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Queen's Edinburgh Rifles

The Queen's Edinburgh Rifles was a brigade of Rifle Volunteers raised in the county of city of Edinburgh in 1859. It later formed two battalions of the Royal Scots, which fought in World War I at Gallipoli, in Palestine and on the Western Front. The two battalions combined between the world wars before being converted into an air defence regiment of the Royal Artillery (RA). This served in Anti-Aircraft Command during World War II and continued in the postwar Territorial Army (TA) until 1961, when its successors were converted into Royal Engineers (RE).

Queen's Edinburgh Rifles
4th/5th (Queen's Edinburgh Rifles) Battalion, Royal Scots
52nd (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) S/L Rgt, RA
130th (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) LAA Rgt, RA
587 (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) LAA Rgt, RA
Active31 August 1859 – 1 May 1961
Country United Kingdom
Branch Territorial Army
RoleInfantry
Air Defence
Part of52nd (Lowland) Division
29th Division
32nd Division
65th (2nd Lowland) Division
Anti-Aircraft Command
Garrison/HQEdinburgh
ColorsHunting Stuart Tartan (Pipers, Royal Stewart)
MarchI'm Ninety-Five
EngagementsSecond Boer War
World War I:
Commanders
Notable
commanders
James, Lord Moncrieff
John Macdonald, Lord Kingsburgh
Sir Robert Cranston

Volunteer Force edit

The enthusiasm for the Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of many Rifle Volunteer Corps (RVCs) composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular British Army in time of need.[1][2][3] The 1st City of Edinburgh RVC comprised 21 different companies raised in that city between 31 August 1859 and November 1860 under the command of James Moncrieff, MP for Edinburgh (later 1st Lord Moncrieff), as Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant. Nine of these companies were professional by background (lawyers, accountants, civil servants, university men and merchants), four were drawn from miscellaneous interests (Freemasons, Total abstainers, the Highland Society of Edinburgh), two were citizens' companies, two were lower middle class (tailors and bankers' clerks) and four were artisan companies:[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

 
Queen's Edinburgh Rifles, 1859.
  • 1st (Advocates) Company, formed 31 August 1859, disbanded 1868
  • 2nd (1st Citizens) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 3rd (Writers to the Signet) Company, formed 31 August 1859, disbanded 1868
  • 4th (Edinburgh University) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 5th (Solicitors before the Supreme Court) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 6th (Accountants) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 7th (Bankers) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 8th (1st Artisans) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 9th (2nd Artisans) Company, formed 31 August 1859
  • 10th (Civil Service) Company, formed 7 October 1859
  • 11th (3rd Artisans) Company, formed 7 December 1859
  • 12th (Freemasons) Company, formed 7 December 1859, reorganised as 12th (Water of Leith) Company 1861
  • 13th (4th Artisans) Company, formed 7 December 1859
  • 14th (2nd Citizens) Company, formed 8 December 1859
  • 15th (1st Merchants) Company, formed 21 December 1859
  • 16th (Total Abstainers) Company, formed 29 February 1860
  • 17th (2nd Merchants) Company, formed 11 May 1860
  • 18th (High Constables) Company, formed 25 May 1860
  • 19th (5th Artisans) Company, formed 8 November 1860
  • 1st (Highland) Company formed 31 August 1859
  • 2nd (Highland) Company formed 18 May 1860
  • 3rd (Highland) Company formed 23 July 1860

The author R. M. Ballantyne was appointed Ensign in No 13 (4th Artisans) Company, and then promoted to be Captain of No 9 (2nd Artisans) Company in July 1860, resigning in July 1863. He rejoined the corps in 1867 as Captain of No 15 (1st Merchants) Company, but resigned again at the end of 1869. His brother John was one of the first officers appointed to the corps, being commissioned as ensign in No 2 (1st Citizens) Company and then selected as Captain of No 14 (2nd Citizens) Company on its formation, before resigning in June 1860.[13]

The first six companies were self-supporting, the members paying for their own uniforms, equipment and arms, while No 7 Company composed of bank clerks, No 15 (1st Merchants) and No 19, mainly tailors, received financial support from their employers. The other artisans paid for their uniforms by instalments and their company expenses were met by public subscriptions. The three Highland Companies came from the Highland Society of Edinburgh. Interest in No 12 Company, the Freemasons, soon fell away and by 1861 it had almost ceased to exist. The novelist Catherine Sinclair came forward with funds and No 12 Company was reorganised, recruited mainly from the Water of Leith district.[7][8]

In 1865 the unit received the title of 1st Queen's Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer Brigade (1st QERVB). A 2nd City of Edinburgh RVC had been formed in 1862 as one company of Highlanders raised from W.D. Young's Ironworks at Fountainbridge with William D. Young himself as captain. On 23 February 1867 this unit was increased to three companies, but simultaneously was included in the 1st QERVB as the 4th, 5th and 6th (Highland) Companies.[5][6][7][8][9][11]

No 16 Company had been formed by John Hope entirely from men who had 'signed the pledge' as total abstainers. Hope then decided to raise a complete corps of abstainers from Edinburgh and on 27 May 1867 the 3rd City of Edinburgh RVC of two companies was formed with Hope in command. Most of his recruits (and the cap badge) were taken from No 16 Company, and the 3rd RVC remained administratively attached to the 1st QERVB for several years. The unit, known locally as 'John Hope's Water Rats', grew to six companies by 1880, when it was renumbered as the 2nd Edinburgh RVC. It became the 4th Volunteer Battalion of the Royal Scots in 1888, and the 6th Battalion, Royal Scots in 1908.[5][6][7][8][9][10][12][14][15][16]

 
The QER Drill Hall at Forrest Hill.

The 1st QERVB continued to grow, adding a 7th (Highland) Company on 27 December 1867 from natives of Caithness living in Edinburgh. Nos 1 and 3 Companies were disbanded in 1868 but on 19 March 1869 a new No 20 Company was formed and the brigade divided into two battalions: 1st Battalion comprised Nos 2, 4, 5. 6, 7, 10, 18 and 1st to 7th Highland Companies; 2nd Battalion comprised Nos 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19 and 20 Companies. It was the largest RVC in the Volunteer Force. The unit established its Headquarters (HQ) at Forrest Hill drill hall, Edinburgh, in 1872, and enlarged the building in 1905. In common with other Edinburgh Volunteer units, it used a rifle range at Hunters Bog in Holyrood Park.[7][8][9][10][12][17]

J.H.A. Macdonald, later Lord Kingsburgh, Lord Advocate of Scotland, was commissioned as a Lt-Col in the brigade in 1864 and became Lt-Col Commandant in 1882. He was one of the leading Volunteer advocates of drill reform, author of On the Best Detail Formation for the New Infantry Tactics (1873) and Commonsense on Parade or Drill without Strings (1886). In 1885 he organised a spectacular night assembly of the brigade, which resulted in 500 new recruits. In 1886 a Mounted Infantry detachment was formed and an affiliated cadet corps was formed at Merchiston Castle School.[7][8][10][18]

Localisation edit

Under the 'Localisation of Forces' scheme introduced in 1872 by the Cardwell Reforms, the 1st QERVB was grouped with the 1st Regiment of Foot (the Royal Scots), the Edinburgh Light Infantry Militia and a number of RVCs from neighbouring counties into Brigade No 62.[16] When these were combined into a single regiment under the Childers Reforms, the 1st QERVB provided two Volunteer Battalions of the Royal Scots from 1 July 1881. The 2nd Battalion formed a Mounted Rifle company in March 1886. On 1 April the unit was designated the Queens Rifle Volunteer Brigade Royal Scots, when it was split into three battalions: 1st Battalion with A-I Companies (previously Nos 2, 5, 6, 7, 10, 18 and 1–3 Highland); 2nd Battalion A–H Companies (previously Nos 8, 9, 11–16); 3rd Battalion A–H Companies (previously Nos 4, 17, 19, 20 and 4–7 Highland).[6][8][9][11][16][17][15]

The Stanhope Memorandum of December 1888 introduced a Mobilisation Scheme for Volunteer units, which would assemble in their own brigades at key points in case of war. In peacetime these brigades provided a structure for collective training.[19][20][21] Under this scheme the QRVB was included in the Forth Brigade under the command of Col J.H.A. Macdonald, based at 51 Hanover Street, Edinburgh, later at Surgeons' Hall. In 1902 the Forth Brigade was split into the 1st and 2nd Lothian Brigades, with the QVRB in the 1st Brigade based at the QRVB Drill Hall in Forrest Road, later at 28 Rutland Street.[16]

2nd Boer War edit

A contingent from the brigade served in the Volunteer Service Companies of the Royal Scots alongside the Regulars in the Second Boer War, and others with the Scottish Volunteer Cyclist Company and the City of London Imperial Volunteers. In all, 245 members of the brigade served in the war, earning its first Battle honour: South Africa 1900–02.[7][8][9][10][16][22]

In 1900, during the 2nd Boer War, the Government provided support (army pay and allowances, with separation allowances for families) for longer than usual summer training camps for the Volunteers. This allowed the Queen's Edinburgh Rifle Brigade to camp for 28 days instead of the usual week, and to concentrate on progressive training.[23] From 1902 to 1906 the brigade provided one battalion to the 32nd Brigade of the field army for 13 days' annual training, the remainder staying with 1st Lothian Bde.[7]

Recruitment soared during the Boer War and the brigade underwent further enlargement in 1900, with the addition of I Company (recruited from Colinton) for 3rd Battalion, and the expansion of the Mounted Infantry detachment to three sections. In 1875 the brigade's highland companies had been ordered to discontinue Highland dress, but in 1900 a complete new Highland Battalion of eight kilted companies was formed in Edinburgh. This was detached from the brigade the following year and became independent as 9th (Highlanders) Volunteer Battalion, Royal Scots.[6][7][8][9][10][24]

In 1905, Sir Robert Cranston, as one of the lieutenant-colonels of the brigade (as well as its Honorary Colonel, ex officio, as Lord Provost of Edinburgh), participated in meetings with H. O. Arnold-Forster, Secretary of State for War, over the future of the Volunteer Force.[25] George Watson's Boys' College formed an affiliated cadet corps in 1905.[8]

Territorial Force edit

When the Volunteers were subsumed into the new Territorial Force (TF) under the Haldane Reforms of 1908,[26][27] the three battalions of the brigade were reorganised to form the 4th and 5th Battalions of the Royal Scots, both granted the subtitle 'Queen's Edinburgh Rifles' in March 1909. A Company of the brigade's 3rd Bn, the old No 4 (Edinburgh University) Company, became the Edinburgh University contingent of the Senior Division of the Officers' Training Corps (OTC) and the Merchiston Castle and George Watson's Cadet Corps joined the Junior Division of the OTC.[6][8][9][10][11][16][17][15][28][29]

The two battalions remained in the Lothian Brigade, which did not join any of the TF's new infantry divisions but continued independently in its coast defence role.[30][31][32]

World War I edit

Mobilisation edit

 
1914 Christmas card by the artist Walter Balmer Hislop, who served in D Company, 1/5th (QER) Bn, as 2nd Lt and died at Gallipoli in April 1915.

On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, the Lothian Brigade mobilised at Edinburgh as part of Scottish Coastal Defences.[30][31][32][33][34][35]

Almost immediately, TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service. On 15 August 1914, the War Office issued instructions to separate those men who had signed up for Home Service only, and form them into reserve units. On 31 August, the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service. The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original, but distinguished by a '2/' prefix, and a 2nd Lothian Brigade was formed from these units. 3rd Line training units were formed in 1915. The only TF battalion of the Royal Scots that did not immediately form a 2nd line was the 6th Bn, which instead provided two companies of reinforcements to bring 1/4th Bn up to war establishment. 3rd Line or Reserve battalions were later added to provide drafts to the battalions overseas, but the number of recruits from Edinburgh began to dry up and drafts were often unavailable.[6][30][32][34][35][36][37] In preparation for the Gallipoli Campaign, 1/5th Royal Scots left 1st Lothian Bde on 10 March 1915, and 1/4th Bn on 24 April, being replaced by their 2nd Line battalions.[33][32]

1/4th (QER) Royal Scots edit

On leaving 1st Lothian Bde the 1/4th (QER) Bn Royal Scots (1/4th RS) joined the Scottish Rifles Brigade in the Lowland Division, which were shortly afterwards numbered as 156th Bde and 52nd Division. The division was at Larbert under orders to proceed to Gallipoli, and on 22 May the battalion entrained for Liverpool where it embarked on the Empress of Britain. The battalion sailed on 24 May via Gibraltar and Malta, arriving on 3 June at Alexandria in Egypt where it went into camp.[30][38][39][40][41][42]

Gallipoli edit

The battalion re-embarked on the Empress of Britain on 8 June and reached Mudros Bay three days later. C Company was then sent aboard the Carron for Cape Helles, followed by A and B Companies aboard HMS Reindeer. The latter vessel was badly damaged in a collision with HMS Immingham and had to return, the men being transhipped to the French Moulooya and then back to the Empress of Britain. A and B Companies with HQ finally sailed again on 14 June aboard HMS Basilisk, accompanied by D Company aboard HMS Grasshopper. They landed at 'W' Beach and moved about a mile inland to begin digging communication tenches under shellfire. The battalion moved up into the front line where it relieved the 1/5th (QER) Bn (see below) for a five-day spell of duty, during which Quartermaster-Sergeant J. Dewar (1914 winner of the King's Prize at the National Rifle Association meeting at Bisley Camp[43]) and Company Sergeant-Major (CSM) D. Lowe distinguished themselves by picking off Turkish snipers.[30][36][41][44]

1/4th Battalion returned to the front line on 27 June to take part in the next day's attack on trenches H12A and H12 (the Battle of Gully Ravine) in which 156th Bde was attached to 29th Division. After a bombardment by warships and the artillery ashore, 29th Division attacked at 11.00. 1/4th Royal Scots on 156th Bde's left had the task of assaulting trenches H12 and H12A on the eastern side of Gully Ravine. The battalion had a 12-man bombing party, but two-thirds of the improvised Jam tin grenades failed to go off. Each man had a tin rectangle on his back to reflect the sun and indicate their position to the artillery – but 156th Bde was allocated none of the available artillery support. Packed into inadequate jumping-off trenches, the brigade suffered heavily from retaliatory shellfire before it went 'over the top' at 11.02. C and D Companies advanced towards H12A, with A Company following up, all suffering heavy casualties from enfilade fire, including most of the officers. Pipe-Major Andrew Buchan, rifle in hand, led forward one party until hit for the third time he died on the parapet of the trench. After a stiff bayonet fight, this trench was captured. B Company diverged half right and charged the enfilading trench, then a party under CSM Lowe moved on to establish a foothold in the second objective (H12) and prepare it for defence, joined by the battalion machine guns. The battalion's casualties were 15 officers killed or died of wounds (including the Commanding Officer (CO), Lt-Col S.R. Dunn, TD, who died on a hospital ship), 204 other ranks (ORs) killed or missing, seven officers and 141 ORs wounded.[36][41][45][46][47]

The battalion was relieved the following day and was then attached to 88th Brigade in 29th Division alongside the 1/5th (QER) Bn. It formed X and Y Companies in a composite battalion with the 1/7th Bn (Z Company), which had started as a half battalion, having lost two companies in the Quintinshill rail disaster before embarkation, and had since also lost heavily at Gully Ravine.[30][40][41][45]

On 12 July the battalion supported 1/4th Royal Scots Fusiliers during the attack on Trenches E10 and F12 (the action at Achi Baba Nullah); its casualties were 27 ORs killed and missing, and 47 wounded.[41][48] The weakened battalion was engaged in fatigue duties at 'W' Beach until 11 August when 14 officers (including a new CO, Col A. Young, VD, a former officer of the QEVRB[16]) arrived as reinforcements and the temporary amalgamation with 1/7th Bn ended. 1/4th Battalion then began to take its turns in the firing line and in the reserve line, though at one point it held 120 yards (110 m) of trench for four days with an effective rifle strength of only 62 men. Sickness kept many men out of action: in October, of 12 officers and 330 ORs, the effective strength was only 181. On 4 November Col Young went to hospital and the 1/4th RS once again formed a composite battalion with the 1/7th Bn, under the command of Lt-Col W.C. Peebles of 1/7th. The combined battalion seized a Turkish trench on 15 November with few casualties and held it against a counter-attack, but was not involved in any of 52nd Division's other major actions before the decision was made to evacuate the Helles positions.[36][41][45][49]

