bathurst during the Gordon Riots in 1780 48 Napoleonic Wars Edit In July 1809 the regiment departed for the Netherlands and took part in the disastrous Walcheren Campaign many of the men caught a disease called Walcheren Fever thought to be a combination of malaria and typhus before returning home in September 49 In April 1810 the regiment was tasked with restoring order after the riots caused by protesters objecting to the incarceration of Sir Francis Burdett in the Tower of London 50 The regiment landed in Lisbon in August 1811 for service in the Peninsular War 51 It took part in the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo in January 1812 and the Siege of Badajoz in March 1812 52 and then undertook successful charges at the Battle of Villagarcia in April 1812 53 and at the Battle of Salamanca in July 1812 54 The regiment next saw action at the Battle of Vitoria in June 1813 55 and then having pursued the French Army into France at the Battle of Toulouse in April 1814 56 The regiment returned home in July 1814 57 Victorian era Edit The 3rd King s Own Hussars were stationed at Mhow and installed this brass plaque inside Christ Church Mhow The regiment was renamed the 3rd The King s Own Regiment of Light Dragoons in 1818 58 It served in Ireland between January 1820 and June 1822 59 and between March 1826 and April 1829 60 It was dispatched in India in July 1837 61 and having moved on to Afghanistan saw action at the Battle of Kabul in September 1842 during the First Anglo Afghan War 62 It fought again at the Battle of Mudki and at the Battle of Ferozeshah in December 1845 and at the Battle of Sobraon in February 1846 during the First Anglo Sikh War 63 It then went on to fight at the Battle of Chillianwala in January 1849 and the Battle of Gujrat in February 1849 during the Second Anglo Sikh War 64 The regiment was renamed the 3rd The King s Own Hussars in 1861 58 It was posted to India in 1868 was back in England in 1879 then had a brief posting to Scotland from 1887 before they were stationed in Ireland from 1889 to 1894 The regiment was back in India in 1898 65 It was deployed to South Africa in December 1901 for service in the Second Boer War and was involved in the last great drives capturing the boers in the north east of the Orange River Colony 66 Following the end of the war in South Africa 507 officers and men of the regiment returned to India on the SS Ionian in October 1902 where they were stationed in Sialkot in Punjab Province 67 First World War Edit Commemorative scroll given to the family of a Lieutenant in the 3rd Hussars 1915 On the outbreak of the First World War the regiment was stationed at Shorncliffe as part of the 4th Cavalry Brigade On mobilisation the brigade was assigned to the Cavalry Division of the British Expeditionary Force and was sent to France The 4th Brigade was assigned to the 2nd Cavalry Division in October with which it remained for the remainder of the war serving on the Western Front 68 Inter War period Edit Crewmembers with Light Tank Mk VIA of the 3rd King s Own Hussars circa 1937 The regiment was renamed the 3rd The King s Own Hussars in January 1921 58 It was deployed to Turkey in November 1921 as part of the British intervention force remaining there until 24 August 1923 when it sailed to Egypt 69 In 1926 the regiment was stationed in Lucknow India Returning to England in 1932 the regiment was initially garrisoned in York but moved to Tidworth in 1934 The regiment began mechanising in 1935 when it began receiving lorries followed by armoured cars in the following year In 1937 the regiment moved to Aldershot where it served as the reconnaissance unit of the 2nd Infantry Division 70 Second World War Edit A light tank MkV1B from a Light Tank Squadron of the 3rd King s Own Hussars Oosthaven Sumatra Netherlands East Indies circa 1942 The 3rd The King s Own Hussars was brigaded with the 4th Hussars in the 1st Armoured Brigade in 1939 After the fall of France the 3rd The King s Own Hussars was shipped to North Africa and assigned to the 7th Armoured Brigade The regiment served in the