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Middlesex Yeomanry

The Middlesex Yeomanry was a volunteer cavalry regiment of the British Army originally raised in 1797. It saw mounted and dismounted action in the Second Boer War and in the First World War at Gallipoli, Salonika and in Palestine, where one of its officers won a Victoria Cross at the Battle of Buqqar Ridge and the regiment rode into Damascus with 'Lawrence of Arabia'. Between the world wars the regiment was converted to the signals role and it provided communications for armoured formations in the Second World War, including service in minor operations in Iraq, Palestine, Syria and Iran, as well as the Western Desert, Italian and North-West European campaigns. It continued in the postwar Territorial Army and its lineage is maintained today by 31 (Middlesex Yeomanry and Princess Louise's Kensington) Signal Squadron, Royal Corps of Signals, which forms part of the Army Reserve.

Middlesex Yeomanry
Middlesex Yeomanry badge (reign of King George VI)[1]
Active1797–1802
1830–present
Country Kingdom of Great Britain (1797–1800)
 United Kingdom (1801–present)
Branch British Army
Size3 Regiments (First World War)
2 Signal units (Second World War)
Squadron (current)
Motto(s)"Pro Aris et Focis" (For Hearth and Home; literally For Altars and Hearths)
AnniversariesLafone Day (27 October)
EngagementsSecond Boer War:

First World War:

Second World War

Battle honoursSee Battle honours below
Commanders
Honorary ColonelColonel Simon G. Hutchinson, MBE[2]
Notable
commanders
Sir Christopher Baynes, 1st Baronet
Lt-Col Hon Somerset Maxwell, MP
Lt-Col Viscount Malden

Formation and early history edit

In 1793 the Prime Minister, William Pitt the Younger, proposed that the English Counties form a force of Volunteer Yeoman Cavalry that could be called on by the King to defend the country against invasion or by the Lord Lieutenant to subdue any civil disorder within the country.[3][4] A cavalry troop entitled the Uxbridge Volunteer Cavalry was raised by Christopher Baynes (later Sir Christopher Baynes, 1st Baronet) in 1797. By 1798 the unit consisted of over 100 men organised in two Troops. It was once called out, in 1801 to prevent rioting.[5][6][7][8][9] After the Treaty of Amiens was concluded in 1802 the regiment was disbanded[5] following a spate of industrial unrest and rioting, authorisation was given on 10 December 1830 to raise two new troops of Yeomanry in the Uxbridge district. It was raised as the Uxbridge Squadron of Yeomanry Cavalry with troops at Harefield and West Drayton, in 1830. The regiment was called upon to provide an escort for King William IV as he passed through Uxbridge to visit the Marquess of Westminster at Moor Park in 1834. The unit was called out on several occasions, notably in 1832 and at the time of the 1848 Chartist meeting on Kennington Common, but merely 'stood by' in barracks and saw no action.[5][6][7][8][10]

The Uxbridge Squadron became the Middlesex Yeomanry Cavalry in 1838 with the following organisation:[5]

  • A Troop in London
  • B Troop in Uxbridge
  • C Troop in London
  • D Troop in West Middlesex (including a contingent at Brighton, Sussex)

Following the Cardwell Reforms a mobilisation scheme began to appear in the Army List from December 1875. This assigned Regular and Yeomanry units places in an order of battle of corps, divisions and brigades for the 'Active Army', even though these formations were entirely theoretical, with no staff or services assigned. The Middlesex Yeomanry were assigned as 'divisional troops' to 3rd Division of II Corps based at Dorking, alongside Regular units of infantry, artillery and engineers.[11]

In the early 1880s the regiment's headquarters (HQ) moved to 43 Albemarle Street in London's West End, later to 25 Chapel Street off Edgware Road, and it had the following organisation:[5][11]

 
Group of different ranks, Middlesex Yeomanry, 1896
  • A Troop in Brighton
  • B Troop in London
  • C Troop in London
  • D Troop in West Middlesex

The regiment evolved to become the Middlesex Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry (Uxbridge) in 1871 and, by order of Field Marshal the Duke of Cambridge, serving at that time as Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, the Middlesex (Duke of Cambridge's Hussars) Yeomanry Cavalry in 1884.[5][7][8]

By 1899 RHQ was at 1 Cathcart Road, South Kensington, and the regiment was in the 1st Yeomanry Brigade together with the Berkshire Yeomanry.[11]

Imperial Yeomanry edit

 
Imperial yeoman on the Veldt.

Following a string of defeats during Black Week in early December 1899, the British government realised that it would need more troops than just the regular army to fight the Second Boer War, particularly mounted troops. On 13 December, the War Office decided to allow volunteer forces to serve in the field, and a Royal Warrant was issued on 24 December that officially created the Imperial Yeomanry (IY). This was organised as county service companies of approximately 115 men enlisted for one year. Existing yeomen and fresh volunteers (mainly middle and upper class) quickly filled the new force, which was equipped to operate as Mounted infantry.[12][13][14][15]

The Middlesex Yeomanry raised the 34th and 35th (Middlesex) Companies, which served alongside two Royal East Kent Yeomanry in 11th Battalion, arriving in South Africa on 20 March, and 62nd (Middlesex) Company in 14th Battalion, which disembarked on 4 May. In 1901 it raised 112th (Middlesex) Company for the second contingent, and this company also served with 11th Bn. In 1902, 14th Bn was disbanded and 62nd (Middlesex) Company joined 11th Bn.[5][10][16][17][18][19]

At the beginning of May 1900 the 11th Battalion IY, under the command of Lt-Col W.K. Mitford of the Middlesex Yeomanry, was with 8th Division in Lt-Gen Sir Leslie Rundle's column.[20] Lord Roberts resumed his advance into the Orange Free State on 3 May, ordering Rundle to prevent any Boers from re-occupying the south-east of the country. On 25 May Maj Henry Dalbiac (a former Royal Artillery officer and veteran of Tel el Kebir) with 34th (Middlesex) Company, acting as advance guard, entered the empty town of Senekal. The Boers attacked the town later in the day, killing Dalbiac and three others. Four of the troopers were wounded and 13 surrendered, while seven made their escape. The rest of the division reoccupied the town later in the day.[19][21][22][23]