Preparations for evacuation were made during early January while the force ashore was slimmed down. 4th/7th Royal Scots formed part of the rearguard, which made its way down to 'V' Beach after dark on 8 January. The battalion was evacuated by lighters and on 9 September sailed aboard HMS Prince George for Mudros. Of the battalion that had originally landed, only the medical officer and 148 ORs remained on the strength.[30][41][50][51]

Egypt edit

After the evacuation of Helles the 52nd (L) Division moved back to Egypt. After reinforcement and concentration it went to El Qantara and on 2 March 1916 it took over part of No 3 Section of the Suez Canal defences.[38] No 3 or Northern Section of the Canal defences had its outer flank anchored on the Mediterranean. Running inland were a series of redoubts manned by 1/4th RS and the rest of the infantry with machine guns and backed by artillery. On the night of 3/4 August a German and Turkish force attacked the position (the Battle of Romani), but 1/4th RS and saw little action. The attack was driven off by the British artillery. and the ANZAC Mounted Division, then the defenders moved to the counter-attack, though the pursuit bogged down in the appalling desert conditions of Sinai.[38][51][52][53][54][55]

Palestine edit

After months of preparation the Eastern Expeditionary Force (EEF) crossed the Sinai Desert at the end of 1916 and prepared to invade Palestine, beginning the Sinai and Palestine Campaign. 52nd (L) Division was held in reserve during the 1st Battle of Gaza (26–27 March 1917) and was not committed.[38][56][57] There followed several weeks of preparation for the 2nd Battle of Gaza. The first phase of the attack was carried out on 17 April, with 52nd (L) Division tasked with taking Ali Mansur and the adjoining hills. 156th Brigade was in reserve at Wadi Ghuzze, moving up during the night. On 19 April 156th Bde was ready to attack Mansura at 07.30 after a 2-hour bombardment, with 1/4th RS in the centre under the command of Lt-Col F.H. Goldthorpe. However, 155th (South Scottish) Bde got held up and 156th was pinned down, lying in the open for 5–6 hours and suffering casualties from shellfire before falling back at the end of the day. The battle ended on 20 April with both sides digging in, the 1/4th RS having suffered casualties of 1 officers and 13 ORs killed, 6 officers and 110 ORs wounded, and 4 ORs missing.[38][54][58][59][60][61]

 
The assault on 'Umbrella Hill' and el Arish Redoubt.
 
Turkish trenches at el Arish Redoubt captured by 4th Royal Scots.

52nd (L) Division spent months digging defences, suffering a steady trickle of casualties from shellfire and in raids. 4th Royal Scots (the '1/' prefix was dropped now that the 2nd and 3rd Line battalions had been disbanded, see below) was now commanded by Lt-Col A.M. Mitchell. Several times the battalion sent patrols out into No man's land with a field telephone, then, having located the position of a Turkish standing patrol, called down artillery fire on it.[62] By the autumn of 1917 the EEF had been revitalised by the arrival of Sir Edmund Allenby as commander-in-chief, and the next operation (the 3rd Battle of Gaza) was much better planned and successful.[63] While the Desert Mounted Corps swept round the Turkish flank, 52nd (L) Division down on the coast carried out a direct attack on the strong el Arish position to pin the Turks. 4th Royal Scots was given the daunting task of crossing 900 yards (820 m) of No man's land and then storming the central and eastern portion of the formidable el Arish redoubt and the associated 'Little Devil' trench system. The troops practised this attack over trench models for days before the attack went in on 2 November. The first phase of the night attack on 'Umbrella Hill' had died down before 4th RS moved out in the dark to its jumping-off position 500 yards (460 m) from the redoubt. Followed by supporting and carrying companies of the 8th Bn Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), and preceded by two tanks (one of which immediately broke down), 4th RS launched its attack at 03.00 as the British artillery pounded the objective. The battalion advanced 'with magnificent steadiness' in four waves on a frontage of 300 yards (270 m) under Turkish artillery fire (the remaining tank was hit and burned out after it had crossed the first two lines of trenches). The infantry crossed four lines of trenches, the following waves 'mopping up' the defenders as they advanced, and then they steadily cleared the 'Little Devil' trenches and dugouts, despite losses from landmines. The objective was carried by 03.55, but counter-attacks had to be held off until daybreak. Daylight showed that the furthest trench was untenable, so the battalion moved back a little to the higher ground from which they could deny these trenches to the enemy. Furher counter-attacks came in at the end of the day, but the position was held. When the battalion was relieved that night it had lost about 200 casualties, which had risen to 240 by the end of the battle on 7 November.[38][54][64][65][66]

The Turks withdrew to defend the Wadi el Hesi, with 52nd (L) Division well up in pursuit. 156th Brigade was left marching in the rear as the rest of the division stormed the wadi and led the pursuit up the coast towards Junction Station.[38][67][68][69] 4th Royal Scots under Lt-Col Mitchell distinguished itself in a successful attack on a Turkish rearguard position at 'Brown Hill' near Burkah, 25 miles (40 km) NE of Gaza City on 11 November. The hill was strongly entrenched, but the battalion advanced 1 mile (1.6 km) under Shrapnel shell fire with one company echeloned back to protect the flank. Rushing forward in small parties, the assault wave gathered in the shelter of a wadi at the foot of the hill, and then attacked under covering fire from artillery and machine guns. Having taken the position the Royal Scots discovered a second untouched Turkish line hidden on the reverse slope; they were counter-attacked from this line and pushed part-way back down the hill, but led the reinforcing 2/3rd Gurkha Rifles back up the hill to capture the position before the end of the day. The battalion, already weak, lost 3 officers and 49 ORs killed, 4 officers and 157 ORs wounded.[54][64][70]

The EEF now began its advance on Jerusalem. 52nd (L) Division had to negotiate a poor road through the hills beyond Beit Liqya in heavy rain to join the Battle of Nebi Samwil. 156th Brigade filed along the track in full view of the Turks and under shellfire as they moved up to relieve the Yeomanry Mounted Division. 4th Royal Scots under Lt-Col Mitchell was detached to move west of El Burj to extend 155th Bde's line to try to contact 54th (East Anglian) Division. The two brigades were now strung out in a very thin line and it was too rocky to dig trenches. Lt-Col Mitchell reported that the gap to the 54th Division was 2 miles (3.2 km) wide, but El Burj was held against Turkish attacks during 28 and 29 November until 155th Bde was relieved by the 3rd Australian Light Horse Bde and 4th Royal Scots could rejoin its own brigade. After breaking this counter-offensive, the EEF captured Jerusalem on 11 December.[38][54][71][72][73]

 
Passage of the Nahr el Auja

52nd (L) Division's next operation was the tricky passage of the Nahr el Auja to launch the Battle of Jaffa. A patrol of 4th RS crossed on a tarpaulin boat built by the Royal Engineers to reconnoitre the position on the night of 13/14 December. The assault troops of the division then practised using similar canvas boats on a village pond, then at 22.30 on the evening of 20 December, in heavy rain, the first assaulting waves of 156th Bde went forward under cover of an artillery barrage and established a bridgehead. Bridging was made difficult by the flooded river, but the Royal Engineers got the follow-up battalions including 4th Royal Scots across by raft. Accompanied by a section of the brigade machine gun company and a Stokes mortar the battalion attacked 'Slag Heap Farm' and captured it without serious difficulty. By 06.00 the brigade was digging in on a strong line, ready for any counter-attack, but none came: the Turks had been completely surprised, and were in full retreat. The advance was renewed up the coast on the morning of 22 December, with fire support from HMS Grafton and gunboats. 156th Brigade advancing in the centre came under shellfire, but casualties were few. Before nightfall, 52nd (L) Division reached the castle of Arsuf overlooking the Plain of Sharon, where it halted. The Official History describes the passage of the Auja as 'one of the most remarkable feats of the Palestine Campaign'. 4th Royal Scots suffered only 5 ORs killed, 1 officer and 21 ORs wounded.[38][54][64][74][75][76]

Western Front edit

In the early part of 1918 the 52nd (L) Division remained in the lines near Arsuf. Then on 24 March it was warned for a transfer to the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) on the Western Front. The division's units sailed from Alexandria between 4 and 11 April, and landed at Marseilles by 17 April. The division was concentrated near Abbeville on 23 April. On 29 April it moved to Aire and continued training. On 6 May it moved to the Vimy area and took over front line trenches. On 31 July it moved up to Arras to join in the Hundred Days Offensive.[30][38][77][78]

On 22 August, 156th Bde was ordered to attack the following morning (the Second Battle of the Somme). Only half the promised number of lorries arrived, and some companies of 4th RS had to march through the night to their jumping-off point south of Mercatel, and there was no time for reconnaissance. The battalion marched straight into action, behind a heavy artillery barrage but without the three tanks that were supposed to accompany them. The attack was a surprise, and the battalion advanced through the wrecked villages, taking all their objectives by 06.45. The tanks then caught up and went out to exploit the ground in front, followed by a company of 4th RS, after which the position was consolidated.[38][79][80]

The Battle of the Scarpe began on 26 August. 4th Royal Scots attacked north of the Cojeul River and advanced steadily until they reached the outer defences of the Hindenburg Line.[38][81][82] On 2 September (the Battle of Drocourt-Quéant Line) 4th Royal Scots moved against the tremendously strong defences at the Quéant end of the Drocourt-Quéant Switch Line and took their objectives with amazing ease. The left of the battalion captured the Moulin Sans Souci windmill, and Lt-Col Mitchell pushed his reserve company into the gap to work along the Hindenburg Line trenches. From 22 to 26 August 4th RS lost 27 ORs killed and 10 missing, 3 officers and 114 ORs wounded, and 3 officers and 98 ORs gassed as the Germans deployed large quantities of Mustard Gas. The battalion was then rested until late September.[38][81][83]

It was brought back into the line on 20 September facing a well-fortified section of the Hindenburg Line on the Canal du Nord. The British held Moeuvres, and the Germans had been counter-attacking the village. They made another attack against 7th RS on 21 September, but at the end of the day four platoons of 4th RS rushed and captured the Germans' strongpoint at E14 Central. Fighting continued around these positions after 4th RS had been relieved.[84]

156th Brigade's role in the great Battle of the Canal du Nord was to attack across the canal, then turn to its right and clear the trenches to the south-east. The British barrage came down at 05.00 on 27 September and the German guns immediately replied on the forming-up trenches. Nevertheless, 4th RS under Lt-Col Mitchell led 156th Bde off at 05.30 as the barrage began to move forwards. They had no tanks because the banks of the dry canal were an obstacle, and on reaching the canal realised that a frontal assault would be very costly, so the battalion reorganised to work round the left flank. Corporal Foggo dashed forwards and threw two Mills bombs into a pillbox that held them up, and the men scrambled down into and across the canal. By 09.55 the battalion had reached their objective. The battalion's losses in defending Moeuvres were 6 officers and 81 ORs, and in forcing the Canal du Nord lost another 11 officers and 96 ORs.[38][85][86][87]

52nd (L) Division took part in the pursuit after the Canal du Nord, before 4th RS were rested from 7 to 27 October. Then on 28 October the battalion went back into the line north east of St Amand for the Final Advance in Artois. The division had closed up to the MonsCondé Canal by 8 November, when it became known that the Germans had abandoned the water defences. The code word 'Hunt' was issued, and 156th Bde crossed in canvas boats to begin the pursuit. By 10 November the brigade was clearing German rearguards from Herchies, near Mons. When the Armistice with Germany came into effect at 11.00 on 11 November the division had reached the NimyJurbise road.[38][88]

After the Armistice the troops were employed in training and clearing up the area. Demobilisation proceeded and between the end of January and end of May 1919 the division's units were reduced to cadres and returned to the UK.[38] The 1/4th Bn was officially disembodied on 24 May 1919.[6]

1/5th (QER) Royal Scots edit

 
V Beach about two days after the landing, seen from the bow of the River Clyde.

The 1/5th (QER) Battalion, Royal Scots, joined 88th Bde in 29th Division at Leamington on 11 March 1915. It was the only TF battalion in what was otherwise a Regular Army formation composed of battalions brought back to the UK from around the British Empire following the outbreak of war.[30][89][90][91][92][93] The battalion entrained for Avonmouth Docks on 21/22 March where it embarked on the Caledonia and the Melville and sailed via Malta to Alexandria where it disembarked on 2 April and went into camp. It re-embarked on 6 April aboard the Dongola, Haverford, Kingstonian, Marquette, and Melville for Mudros, where it joined the British forces gathering for the Landing at Cape Helles. After lying anchored off Tenedos the force began landing at 07.00 on 25 April. Two companies of 1/5th Bn landed at V Beach at 12.30 without casualties and moved forward to the support trenches. The other two companies landed later to provide working parties on the beach, unloading stores under fire and suffering casualties. One of the advanced companies was moved up into the firing line on 26 April and the battalion joined in the general advance against Achi Baba Ridge the following afternoon. By 08.00 on 28 April the battalion had suffered heavy casualties, including the CO, Lt-Col J.T.R. Wilson wounded, and had to be withdrawn from the advanced positions. The battalion was moved to the left where it began building a redoubt, and then moved back to reserve positions.[30][36][41][89][92][94]

On 7 May, during the operations around Krithia Nullah, 1/5th RS were able to rush the Turkish strongpoint of Fir Tree Wood; it was then lost to a counter-attack, but 88th Bde had recovered it by the end of the day. Overall, however the fighting was inconclusive.[36][41][95] 88th Brigade again took terrible casualties in the Battle of Gully Ravine on 28 June (see above). At one point Second lieutenant Herbert James of the 4th Bn Worcestershire Regiment found some platoons of 1/5th RS without any officers and led them into the first line of Turkish trenches, for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross.[46]

The attack of 28 June was the last major action at Gallipoli for the 1/5th RS. Reduced to less than a company's strength and with no drafts from home, it was evacuated to Mudros in July for rest and was replaced in 29th Division by the Royal Newfoundland Regiment from the 1st Lothian Bde. Rebuilt to half-battalion strength, about 300 men, the 1/5th RS returned to the Gallipoli Peninsula in August for two more spells of trench duty, including being in reserve for 88th Bde's attack on 6 August and the Battle of Scimitar Hill, before being withdrawn to Egypt in October.[33][41][45][89][93][96] On 10 March 1916 the battalion embarked at Port Said for France to join the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) on the Western Front.[34]

5th/6th Royal Scots edit

After arriving in France on 22 March the weak 1/5th RS was assigned to Line of communication (LoC) duties in April 1916. Then on 15 May it was amalgamated with the 1/6th Royal Scots to form the 5th/6th Bn.[6][30][34][35][89][90][91][51][97] Having contributed large drafts to the 1/4th (QER) Bn, 1/6th Bn did not leave the Lothian Bde until 5 September 1915[51][32] and went to Egypt where it joined the Western Frontier Force (WFF) on 20 November. After serving with the WFF in the Senussi Campaign it was sent to France on 27 February 1916 for LoC duties on the Western Front. 1/6th arrived at Marseilles on 15 May 1916 and was immediately amalgamated with 1/5th.[51][97][98]

On 29 July the combined 5th/6th RS joined 14th Bde in 32nd Division. The 32nd was a Kitchener's Army formation that had been bolstered by the Regular 14th Bde. It had suffered heavy casualties on the First day of the Somme (1 July)[99] and 5th/6th Royal Scots replaced one of its shattered battalions.[30][100][101][102]

At dawn on 16 November, 14th Bde took over an ill-defined section of line forming a defensive flank to the attacks being made in the Battle of the Ancre Heights. Following a fall of snow and chilling rain, the brigade was ordered to push the flank forward 500 yards (460 m) towards 'Ten Tree Alley' when the rest of the division attacked on 18 November. Little headway was made in this last gasp of the Somme offensive.[100][103]

The division took part in minor operations along the Ancre in January and February 1917, and then followed the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line (Operation Alberich) in March and April. During this pursuit the 32nd Division carried out the British Army's first open warfare operation on the Western Front since 1914. By nightfall on 1 April, 14th Bde had reached Holnon Wood. At 05.00 on 2 April it put in a successful attack and captured this large wood.[100][104]