North African Campaign In 1941 B Squadron was sent to Singapore as reinforcements but with the fall of Singapore it was diverted to Java where after a brief fight it was ordered to surrender and the men spent the rest of the war as Prisoners of War 71 Fifty four members of B Squadron died as prisoners of the Japanese Army The few survivors returned to the regiment in 1945 after the war ended 72 The remainder of the regiment fought as part of 9th Armoured Brigade in the Battle of El Alamein After the campaign in North Africa the 3rd The King s Own Hussars next saw action in the Italian campaign serving through 1944 and 1945 72 Post War period and amalgamation Edit The regiment was posted to Palestine in October 1945 73 It moved to Kingsway Barracks in Rendsburg in summer 1948 before transferring to Ripon Barracks in Bielefeld in 1951 to Epsom Barracks in Iserlohn in July 1953 and York Barracks in Munster in September 1957 73 It returned home in October 1958 to Tidworth Camp where it amalgamated with the 7th Queen s Own Hussars to form the Queen s Own Hussars in November 1958 73 Regimental museum EditThe regimental collection is moving to a new facility in Warwick known as Trinity Mews it is due to open in 2018 74 Battle honours EditThe regiment s battle honours were as follows 58 War of Austrian Succession Dettingen Napoleonic Wars Salamanca Vittoria Toulouse Peninsula India Cabool 1842 Moodkee Ferozeshar Sobraon Chillianwallah Battle of Goojerat Punjaub Boer War South Africa 1902 The Great War Mons Le Cateau Retreat from Mons Marne 1914 Aisne 1914 Messines 1914 Armentieres 1914 Ypres 1914 15 Gheluvelt St Julien Bellewaarde Arras 1917 Scarpe 1917 Cambrai 1917 18 Somme 1918 St Quentin Lys Hazebrouck Amiens Bapaume 1918 Hindenburg Line Canal du Nord Selle Sambre France and Flanders 1914 18 The Second World War Sidi Barrani Buq Buq Beda Fomm Sidi Suleiman El Alamein North Africa 1940 42 Citta della Pieve Citta di Castello Italy 1944 Battle of CreteColonel in Chief Edit1953 The Princess Margaret Countess of Snowdon CI GCVOColonels of the Regiment EditColonels of the Regiment were 58 Duke of Somerset s Regiment of Dragoons1685 1687 Brig Gen Charles Seymour 6th Duke of Somerset KG 1687 1688 Col Alexander Cannon 1688 1694 Maj Gen Richard LevesonThe Queen Consort s Own Regiment of Dragoons 1694 1694 1695 Col Thomas Fairfax 5th Lord Fairfax 1695 1703 Maj Gen William Lloyd 1703 1732 Lt Gen George Carpenter 1st Baron CarpenterThe King s Regiment of Dragoons 1714 1732 1743 Gen Sir Philip Honywood KB 1743 1752 Lt Gen Humphrey Bland3rd King s Own Regiment of Dragoons 1751 1752 1755 F M James O Hara 2nd Baron Tyrawley Lord Kilmaine 1755 1772 Lt Gen George Keppel 3rd Earl of Albemarle KG Viscount Bury 1772 1797 Gen Charles Fitzroy 1st Baron Southampton 1797 1799 Gen Francis Lascelles 1799 1807 Gen Charles Grey 1st Earl Grey KB 1807 1821 Gen William Cartwright3rd The King s Own Regiment of Light Dragoons 1818 1821 1829 F M Stapleton Cotton 1st Viscount Combermere GCB GCH KSI 1829 1839 Lt Gen Lord George Thomas Beresford GCH 1839 1855 Gen Lord Charles Henry Somerset Manners KCB 1855 1866 Gen Peter Augustus Latour CB KH3rd King s Own Hussars 1861 1866 1872 Gen Henry Aitchison Hankey 1872 1884 Gen Sir George Henry Lockwood KCB 1884 1891 Lt Gen Sir Frederick Wellington John FitzWygram Bt 1891 Lt Gen Edward Burgoyne Cuerton 1891 1909 Lt Gen Edward Howard Vyse 1909 1912 Maj Gen Richard Blundell Hollinshed Blundell 1912 1924 F M Julian Hedworth George Byng 1st Viscount Byng of Vimy GCB GCMG MVO3rd The King s Own Hussars 1921 1924 1926 Maj Gen Alfred Alexander Kennedy CB CMG 1926 1946 Brig Gen Philip James Vandeleur Kelly CMG DSO 1946 1955 Brig George Edward Younghusband CBE 1955 1958 Lt Col Hon Col Sir Douglas Winchester Scott Bt 1958 Regiment amalgamated with 7th Queen s Own Hussars to form The Queen s Own HussarsSee also EditBritish cavalry during the First World War Battle of Java 1942 Notes Edit This was deliberate policy to prevent regiments owing primary allegiance to the Crown and a response to the perceived use of a standing army by Cromwell Charles