The war ground on as the Imperial forces tried to control the Boer Commandos with a system of blockhouse lines. Rundle's force was building one such line that had reached Tweefontein just before Christmas 1901, watched by a large commando under Christiaan de Wet. 11th Battalion IY was the main part of a covering force of 400 yeomanry and two guns camped on the nearby hill of Groenkop under the command of Maj Williams. The approaches were inadequately picketed, and at 02.00 on Christmas morning de Wet led his men up the hill. They were already half way up before they were challenged by a sentry, and immediately stormed the camp, sweeping through the tents and transport lines in the dark. Of around 550 men in camp, almost 350 were killed or captured in the Battle of Groenkop, and the camp was looted by the hungry Boers. However, it was their last major success, and the war ended in April 1902.[19][24][25] The Middlesex IY companies earned the regiment its first Battle honour: South Africa 1900–01.[5][11][26][27]

The IY concept was considered a success and before the war ended the existing Yeomanry regiments at home were converted into Imperial Yeomanry, the Middlesex becoming the Middlesex Imperial Yeomanry (Duke of Cambridge's Hussars) in 1901. It HQ was at Rutland Yard, Knightsbridge[5][11] The Imperial Yeomanry were subsumed into the new Territorial Force (TF) under the Haldane Reforms of 1908,[28][29][30] the Middlesex becoming the 1st County of London Yeomanry (Middlesex, Duke of Cambridge's Hussars). It formed part of the TF's London Mounted Brigade. Regimental HQ moved to the Duke of York's Headquarters in Chelsea in 1912.[5][7][11][19][31][32]

First World War edit

In accordance with the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 (7 Edw. 7, c.9) which brought the TF into being, it was intended to be a home defence force for service during wartime and members could not be compelled to serve outside the country. However, on the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, many members volunteered for Imperial Service. Therefore, TF units were split in August and September 1914 into 1st Line (liable for overseas service) and 2nd Line (home service for those unable or unwilling to serve overseas) units. Later, a 3rd Line was formed to act as a reserve, providing trained replacements for the 1st and 2nd Line regiments.[34][35]

1/1st County of London Yeomanry edit

The 1st Line regiment was mobilised in August 1914 and moved with the London Mounted Brigade to Hounslow before joining the 2nd Mounted Division at Streatley.[36][37][38] In mid-November 1914 the division moved to Norfolk as part of the coast defences. In April 1915 the regiment was at Mundesley when the brigade was ordered overseas. The regiment entrained for Avonmouth Docks where the men embarked on the Nile on 14 April and sailed for Egypt. The horses were loaded aboard the cramped and insanitary Crispin, and 32 died during the voyage. On arrival the brigade was sent to the Suez Canal defences near Ismailia, being redesignated the 4th (London) Mounted Bde.[36][37][38][39]

Gallipoli edit

On 10 August the 2nd Mounted Division was ordered to reorganise as a dismounted formation and prepare to proceed overseas. Each regiment left a squadron HQ and the officers and men of two troops to look after the horses. On 13 August the rest of the regiment (16 officers and 320 other ranks) entrained for Alexandria where they boarded the Caledonia the next day. It arrived at Mudros on 16 August, transhipped them to the Doris next day, and on 18 August they landed at Suvla Bay to join in the Gallipoli Campaign.[36][37][38][39]

On the afternoon of 21 August the division was ordered to advance from Lala Baba across the plain to Chocolate Hill and then attack the Turkish positions on the W Hills. The advance across the plain was described by a Turkish artillery officer as presenting 'a target such as artillerymen thought impossible outside the world of dreams'. On reaching Chocolate Hill the dismounted Yeomen continued towards Scimitar Hill and Hill 112 without having a chance to reconnoitre the position or be properly briefed. Part of the hill was captured, but the surviving Yeomen came under enfilade fire and by nightfall were hanging onto a ragged line halfway up the hills. By the time the Middlesex Yeomanry were withdrawn to Lala Baba the following day they had suffered casualties of 10 killed or died of wounds and 46 wounded. This, the Battle of Scimitar Hill, was the last British attack delivered on the Suvla Front.[36][39][40]

From now on the regiment took its turns holding the front line. By 4 September the Yeomanry were so weak from casualties and sickness that the brigade (1/1st County of London (Middlesex), 1/1st City of London (Rough Riders) and 1/3rd County of London (Sharpshooters)) was formed into a composite 4th London Regiment of Yeomanry. The regiment was relieved on 17 September by the Scottish Horse, one look-out mistakenly reporting the arrival of some Scottish Gaelic-speaking soldiers as a Turkish break-in. When the Middlesex Yeomanry were withdrawn to Lala Baba on 1 November they were reduced to fewer than 50 men. They were evacuated to Mudros and then Egypt to recuperate, the regiment regaining its independence in December.[32][36][37][38][39]

 
Yeomanry move down a track into the Struma Valley, Salonika front, summer 1916.

Salonika edit

During December 1915 and January 1916 the 2nd Mounted Division was broken up and its units distributed to other formations. 4th (London) Mounted Brigade was redesignated 8th Mounted Brigade and sent to Abbassia to return to the Suez Canal defences. In November the brigade was sent to the Macedonian front, disembarking at Salonika and going up-country to serve as GHQ troops. On occasions mounted parties of the Middlesex Yeomanry, riding with muffled bits, were sent out at night into No man's land (here about 1 mile (1.6 km) wide) to erect barbed wire obstacles.[36][38][41]

Palestine edit

In June 1917 the regiment was withdrawn with 8th Mounted Brigade to Egypt and then moved up to the Palestine Front, where it joined the Yeomanry Mounted Division that was forming at Khan Yunis in the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF).[36][42][43]

 
Detail of the el Girheir to el Buqqar defensive line

The campaign was coming to the end of a period of stalemate, with the EEF preparing to renew its offensive. The Turkish Yildirim Army Group carried out a reconnaissance in force in late October against 8th Mounted Brigade, which was holding a 14 miles (23 km) outpost line along the el Buqqar ridge to cover railway construction parties. At 04:10 on 27 October a post on Point 630 held by the Middlesex Yeomanry was attacked by an Ottoman cavalry patrol in great strength, bringing on the Battle of Buqqar Ridge. Two Yeomanry troops ordered forward in support advanced through heavy fire to find the post almost surrounded. A squadron of the City of London Yeomanry in reserve advanced, also under heavy fire, to occupy a position 200 yards (180 m) south of the threatened post, which stopped the Ottoman forces from completely surrounding the Middlesex men. By 10.55 an Ottoman infantry attack was developing against the post. The defenders were driven off the hill but withdrew to a trench just below the crest and held out there during the day against odds of 20 to 1, with the attackers closing to within 40 yards (37 m). Fighting continued until late in the afternoon when troops from the 53rd (Welsh) Division drove off the attackers. The Yeomanry post had lost 4 dead and 14 wounded.[44][45][46]

 
Major Alexander Lafone, VC.