In June the division was moved to the Flanders coast to support an expected breakthrough at Ypres that never came. However, the Germans put in a spoiling attack at Nieuport (Operation Strandfest) on 10–11 July, preceded by three days of bombardment. 14th Brigade was not closely engaged, and a planned counter-attack was abandoned.[100][105]

The Germans launched their Spring Offensive (Operation Michael) south of Arras in March 1918 and 32nd Division was sent to the area as reinforcements. On 3 April, 14th Bde took part in the night attack to recapture Ayette, and on 5 April the final attempt to relaunch Operation Michael was defeated at the Battle of the Ancre.[100][106] During May and June, which was quiet on the British front, the 5th/6th RS carried out raids.[77]

The Allied Hundred Days Offensive began on 8 August with the Battle of Amiens. 32nd Division was in reserve on the first day, though 5th/6th RS was briefly engaged. 14th Brigade then led the division's attack on 11 August, with 5th/6th RS and 1st Dorset Regiment in front. As soon as they advanced they came under heavy fire, but they got close to the village of Damery with the help of two tanks that went through the village twice. The attack was then halted to avoid heavier casualties.[100][107][108] The brigade was in reserve for 32nd Division's attack on 23 August.[100][79][107]

On 28 August during the Battle of the Scarpe 14th Bde attacked at 05.00 and advanced unopposed towards its first two objectives: 5th/6th RS's advance was described as 'a procession', and by the end of the day the brigade had observation over the Somme Valley. Soon after dawn the next day they had pushed right up to the river.[107][109] 5th/6th Royal Scots was then pulled out of the line, but it returned to cross the Somme Canal and river on 5 September. At 10.30 one company waded across at the site of Brie bridge, despite machine gun fire; it then cleared Brie, bombing the dugouts, while a second company crossed by a temporary footbridge. The two companies then established a line 1,000 yards (910 m) beyond the village, and the division passed through later in the day.[107][110]

There was then another rest until the Battle of St Quentin Canal began on 29 September.[100][107] Facing the most formidable part of the Hindenburg Line on the St Quentin Canal, 5th/6th RS did not go into action until 1 October, once the line had been breached. At 16.00 they were directed against the key position in the German second line, the village of Sequehart, just north of St Quentin. The village changed hands four times until on 3 October the battalion, which had specifically asked for another chance to take the village, succeeded in holding it, despite heavy shelling and two more counter-attacks.[85][111]

By early November the army had closed up to the Sambre–Oise Canal. The Battle of the Sambre opened on 4 November. Two platoons of 5th/6th RS were given the task of attacking le Donjon two minutes after Zero Hour behind special barrage, and if possible to obtain a crossing over the canal. Finding themselves unable to follow the assigned path through the marsh, the two platoons the half the battalion followed the 1st Dorsets across a floating bridge; le Donjon fell at 10.45. At 13.30 the 5th/6th RS and 1st Dorsets advanced to establish the bridgehead defences: the opposition was so negligible that no barrage was required.[100][112][113]

The advance continued, with the division capturing Grand-Fayt on 6 November and Avesnes on 8 November, which it was occupying on 11 November when the Armistice came into force. 32nd Division was chosen as part of the occupation force (the British Army of the Rhine) and advanced to the Meuse between Dinant and Namur, where it became the reserve to the army in Germany. On 3 February 1919 the division took over the southern sector of the Cologne bridgehead, but by then the remaining TF units were being demobilised. and 5th/6th Royal Scots left for home between 25 February and 19 March.[100] It was disembodied on 12 November 1919.[6]

2/4th and 2/5th (QER) Royal Scots edit

After formation in September 1914 2/4th (QER) Bn went to Penicuik in February 1915 and both transferred from 2nd Lothian Bde to 1st Lothian Bde at Peebles to replace their 1st Line battalions. They left in October and November 1915 to join 195th Bde in 65th (2nd Lowland) Division.[6][30][33][114] In November 1915 the infantry battalions in the 64th (2nd Highland) and 65th (2nd Lowland) Divisions were reorganised and numbered sequentially, the 2/4th, 2/5th and 2/6th Royal Scots temporarily combining as No 19 Battalion; by May 1916 they had reverted to their previous regimental designations, but 2/5th remained merged with 2/4th.[6][30][34][35][114]

195th Brigade was stationed at Dunfermline during the winter of 1915–16. In March 1916, 65th (2nd L) Division moved into England and joined Southern Army (Home Forces), 195th Bde being quartered in Essex around Billericay and then from July at Terling. In January 1917 the division moved to Ireland to relieve 59th (2nd North Midland) Division, which had been the first TF formation to serve in that country. 2/4th Battalion was stationed at Fermoy.[30][114][115]

During 1917 the 2nd Line TF battalions in 65th (2nd Lowland) Division were progressively replaced by Graduated Battalions of the Training Reserve; in August 1917 the 2/4th Royal Scots was disbanded and was replaced by 217th Graduated Bn.[30][34][114][115]

3/4th and 3/5th Royal Scots edit

The 3rd Line battalions of the Queen's Edinburgh Rifles were formed as training units at Peebles in May 1915 and moved to Loanhead and Galashiels respectively in November. They were designated as the 4th and 5th Reserve Bns, Royal Scots, on 8 April 1916 and were at Stobs Military Camp in May. On 1 September 1916, while it was at Catterick Camp in North Yorkshire, the 4th Reserve Bn absorbed the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th Reserve Bns and became part of the Lowland Reserve Brigade. It also absorbed the 9th (Highland) Reserve Bn in June 1917. The combined battalion moved back to Edinburgh, in the Edinburgh Special Reserve Brigade, in November 1917, then to Haddington in April 1918, and was at Cupar in the Forth Garrison at the end of the war. It was disbanded on 28 June 1919 in Glasgow.[6][30][34][35]

6th Scottish Provisional Battalion edit

In 1915 the Home Service men of the 4th, 5th and 6th Royal Scots were combined into 6th Scottish Provisional Battalion, which joined the Lothian Brigade (redesignated the Scottish Provisional Brigade and later 1st Provisional Brigade) on 22 May. In April 1916 the 1st Provisional Bde moved from Scotland to Kent to take over coastal defence duties. The Military Service Act 1916 swept away the Home/Foreign service distinction, and all TF soldiers became liable for overseas service, if medically fit, and the remaining provisional battalions were reorganised, but the 6th Provisional Bn had already been disbanded and its men dispersed.[33][116][117][118][119]

Interwar edit

 
90 cm 'Projector Anti-Aircraft', displayed at Fort Nelson, Hampshire.

The TF was reconstituted on 7 February 1920 and the 52nd (Lowland) Division and its units began to reform. The 4th and 5th (QER) Battalions did guard duty during the coal strike of April 1921. After the TF was reorganised as the Territorial Army (TA), the two battalions reformed in 1921 as a single 4th/5th (Queen's Edinburgh Rifles) Bn, Royal Scots, and absorbed 10th (Cyclist) Bn, Royal Scots at Linlithgow as A Company.[6][9][29][38][120][121] The combined battalion formed part of 155th (East Scottish) Bde in 52nd (L) Division.[122]

AA Conversion edit

During the 1930s the increasing need for anti-aircraft (AA) defence for Britain's cities was addressed by converting a number of TA infantry battalions into AA units. The 4th/5th (QER) Royal Scots was one of the battalions selected, becoming a Royal Artillery searchlight (S/L) regiment on 1 November 1938 while remaining affiliated with the Royal Scots. It was designated 4th/5th (Queen's Edinburgh) Bn The Royal Scots (The Royal Regiment) (52nd Searchlight Regiment) and consisted of HQ, 405, 406, 407 Companies based at Forrest Road. At the same time, the TA was doubled in size following the Munich Crisis, so A Company at Linlithgow was separated to become the basis for 14th (West Lothian Royal Scots) Light AA Regiment, RA.[6][9][29][121][123][124][125][126][127]

World War II edit

52nd (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) Searchlight Regiment edit

 
3 AA Divisional sign.

The regiment formed part of 3 AA Division covering Scotland. In February 1939 the existing AA defences came under the control of a new Anti-Aircraft Command. In June a partial mobilisation of TA units was begun in a process known as 'couverture', whereby each AA unit did a month's tour of duty in rotation to man selected AA and searchlight positions. On 24 August, ahead of the declaration of war, AA Command was fully mobilised at its war stations.[128] 4th/5th Royal Scots (52nd S/L Rgt) became part of 52nd Light Anti-Aircraft Brigade, which was formed in August 1939 with responsibility for all of 3 AA Division's S/L provision.[127][129]

As part of the Forth defences, 52nd Searchlight Regiment was engaged in the first air raid against the UK during World War II, when German aircraft attacked the Royal Naval Dockyard at Rosyth near the Forth Bridge on 16 October 1939. During the Phoney War period there were a number of other attacks on the naval bases of Scotland before the Luftwaffe turned its attention to the campaigns in Norway and France and the Low Countries.[123][130][131]

In February 1940 the regiment sent a cadre of 5 officers and 27 ORs to 222nd Searchlight Training Regiment, RA, at Norton Manor Barracks near Taunton, where, with a similar cadre from 51st (Highland) Anti-Aircraft Battalion, Royal Engineers, they formed a new 474th Searchlight Battery, Royal Artillery, from new conscripts and volunteers. This independent battery served wit AA Command and later provided artificial illumination, or 'Monty's Moonlight', for night operations by 21st Army Group during the campaign in North West Europe in 1944–45.[132][133]

In August 1940 the RA took over all the S/L regiments in AA Command, after which the regiment was designated 52nd (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) Searchlight Regiment, RA, and the companies were termed batteries.[6][9][134][126][135][136]

Eastern Scotland largely escaped air attack during the Battle of Britain. In November 1940, at the height of The Blitz, a new 12 AA Division was formed to take over responsibility for western Scotland (including Glasgow and the Clyde) while 3 AA Division (including 52 LAA Bde and 52nd S/L Rgt) retained responsibility for eastern Scotland.[137] The regiment remained in 52 AA Bde and 3 AA Division for the next year.moving to positions in the Scottish Borders.[123][138]

The regiment supplied another cadre of experienced officers and men to 237th S/L Training Rgt at Holywood, County Down, where it provided the basis for a new 535 S/L Bty formed on 14 November 1940. This battery later joined 56th (5th Battalion, Cameronian Scottish Rifles) S/L Rgt. On 11 February 1941 52nd S/L Rgt was joined by 531 S/L Bty formed on 14 November at 235th S/L Training Rgt at Ayr from a cadre provided by 56th S/L Rgt.[134] By December 1941, 408 S/L Bty had transferred to 53rd S/L Rgt (5th Bn Royal Northumberland Fusiliers)[139]

130th (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment edit

By 1942, AA Command had more than enough S/L units, but was still seriously short of light anti-aircraft (LAA) gun units, and began a programme of converting S/L units (which also had the benefit of saving manpower). In March 52nd S/L Rgt was converted to the LAA role as 130th (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) LAA Rgt, the batteries becoming 406, 407 and 426 LAA Btys. After training it remained in 52 AA Bde in 3 AA Division, stationed in Aberdeenshire.[6][9][123][124][135][136][137][140][141][142][143]

In August 1942, 3 AA Divisional HQ moved south to help control the AA units brought in to defend against Luftwaffe 'hit and run' attacks on the South Coast of England.[137][144] Simultaneously, 52 AA Bde HQ left AA Command to mobilise for the landings in North Africa (Operation Torch).[143][145] 130th LAA Regiment moved to 51 AA Bde in a new 6 AA Group that took over responsibility for Scotland in October. By now the regiment had been joined by 446 LAA Bty, transferred from 95th LAA Rgt.[137][146]

The regiment moved to 67 AA Bde in 3 AA Group in Dorset in April 1943,[123][147] and then to 2 AA Group in South East England, first in 5 AA Bde, then to 71 AA Bde.[148]

Operation Diver edit

 
 
LAA guns emplaced on the South Coast, August 1944.

130th LAA Regiment was stationed on the Kent coast, in the so-called 'Hellfire Corner' where Cross-Channel shelling from German guns was frequent. In November 1943 2 AA Gp was ordered to plan for the expected onslaught of V-1 flying bombs (codenamed 'Divers') against London, to which it responded by planning a thick belt of Heavy AA (HAA) gun positions across the likely flight path, backed by LAA guns. Meanwhile, 2 AA Gp also had to deal with a sharp increase in Luftwaffe air raids trying to reach London during the winter of 1943–1944 (the so-called 'Little Blitz'), in which the regiment was heavily engaged. However, AA Command was being forced to release manpower for overseas service, particularly the Allied invasion of Normandy, Operation Overlord, and many AA regiments lost one of their four batteries; by March 1944, 446 LAA Bty had been disbanded.[123][137][148][149]

Once 'Overlord' began on 6 June (D-Day) the shelling of Hellfire Corner increased in intensity. The first V-1 missiles were launched against London a week after D-Day, and Operation Diver was activated. 2 AA Group's batteries left their 'Overlord' sites and moved to pre-planned sites across the 'funnel' of V-1 flightpaths. However, the results were disappointing, and the HAA gun belt was moved to the coast and interlaced with LAA guns to hit the missiles out to sea. This new belt was divided into six brigade sectors, with 71 AA Bde taking charge of one. The guns were constantly in action and their success rate against the 'Divers' steadily improved, until over 50 per cent of incoming missiles were destroyed by gunfire or fighter aircraft. This phase of Operation Diver ended in September after the V-1 launch sites in Northern France had been overrun by 21st Army Group.[123][137][150][151][152][153]

A new phase of Operation Diver began when the Luftwaffe began launching V-1s from aircraft over the North Sea. AA Command had to reorganise its defences, stripping guns from existing sites and moving them to the coast of East Anglia, which entailed enormous reorganisation. As the Luftwaffe and V-1 threat to the UK diminished, AA Command was forced to transfer men and units to infantry duties.[137][154] 130th LAA Regiment avoided all the shuffling and disbandments, remaining with 71 AA Bde in 2 AA Gp throughout the Diver offensive and until the end of the war.[123][155] After the war it transferred to 28 (Thames and Medway) AA Bde in 1 AA Gp as demobilisation proceeded.[156]

Postwar edit

When the TA was reconstituted on 1 January 1947, the regiment reformed at Edinburgh as 587 (Queen's Edinburgh, Royal Scots) LAA Rgt. It formed part of 62 AA Bde (the former 36 (Scottish) AA Bde).[6][9][12][124][126][140][135][157][158][159][160][161]

When AA Command was disbanded on 10 March 1955 there was a major reduction in the number of AA units in the TA. 587 LAA Rgt amalgamated with R Bty of 471 (Forth) HAA Rgt, 514 (West Lothian, Royal Scots) LAA Rgt and 519 (Dunedin) LAA Rgt to form a new 432 LAA Rgt with the following organisation:[6][9][12][126][157][158][162] [163][164]

  • P (Queens Edinburgh, Royal Scots) Bty – from 587 LAA
  • Q (West Lothian, Royal Scots) Bty – from 514 LAA
  • R (City of Edinburgh) Bty – from 471 HAA
  • S (Dunedin) Bty – from 519 LAA

A further reduction in 1961 saw 432nd LAA Rgt transferred to the Royal Engineers (RE) and joined with 585 (Edinburgh) and 586 Independent Field Squadrons, to form 432 (City of Edinburgh) Corps Engineer Regiment (except Q (West Lothian, Royal Scots) Bty, which joined 445 (Cameronians) LAA Rgt). When the TA was converted into the TAVR in 1967, 432 Engineer Regiment was reduced to a single 104 (City of Edinburgh) Field Squadron in 71 (Scottish) Engineer Regiment. It was disbanded in 1999.[6][9][12][126][158][162][165][166][167]