and James as a tool of domestic oppression References Edit Bolitho Hector 1963 The Galloping Third The Story of the 3rd the King s Own Hussars Murray p 3 ISBN 1135540497 Chant Christopher 1988 Handbook of British Regiments 2014 ed Routledge p 27 ISBN 0415710790 Cannon Richard 1846 Historical Record of the Third or the King s Own Regiment of Light Dragoons 2015 ed Forgotten Books ISBN 1 330 44220 2 Bolitho Hector 1963 The Galloping Third The Story of the 3rd the King s Own Hussars Murray pp 10 11 ISBN 1135540497 Bolitho p 11 Bolitho pp 13 14 Bolitho p 15 Bolitho p 16 Childs John 1997 The Williamite War 1689 1691 In Thomas Bartlett amp Keith Jeffery Eds A Military History or Ireland p 125 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Bolitho pp 17 18 Bolitho p 19 Bolitho p 21 Bolitho p 22 Bolitho p 23 Bolitho p 24 Bolitho pp 24 25 Bolitho pp 26 27 Bolitho pp 27 28 Bolitho p 31 a b Bolitho p 32 a b Bolitho p 33 Childs p 287 Bolitho pp 34 35 Bolitho p 36 Bolitho pp 37 38 Bolitho p 38 Bolitho pp 38 40 Bolitho pp 40 41 a b Bolitho p 41 Bolitho pp 41 42 a b Bolitho p 43 Bolitho p 44 Bolitho p 46 Bolitho p 47 Bolitho pp 49 50 Bolitho p 51 Bolitho pp 52 53 Bolitho pp 56 57 Bolitho pp 57 58 Bolitho pp 59 60 Boolitho pp 61 62 Bolitho p 69 Bolitho p 71 a b Bolitho p 72 Bolitho pp 73 74 Bolitho p 74 a b Cannon p 42 Cannon p 46 Cannon p 52 Cannon p 53 Cannon p 54 Cannon p 55 Cannon p 57 Cannon p 61 Cannon p 69 Cannon p 71 Cannon p 74 a b c d e 3rd The King s Own Hussars Regiments org Archived from the original on 9 June 2007 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Cannon p 81 Cannon p 85 Cannon p 88 Cannon p 93 Cannon p 101 3rd The King s Own Hussars National Army Museum Retrieved 28 August 2016 Hart s Army list 1903 3rd Hussars Anglo Boer War Retrieved 28 August 2016 The Army in South Africa Troops returning Home The Times No 36893 London 8 October 1902 p 8 Baker Chris The Hussars The Long Long Trail The British Army of 1914 1918 Archived from the original on 24 March 2009 Retrieved 29 March 2009 Locations of British cavalry infantry and machine gun units 1914 1924 Robert W Gould Heraldene 1977 Graham Watson amp T F Mills 5 March 2005 Deployments of the 3rd The King s Own Hussars regiments org Archived from the original on 15 July 2007 L Klemen 1999 2000 The conquest of Java Island March 1942 Forgotten Campaign The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941 1942 Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 a b Queen s Own Husssars Museum Queen s Own Hussars Museum Site Archived from the original on 12 December 2009 Retrieved 28 September 2009 a b c 3rd The King s Own Hussars British Army units 1945 on Retrieved 7 August 2016 More about the New Museum The Queen s Own Hussars Museum Retrieved 11 June 2018 Bibliography EditAnonymous 1985 The Queen s Own Hussars Tercentenary Edition The Queen s Own Hussar s Regimental Museum ISBN 0 9510300 0 0 Bartlett Thomas Keith Jeffrey 1997 A Military History of Ireland Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 62989 6 Bolitho Hector 1963 The Galloping Third The Story of the 3rd the King s Own Hussars John Murray Ltd Burnside Lieutenant Colonel F R 1945 A Short History of 3rd the King s Own Hussars 1685 1945 Gale and Polden Ltd Cannon Richard 1847 The Third or The King s Own Regiment of Light Dragoons containing an account of the formation of the regiment in 1865 and its subsequent services to 1846 Parker Furnivall and Parker Chant Christopher 1988 The Handbook of British Regiments Routledge ISBN 0 415 00241 9 Childs John 1991 The Nine Years War and the British Army 1688 1697 The Operations in the Low Countries Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 3461 2 Latimer Jon 2002 Alamein John Murray Ltd ISBN 0 7195 6213 9 External links EditHistorical website Regimental Association British Army Locations from 1945 British Army Locations from 1945 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 3rd The King 27s Own Hussars amp oldid 1134959090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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