Meanwhile, Point 720 held by two troops from B Squadron, Middlesex Yeomanry, commanded by Major Alexander Malins Lafone, had been attacked by several Ottoman cavalry squadrons, and later by heavy rifle and machine gun fire and occasional artillery shells. The post was out of communication from 06.00 and reinforcements were unable to break through. After six hours and two unsuccessful mounted charges, the final attack on Hill 720 was made by 1200 Ottoman cavalry supported by machine-gun and artillery fire. All except three of the Yeomanry on Hill 720 were killed. Major Lafone was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for encouraging his men to resist the Ottoman attack.[44][45][46][47]

On 31 October 1917 the EEF opened its own offensive with the Third Battle of Gaza. The Yeomanry were initially held in reserve, but on 6 November the division went into action as part of the Desert Mounted Corps (DMC) at the Capture of the Sheria Position. There followed a pursuit towards Jerusalem, in which the Yeomanry took part in the battles of Mughar Ridge (13 November) and Nebi Samwil outside Jerusalem (17–24 November). The Turks counter-attacked on 27 November and the Yeomanry held the line for two days. Jerusalem surrendered on 9 December.[42][48]

The crisis on the Western Front caused by the German spring offensive in March 1918 led to an urgent call for reinforcements from Palestine. A number of formations were 'Indianised', roughly two-thirds of their British units being sent to France and replaced by Indian Army units. The Yeomanry Division was one such, becoming the 1st Mounted Division, and later the 4th Cavalry Division, while the 8th Mounted Brigade became the 11th Cavalry Brigade. The Middlesex Yeomanry remained with the 11th, now brigaded with the 29th Lancers and 36th Jacob's Horse.[42][49]

The EEF launched its final offensive, the Battle of Megiddo, on 19 September 1918. The DMC was on the coast, massed behind the infantry to exploit the breakthrough. 4th Cavalry Division was launched four hours after Zero at 08.40 and advanced against slight resistance. The division paused after 12 hours, then overran the Turks' primitive third line defences. It paused to water the horses in the evening, then moved off again an hour before midnight, riding into the German–Turkish HQ at Afulah and then heading east to Beisan to cut off Turkish retreat. The division rode 70 miles (110 km) in 34 hours. There was still a 25 miles (40 km) gap through which the Turks could escape across the River Jordan, and on 23 September 11th Cavalry Brigade was ordered to ride south down both banks of the river to cut off this route. It encountered the HQ elements of the German Asia Corps at Makhadet abu Naji; after a fight the cavalry charged to seal off both sides of the ford, capturing 4000 prisoners. The following morning the brigade completed the closure of the net by seizing the fords at Makhadet el Masudi and gathering another 5000 prisoners. 4th Cavalry Division now turned north to cooperate with the Arab Northern Army's advance on Damascus. The men were beginning to suffer from malaria, influenza and hunger, and the advance slowed, but on 30 September 11th Brigade was pushed on ahead and caught up with Col T.E. Lawrence and the Arab irregulars attacking the Turkish rearguard. Lawrence asked for help, and was sent the Middlesex Yeomanry and the Hampshire Royal Horse Artillery. The gunners fired over open sights until darkness fell, then the Yeomanry and Arabs charged the Turks in the rear, forcing them into the Arab trap. Damascus fell the following morning. The Turkish Army was broken, and the Armistice of Mudros ended the war in the Middle East a month later.[50][51]

2/1st County of London Yeomanry edit

The 2nd Line regiment was formed at Chelsea in 1914 and in November 1914 it was at Ranelagh Park. By June 1915 it was with 2/1st London Mounted Brigade in 2/2nd Mounted Division and was at Bylaugh Park (north east of East Dereham) in Norfolk. In October it was at Blickling Hall.[52][38][53] On 31 March 1916, the remaining Mounted Brigades were ordered to be numbered in a single sequence;[54] the brigade was numbered as 12th Mounted Brigade and the division as 3rd Mounted Division.[52][53]

In July 1916, the regiment was converted to a cyclist unit in 4th Cyclist Brigade, 1st Cyclist Division in the North Walsham area. In November 1916, the division was broken up and regiment was merged with the 2/3rd County of London Yeomanry (Sharpshooters) to form 6th (1st and 3rd County of London) Yeomanry Cyclist Regiment in 2nd Cyclist Brigade, probably at Reepham. In March 1917 it resumed its identity as 2/1st County of London Yeomanry and moved to Overstrand; in the autumn it moved to Melton Constable. In May 1918 the regiment moved to Ireland and was stationed at The Curragh, still in 2nd Cyclist Brigade, until the end of the war.[38][52][53]

3/1st County of London Yeomanry edit

The 3rd Line regiment was formed in April 1915 at Ranelagh and in the summer it was affiliated to a Reserve Cavalry Regiment in Eastern Command. In the summer of 1916 it was affiliated to the 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment at The Curragh. Early in 1917 it was absorbed into the 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiment at The Curragh.[38][53]

Interwar edit

After the war, it was clear that there were more cavalry units than needed and it was decided that only the 14 most senior Yeomanry regiments would retain their mounts, forming the 2nd Cavalry Division in the reorganised Territorial Army (TA). Most of the remainder chose to convert to armoured cars or artillery in 1920. Uniquely, the Middlesex Yeomanry elected to become a signal unit, joining the new Royal Corps of Signals when that was formed two months later. It became 2nd Cavalry Divisional Signals (Middlesex Yeomanry),[a] of two squadrons (A and B), with HQ still at the Duke of York's Headquarters.[5][7][8][11][19][32][56]

In the late 1930s, mechanisation of the British Army was proceeding, and an experimental armoured formation was created as The Mobile Division, later 1st Armoured Division. In 1938 the Middlesex Yeomanry became Mobile Divisional Signals (Middlesex Yeomanry). When the TA was doubled in size after the Munich Crisis the unit raised a second line as the Horse Cavalry Brigade Signal Troops. Shortly afterwards the two units became1st and 2nd (Middlesex Yeomanry) Armoured Divisional Signals.[5][11][8][32]