Uniform, Insignia and Bands edit

The original uniform worn by the Queen's Edinburgh Rifles was a long tunic and trousers in dark Volunteer grey with black braiding and a low black-peaked cap. The three original Highland companies wore black-laced grey doublets and kilts of Black Watch ('Government') tartan with different bonnets for each of the three companies. Each of the original 21 QER companies had a different cap badge. The cut of the tunic was later changed to match that of the Rifle Brigade, and the original low peaked cap was replaced first (1862) by a Shako with a black ball-tuft, next (1875) by a Busby with black plume and then (1895) by a black Astrakhan fur busby matching the Rifle Brigade.[7][12][11][13] In 1900–1901 the brigade adopted a drab felt hat; this was prohibited in 1902 but a drab service dress with light green Austrian knot and trouser piping was adopted for marching and drill order, with a drab felt hat (with black plume for the mounted infantry).[7] The grey uniform was retained for full dress until 1908 when the battalions adopted the scarlet uniform tunic with blue facings of the Royal Scots. The regimental tartan was Hunting Stuart, while the pipers wore Royal Stewart tartan.[8][16][11]

In 1943, 130th LAA Rgt adopted as its regimental flash a silhouette of the Royal Scots' other ranks' cap badge in black cloth, the colour commemorating the black braiding of the QER. In 1947, 587th LAA Rgt adopted a black silhouette of a Thistle head on a brown square; this was officially approved as its regimental flash on 9 November 1951 and worn until 1955.[126]

The 1st City of Edinburgh RVC formed a band early in its history, adopting the regimental march of the Rifle Brigade, I'm Ninety-Five. The early QER Highland companies each had two pipers, and the corps also had a bugle band.[12]

Honorary Colonels edit

From the formation of the 1st QERVB the Lord Provost of Edinburgh served ex officio as its Honorary Colonel. From 1873 additional honorary colonels were added:[7][9][16]

Memorials edit

All Royal Scots who died in World War I are commemorated by the memorial gates unveiled at the regimental depot, Glencorse Barracks, Penicuik, in 1927. These were designed by J.A. McWilliam, a member of the QER.[169][170][171][172]

The 4th/5th Battalion's colours from 1925 to 1938 are preserved in the Royal Scots Regimental Museum at Edinburgh Castle.[171][173]

A memorial Masonic Lodge, Queen's Edinburgh Rifles (The Royal Scots) No 1253, was established on 3 February 1921, under the Grand Lodge of Scotland, to commemorate those members who died in World War I. A lodge room was established in 1925 at the Forrest Road drill hall which also served as a Territorial Army headquarters and as a building for the University of Edinburgh Officer Training Corps. The Lodge now meets in Portobello but maintains its role as a memorial lodge.[174]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Beckett.
  2. ^ Grierson, pp. 1–12.
  3. ^ Spiers, pp. 163–8.
  4. ^ Beckett, pp. 59–60.
  5. ^ a b c Beckett, Appendix VII.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Frederick, p. 299.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Grierson, pp. 12–4, 177–84.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Westlake, Rifle Volunteers, pp. 78–81.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p . 27 December 2005. Archived from the original on 27 December 2005.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g "The Story of the Royal Scots". www.electricscotland.com.
  11. ^ a b c d e f QER at Scottish Military Articles.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h J.T. Thomson, 'The 1st City of Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer Corps', Soldiers of the Queen, No58/59, January 1990.
  13. ^ a b J.T. Thomson, 'R.M. and J. Ballantyne and the Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer Corps', Soldiers of the Queen, No 56/57, June 1989.
  14. ^ Grierson, pp. 185–6.
  15. ^ a b c . 30 December 2005. Archived from the original on 30 December 2005.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i Army List, various dates.
  17. ^ a b c . 27 December 2005. Archived from the original on 27 December 2005.
  18. ^ Beckett, p. 198; Appendix VI.
  19. ^ Beckett, pp. 135, 185–6.
  20. ^ Dunlop, pp. 60–1; Appendix A.
  21. ^ Spiers, pp. 228–9.
  22. ^ Leslie.
  23. ^ Beckett, p. 220.
  24. ^ . 27 December 2005. Archived from the original on 27 December 2005.
  25. ^ Beckett, p. 245.
  26. ^ Dunlop, Chapter 14.
  27. ^ Spiers, Chapter 10.
  28. ^ "London Gazette 20 March 1908".
  29. ^ a b c "The Territorial Army/Army Reserve | The Royal Scots". www.theroyalscots.co.uk.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q James, p. 42/
  31. ^ a b . 19 February 2006. Archived from the original on 19 February 2006.
  32. ^ a b c d e . 18 November 2010. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010.
  33. ^ a b c d e HQ 221 Mixed Brigade War Diary 4 August 1914 – 30 July 1919, The National Archives, Kew, file WO 95/5458.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g "Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment) – The Long, Long Trail".
  35. ^ a b c d e "WW1 Battalions | The Royal Scots". www.theroyalscots.co.uk.
  36. ^ a b c d e f "Territorials/Dardanelles | The Royal Scots". www.theroyalscots.co.uk.
  37. ^ Becke, Pt 2b, p. 6.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Becke Pt 2a, pp. 109–115.
  39. ^ "52nd (Lowland) Division – The Long, Long Trail".
  40. ^ a b . 28 December 2009. Archived from the original on 28 December 2009.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Westlake, Gallipoli, pp. 1–11.
  42. ^ Thompson. pp. 11–5.
  43. ^ "The King's and Queen's Prize". NRA.
  44. ^ Thompson, pp. 40–1.
  45. ^ a b c d Brander, p. 57.
  46. ^ a b Gillon, pp. 49–51.
  47. ^ Thompson, pp. 46–58.
  48. ^ Thompson, pp. 102–26.
  49. ^ Thompson, pp. 134, 141, 174.
  50. ^ Thompson, pp. 230–40.
  51. ^ a b c d e Brander, p. 58.
  52. ^ Bullock, pp. 30–1.
  53. ^ MacMunn & Falls, p. 156.
  54. ^ a b c d e f "Egypt and Palestine | The Royal Scots". www.theroyalscots.co.uk. 14 June 2016.
  55. ^ Thompson, p. 286.
  56. ^ Bullock, pp. 44–5.
  57. ^ MacMunn & Falls, pp. 310–4.
  58. ^ Brander, pp. 62–3.
  59. ^ Bullock, pp. 46–7.
  60. ^ MacMunn & Falls, pp. 329–48.
  61. ^ Thompson, pp. 312–34.
  62. ^ Thompson, p. 349.
  63. ^ Bullock, pp. 62–75.
  64. ^ a b c Brander, p. 65.
  65. ^ Bullock, p. 75.
  66. ^ Thompson, pp 360–70.
  67. ^ Bullock, pp. 75–81.
  68. ^ Falls, Egypt and Palestine, Vol II, pp. 131–6.
  69. ^ Thompson, pp. 372–99.
  70. ^ Thompson, pp. 402–9.
  71. ^ Bullock, pp. 90–5.
  72. ^ Falls, Egypt and Palestine, Vol II, pp. 194–6.
  73. ^ Thompson pp. 462–73.
  74. ^ Bullock, p. 96.
  75. ^ Falls, Egypt and Palestine, Vol II, pp. 268–74.
  76. ^ Thompson, pp. 480–501.
  77. ^ a b Brander, p. 67.
  78. ^ Thompson, pp. 511–5.
  79. ^ a b Blaxland, p. 207.
  80. ^ Thompson, pp. 518–20.
  81. ^ a b Brander, p. 69.
  82. ^ Thompson, pp. 525–32.
  83. ^ Thompson, pp. 539–44.
  84. ^ Thompson, pp. 553–6.
  85. ^ a b Brander, p. 71.
  86. ^ Edmonds & Maxwell-Hyslop, pp. 33–4.
  87. ^ Thompson, pp. 560–8.
  88. ^ Thompson, pp. 569–72.
  89. ^ a b c d Becke Pt 1, pp. 117–24.
  90. ^ a b "29th Division – The Long, Long Trail".
  91. ^ a b . 8 November 2009. Archived from the original on 8 November 2009.
  92. ^ a b Brander, p. 56.
  93. ^ a b Gillon, p. 6 & Appendix II.
  94. ^ Gillon, pp. 28, 35–6.
  95. ^ Gillon, pp. 38–9.
  96. ^ Gillon, pp. 54–6, 59–60.
  97. ^ a b . 27 September 2011. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011.
  98. ^ . 1 September 2011. Archived from the original on 1 September 2011.
  99. ^ Edmonds 1916, pp. 409–10, 421.
  100. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Becke, Pt 3b, pp. 21–9.
  101. ^ "32nd Division – The Long, Long Trail".
  102. ^ . 27 September 2011. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011.
  103. ^ Miles, pp. 512–24.
  104. ^ Falls, France and Belgium 1917, Vol I, pp. 156–8.
  105. ^ Edmonds, 1917, Vol II, pp. 116–22.
  106. ^ Edmonds, 1918, Vol II, p. 111.
  107. ^ a b c d e Brander, p. 68.
  108. ^ Edmonds, 1918, Vol IV, pp. 144–5.
  109. ^ Edmonds, 1918, Vol IV, pp. 330, 339.
  110. ^ Edmonds, 1918, Vol IV, pp. 445–6.
  111. ^ Edmonds & Maxwell-Hyslop, pp. 139, 142, 163.
  112. ^ Blaxland, p. 256.
  113. ^ Edmonds & Maxwell-Hyslop, pp. 470–1.
  114. ^ a b c d Becke Pt 2b, pp. 61–5.
  115. ^ a b "65th (2nd Lowland) Division – The Long, Long Trail".
  116. ^ Frederick, p. 184.
  117. ^ Army Council Instruction No 221, January 1916, Appendix 18.
  118. ^ Army Council Instruction No 2364, 17 December 1916, Appendix 204.
  119. ^ "The 10 Provisional Brigades". Great War Forum. 5 February 2012.
  120. ^ Brander, p. 78.
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  122. ^ Titles and designations, 1927.
  123. ^ a b c d e f g h Brander, pp. 95–6.
  124. ^ a b c Frederick, pp. 859, 869.
  125. ^ Monthly Army List, January 1939.
  126. ^ a b c d e f Litchfield, pp. 298–300.
  127. ^ a b "British Anti-Aircraft Command, TA on 3 September 1939 :: The Patriot Files :: Dedicated to the preservation of military history". www.patriotfiles.com.
  128. ^ Routledge, pp. 65–6, 371.
  129. ^ Routledge, Table LX, p. 378.
  130. ^ "Collier Chapter 5". www.ibiblio.org.
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  132. ^ 474 S/L Bty War Diary, 1940–41, TNA] file WO 166/3322.
  133. ^ 474 (Ind) S/L Bty War Diary, January–June 1944, TNA file WO 166/14909.
  134. ^ a b Frederick, p. 861.
  135. ^ a b c Farndale, Annex M.
  136. ^ a b "RA 1939-45 52 SL Rgt".
  137. ^ a b c d e f g "Page 5973 | Issue 38149, 16 December 1947 | London Gazette | The Gazette".
  138. ^ Order of Battle of Non-Field Force Units in the United Kingdom, Part 27: AA Command, 12 May 1941, TNA file WO 212/79.
  139. ^ Order of Battle of Non-Field Force Units in the United Kingdom, Part 27: AA Command, 2 December 1941, TNA file WO 212/80.
  140. ^ a b Frederick, pp. 806, 840.
  141. ^ "RA 1939-45 130 LAA".
  142. ^ Routledge, p. 400.
  143. ^ a b Order of Battle of Non-Field Force Units in the United Kingdom, Part 27: AA Command, 14 May 1942, with amendments, TNA file WO 212/81.
  144. ^ Routledge, pp. 402–3.
  145. ^ Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom, Part 3: Royal Artillery (Non-Divisional Units), 22 November 1942, TNA file WO 212/8.
  146. ^ Order of Battle of Non-Field Force Units in the United Kingdom, Part 27: AA Command, 1 October 1942, with amendments, TNA file WO 212/82.
  147. ^ Order of Battle of Non-Field Force Units in the United Kingdom, Part 27: AA Command, 13 March 1943, with amendments, TNA file WO 212/83.
  148. ^ a b Order of Battle of AA Command, 1 August 1943, with amendments, TNA file WO 212/84.
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  150. ^ "Collier Chapter 23". www.ibiblio.org.
  151. ^ "Collier Chapter 24". www.ibiblio.org.
  152. ^ "Collier Appendix XLV". www.ibiblio.org.
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  154. ^ Routledge, pp. 416–7.
  155. ^ Order of Battle of AA Command, 27 April 1944, TNA file WO 212/85.
  156. ^ Order of Battle of AA Command, 15 November 1945, TNA file WO 212/86.
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  160. ^ "British Army units from 1945 on - AA Brigades 30 - 66". british-army-units1945on.co.uk.
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  163. ^ Litchfield, pp. 283–4.
  164. ^ "British Army units from 1945 on - 474 - 519 Regiments 1947-67". british-army-units1945on.co.uk.
  165. ^ Watson & Rinaldi, p. 298.
  166. ^ "British Army units from 1945 on - Regiments TA - 118 to 432". british-army-units1945on.co.uk.
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  168. ^ Burke's
  169. ^ Brander, p. 79.
  170. ^ "Memorials & Monuments | The Royal Scots". www.theroyalscots.co.uk.
  171. ^ a b "'Summary of Memorials' at the Royal Scots website" (PDF).
  172. ^ "Royal Scots". Imperial War Museums.
  173. ^ "Museum | The Royal Scots". www.theroyalscots.co.uk.
  174. ^ "Geograph:: Lodge, Queen's Edinburgh Rifles, Forrest... (C) kim traynor". www.geograph.org.uk.

References edit

  • Army Council Instructions Issued During January 1916, London: HM Stationery Office, 1916.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 1: The Regular British Divisions, London: HM Stationery Office, 1934/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-38-X.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2a: The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st-Line Territorial Force Divisions (42–56), London: HM Stationery Office, 1935/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-39-8.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2b: The 2nd-Line Territorial Force Divisions (57th–69th), with the Home-Service Divisions (71st–73rd) and 74th and 75th Divisions, London: HM Stationery Office, 1937/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-39-8.
  • Ian F.W. Beckett, Riflemen Form: A Study of the Rifle Volunteer Movement 1859–1908, Aldershot: Ogilby Trusts, 1982, ISBN 0 85936 271 X.
  • Gregory Blaxland, Amiens: 1918, London: Frederick Muller, 1968/Star, 1981, ISBN 0-352-30833-8.
  • A. Michael Brander, Famous Regiments Series: The Royal Scots (The Royal Regiment), London: Leo Cooper, 1976, ISBN 0-85052-183-1.
  • David L. Bullock, Allenby's War: The Palestine-Arabian Campaigns 1916–1918, London: Blandford Press, 1988, ISBN 0-7137-1869-2.
  • Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 100th Edn, London, 1953.
  • Basil Collier, History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series: The Defence of the United Kingdom, London: HM Stationery Office, 1957/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2004, ISBN 978-1-84574-055-9.
  • Col John K. Dunlop, The Development of the British Army 1899–1914, London: Methuen, 1938.
  • Brig-Gen Sir James E. Edmonds, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium, 1916, Vol I, London: Macmillan,1932/Woking: Shearer, 1986, ISBN 0-946998-02-7.
  • Brig-Gen James E. Edmonds, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium 1917, Vol II, Messines and Third Ypres (Passchendaele), London: HM Stationery Office, 1948/Imperial War Museum and Battery Press, 1992, ISBN 0-90162775-5.
  • Brig-Gen Sir James E. Edmonds, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium 1918, Vol II, March–April: Continuation of the German Offensives, London: Macmillan, 1937/Imperial War Museum and Battery Press, 1995, ISBN 1-87042394-1.
  • Brig-Gen Sir James E. Edmonds, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium 1918, Vol IV, 8th August–26th September: The Franco-British Offensive, London: Macmillan, 1939/Imperial War Museum and Battery Press, 1993, ISBN 1-870423-86-0.
  • Brig-Gen Sir James E. Edmonds & Lt-Col R. Maxwell-Hyslop, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium 1918, Vol V, 26th September–11th November, The Advance to Victory, London: HM Stationery Office, 1947/Imperial War Museum and Battery Press, 1993, ISBN 1-870423-06-2.
  • Capt Cyril Falls, History of the Great War: Military Operations, Egypt and Palestine, Vol II, From June 1917 to the End of the War, London: HM Stationery Office, 1930/Imperial War Museum and Naval & Military Press, 2013, ISBN 1-84574951-0.
  • Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Years of Defeat: Europe and North Africa, 1939–1941, Woolwich: Royal Artillery Institution, 1988/London: Brasseys, 1996, ISBN 1-85753-080-2.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol I, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-007-3.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol II, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-009-X.
  • Capt Stair Gillon, The Story of the 29th Division, London: Nelson, 1925/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2002, ISBN 978-1-843422-65-5
  • Maj-Gen J.M. Grierson, Records of the Scottish Volunteer Force 1859–1908, Edinburgh:Blackwood, 1909.
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  • N.B. Leslie, Battle Honours of the British and Indian Armies 1695–1914, London: Leo Cooper, 1970, ISBN 0-85052-004-5.
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  • Capt Wilfred Miles, History of the Great War: Military Operations, France and Belgium 1916, Vol II, 2nd July 1916 to the End of the Battles of the Somme, London: Macmillan, 1938/Imperial War Museum & Battery Press, 1992, ISBN 0-89839-169-5.
  • Gen Sir Frederick Pile's despatch: "The Anti-Aircraft Defence of the United Kingdom from 28th July, 1939, to 15th April, 1945" London Gazette 18 December 1947
  • Brig N.W. Routledge, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Anti-Aircraft Artillery 1914–55, London: Royal Artillery Institution/Brassey's, 1994, ISBN 1-85753-099-3.
  • Edward M. Spiers, The Army and Society 1815–1914, London: Longmans, 1980, ISBN 0-582-48565-7.
  • Lt-Col R.R. Thompson, The Fifty-Second (Lowland) Division 1914–1918, Glasgow: Maclehose, Jackson 1923/Uckfield: Naval & Military, 2004, ISBN 978-1-84342993-7.
  • Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army, London: War Office, 7 November 1927.
  • Graham E. Watson & Richard A. Rinaldi, The Corps of Royal Engineers: Organization and Units 1889–2018, Tiger Lily Books, 2018, ISBN 978-171790180-4.
  • Ray Westlake, British Regiments at Gallipoli, Barnsley: Leo Cooper, 1996, ISBN 0-85052-511-X.
  • Ray Westlake, Tracing the Rifle Volunteers, Barnsley: Pen and Sword, 2010, ISBN 978-1-84884-211-3.