Second World War edit

1st Cavalry Divisional Signals edit

Soon after the outbreak of war the first line unit became 1st Cavalry Divisional Signals (Middlesex Yeomanry), the 1st (and only) Cavalry Division being composed mainly of horsed Yeomanry regiments. It joined Divisional HQ when the formation assembled in Northern Command on 1 November 1939. It then left the UK on 18 January 1940 and travelled across France to embark at Marseille for Palestine, arriving on 31 January. A divisional signal unit provided communications (line, wireless and despatch rider) from divisional HQ down to the level of individual unit HQs; each brigade was allocated a squadron and the establishment for cavalry divisional signals included its own Light Aid Detachment of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps.[7][8][57][58]

'Kingcol' edit

At first, the division's role was internal security, while its mounted units underwent mechanisation. The signal unit detached Troops that formed new signal units for service at Tobruk and on Crete. Then, after a German-backed coup d'état in Iraq in April 1941, the Royal Air Force (RAF) training base at Habbaniya came under siege by Iraqi Nationalist forces. A relief column, known as 'Habforce', was organised from the troops available in Palestine. On 8 May Brigadier 'Joe' Kingstone of 4th Cavalry Brigade (the only one yet motorised) was sent on ahead with his brigade HQ and signals leading a Flying column named 'Kingcol' to effect a relief of the airbase as soon as possible.[8][32][59][60][61][62]

Kingcol operated as a self-contained unit with 12 days' rations and five days' water. It moved out from Transjordan following the AmmanBaghdad road and Mosul–Haifa oil pipeline to the fort of Rutba, which had been recaptured by the Arab Legion and 2nd RAF Armoured Car Squadron on 10 May. Kingcol moved out from Rutba on 15 May, crossing the desert in exceptionally hot weather, digging the heavy vehicles out when they broke through the surface of the poor tracks, and under attack by German aircraft. The direct road to Habbaniya was blocked by Iraqi troops at Ramadi, but engineers from Habbaniya had bridged the canal to the south and Kingcol arrived from that direction on 18 May. Kingcol and the Habbaniya garrison now attacked Fallujah, moving up both sides of the Euphrates on 19 May and capturing the bridge in only half an hour (the Battle of Fallujah). An Iraqi counter-attack was driven off on 22 May, but the British and Assyrian troops fought back ferociously and the Iraqis withdrew. Kingcol now advanced on Baghdad, rumour magnifying the size of the small British forces, and the Iraqis asked for an armistice on 30 May.[62][63][64]

In mid-June, Habforce joined the campaign against Vichy French forces in Syria. Its role was to advance across the desert from Iraq and capture Palmyra, while a direct attack (Operation Exporter) was made from Palestine towards Damascus by a force including part of 1st Cavalry Division. 4th Cavalry Brigade's advance with Habforce was continually harried by Vichy Air Force attacks and it lost a lot of men and vehicles. After the fall of Damascus and Palmyra, the Syria–Lebanon campaign ended on 14 July with the Armistice of Saint Jean d'Acre.[62][65][66][67]

9th Armoured Brigade Signals edit

 
9th Armoured Brigade's formation sign, the horse referencing its mounted Yeomanry origins.[68]

Persia edit

Having progressed with its mechanisation 1st Cavalry Division was reorganised as 10th Armoured Division on 1 August 1941 in Syria, though it was still short of vital units and equipment. 4th Cavalry Brigade became 9th Armoured Brigade (in fact motorised rather than armoured) and was immediately detached to cross Iraq with 'Hazelforce' and take part in the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran. 9th Armoured and 2nd Indian Brigades advanced to Shahabad in conjunction with other columns and on 28 August the pro-Axis Persian government fell. British and Soviet forces entered Teheran on 17 September and 9th Armoured Brigade returned to Palestine the following month.[69][70]

In March 1942 'F' Divisional Signals arrived from the UK having been detached from 11th Armoured Division. It merged with the former cavalry divisional signals and became the larger part of 10th Armoured Divisional Signals, while the Middlesex Yeomanry provided 9th Armoured Brigade Signal Squadron. The former CO of 11th Armoured Divisional Signals, Lt-Col R.H.O. Coryton, took command, and the CO of Cavalry Division Signals, Lt-Col the Hon Somerset Maxwell, MP, a pre-war Middesex Yeomanry officer, moved to take command of 7th Armoured Division Signals; he was mortally wounded at Alamein later in the year.[7][8][11][71][72]

'Calforce' edit

10th Armoured Division remained in Palestine until the end of April 1942 when part of it moved up to Libya and was engaged in the confused Second Battle of Ruweisat Ridge (El Mreir) (21–22 July).[7][57][73][74] 9th Armoured Bde did not follow to Egypt until May, and remained in the Nile Delta area as an independent brigade until August. It was then sent up to join 'Calforce' under the command of Brig Percy Calvert-Jones of 12th Anti-Aircraft Brigade who had gathered a heterogeneous collection of artillery units in a series of rearguard actions during Eighth Army's long retreat to the El Alamein position. Eighth Army used 'Calforce' as a blocking force and 9th Armoured Bde was attached to it from 26 August to 8 September.[69][75]

Alamein edit

 
Inside an Armoured Command Vehicle in Action, sketch by Anthony Gross, Egypt 1942.