External sources edit

  • British Army units from 1945 on
  • Great War Forum
  • The Long, Long Trail
  • Orders of Battle at Patriot Files
  • Royal Artillery 1939–1945
  • The Royal Scots
  • Scottish Military History
  • Graham Watson, The Territorial Army 1947

queen, edinburgh, rifles, brigade, rifle, volunteers, raised, county, city, edinburgh, 1859, later, formed, battalions, royal, scots, which, fought, world, gallipoli, palestine, western, front, battalions, combined, between, world, wars, before, being, convert. The Queen s Edinburgh Rifles was a brigade of Rifle Volunteers raised in the county of city of Edinburgh in 1859 It later formed two battalions of the Royal Scots which fought in World War I at Gallipoli in Palestine and on the Western Front The two battalions combined between the world wars before being converted into an air defence regiment of the Royal Artillery RA This served in Anti Aircraft Command during World War II and continued in the postwar Territorial Army TA until 1961 when its successors were converted into Royal Engineers RE Queen s Edinburgh Rifles4th 5th Queen s Edinburgh Rifles Battalion Royal Scots52nd Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots S L Rgt RA130th Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots LAA Rgt RA587 Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots LAA Rgt RAActive31 August 1859 1 May 1961Country United KingdomBranchTerritorial ArmyRoleInfantryAir DefencePart of52nd Lowland Division29th Division32nd Division65th 2nd Lowland DivisionAnti Aircraft CommandGarrison HQEdinburghColorsHunting Stuart Tartan Pipers Royal Stewart MarchI m Ninety FiveEngagementsSecond Boer WarWorld War I Gallipoli Campaign Sinai and Palestine Campaign Western FrontWorld War II Home defence Operation DiverCommandersNotablecommandersJames Lord MoncrieffJohn Macdonald Lord KingsburghSir Robert Cranston Contents 1 Volunteer Force 1 1 Localisation 1 2 2nd Boer War 2 Territorial Force 3 World War I 3 1 Mobilisation 3 2 1 4th QER Royal Scots 3 2 1 Gallipoli 3 2 2 Egypt 3 2 3 Palestine 3 2 4 Western Front 3 3 1 5th QER Royal Scots 3 4 5th 6th Royal Scots 3 5 2 4th and 2 5th QER Royal Scots 3 6 3 4th and 3 5th Royal Scots 3 7 6th Scottish Provisional Battalion 4 Interwar 4 1 AA Conversion 5 World War II 5 1 52nd Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots Searchlight Regiment 5 2 130th Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots Light Anti Aircraft Regiment 5 2 1 Operation Diver 6 Postwar 7 Uniform Insignia and Bands 8 Honorary Colonels 9 Memorials 10 Notes 11 References 12 External sourcesVolunteer Force editThe enthusiasm for the Volunteer movement following an invasion scare in 1859 saw the creation of many Rifle Volunteer Corps RVCs composed of part time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular British Army in time of need 1 2 3 The 1st City of Edinburgh RVC comprised 21 different companies raised in that city between 31 August 1859 and November 1860 under the command of James Moncrieff MP for Edinburgh later 1st Lord Moncrieff as Lieutenant Colonel Commandant Nine of these companies were professional by background lawyers accountants civil servants university men and merchants four were drawn from miscellaneous interests Freemasons Total abstainers the Highland Society of Edinburgh two were citizens companies two were lower middle class tailors and bankers clerks and four were artisan companies 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 nbsp Queen s Edinburgh Rifles 1859 1st Advocates Company formed 31 August 1859 disbanded 1868 2nd 1st Citizens Company formed 31 August 1859 3rd Writers to the Signet Company formed 31 August 1859 disbanded 1868 4th Edinburgh University Company formed 31 August 1859 5th Solicitors before the Supreme Court Company formed 31 August 1859 6th Accountants Company formed 31 August 1859 7th Bankers Company formed 31 August 1859 8th 1st Artisans Company formed 31 August 1859 9th 2nd Artisans Company formed 31 August 1859 10th Civil Service Company formed 7 October 1859 11th 3rd Artisans Company formed 7 December 1859 12th Freemasons Company formed 7 December 1859 reorganised as 12th Water of Leith Company 1861 13th 4th Artisans Company formed 7 December 1859 14th 2nd Citizens Company formed 8 December 1859 15th 1st Merchants Company formed 21 December 1859 16th Total Abstainers Company formed 29 February 1860 17th 2nd Merchants Company formed 11 May 1860 18th High Constables Company formed 25 May 1860 19th 5th Artisans Company formed 8 November 1860 1st Highland Company formed 31 August 1859 2nd Highland Company formed 18 May 1860 3rd Highland Company formed 23 July 1860 The author R M Ballantyne was appointed Ensign in No 13 4th Artisans Company and then promoted to be Captain of No 9 2nd Artisans Company in July 1860 resigning in July 1863 He rejoined the corps in 1867 as Captain of No 15 1st Merchants Company but resigned again at the end of 1869 His brother John was one of the first officers appointed to the corps being commissioned as ensign in No 2 1st Citizens Company and then selected as Captain of No 14 2nd Citizens Company on its formation before resigning in June 1860 13 The first six companies were self supporting the members paying for their own uniforms equipment and arms while No 7 Company composed of bank clerks No 15 1st Merchants and No 19 mainly tailors received financial support from their employers The other artisans paid for their uniforms by instalments and their company expenses were met by public subscriptions The three Highland Companies came from the Highland Society of Edinburgh Interest in No 12 Company the Freemasons soon fell away and by 1861 it had almost ceased to exist The novelist Catherine Sinclair came forward with funds and No 12 Company was reorganised recruited mainly from the Water of Leith district 7 8 In 1865 the unit received the title of 1st Queen s Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer Brigade 1st QERVB A 2nd City of Edinburgh RVC had been formed in 1862 as one company of Highlanders raised from W D Young s Ironworks at Fountainbridge with William D Young himself as captain On 23 February 1867 this unit was increased to three companies but simultaneously was included in the 1st QERVB as the 4th 5th and 6th Highland Companies 5 6 7 8 9 11 No 16 Company had been formed by John Hope entirely from men who had signed the pledge as total abstainers Hope then decided to raise a complete corps of abstainers from Edinburgh and on 27 May 1867 the 3rd City of Edinburgh RVC of two companies was formed with Hope in command Most of his recruits and the cap badge were taken from No 16 Company and the 3rd RVC remained administratively attached to the 1st QERVB for several years The unit known locally as John Hope s Water Rats grew to six companies by 1880 when it was renumbered as the 2nd Edinburgh RVC It became the 4th Volunteer Battalion of the Royal Scots in 1888 and the 6th Battalion Royal Scots in 1908 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 14 15 16 nbsp The QER Drill Hall at Forrest Hill The 1st QERVB continued to grow adding a 7th Highland Company on 27 December 1867 from natives of Caithness living in Edinburgh Nos 1 and 3 Companies were disbanded in 1868 but on 19 March 1869 a new No 20 Company was formed and the brigade divided into two battalions 1st Battalion comprised Nos 2 4 5 6 7 10 18 and 1st to 7th Highland Companies 2nd Battalion comprised Nos 8 9 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 and 20 Companies It was the largest RVC in the Volunteer Force The unit established its Headquarters HQ at Forrest Hill drill hall Edinburgh in 1872 and enlarged the building in 1905 In common with other Edinburgh Volunteer units it used a rifle range at Hunters Bog in Holyrood Park 7 8 9 10 12 17 J H A Macdonald later Lord Kingsburgh Lord Advocate of Scotland was commissioned as a Lt Col in the brigade in 1864 and became Lt Col Commandant in 1882 He was one of the leading Volunteer advocates of drill reform author of On the Best Detail Formation for the New Infantry Tactics 1873 and Commonsense on Parade or Drill without Strings 1886 In 1885 he organised a spectacular night assembly of the brigade which resulted in 500 new recruits In 1886 a Mounted Infantry detachment was formed and an affiliated cadet corps was formed at Merchiston Castle School 7 8 10 18 Localisation edit Under the Localisation of Forces scheme introduced in 1872 by the Cardwell Reforms the 1st QERVB was grouped with the 1st Regiment of Foot the Royal Scots the Edinburgh Light Infantry Militia and a number of RVCs from neighbouring counties into Brigade No 62 16 When these were combined into a single regiment under the Childers Reforms the 1st QERVB provided two Volunteer Battalions of the Royal Scots from 1 July 1881 The 2nd Battalion formed a Mounted Rifle company in March 1886 On 1 April the unit was designated the Queens Rifle Volunteer Brigade Royal Scots when it was split into three battalions 1st Battalion with A I Companies previously Nos 2 5 6 7 10 18 and 1 3 Highland 2nd Battalion A H Companies previously Nos 8 9 11 16 3rd Battalion A H Companies previously Nos 4 17 19 20 and 4 7 Highland 6 8 9 11 16 17 15 The Stanhope Memorandum of December 1888 introduced a Mobilisation Scheme for Volunteer units which would assemble in their own brigades at key points in case of war In peacetime these brigades provided a structure for collective training 19 20 21 Under this scheme the QRVB was included in the Forth Brigade under the command of Col J H A Macdonald based at 51 Hanover Street Edinburgh later at Surgeons Hall In 1902 the Forth Brigade was split into the 1st and 2nd Lothian Brigades with the QVRB in the 1st Brigade based at the QRVB Drill Hall in Forrest Road later at 28 Rutland Street 16 2nd Boer War edit A contingent from the brigade served in the Volunteer Service Companies of the Royal Scots alongside the Regulars in the Second Boer War and others with the Scottish Volunteer Cyclist Company and the City of London Imperial Volunteers In all 245 members of the brigade served in the war earning its first Battle honour South Africa 1900 02 7 8 9 10 16 22 In 1900 during the 2nd Boer War the Government provided support army pay and allowances with separation allowances for families for longer than usual summer training camps for the Volunteers This allowed the Queen s Edinburgh Rifle Brigade to camp for 28 days instead of the usual week and to concentrate on progressive training 23 From 1902 to 1906 the brigade provided one battalion to the 32nd Brigade of the field army for 13 days annual training the remainder staying with 1st Lothian Bde 7 Recruitment soared during the Boer War and the brigade underwent further enlargement in 1900 with the addition of I Company recruited from Colinton for 3rd Battalion and the expansion of the Mounted Infantry detachment to three sections In 1875 the brigade s highland companies had been ordered to discontinue Highland dress but in 1900 a complete new Highland Battalion of eight kilted companies was formed in Edinburgh This was detached from the brigade the following year and became independent as 9th Highlanders Volunteer Battalion Royal Scots 6 7 8 9 10 24 In 1905 Sir Robert Cranston as one of the lieutenant colonels of the brigade as well as its Honorary Colonel ex officio as Lord Provost of Edinburgh participated in meetings with H O Arnold Forster Secretary of State for War over the future of the Volunteer Force 25 George Watson s Boys College formed an affiliated cadet corps in 1905 8 Territorial Force editWhen the Volunteers were subsumed into the new Territorial Force TF under the Haldane Reforms of 1908 26 27 the three battalions of the brigade were reorganised to form the 4th and 5th Battalions of the Royal Scots both granted the subtitle Queen s Edinburgh Rifles in March 1909 A Company of the brigade s 3rd Bn the old No 4 Edinburgh University Company became the Edinburgh University contingent of the Senior Division of the Officers Training Corps OTC and the Merchiston Castle and George Watson s Cadet Corps joined the Junior Division of the OTC 6 8 9 10 11 16 17 15 28 29 The two battalions remained in the Lothian Brigade which did not join any of the TF s new infantry divisions but continued independently in its coast defence role 30 31 32 World War I editMobilisation edit nbsp 1914 Christmas card by the artist Walter Balmer Hislop who served in D Company 1 5th QER Bn as 2nd Lt and died at Gallipoli in April 1915 On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914 the Lothian Brigade mobilised at Edinburgh as part of Scottish Coastal Defences 30 31 32 33 34 35 Almost immediately TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service On 15 August 1914 the War Office issued instructions to separate those men who had signed up for Home Service only and form them into reserve units On 31 August the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original but distinguished by a 2 prefix and a 2nd Lothian Brigade was formed from these units 3rd Line training units were formed in 1915 The only TF battalion of the Royal Scots that did not immediately form a 2nd line was the 6th Bn which instead provided two companies of reinforcements to bring 1 4th Bn up to war establishment 3rd Line or Reserve battalions were later added to provide drafts to the battalions overseas but the number of recruits from Edinburgh began to dry up and drafts were often unavailable 6 30 32 34 35 36 37 In preparation for the Gallipoli Campaign 1 5th Royal Scots left 1st Lothian Bde on 10 March 1915 and 1 4th Bn on 24 April being replaced by their 2nd Line battalions 33 32 1 4th QER Royal Scots edit On leaving 1st Lothian Bde the 1 4th QER Bn Royal Scots 1 4th RS joined the Scottish Rifles Brigade in the Lowland Division which were shortly afterwards numbered as 156th Bde and 52nd Division The division was at Larbert under orders to proceed to Gallipoli and on 22 May the battalion entrained for Liverpool where it embarked on the Empress of Britain The battalion sailed on 24 May via Gibraltar and Malta arriving on 3 June at Alexandria in Egypt where it went into camp 30 38 39 40 41 42 Gallipoli edit The battalion re embarked on the Empress of Britain on 8 June and reached Mudros Bay three days later C Company was then sent aboard the Carron for Cape Helles followed by A and B Companies aboard HMS Reindeer The latter vessel was badly damaged in a collision with HMS Immingham and had to return the men being transhipped to the French Moulooya and then back to the Empress of Britain A and B Companies with HQ finally sailed again on 14 June aboard HMS Basilisk accompanied by D Company aboard HMS Grasshopper They landed at W Beach and moved about a mile inland to begin digging communication tenches under shellfire The battalion moved up into the front line where it relieved the 1 5th QER Bn see below for a five day spell of duty during which Quartermaster Sergeant J Dewar 1914 winner of the King s Prize at the National Rifle Association meeting at Bisley Camp 43 and Company Sergeant Major CSM D Lowe distinguished themselves by picking off Turkish snipers 30 36 41 44 1 4th Battalion returned to the front line on 27 June to take part in the next day s attack on trenches H12A and H12 the Battle of Gully Ravine in which 156th Bde was attached to 29th Division After a bombardment by warships and the artillery ashore 29th Division attacked at 11 00 1 4th Royal Scots on 156th Bde s left had the task of assaulting trenches H12 and H12A on the eastern side of Gully Ravine The battalion had a 12 man bombing party but two thirds of the improvised Jam tin grenades failed to go off Each man had a tin rectangle on his back to reflect the sun and indicate their position to the artillery but 156th Bde was allocated none of the available artillery support Packed into inadequate jumping off trenches the brigade suffered heavily from retaliatory shellfire before it went over the top at 11 02 C and D Companies advanced towards H12A with A Company following up all suffering heavy casualties from enfilade fire including most of the officers Pipe Major Andrew Buchan rifle in hand led forward one party until hit for the third time he died on the parapet of the trench After a stiff bayonet fight this trench was captured B Company diverged half right and charged the enfilading trench then a party under CSM Lowe moved on to establish a foothold in the second objective H12 and prepare it for defence joined by the battalion machine guns The battalion s casualties were 15 officers killed or died of wounds including the Commanding Officer CO Lt Col S R Dunn TD who died on a hospital ship 204 other ranks ORs killed or missing seven officers and 141 ORs wounded 36 41 45 46 47 The battalion was relieved the following day and was then attached to 88th Brigade in 29th Division alongside the 1 5th QER Bn It formed X and Y Companies in a composite battalion with the 1 7th Bn Z Company which had started as a half battalion having lost two companies in the Quintinshill rail disaster before embarkation and had since also lost heavily at Gully Ravine 30 40 41 45 On 12 July the battalion