As an independent formation, 9th Armoured Bde was assigned to support the 2nd New Zealand Division in the Second Battle of El Alamein. In the first phase (Operation Lightfoot) on 23 October, the New Zealanders took most of their objectives, but 9th Armoured ran into an undetected minefield and was held up. At daybreak it was in the open and under fire. During the 'Dog fight' phase of the battle over succeeding days the New Zealand Division and 9th Armoured Bde were withdrawn into reserve, and 9th Armoured was given priority for re-equipment. It went into action again in the second phase of the battle (Operation Supercharge), tasked with advancing beyond the New Zealanders' first objective to smash through the deeper Axis defences. It left its rest area near El Alamein station by 20.00 on 1 November and made a difficult approach march through darkness and dust, and its delayed attack began just before dawn. The brigade ran into heavy opposition and lost most of its tanks, but tried to hold the ground taken so that 1st Armoured Division could pass through and continue the attack.[69][76][77]

After Alamein 9th Armoured Bde was sent off with 2nd New Zealand Division to pursue the beaten Axis forces, though it was badly held up by road congestion and only managed 12 miles (19 km) on the first day (4 November). Two days later it was running short of fuel. On 11 November, while the New Zealanders continued their pursuit, 9th Armoured Bde was withdrawn and returned to join 10th Armoured Division in the Delta. By the beginning of 1943 it was back in Syria.[73][69][78]

10th Armoured Division was not required for the Sicilian or Italian campaigns, where the terrain was not suitable for large armoured formations, and divisional HQ and signals were finally disbanded on 15 June 1944.[7][73] Its component brigades, however, continued as independent formations. 9th Armoured Bde joined Ninth Army in May 1943 and remained with it Palestine and Syria until returning to Egypt in March 1944. On 30 April the brigade embarked and joined Eighth Army in Italy on 5 May.[32][69]

Italy edit

The brigade was allotted to XIII Corps, which in turn assigned it to 78th Infantry Division for the Battle of Lake Trasimeno beginning on 20 June. While the fighting continued, 10th Indian Infantry Division of X Corps took up the advance and 9th Armoured Bde was transferred to its command. The brigade protected the corps' right flank during the advance towards Florence, then was switched to the left to support the success of 4th Indian Infantry Division. For the next phase of the campaign, Operation Olive to breach the Gothic Line, 9th Armoured Bde was back with 10th Indian Division in X Corps; Brigade HQ controlled two armoured car regiments patrolling the mountainous country.[69][79][80]

9th Armoured Bde HQ was then pulled out of the line for a new role: commanding specialist armour for the future crossing of the River Po. This included Duplex Drive amphibious tanks and armoured personnel carriers. The brigade began training in October but the advance to the Po was delayed by the onset of winter. The brigade took up normal duties in the line until February 1945 when it resumed specialist training. The actual crossing in the final stages of the Spring offensive (Operation Grapeshot) began on 23 April, and the German forces in Italy surrendered on 2 May.[81][82]

9th Armoured Bde Group was then selected for operations in the Far East. The personnel were airlifted back to the UK from Italy in August, but before they could reorganise and retrain the Surrender of Japan ended the war.[69]

2nd Armoured Divisional Signals edit

 
2nd Armoured Division formation sign, as painted on vehicles.

The second line unit of the Middlesex Yeomanry joined 2nd Armoured Division HQ in Northern Command on 4 March 1940. When the Battle of France was lost and the British Expeditionary Force was being evacuated from Dunkirk (without its equipment) at the end of May, the incomplete 2nd Armoured Division was the only armoured formation available to Home Forces. It was moved into the area between Northampton and Newmarket to be ready to counter-attack in the event of invasion.[83][84][85][86]

However, even at the time of greatest invasion threat, the British Government was prepared to send armoured units to reinforce Middle East Forces facing the Italians. As the threat of invasion of the United Kingdom receded, it became possible to spare more troops and equipment for the Middle East. 2nd Armoured Division (less 22nd Armoured Brigade) was the first significant formation sent. It embarked on 26 October 1940 and landed in Egypt on 1 January 1941.[83][87]

 
An AEC Armoured Command Vehicle in the desert.

The British offensive into Libya (Operation Compass) was already under way, and part of the division was sent up into Cyrenaica in early February before it was really ready, where it reinforced the near-exhausted 7th Armoured Division in the final stages of the operation. The rest of the division remained on the lines of communication. There was now a pause in operations, but even by the end of March the division was short of serviceable equipment. On 31 March 2nd Armoured Division under the command of Maj-Gen Michael Gambier-Parry was holding the front when Gen Erwin Rommel opened the Axis counter-offensive (Operation Sonnenblume) and began pushing it back. It was taking almost two hours to transmit messages to Cyrenaica Command and the fighting became confused. On 6 April Cyrenaica Command ordered 2nd Armoured Division HQ to withdraw, but it is unlikely that the order ever got through, though it was picked up by 3rd Armoured Brigade's HQ. Divisional HQ and a collection of other units was caught by Rommel's forces at Mechili on 7 April. Gambier-Parry rejected two offers to surrender while his troops and HQ staff fought off attacks, and some units broke out at dawn the following day, but most of 2nd Armoured Division HQ and Signals became Prisoners of War.[7][83][88][89]

22nd Armoured Brigade Signals edit

 
22nd Armoured Brigade's formation sign.

North Africa and Italy edit

22nd Armoured Brigade and its signal squadron had been left in the UK while the rest of 2nd Armoured Division sailed to Egypt. It finally arrived on 2 October, long after 2nd Armoured Division had been captured. The brigade served through the rest of the Western Desert Campaign under the command alternately of 1st and 7th Armoured Divisions, seeing action at the Relief of Tobruk in November 1941, and the battles of Gazala, Mersa Matruh, First Alamein and Alam el Halfa. From the Second Battle of El Alamein the brigade became a permanent part of 7th Armoured Division. It served through the Tunisian Campaign at Medenine, the Mareth Line, Wadi Akarit, Enfidaville, and the capture of Tunis. It then took part in the landings at Salerno on the Italian mainland, the advance on Naples and the Volturno crossing before being withdrawn to the UK. Equipment was transferred to 5th Canadian Armoured Division and the personnel sailed from Naples to Glasgow, docking on 7 January 1944.[7][8][90][91]

 
A wireless-operator in an Armoured Command Vehicle, painting by Thomas Freeth, 1942.

Normandy edit

By 1944 an armoured brigade signal squadron (4 Sqn of divisional signals) was organised as Sqn HQ (2 officers and 23 other ranks (ORs)), W Troop (1 officer and 51 ORs) with brigade HQ, V Trp (19 ORs) with the motor battalion, and X, Y and Z Trps (each of 15 ORs) with the three armoured regiments.[92] 22nd Armoured Brigade was re-equipped and trained in the area round Brandon, Suffolk, to take part in the Allied landings in Normandy (Operation Overlord). The brigade was to sail in assault landing craft and land on D Day and D + 1, followed by the rest of 7th Armoured Division. It embarked on Landing Craft Tank (LCTs) at Felixstowe on 4 June and landed successfully on Gold Beach during the morning of D + 1 (7 June).[7][90][93]

On 10 June, 22nd Armoured Bde led the division's advance towards Villers-Bocage, but progress was slow through the restricted Bocage country, and the brigade was badly beaten at the Battle of Villers Bocage on 13 June.[94][95] In July the division was moved to the area north of Caen to take part in Operation Goodwood. The armour crossed the River Orne on 18 July and attacked behind massive artillery and air bombardment, but 7th Armoured was caught in traffic congestion and barely got into action.[90][96][97] The division was shifted west again to take part in Operation Bluecoat (1–2 August), but failed to gain its objective, the commanders of 7th Armoured Division and 22nd Armoured Bde being sacked.[90][98][99] The division came into its own after the breakout from the Normandy beachhead, when it advanced rapidly across northern France and Belgium, liberating towns as they went, including Ghent on 5 September.[100][101]

Low Countries and Germany edit

 
The Cromwell command tank (with multiple wireless aerials) of Brig Tony Wingfield, commanding 22nd Armoured Bde, 31 March 1945.

The rest of September and October was spent in probing operations while 21st Army Group's emphasis shifted to Antwerp and Operation Market Garden, where the division was called in to clear XXX Corps' severed supply lines. 22nd Armoured Bde cooperated with 51st (Highland) Division around 's-Hertogenbosch, but much of the country was unsuitable for tanks. It was not until 13 January 1945 that the division participated in a major attack (Operation Blackcock) towards Roermond. The division then rested and prepared for the crossing of the Rhine, Operation Plunder. The infantry began their assault crossing on the night of 23/24 March, followed by an airborne landing (Operation Varsity) next day. By 27 March the Sappers had bridged the river and 7th Armoured began to cross. At first progress was slow, but on 29 March 22nd Armoured Bde fanned out leading the advance; the division made 120 miles (190 km) by 2 April, only halted by the River Ems. 11th Armoured Division having captured a bridge intact, 22nd Armoured Bde resumed its advance, now a pursuit. Hamburg surrendered to 7th Armoured Division on 3 May, and the German surrender at Lüneburg Heath followed next day.[90][102][103]

Postwar edit

 
Sign at the headquarters of 31 (Middlesex Yeomanry and Princess Louise's Kensington) Signal Squadron (formerly 47 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Signal Squadron

Postwar the unit initially reformed as 40 Signal Regiment, RCS, but when the TA was reconstituted in 1947 it formed 16th Airborne Divisional Signal Regiment (Middlesex Yeomanry) with RHQ at Uxbridge and four squadrons, together with 22 Armoured Brigade Signal Troop in 56th (London) Armoured Division.[5][7][8][32][104][105]

When 16th Division was reduced to a single parachute brigade in 1956 the airborne part of the regiment was similarly reduced to No 3 Sqn (as 44 Independent Parachute Brigade Signal Squadron) while the rest took on general signal duties including a 'Phantom Signals' element. That year the unit's title was changed to Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Regiment, becoming 40 Signal Regiment (Middlesex Yeomanry) in 1959, when 44 Parachute Brigade Squadron was renumbered 305 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Signal Squadron, (Parachute Brigade), and the independent 32 Guards Brigade Signals became 301 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Signal Squadron (Guards Brigade). 22 Armoured Brigade Signals also became 303 Sqn.[5][7][8][32][106][107]

The TA was reduced in 1961, when the regiment amalgamated with 47 (London) Signal Regiment to form 47 Signal Regiment (Middlesex Yeomanry), with the Middlesex Yeomanry contributing RHQ, 301 and 305 Sqns, while 303 Sqn went to 57 Signal Regiment.[5][7][106] The TA was further reduced in 1967 with the formation of the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve (TAVR). The regiment was reduced squadron status as 47 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Signal Squadron in 31 (City of London) Signal Regiment, with Sqn HQ at Harrow, London.[5][7][32][108] At the same time a separate Airhead Signal Unit was formed at Chelsea from 305 Sqn, which was part of the 'Ever Ready' (TAVR Category I) 55 (Thames and Mersey) Signal Squadron. It later regained the 44 Parachute Brigade Signal Troop title.[107][109]

After the 'Front Line First' defence study, 47 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Sqn moved from 31 (City of London) to 39 (Skinners) Signal Regiment in 1995 and Sqn HQ moved back to Uxbridge[5][7] It moved again to 71 (City of London) Yeomanry Signal Regiment in 2006.[32][10] 47 (MY) Sqn was affiliated to the Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers in the City of London.[110]

The squadron amalgamated with 41 (Princess Louise's Kensington) Signal Squadron to form a new entity, 31 (Middlesex Yeomanry and Princess Louise's Kensington) Signal Squadron, in 2014.[111]

Uniforms and insignia edit

The full dress uniform of the unit raised in 1830 comprised a green coatee with black facings and turnbacks, brass shoulder scales for other ranks, epaulettes for officers, and gilt buttons inscribed 'U.Y.C.' The coatee was worn with dark blue overalls with scarlet welts (soon afterwards replaced by double scarlet stripes); white trousers were worn in summer until 1841. The headdress was a wide-topped light dragoon shako with black plume and cap-line and a brass Maltese cross with the Coat of arms of Middlesex in the centre. The accoutrements were black sword-belts, carbine belts and pouches, with scarlet and yellow girdles (scarlet and gold for officers). In 1856 the regiment wore a Yeomanry version of the Dragoon helmet with the 1855 pattern double-breasted tunic.[6]

The regiment adopted a Hussar uniform in 1872 but with dark green substituted for the blue of the regular cavalry regiments of that designation. ; the facings were black, and dark blue overalls were on with double scarlet stripes (gold stripes for officers). The headdress was a Busby with a green bag and green-over-red plume. Equipment was black, and knee-boots were worn when mounted; all ranks had black lambskin saddle covers, and officers' chargers had green jowl-plumes tipped with scarlet.[19][6][11][112][113] The Middlesex Yeomanry disregarded War Office instructions to adopt silver braiding (the traditional distinction of volunteer units) and in a display of independence added additional gold braiding to their officers' tunics.[114] The group photograph above shows the range of uniforms worn during the 1890s, with relatively plain service and ordinary duty dress the most commonly worn garments.