supported 1 4th Royal Scots Fusiliers during the attack on Trenches E10 and F12 the action at Achi Baba Nullah its casualties were 27 ORs killed and missing and 47 wounded 41 48 The weakened battalion was engaged in fatigue duties at W Beach until 11 August when 14 officers including a new CO Col A Young VD a former officer of the QEVRB 16 arrived as reinforcements and the temporary amalgamation with 1 7th Bn ended 1 4th Battalion then began to take its turns in the firing line and in the reserve line though at one point it held 120 yards 110 m of trench for four days with an effective rifle strength of only 62 men Sickness kept many men out of action in October of 12 officers and 330 ORs the effective strength was only 181 On 4 November Col Young went to hospital and the 1 4th RS once again formed a composite battalion with the 1 7th Bn under the command of Lt Col W C Peebles of 1 7th The combined battalion seized a Turkish trench on 15 November with few casualties and held it against a counter attack but was not involved in any of 52nd Division s other major actions before the decision was made to evacuate the Helles positions 36 41 45 49 Preparations for evacuation were made during early January while the force ashore was slimmed down 4th 7th Royal Scots formed part of the rearguard which made its way down to V Beach after dark on 8 January The battalion was evacuated by lighters and on 9 September sailed aboard HMS Prince George for Mudros Of the battalion that had originally landed only the medical officer and 148 ORs remained on the strength 30 41 50 51 Egypt edit After the evacuation of Helles the 52nd L Division moved back to Egypt After reinforcement and concentration it went to El Qantara and on 2 March 1916 it took over part of No 3 Section of the Suez Canal defences 38 No 3 or Northern Section of the Canal defences had its outer flank anchored on the Mediterranean Running inland were a series of redoubts manned by 1 4th RS and the rest of the infantry with machine guns and backed by artillery On the night of 3 4 August a German and Turkish force attacked the position the Battle of Romani but 1 4th RS and saw little action The attack was driven off by the British artillery and the ANZAC Mounted Division then the defenders moved to the counter attack though the pursuit bogged down in the appalling desert conditions of Sinai 38 51 52 53 54 55 Palestine edit After months of preparation the Eastern Expeditionary Force EEF crossed the Sinai Desert at the end of 1916 and prepared to invade Palestine beginning the Sinai and Palestine Campaign 52nd L Division was held in reserve during the 1st Battle of Gaza 26 27 March 1917 and was not committed 38 56 57 There followed several weeks of preparation for the 2nd Battle of Gaza The first phase of the attack was carried out on 17 April with 52nd L Division tasked with taking Ali Mansur and the adjoining hills 156th Brigade was in reserve at Wadi Ghuzze moving up during the night On 19 April 156th Bde was ready to attack Mansura at 07 30 after a 2 hour bombardment with 1 4th RS in the centre under the command of Lt Col F H Goldthorpe However 155th South Scottish Bde got held up and 156th was pinned down lying in the open for 5 6 hours and suffering casualties from shellfire before falling back at the end of the day The battle ended on 20 April with both sides digging in the 1 4th RS having suffered casualties of 1 officers and 13 ORs killed 6 officers and 110 ORs wounded and 4 ORs missing 38 54 58 59 60 61 nbsp The assault on Umbrella Hill and el Arish Redoubt nbsp Turkish trenches at el Arish Redoubt captured by 4th Royal Scots 52nd L Division spent months digging defences suffering a steady trickle of casualties from shellfire and in raids 4th Royal Scots the 1 prefix was dropped now that the 2nd and 3rd Line battalions had been disbanded see below was now commanded by Lt Col A M Mitchell Several times the battalion sent patrols out into No man s land with a field telephone then having located the position of a Turkish standing patrol called down artillery fire on it 62 By the autumn of 1917 the EEF had been revitalised by the arrival of Sir Edmund Allenby as commander in chief and the next operation the 3rd Battle of Gaza was much better planned and successful 63 While the Desert Mounted Corps swept round the Turkish flank 52nd L Division down on the coast carried out a direct attack on the strong el Arish position to pin the Turks 4th Royal Scots was given the daunting task of crossing 900 yards 820 m of No man s land and then storming the central and eastern portion of the formidable el Arish redoubt and the associated Little Devil trench system The troops practised this attack over trench models for days before the attack went in on 2 November The first phase of the night attack on Umbrella Hill had died down before 4th RS moved out in the dark to its jumping off position 500 yards 460 m from the redoubt Followed by supporting and carrying companies of the 8th Bn Cameronians Scottish Rifles and preceded by two tanks one of which immediately broke down 4th RS launched its attack at 03 00 as the British artillery pounded the objective The battalion advanced with magnificent steadiness in four waves on a frontage of 300 yards 270 m under Turkish artillery fire the remaining tank was hit and burned out after it had crossed the first two lines of trenches The infantry crossed four lines of trenches the following waves mopping up the defenders as they advanced and then they steadily cleared the Little Devil trenches and dugouts despite losses from landmines The objective was carried by 03 55 but counter attacks had to be held off until daybreak Daylight showed that the furthest trench was untenable so the battalion moved back a little to the higher ground from which they could deny these trenches to the enemy Furher counter attacks came in at the end of the day but the position was held When the battalion was relieved that night it had lost about 200 casualties which had risen to 240 by the end of the battle on 7 November 38 54 64 65 66 The Turks withdrew to defend the Wadi el Hesi with 52nd L Division well up in pursuit 156th Brigade was left marching in the rear as the rest of the division stormed the wadi and led the pursuit up the coast towards Junction Station 38 67 68 69 4th Royal Scots under Lt Col Mitchell distinguished itself in a successful attack on a Turkish rearguard position at Brown Hill near Burkah 25 miles 40 km NE of Gaza City on 11 November The hill was strongly entrenched but the battalion advanced 1 mile 1 6 km under Shrapnel shell fire with one company echeloned back to protect the flank Rushing forward in small parties the assault wave gathered in the shelter of a wadi at the foot of the hill and then attacked under covering fire from artillery and machine guns Having taken the position the Royal Scots discovered a second untouched Turkish line hidden on the reverse slope they were counter attacked from this line and pushed part way back down the hill but led the reinforcing 2 3rd Gurkha Rifles back up the hill to capture the position before the end of the day The battalion already weak lost 3 officers and 49 ORs killed 4 officers and 157 ORs wounded 54 64 70 The EEF now began its advance on Jerusalem 52nd L Division had to negotiate a poor road through the hills beyond Beit Liqya in heavy rain to join the Battle of Nebi Samwil 156th Brigade filed along the track in full view of the Turks and under shellfire as they moved up to relieve the Yeomanry Mounted Division 4th Royal Scots under Lt Col Mitchell was detached to move west of El Burj to extend 155th Bde s line to try to contact 54th East Anglian Division The two brigades were now strung out in a very thin line and it was too rocky to dig trenches Lt Col Mitchell reported that the gap to the 54th Division was 2 miles 3 2 km wide but El Burj was held against Turkish attacks during 28 and 29 November until 155th Bde was relieved by the 3rd Australian Light Horse Bde and 4th Royal Scots could rejoin its own brigade After breaking this counter offensive the EEF captured Jerusalem on 11 December 38 54 71 72 73 nbsp Passage of the Nahr el Auja 52nd L Division s next operation was the tricky passage of the Nahr el Auja to launch the Battle of Jaffa A patrol of 4th RS crossed on a tarpaulin boat built by the Royal Engineers to reconnoitre the position on the night of 13 14 December The assault troops of the division then practised using similar canvas boats on a village pond then at 22 30 on the evening of 20 December in heavy rain the first assaulting waves of 156th Bde went forward under cover of an artillery barrage and established a bridgehead Bridging was made difficult by the flooded river but the Royal Engineers got the follow up battalions including 4th Royal Scots across by raft Accompanied by a section of the brigade machine gun company and a Stokes mortar the battalion attacked Slag Heap Farm and captured it without serious difficulty By 06 00 the brigade was digging in on a strong line ready for any counter attack but none came the Turks had been completely surprised and were in full retreat The advance was renewed up the coast on the morning of 22 December with fire support from HMS Grafton and gunboats 156th Brigade advancing in the centre came under shellfire but casualties were few Before nightfall 52nd L Division reached the castle of Arsuf overlooking the Plain of Sharon where it halted The Official History describes the passage of the Auja as one of the most remarkable feats of the Palestine Campaign 4th Royal Scots suffered only 5 ORs killed 1 officer and 21 ORs wounded 38 54 64 74 75 76 Western Front edit In the early part of 1918 the 52nd L Division remained in the lines near Arsuf Then on 24 March it was warned for a transfer to the British Expeditionary Force BEF on the Western Front The division s units sailed from Alexandria between 4 and 11 April and landed at Marseilles by 17 April The division was concentrated near Abbeville on 23 April On 29 April it moved to Aire and continued training On 6 May it moved to the Vimy area and took over front line trenches On 31 July it moved up to Arras to join in the Hundred Days Offensive 30 38 77 78 On 22 August 156th Bde was ordered to attack the following morning the Second Battle of the Somme Only half the promised number of lorries arrived and some companies of 4th RS had to march through the night to their jumping off point south of Mercatel and there was no time for reconnaissance The battalion marched straight into action behind a heavy artillery barrage but without the three tanks that were supposed to accompany them The attack was a surprise and the battalion advanced through the wrecked villages taking all their objectives by 06 45 The tanks then caught up and went out to exploit the ground in front followed by a company of 4th RS after which the position was consolidated 38 79 80 The Battle of the Scarpe began on 26 August 4th Royal Scots attacked north of the Cojeul River and advanced steadily until they reached the outer defences of the Hindenburg Line 38 81 82 On 2 September the Battle of Drocourt Queant Line 4th Royal Scots moved against the tremendously strong defences at the Queant end of the Drocourt Queant Switch Line and took their objectives with amazing ease The left of the battalion captured the Moulin Sans Souci windmill and Lt Col Mitchell pushed his reserve company into the gap to work along the Hindenburg Line trenches From 22 to 26 August 4th RS lost 27 ORs killed and 10 missing 3 officers and 114 ORs wounded and 3 officers and 98 ORs gassed as the Germans deployed large quantities of Mustard Gas The battalion was then rested until late September 38 81 83 It was brought back into the line on 20 September facing a well fortified section of the Hindenburg Line on the Canal du Nord The British held Moeuvres and the Germans had been counter attacking the village They made another attack against 7th RS on 21 September but at the end of the day four platoons of 4th RS rushed and captured the Germans strongpoint at E14 Central Fighting continued around these positions after 4th RS had been relieved 84 156th Brigade s role in the great Battle of the Canal du Nord was to attack across the canal then turn to its right and clear the trenches to the south east The British barrage came down at 05 00 on 27 September and the German guns immediately replied on the forming up trenches Nevertheless 4th RS under Lt Col Mitchell led 156th Bde off at 05 30 as the barrage began to move forwards They had no tanks because the banks of the dry canal were an obstacle and on reaching the canal realised that a frontal assault would be very costly so the battalion reorganised to work round the left flank Corporal Foggo dashed forwards and threw two Mills bombs into a pillbox that held them up and the men scrambled down into and across the canal By 09 55 the battalion had reached their objective The battalion s losses in defending Moeuvres were 6 officers and 81 ORs and in forcing the Canal du Nord lost another 11 officers and 96 ORs 38 85 86 87 52nd L Division took part in the pursuit after the Canal du Nord before 4th RS were rested from 7 to 27 October Then on 28 October the battalion went back into the line north east of St Amand for the Final Advance in Artois The division had closed up to the Mons Conde Canal by 8 November when it became known that the Germans had abandoned the water defences The code word Hunt was issued and 156th Bde crossed in canvas boats to begin the pursuit By 10 November the brigade was clearing German rearguards from Herchies near Mons When the Armistice with Germany came into effect at 11 00 on 11 November the division had reached the Nimy Jurbise road 38 88 After the Armistice the troops were employed in training and clearing up the area Demobilisation proceeded and between the end of January and end of May 1919 the division s units were reduced to cadres and returned to the UK 38 The 1 4th Bn was officially disembodied on 24 May 1919 6 1 5th QER Royal Scots edit nbsp V Beach about two days after the landing seen from the bow of the River Clyde The 1 5th QER Battalion Royal Scots joined 88th Bde in 29th Division at Leamington on 11 March 1915 It was the only TF battalion in what was otherwise a Regular Army formation composed of battalions brought back to the UK from around the British Empire following the outbreak of war 30 89 90 91 92 93 The battalion entrained for Avonmouth Docks on 21 22 March where it embarked on the Caledonia and the Melville and sailed via Malta to Alexandria where it disembarked on 2 April and went into camp It re embarked on 6 April aboard the Dongola Haverford Kingstonian Marquette and Melville for Mudros where it joined the British forces gathering for the Landing at Cape Helles After lying anchored off Tenedos the force began landing at 07 00 on 25 April Two companies of 1 5th Bn landed at V Beach at 12 30 without casualties and moved forward to the support trenches The other two companies landed later to provide working parties on the beach unloading stores under fire and suffering casualties One of the advanced companies was moved up into the firing line on 26 April and the battalion joined in the general advance against Achi Baba Ridge the following afternoon By 08 00 on 28 April the battalion had suffered heavy casualties including the CO Lt Col J T R Wilson wounded and had to be withdrawn from the advanced positions The battalion was moved to the left where it began building a redoubt and then moved back to reserve positions 30 36 41 89 92 94 On 7 May during the operations around Krithia Nullah 1 5th RS were able to rush the Turkish strongpoint of Fir Tree Wood it was then lost to a counter attack but 88th Bde had recovered it by the end of the day Overall however the fighting was inconclusive 36 41 95 88th Brigade again took terrible casualties in the Battle of Gully Ravine on 28 June see above At one point Second lieutenant Herbert James of the 4th Bn Worcestershire Regiment found some platoons of 1 5th RS without any officers and led them into the first line of Turkish trenches for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross 46 The attack of 28 June was the last major action at Gallipoli for the 1 5th RS Reduced to less than a company s strength and with no drafts from home it was evacuated to Mudros in July for rest and was replaced in 29th Division by the Royal Newfoundland Regiment from the 1st Lothian Bde Rebuilt to half battalion strength about 300 men the 1 5th RS returned to the Gallipoli Peninsula in August for two more spells of trench duty including being in reserve for 88th Bde s attack on 6 August and the Battle of Scimitar Hill before being withdrawn to Egypt in October 33 41 45 89 93 96 On 10 March 1916 the battalion embarked at Port Said for France to join the British Expeditionary Force BEF on the Western Front 34 5th 6th Royal Scots edit After arriving in France on 22 March the weak 1 5th RS was assigned to Line of communication LoC duties in April 1916 Then on 15 May it was amalgamated with the 1 6th Royal Scots to form the 5th 6th Bn 6 30 34 35 89 90 91 51 97 Having contributed large drafts to the 1 4th QER Bn 1 6th Bn did not leave the Lothian Bde until 5 September 1915 51 32 and went to Egypt where it joined the Western Frontier Force WFF on 20 November After serving with the WFF in the Senussi Campaign it was sent to France on 27 February 1916 for LoC duties on the Western Front 1 6th arrived at Marseilles on 15 May 1916 and was immediately amalgamated with 1 5th 51 97 98 On 29 July the combined 5th 6th RS joined 14th Bde in 32nd Division The 32nd was a Kitchener s Army formation that had been bolstered by the Regular 14th Bde It had suffered heavy casualties on the First day of the Somme 1 July 99 and 5th 6th Royal Scots replaced one of its shattered battalions 30 100 101 102 At dawn on 16 November 14th Bde took over an ill defined section of line forming a defensive flank to the attacks being made in the Battle of the Ancre Heights Following a fall of snow and chilling rain the brigade was ordered to push the flank forward 500 yards 460 m towards Ten Tree Alley when the rest of the division attacked on 18 November Little headway was made in this last gasp of the Somme offensive 100 103 The division took part in minor operations along the Ancre in January and February 1917 and then followed the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line Operation Alberich in March and April During this pursuit the 32nd Division carried out the British Army s first open warfare operation on the Western Front since 1914 By nightfall on 1 April 14th Bde had reached Holnon Wood At 05 00 on 2 April it put in a successful attack and captured this large wood 100 104 In June the division was moved to the Flanders coast to support an expected breakthrough at Ypres that never came However the Germans put in a spoiling attack at Nieuport Operation Strandfest on 10 11 July preceded by three days of bombardment 14th Brigade was not closely engaged and a planned counter attack was abandoned 100 105 The Germans launched their Spring Offensive Operation Michael south of Arras in March 1918 and 32nd Division was sent to the area as reinforcements On 3 April 14th Bde took part in the night attack to recapture Ayette and on 5 April the final attempt to relaunch Operation Michael was defeated at the Battle of the Ancre 100 106 During May and June which was quiet on the British front the 5th 6th RS carried out raids 77 The Allied Hundred Days Offensive began on 8 August with the Battle of Amiens 32nd Division was in reserve on the first day though 5th 6th RS was briefly engaged 14th Brigade then led the division s attack on 11 August with 5th 6th RS and 1st Dorset Regiment in front As soon as they advanced they came under heavy fire but they got close to the village of Damery with the help of two tanks that went through the village twice The attack was then halted to avoid heavier casualties 100 107 108 The brigade was in reserve for 32nd Division s attack on 23 August 100 79 107 On 28 August during the Battle of the Scarpe 14th Bde attacked at 05 00 and advanced unopposed towards its first two objectives 5th 6th RS s advance was described as a procession and by the end of the day the brigade had observation over the Somme Valley Soon after dawn the next day they had pushed right up to the river 107 109 5th 6th Royal Scots was then pulled out of the line but it returned to cross the Somme Canal and river on 5 September At 10 30 one company waded across at the site of Brie bridge despite machine gun fire it then cleared Brie bombing the dugouts while a second company crossed by a temporary footbridge The two companies then established a line 1 000 yards 910 m beyond the village and the division passed through later in the day 107 110 There was then another rest until the Battle of St Quentin Canal began on 29 September 100 107 Facing the most formidable part of the Hindenburg Line on the St Quentin Canal 5th 6th RS did not go into action until 1 October once the line had been breached At 16 00 they were directed against the key position in the German second line the village of Sequehart just north of St Quentin The village changed hands four times until on 3 October the battalion which had specifically asked for another chance to take the village succeeded in holding it despite heavy shelling and two more counter attacks 85 111 By early November the army had closed up to the Sambre Oise Canal The Battle of the Sambre opened on 4 November Two platoons of 5th 6th RS were given the task of attacking le Donjon two minutes after Zero Hour behind special barrage and if possible to obtain a crossing over the canal Finding themselves unable to follow the assigned path through the marsh the two platoons the half the battalion followed the 1st Dorsets across a floating bridge le Donjon fell at 10 45 At 13 30 the 5th 6th RS and 1st Dorsets advanced to establish the bridgehead defences the opposition was so negligible that no barrage was required 100 112 113 The advance continued with the division capturing Grand Fayt on 6 November and Avesnes on 8 November which it was occupying on 11 November when the Armistice came into force 32nd Division was chosen as part of the occupation force the British Army of the Rhine and advanced to the Meuse between Dinant and Namur where it became the reserve to the army in Germany On 3 February 1919 the division took over the southern sector of the Cologne bridgehead but by then the remaining TF units were being demobilised and 5th 6th Royal Scots left for home between 25 February and 19 March 100 It was disembodied on 12 November 1919 6 2 4th and 2 5th QER Royal Scots edit After formation in September 1914 2 4th QER Bn went to Penicuik in February 1915 and both transferred from 2nd Lothian Bde to 1st Lothian Bde at Peebles to replace their 1st Line battalions They left in October and November 1915 to join 195th Bde in 65th 2nd Lowland Division 6 30 33 114 In November 1915 the infantry battalions in the 64th 2nd Highland and 65th 2nd Lowland Divisions were reorganised and numbered sequentially the 2 4th 2 5th and 2 6th Royal Scots temporarily combining as No 19 Battalion by May 1916 they had reverted to their previous regimental designations but 2 5th remained merged with 2 4th 6 30 34 35 114 195th Brigade was stationed at Dunfermline during the winter of 1915 16 In March 1916 65th 2nd L Division moved into England and joined Southern Army Home Forces 195th Bde being quartered in Essex around Billericay and then from July at Terling In January 1917 the division moved to Ireland to relieve 59th 2nd North Midland Division which had been the first TF formation to serve in that country 2 4th Battalion was stationed at Fermoy 30 114 115 During 1917 the 2nd Line TF battalions in 65th 2nd Lowland Division were progressively replaced by Graduated Battalions of the Training Reserve in August 1917 the 2 4th Royal Scots was disbanded and was replaced by 217th Graduated Bn 30 34 114 115 3 4th and 3 5th Royal Scots edit The 3rd Line battalions of the Queen s Edinburgh Rifles were formed as training units at Peebles in May 1915 and moved to Loanhead and Galashiels respectively in November They were designated as the 4th and 5th Reserve Bns Royal Scots on 8 April 1916 and were at Stobs Military Camp in May On 1 September 1916 while it was at Catterick Camp in North Yorkshire the 4th Reserve Bn absorbed the 5th 6th 7th and 8th Reserve Bns and became part of the Lowland Reserve Brigade It also absorbed the 9th Highland Reserve Bn in June 1917 The combined battalion moved back to Edinburgh in the Edinburgh Special Reserve Brigade in November 1917 then to Haddington in April 1918 and was at Cupar in the Forth Garrison at the end of the war It was disbanded on 28 June 1919 in Glasgow 6 30 34 35 6th Scottish Provisional Battalion edit In 1915 the Home Service men of the 4th 5th and 6th Royal Scots were combined into 6th Scottish Provisional Battalion which joined the Lothian Brigade redesignated the Scottish Provisional Brigade and later 1st Provisional Brigade on 22 May In April 1916 the 1st Provisional Bde moved from Scotland to Kent to take over coastal defence duties The Military Service Act 1916 swept away the Home Foreign service distinction and all TF soldiers became liable for overseas service if medically fit and the remaining provisional battalions were reorganised but the 6th Provisional Bn had already been disbanded and its men dispersed 33 116 117 118 119 Interwar edit nbsp 90 cm Projector Anti Aircraft displayed at Fort Nelson Hampshire The TF was reconstituted on 7 February 1920 and the 52nd Lowland Division and its units began to reform The 4th and 5th QER Battalions did guard duty during the coal strike of April 1921 After the TF was reorganised as the Territorial Army TA the two battalions reformed in 1921 as a single 4th 5th Queen s Edinburgh Rifles Bn Royal Scots and absorbed 10th Cyclist Bn Royal Scots at Linlithgow as A Company 6 9 29 38 120 121 The combined battalion formed part of 155th East Scottish Bde in 52nd L Division 122 AA Conversion edit During the 1930s the increasing need for anti aircraft AA defence for Britain s cities was addressed by converting a number of TA infantry battalions into AA units The 4th 5th QER Royal Scots was one of the battalions selected becoming a Royal Artillery searchlight S L regiment on 1 November 1938 while remaining affiliated with the Royal Scots It was designated 4th 5th Queen s Edinburgh Bn The Royal Scots The Royal Regiment 52nd Searchlight Regiment and consisted of HQ 405 406 407 Companies based at Forrest Road At the same time the TA was doubled in size following the Munich Crisis so A Company at Linlithgow was separated to become the basis for 14th West Lothian Royal Scots Light AA Regiment RA 6 9 29 121 123 124 125 126 127 World War II edit52nd Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots Searchlight Regiment edit nbsp 3 AA Divisional sign The regiment formed part of 3 AA Division covering Scotland In February 1939 the existing AA defences came under the control of a new Anti Aircraft Command In June a partial mobilisation of TA units was begun in a process known as couverture whereby each AA unit did a month s tour of duty in rotation to man selected AA and searchlight positions On 24 August ahead of the declaration of war AA Command was fully mobilised at its war stations 128 4th 5th Royal Scots 52nd S L Rgt became part of 52nd Light Anti Aircraft Brigade which was formed in August 1939 with responsibility for all of 3 AA Division s S L provision 127 129 As part of the Forth defences 52nd Searchlight Regiment was engaged in the first air raid against the UK during World War II when German aircraft attacked the Royal Naval Dockyard at Rosyth near the Forth Bridge on 16 October 1939 During the Phoney War period there were a number of other attacks on the naval bases of Scotland before the Luftwaffe turned its attention to the campaigns in Norway and France and the Low Countries 123 130 131 In February 1940 the regiment sent a cadre of 5 officers and 27 ORs to 222nd Searchlight Training Regiment RA at Norton Manor Barracks near Taunton where with a similar cadre from 51st Highland Anti Aircraft Battalion Royal Engineers they formed a new 474th Searchlight Battery Royal Artillery from new conscripts and volunteers This independent battery served wit AA Command and later provided artificial illumination or Monty s Moonlight for night operations by 21st Army Group during the campaign in North West Europe in 1944 45 132 133 In August 1940 the RA took over all the S L regiments in AA Command after which the regiment was designated 52nd Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots Searchlight Regiment RA and the companies were termed batteries 6 9 134 126 135 136 Eastern Scotland largely escaped air attack during the Battle of Britain In November 1940 at the height of The Blitz a new 12 AA Division was formed to take over responsibility for western Scotland including Glasgow and the Clyde while 3 AA Division including 52 LAA Bde and 52nd S L Rgt retained responsibility for eastern Scotland 137 The regiment remained in 52 AA Bde and 3 AA Division for the next year moving to positions in the Scottish Borders 123 138 The regiment supplied another cadre of experienced officers and men to 237th S L Training Rgt at Holywood County Down where it provided the basis for a new 535 S L Bty formed on 14 November 1940 This battery later joined 56th 5th Battalion Cameronian Scottish Rifles S L Rgt On 11 February 1941 52nd S L Rgt was joined by 531 S L Bty formed on 14 November at 235th S L Training Rgt at Ayr from a cadre provided by 56th S L Rgt 134 By December 1941 408 S L Bty had transferred to 53rd S L Rgt 5th Bn Royal Northumberland Fusiliers 139 130th Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots Light Anti Aircraft Regiment edit By 1942 AA Command had more than enough S L units but was still seriously short of light anti aircraft LAA gun units and began a programme of converting S L units which also had the benefit of saving manpower In March 52nd S L Rgt was converted to the LAA role as 130th Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots LAA Rgt the batteries becoming 406 407 and 426 LAA Btys After training it remained in 52 AA Bde in 3 AA Division stationed in Aberdeenshire 6 9 123 124 135 136 137 140 141 142 143 In August 1942 3 AA Divisional HQ moved south to help control the AA units brought in to defend against Luftwaffe hit and run attacks on the South Coast of England 137 144 Simultaneously 52 AA Bde HQ left AA Command to mobilise for the landings in North Africa Operation Torch 143 145 130th LAA Regiment moved to 51 AA Bde in a new 6 AA Group that took over responsibility for Scotland in October By now the regiment had been joined by 446 LAA Bty transferred from 95th LAA Rgt 137 146 The regiment moved to 67 AA Bde in 3 AA Group in Dorset in April 1943 123 147 and then to 2 AA Group in South East England first in 5 AA Bde then to 71 AA Bde 148 Operation Diver edit nbsp nbsp LAA guns emplaced on the South Coast August 1944 130th LAA Regiment was stationed on the Kent coast in the so called Hellfire Corner where Cross Channel shelling from German guns was frequent In November 1943 2 AA Gp was ordered to plan for the expected onslaught of V 1 flying bombs codenamed Divers against London to which it responded by planning a thick belt of Heavy AA HAA gun positions across the likely flight path backed by LAA guns Meanwhile 2 AA Gp also had to deal with a sharp increase in Luftwaffe air raids trying to reach London during the winter of 1943 1944 the so called Little Blitz in which the regiment was heavily engaged However AA Command was being forced to release manpower for overseas service particularly the Allied invasion of Normandy Operation Overlord and many AA regiments lost one of their four batteries by March 1944 446 LAA Bty had been disbanded 123 137 148 149 Once Overlord began on 6 June D Day the shelling of Hellfire Corner increased in intensity The first V 1 missiles were launched against London a week after D Day and Operation Diver was activated 2 AA Group s batteries left their Overlord sites and moved to pre planned sites across the funnel of V 1 flightpaths However the results were disappointing and the HAA gun belt was moved to the coast and interlaced with LAA guns to hit the missiles out to sea This new belt was divided into six brigade sectors with 71 AA Bde taking charge of one The guns were constantly in action and their success rate against the Divers steadily improved until over 50 per cent of incoming missiles were destroyed by gunfire or fighter aircraft This phase of Operation Diver ended in September after the V 1 launch sites in Northern France had been overrun by 21st Army Group 123 137 150 151 152 153 A new phase of Operation Diver began when the Luftwaffe began launching V 1s from aircraft over the North Sea AA Command had to reorganise its defences stripping guns from existing sites and moving them to the coast of East Anglia which entailed enormous reorganisation As the Luftwaffe and V 1 threat to the UK diminished AA Command was forced to transfer men and units to infantry duties 137 154 130th LAA Regiment avoided all the shuffling and disbandments remaining with 71 AA Bde in 2 AA Gp throughout the Diver offensive and until the end of the war 123 155 After the war it transferred to 28 Thames and Medway AA Bde in 1 AA Gp as demobilisation proceeded 156 Postwar editWhen the TA was reconstituted on 1 January 1947 the regiment reformed at Edinburgh as 587 Queen s Edinburgh Royal Scots LAA Rgt It formed part of 62 AA Bde the former 36 Scottish AA Bde 6 9 12 124 126 140 135 157 158 159 160 161 When AA Command was disbanded on 10 March 1955 there was a major reduction in the number of AA units in the TA 587 LAA Rgt amalgamated with R Bty of 471 Forth HAA Rgt 514 West Lothian Royal Scots LAA Rgt and 519 Dunedin LAA Rgt to form a new 432 LAA Rgt with the following organisation 6 9 12 126 157 158 162 163 164 P Queens Edinburgh Royal Scots Bty from 587 LAA Q West Lothian Royal Scots Bty from 514 LAA R City of Edinburgh Bty from 471 HAA S Dunedin Bty from 519 LAA A further reduction in 1961 saw 432nd LAA Rgt