Khaki uniforms with Slouch hats were laid down for the Imperial Yeomanry after the Second Boer War, but they were allowed coloured facings and plumes. A form of full dress was reinstated in 1905, the Middlesex Yeomanry wearing blue jackets with the slouch hat and khaki drab breeches (blue overalls with yellow/gold stripes when mounted). Slouch hats were replaced by service caps in 1907 (see photo of Major Lafone above). The old full dress was reinstated in 1910, but with the Busby bag changed to scarlet and the overall stripes to yellow for all ranks.[11][19][115][116] The khaki service dress of the regular cavalry was adopted for training and ordinary duties about 1907, becoming the standard uniform worn on all occasions following the outbreak of the First World War.[117]

When the Middlesex Yeomanry converted to Royal Signals they retained their cap badge[1][19] and wore the brass Royal Corps of Signals shoulder title with 'Y' above to indicate yeomanry.[7][56] During the Second World War, signals units would have worn the formation badge of their respective HQs as a shoulder flash. Since the Second World War, parachute signal units have worn a 'Drop Zone' (DZ) flash in the RCS colours of white over blue. 16 Airborne Signal Rgt (Middlesex Yeomanry) adopted a non-standard DZ flash with yellow and green vertical stripes over which the red letters TA appeared (the T on the green stripe). 44 Parachute Brigade Signal Sqn and 305 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Parachute Signal Sqn wore the red numbers 44 or 305 on the white over blue DZ flash.[118]

47 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Signal Rgt 1961–67 wore the Middlesex Yeomanry cap and collar badges on battledress, but Royal Signals collar badges on Service Dress or No 1 Dress. The former red-yellow-green shoulder flash of the Middlesex Yeomanry was replaced by an eight-pointed star derived from the divisional flash of the 47th (1/2nd London) Division in the First World War. The regiment had its own system of rank badges: corporals and lance corporals both wore two chevrons with a crown above; sergeants and lance sergeants wore three chevrons with a crown above; staff sergeants and the Squadron Quartermaster Sergeant (SQMS) wore four chevrons and a crown.[7]

47 (Middlesex Yeomanry) Signal Sqn wear a lanyard of parachute cord in dull green and gold to remember their service as airborne signals. The squadron collar badges and buttons are those of the Middlesex Yeomanry, and the squadron has retained Middlesex Yeomanry Stable belts and Side caps. Officers wear a woven wire Middlesex Yeomanry badge with the side cap. The SQMS has the distinction of wearing four chevrons.[7]

Commanders edit

Commanding officers edit

The following officers have commanded the regiment and its successors:[8][11]

Uxbridge Volunteer Cavalry

Middlesex Yeomanry

  • Capt, later Lt-Col Hubert de Burgh, 5 January 1831
  • Lt-Col Frederick Cox, 3 August 1872
  • Lt-Col William H. Harfield, 7 June 1880
  • Lt-Col W.H. Mitford, 23 April 1892
  • Lt-Col F. Heygate-Lambert, 28 October 1903
  • Lt-Col W. Duncan, 28 April 1910

2nd Cavalry Divisional Signals

  • Maj W.D. Marcuse, TD, 1920
  • Maj A.L. Brodrick, 1921
  • Maj H.D. Roberts, MC, TD, 23 February 1929
  • Lt-Col G.S. Sale, MC, TD, 1932
  • Maj L.F. Messel, 1938

1st Cavalry Divisional Signals

2nd Armoured Divisional Signals

  • Lt-Col W.P. Doyle, 1939
  • Lt-Col B.B. Kennett, MBE, 1940–41

16th Airborne Divisional Signals

  • Lt-Col Viscount Malden, TD, 1947
  • Lt-Col N.E. Pease, MBE, TD, 1950
  • Lt-Col J.J. Collins, MC, TD

Honorary Colonels edit

The following officers have served as Honorary Colonel of the unit:[5][11]

  • Frederick Cox, former CO, appointed 23 March 1878
  • FM The Duke of Cambridge, who had given his name to the regiment 10 years earlier, appointed 6 January 1894
  • FM Earl Kitchener of Khartoum, appointed 5 July 1910
  • Lt-Col Lord Denman, GCMG, KCVO, former officer in 11th Bn IY and Middlesex Imperial Yeomanry, appointed 11 April 1923
  • Maj H.D. Roberts, MC, TD, former CO , appointed 6 April 1935
  • Brig B.B. Kennett, CBE, former CO
  • Lt-Col Reginald Capell, Viscount Malden (later 9th Earl of Essex), TD, former CO, appointed 6 April 1957

Honours edit

 
Lt-Col Oliver Watson, depicted in the uniform of the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry.

Victoria Crosses edit

Major Alexander Malins Lafone was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross (VC) for his actions at the Battle of el Buqqar Ridge (see above).[47]

Major Oliver Cyril Spencer Watson had been a Regular Army officer seeing action on the North West Frontier and against the Boxer Rebellion. After retiring from the army he joined the Middlesex Yeomanry in 1909, and saw action with the regiment at Gallipoli. After returning to the UK he was attached to the 2/5th Battalion, King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry on the Western Front. On 28 March 1918 he was commanding the battalion as an acting Lt-Col when he won a posthumous VC leading a counter-attack at Rossignol Wood north of Hebuterne, France. Watson has no known grave and is commemorated on the Arras Memorial, his regiment listed as Middlesex Hussars.[119][120][121] The Middlesex Yeomanry consequently lays claim to two of the three Victoria Crosses awarded to the Yeomanry as a whole.

Battle honours edit

The Middlesex Yeomanry was awarded the following battle honours (honours in bold were emblazoned on the regimental standard):[5][11][26]

Battle honours of Yeomanry regiments are held by their descendant units, irrespective of their current arm or service, even if they (like the Royal Signals) do not themselves display battle honours.[122]

Memorial edit

The regiment's memorial, designed by Basil Gotto, is in the Nelson Chamber of the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London. Unveiled in 1906, the plaque commemorated the 55 members of the Middlesex Yeomanry's Imperial Yeomanry companies who were killed in action in the Second Boer war. Subsequently, flanking panels were added for the First World War, and a panel underneath for the Second World War.[123]