transferred to the Royal Engineers RE and joined with 585 Edinburgh and 586 Independent Field Squadrons to form 432 City of Edinburgh Corps Engineer Regiment except Q West Lothian Royal Scots Bty which joined 445 Cameronians LAA Rgt When the TA was converted into the TAVR in 1967 432 Engineer Regiment was reduced to a single 104 City of Edinburgh Field Squadron in 71 Scottish Engineer Regiment It was disbanded in 1999 6 9 12 126 158 162 165 166 167 Uniform Insignia and Bands editThe original uniform worn by the Queen s Edinburgh Rifles was a long tunic and trousers in dark Volunteer grey with black braiding and a low black peaked cap The three original Highland companies wore black laced grey doublets and kilts of Black Watch Government tartan with different bonnets for each of the three companies Each of the original 21 QER companies had a different cap badge The cut of the tunic was later changed to match that of the Rifle Brigade and the original low peaked cap was replaced first 1862 by a Shako with a black ball tuft next 1875 by a Busby with black plume and then 1895 by a black Astrakhan fur busby matching the Rifle Brigade 7 12 11 13 In 1900 1901 the brigade adopted a drab felt hat this was prohibited in 1902 but a drab service dress with light green Austrian knot and trouser piping was adopted for marching and drill order with a drab felt hat with black plume for the mounted infantry 7 The grey uniform was retained for full dress until 1908 when the battalions adopted the scarlet uniform tunic with blue facings of the Royal Scots The regimental tartan was Hunting Stuart while the pipers wore Royal Stewart tartan 8 16 11 In 1943 130th LAA Rgt adopted as its regimental flash a silhouette of the Royal Scots other ranks cap badge in black cloth the colour commemorating the black braiding of the QER In 1947 587th LAA Rgt adopted a black silhouette of a Thistle head on a brown square this was officially approved as its regimental flash on 9 November 1951 and worn until 1955 126 The 1st City of Edinburgh RVC formed a band early in its history adopting the regimental march of the Rifle Brigade I m Ninety Five The early QER Highland companies each had two pipers and the corps also had a bugle band 12 Honorary Colonels editFrom the formation of the 1st QERVB the Lord Provost of Edinburgh served ex officio as its Honorary Colonel From 1873 additional honorary colonels were added 7 9 16 James Moncreiff 1st Baron Moncreiff lt col commandant 1859 73 appointed 17 May 1873 168 D Davidson CB lt col commandant 1873 82 appointed 28 June 1882 Gen Viscount Wolseley Adjutant General to the Forces and future Commander in Chief of the British Army appointed 24 April 1889 John Macdonald Lord Kingsburgh VD lt col commandant 1882 92 appointed to 5th Bn Royal Scots 5 June 1901Memorials editAll Royal Scots who died in World War I are commemorated by the memorial gates unveiled at the regimental depot Glencorse Barracks Penicuik in 1927 These were designed by J A McWilliam a member of the QER 169 170 171 172 The 4th 5th Battalion s colours from 1925 to 1938 are preserved in the Royal Scots Regimental Museum at Edinburgh Castle 171 173 A memorial Masonic Lodge Queen s Edinburgh Rifles The Royal Scots No 1253 was established on 3 February 1921 under the Grand Lodge of Scotland to commemorate those members who died in World War I A lodge room was established in 1925 at the Forrest Road drill hall which also served as a Territorial Army headquarters and as a building for the University of Edinburgh Officer Training Corps The Lodge now meets in Portobello but maintains its role as a memorial lodge 174 Notes edit Beckett Grierson pp 1 12 Spiers pp 163 8 Beckett pp 59 60 a b c Beckett Appendix VII a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Frederick p 299 a b c d e f g h i j k l Grierson pp 12 4 177 84 a b c d e f g h i j k l Westlake Rifle Volunteers pp 78 81 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p 1st Battalion The Queen s Edinburgh Rifles UK 27 December 2005 Archived from the original on 27 December 2005 a b c d e f g The Story of the Royal Scots www electricscotland com a b c d e f QER at Scottish Military Articles a b c d e f g h J T Thomson The 1st City of Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer Corps Soldiers of the Queen No58 59 January 1990 a b J T Thomson R M and J Ballantyne and the Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer Corps Soldiers of the Queen No 56 57 June 1989 Grierson pp 185 6 a b c 6th Battalion The Royal Scots UK 30 December 2005 Archived from the original on 30 December 2005 a b c d e f g h i Army List various dates a b c 2nd Battalion The Queen s Edinburgh Rifles UK 27 December 2005 Archived from the original on 27 December 2005 Beckett p 198 Appendix VI Beckett pp 135 185 6 Dunlop pp 60 1 Appendix A Spiers pp 228 9 Leslie Beckett p 220 9th Highlanders Battalion The Royal Scots UK 27 December 2005 Archived from the original on 27 December 2005 Beckett p 245 Dunlop Chapter 14 Spiers Chapter 10 London Gazette 20 March 1908 a b c The Territorial Army Army Reserve The Royal Scots www theroyalscots co uk a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q James p 42 a b The King Field Marshal 19 February 2006 Archived from the original on 19 February 2006 a b c d e Coast Defence Units 18 November 2010 Archived from the original on 18 November 2010 a b c d e HQ 221 Mixed Brigade War Diary 4 August 1914 30 July 1919 The National Archives Kew file WO 95 5458 a b c d e f g Royal Scots Lothian Regiment The Long Long Trail a b c d e WW1 Battalions The Royal Scots www theroyalscots co uk a b c d e f Territorials Dardanelles The Royal Scots www theroyalscots co uk Becke Pt 2b p 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Becke Pt 2a pp 109 115 52nd Lowland Division The Long Long Trail a b 52nd Lowland Division 28 December 2009 Archived from the original on 28 December 2009 a b c d e f g h i j Westlake Gallipoli pp 1 11 Thompson pp 11 5 The King s and Queen s Prize NRA Thompson pp 40 1 a b c d Brander p 57 a b Gillon pp 49 51 Thompson pp 46 58 Thompson pp 102 26 Thompson pp 134 141 174 Thompson pp 230 40 a b c d e Brander p 58 Bullock pp 30 1 MacMunn amp Falls p 156 a b c d e f Egypt and Palestine The Royal Scots www theroyalscots co uk 14 June 2016 Thompson p 286 Bullock pp 44 5 MacMunn amp Falls pp 310 4 Brander pp 62 3 Bullock pp 46 7 MacMunn amp Falls pp 329 48 Thompson pp 312 34 Thompson p 349 Bullock pp 62 75 a b c Brander p 65 Bullock p 75 Thompson pp 360 70 Bullock pp 75 81 Falls Egypt and Palestine Vol II pp 131 6 Thompson pp 372 99 Thompson pp 402 9 Bullock pp 90 5 Falls Egypt and Palestine Vol II pp 194 6 Thompson pp 462 73 Bullock p 96 Falls Egypt and Palestine Vol II pp 268 74 Thompson pp 480 501 a b Brander p 67 Thompson pp 511 5 a b Blaxland p 207 Thompson pp 518 20 a b Brander p 69 Thompson pp 525 32 Thompson pp 539 44 Thompson pp 553 6 a b Brander p 71 Edmonds amp Maxwell Hyslop pp 33 4 Thompson pp 560 8 Thompson pp 569 72 a b c d Becke Pt 1 pp 117 24 a b 29th Division The Long Long Trail a b 29th Division 8 November 2009 Archived from the original on 8 November 2009 a b Brander p 56 a b Gillon p 6 amp Appendix II Gillon pp 28 35 6 Gillon pp 38 9 Gillon pp 54 6 59 60 a b Lines of Communication Troops France and Flanders 27 September 2011 Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Miscellaneous Units Serving Overseas 1 September 2011 Archived from the original on 1 September 2011 Edmonds 1916 pp 409 10 421 a b c d e f g h i j Becke Pt 3b pp 21 9 32nd Division The Long Long Trail 32nd Division 27 September 2011 Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Miles pp 512 24 Falls France and Belgium 1917 Vol I pp 156 8 Edmonds 1917 Vol II pp 116 22 Edmonds 1918 Vol II p 111 a b c d e Brander p 68 Edmonds 1918 Vol IV pp 144 5 Edmonds 1918 Vol IV pp 330 339 Edmonds 1918 Vol IV pp 445 6 Edmonds amp Maxwell Hyslop pp 139 142 163 Blaxland p 256 Edmonds amp Maxwell Hyslop pp 470 1 a b c d Becke Pt 2b pp 61 5 a b 65th 2nd Lowland Division The Long Long Trail Frederick p 184 Army Council Instruction No 221 January 1916 Appendix 18 Army Council Instruction No 2364 17 December 1916 Appendix 204 The 10 Provisional Brigades Great War Forum 5 February 2012 Brander p 78 a b 10th Cyclist Battalion The Royal Scots UK 26 December 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2005 Titles and designations 1927 a b c d e f g h Brander pp 95 6 a b c Frederick pp 859 869 Monthly Army List January 1939 a b c d e f Litchfield pp 298 300 a b British Anti Aircraft Command TA on 3 September 1939 The Patriot Files Dedicated to the preservation of military history www patriotfiles com Routledge pp 65 6 371 Routledge Table LX p 378 Collier Chapter 5 www ibiblio org Routledge pp 374 6 474 S L Bty War Diary 1940 41 TNA file WO 166 3322 474 Ind S L Bty War Diary January June 1944 TNA file WO 166 14909 a b Frederick p 861 a b c Farndale Annex M a b RA 1939 45 52 SL Rgt a b c d e f g Page 5973 Issue 38149 16 December 1947 London Gazette The Gazette Order of Battle of Non Field Force Units in the United Kingdom Part 27 AA Command 12 May 1941 TNA file WO 212 79 Order of Battle of Non Field Force Units in the United Kingdom Part 27 AA Command 2 December 1941 TNA file WO 212 80 a b Frederick pp 806 840 RA 1939 45 130 LAA Routledge p 400 a b Order of Battle of Non Field Force Units in the United Kingdom Part 27 AA Command 14 May 1942 with amendments TNA file WO 212 81 Routledge pp 402 3 Order of Battle of the Field Force in the United Kingdom Part 3 Royal Artillery Non Divisional Units 22 November 1942 TNA file WO 212 8 Order of Battle of Non Field Force Units in the United Kingdom Part 27 AA Command 1 October 1942 with amendments TNA file WO 212 82 Order of Battle of Non Field Force Units in the United Kingdom Part 27 AA Command 13 March 1943 with amendments TNA file WO 212 83 a b Order of Battle of AA Command 1 August 1943 with amendments TNA file WO 212 84 Routledge pp 408 10 Collier Chapter 23 www ibiblio org Collier Chapter 24 www ibiblio org Collier Appendix XLV www ibiblio org Routledge pp 410 16 Table LXX p 423 Map 38 Routledge pp 416 7 Order of Battle of AA Command 27 April 1944 TNA file WO 212 85 Order of Battle of AA Command 15 November 1945 TNA file WO 212 86 a b Frederick p 1024 a b c British Army units from 1945 on 414 443 Regiments 1947 67 british army units1945on co uk Litchfield Appendix 5 British Army units from 1945 on AA Brigades 30 66 british army units1945on co uk Watson TA 1947 a b Frederick p 1013 Litchfield pp 283 4 British Army units from 1945 on 474 519 Regiments 1947 67 british army units1945on co uk Watson amp Rinaldi p 298 British Army units from 1945 on Regiments TA 118 to 432 british army units1945on co uk Edinburgh Engineers UK 27 December 2005 Archived from the original on 27 December 2005 Burke s Brander p 79 Memorials amp Monuments The Royal Scots www theroyalscots co uk a b Summary of Memorials at the Royal Scots website PDF Royal Scots Imperial War Museums Museum The Royal Scots www theroyalscots co uk Geograph Lodge Queen s Edinburgh Rifles Forrest C kim traynor www geograph org uk References editArmy Council Instructions Issued During January 1916 London HM Stationery Office 1916 Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 1 The Regular British Divisions London HM Stationery Office 1934 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 38 X Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2a The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st Line Territorial Force Divisions 42 56 London HM Stationery Office 1935 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 39 8 Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2b The 2nd Line Territorial Force Divisions 57th 69th with the Home Service Divisions 71st 73rd and 74th and 75th Divisions London HM Stationery Office 1937 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 39 8 Ian F W Beckett Riflemen Form A Study of the Rifle Volunteer Movement 1859 1908 Aldershot Ogilby Trusts 1982 ISBN 0 85936 271 X Gregory Blaxland Amiens 1918 London Frederick Muller 1968 Star 1981 ISBN 0 352 30833 8 A Michael Brander Famous Regiments Series The Royal Scots The Royal Regiment London Leo Cooper 1976 ISBN 0 85052 183 1 David L Bullock Allenby s War The Palestine Arabian Campaigns 1916 1918 London Blandford Press 1988 ISBN 0 7137 1869 2 Burke s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage 100th Edn London 1953 Basil Collier History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Defence of the United Kingdom London HM Stationery Office 1957 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 978 1 84574 055 9 Col John K Dunlop The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen 1938 Brig Gen Sir James E Edmonds History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1916 Vol I London Macmillan 1932 Woking Shearer 1986 ISBN 0 946998 02 7 Brig Gen James E Edmonds History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1917 Vol II Messines and Third Ypres Passchendaele London HM Stationery Office 1948 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1992 ISBN 0 90162775 5 Brig Gen Sir James E Edmonds History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 Vol II March April Continuation of the German Offensives London Macmillan 1937 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1995 ISBN 1 87042394 1 Brig Gen Sir James E Edmonds History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 Vol IV 8th August 26th September The Franco British Offensive London Macmillan 1939 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1993 ISBN 1 870423 86 0 Brig Gen Sir James E Edmonds amp Lt Col R Maxwell Hyslop History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 Vol V 26th September 11th November The Advance to Victory London HM Stationery Office 1947 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1993 ISBN 1 870423 06 2 Capt Cyril Falls History of the Great War Military Operations Egypt and Palestine Vol II From June 1917 to the End of the War London HM Stationery Office 1930 Imperial War Museum and Naval amp Military Press 2013 ISBN 1 84574951 0 Gen Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery The Years of Defeat Europe and North Africa 1939 1941 Woolwich Royal Artillery Institution 1988 London Brasseys 1996 ISBN 1 85753 080 2 J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol I Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 007 3 J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol II Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 009 X Capt Stair Gillon The Story of the 29th Division London Nelson 1925 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2002 ISBN 978 1 843422 65 5 Maj Gen J M Grierson Records of the Scottish Volunteer Force 1859 1908 Edinburgh Blackwood 1909 Brig E A James British Regiments 1914 18 Samson Books 1978 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2001 ISBN 978 1 84342 197 9 N B Leslie Battle Honours of the British and Indian Armies 1695 1914 London Leo Cooper 1970 ISBN 0 85052 004 5 Lt Gen Sir George MacMunn amp Capt Cyril Falls History of the Great War Military Operations Egypt and Palestine Vol I From the Outbreak of War with Germany to June 1917 London HM Stationery Office 1928 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1992 ISBN 1 870423 26 7 Capt Wilfred Miles History of the Great War Military Operations France and Belgium 1916 Vol II 2nd July 1916 to the End of the Battles of the Somme London Macmillan 1938 Imperial War Museum amp Battery Press 1992 ISBN 0 89839 169 5 Gen Sir Frederick Pile s despatch The Anti Aircraft Defence of the United Kingdom from 28th July 1939 to 15th April 1945 London Gazette 18 December 1947 Brig N W Routledge History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Anti Aircraft Artillery 1914 55 London Royal Artillery Institution Brassey s 1994 ISBN 1 85753 099 3 Edward M Spiers The Army and Society 1815 1914 London Longmans 1980 ISBN 0 582 48565 7 Lt Col R R Thompson The Fifty Second Lowland Division 1914 1918 Glasgow Maclehose Jackson 1923 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 978 1 84342993 7 Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army London War Office 7 November 1927 Graham E Watson amp Richard A Rinaldi The Corps of Royal Engineers Organization and Units 1889 2018 Tiger Lily Books 2018 ISBN 978 171790180 4 Ray Westlake British Regiments at Gallipoli Barnsley Leo Cooper 1996 ISBN 0 85052 511 X Ray Westlake Tracing the Rifle Volunteers Barnsley Pen and Sword 2010 ISBN 978 1 84884 211 3 External sources editMark Conrad The British Army 1914 archive site British Army units from 1945 on Electric Scotland Great War Forum The Long Long Trail Orders of Battle at Patriot Files The Regimental Warpath 1914 1918 archive site Land Forces of Britain the Empire and Commonwealth Regiments org archive site Royal Artillery 1939 1945 The Royal Scots Scottish Military History Graham Watson The Territorial Army 1947 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Queen 27s Edinburgh Rifles amp oldid 1197749586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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