The Church of St Martin-within-Ludgate is the Middlesex Yeomanry's Regimental Chapel; it is the starting point for the regiment's annual Lafone Day service and parade up Ludgate Hill to St Paul's, where a wreath is laid at the memorial in the crypt.[124]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Divisional signal units of the Royal Signals 1920–45 were battalion-sized and commanded by a Major or Lieutenant-Colonel; they were not termed 'regiments' until 1946.[55]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Anon, Regimental Badges.
  2. ^ "No. 63516". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 November 2021. p. 19472.
  3. ^ Rogers, p. 145.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 August 2004.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s . Archived from the original on 15 July 2007. Retrieved 2 May 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ a b c d Money Barnes, pp. 194–7.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Lord & Watson, pp. 156–9.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Nalder, pp. 594–5.
  9. ^ Redford & Riches 1818, p. 149
  10. ^ a b c (PDF). Royal Signals. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Army List, various dates.
  12. ^ Dunlop, pp. 104–18.
  13. ^ Money Barnes, pp. 242–5.
  14. ^ Rogers, p. 228.
  15. ^ Spiers, p. 239.
  16. ^
  17. ^ IY Companies at Roll of Honour.
  18. ^ IY at Anglo-Boer War.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Money Barnes, pp. 262–4.
  20. ^ Amery (1909), Appendix to Chapters I-XIV, pp. 503–14.
  21. ^ Watt.
  22. ^ Dalbiac at Anglo-Boer War.
  23. ^ Maurice, p. 139.
  24. ^ Kruger, pp. 468–9.
  25. ^ Pakenham, pp. 264–5.
  26. ^ a b Leslie.
  27. ^ Stonham & Freeman.
  28. ^ London Gazette, 20 March 1908.
  29. ^ Dunlop, Chapter 14.
  30. ^ Spiers, Chapter 10.
  31. ^ Barnes, pp. 272–4.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i j 1st CoLY at Stepping Forward London.
  33. ^ Conrad, Mark (1996). "The British Army, 1914".
  34. ^ Becke, Pt 2b, p. 6.
  35. ^ Rinaldi 2008, p. 35
  36. ^ a b c d e f g Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 9–17.
  37. ^ a b c d 2nd Mounted Division at Long, Long Trail.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h Baker, Chris. "The 1st County of London Yeomanry". The Long, Long Trail. Retrieved 6 April 2015.
  39. ^ a b c d Westlake, pp. 265–6.
  40. ^ North, pp. 182–5.
  41. ^ Wakefield & Moody, pp. 9, 126–9, Appendix.
  42. ^ a b c Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 31–4.
  43. ^ Bullock, p. 62.
  44. ^ a b Falls, Vol II, p. 38.
  45. ^ a b Massey, p. 29.
  46. ^ a b Preston, p. 21.
  47. ^ a b "No. 30433". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 December 1917. p. 13222.
  48. ^ Bullock, pp. 73–6, 80–1, 91–5.
  49. ^ Bullock, pp. 111–3, Appendices.
  50. ^ Bullock, p. 130–3, 136–7, 142–4.
  51. ^ Lawrence, pp. 661–2.
  52. ^ a b c Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 19–26.
  53. ^ a b c d James 1978, p. 23
  54. ^ James 1978, p. 36
  55. ^ Lord & Watson, p. 21.
  56. ^ a b TA 1927.
  57. ^ a b Joslen, p. 33.
  58. ^ Joslen, p. 132.
  59. ^ Joslen, p. 189.
  60. ^ Playfair, Vol II, pp. 177–87.
  61. ^ Smith, pp. 174–5.
  62. ^ a b c H. Stafford Northcote, 'Revolt in the Desert', in Purnell's History of the Second World War, pp. 540–9.
  63. ^ Smith, p. 180.
  64. ^ Playfair, Vol II, pp. 187–97.
  65. ^ H. Stafford Northcote, 'Desert Tragedy: The Conquest of Vichy Syria', in Purnell's History of the Second World War, pp. 550–60.
  66. ^ Playfair, Vol II, pp. 203, 209–14.
  67. ^ Smith, pp. 221–32, 236, 246–50.
  68. ^ "Badge, formation, 9th Armoured Brigade & 9th Independent Armoured Brigade (TA)". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  69. ^ a b c d e f g Joslen, pp. 162–3.
  70. ^ Playfair, Vol II, pp 252–3.
  71. ^ Nalder, p. 592-3.
  72. ^ Burke's, 'Farnham'.
  73. ^ a b c Joslen, pp. 25–6.
  74. ^ Playfair, Vol III, pp. 249, 281, 353–7.
  75. ^ Routledge, pp. 139–40.
  76. ^ Joslen, p. 573.
  77. ^ Playfair & Molony, Vol IV, pp. 7–9, 37–8, 46, 57, 64–7.
  78. ^ Playfair & Molony, Vol IV, pp. 81–3, 221.
  79. ^ Molony, Vol VI, Pt I, pp. 13, 243.
  80. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt II, pp. 5, 23, 39, 42, 46–7, 76–7, 145–8, 225–6.
  81. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt II, pp. 234, 298.
  82. ^ Jackson, Vol VI, Pt III, pp. 209, 222, Appendix 6.
  83. ^ a b c Joslen, p. 16.
  84. ^ Collier Chapter VII.
  85. ^ Collier, Chapter VIII.
  86. ^ Collier, Chapter XIV.
  87. ^ Playfair, Vol I, pp. 190, 244–7.
  88. ^ Playfair, Vol I, pp. 291, 355, 357, 365.
  89. ^ Playfair, Vol II, pp. 2–7, 19–30.
  90. ^ a b c d e Joslen, pp. 168–9.
  91. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 4–20.
  92. ^ Lord & Watson, p. 263.
  93. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 21–3, 27–31.
  94. ^ Ellis, Vol I, pp. 251–6.
  95. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 32–43.
  96. ^ Ellis, Vol I, pp. 335–43.
  97. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 46–8.
  98. ^ Hunt, pp. 66–8.
  99. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 52–8.
  100. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 59–88.
  101. ^ Ellis, Vol II, p. 6.
  102. ^ Lindsay & Johnstone, pp. 89–158.
  103. ^ Ellis, Vol II, pp. 43, 123–6, 243, 293, 305–6, 310, 338–9.
  104. ^ Lord & Watson, p. 268.
  105. ^ 16 Airborne Division at Stepping Forward London.
  106. ^ a b Lord & Watson, pp. 202–3.
  107. ^ a b Lord & Watson, pp. 308–9.
  108. ^ Lord & Watson, p. 282.
  109. ^ Lord & Watson, pp. 167–8.
  110. ^ Livery Company affiliations at Stepping Forward London.
  111. ^ "31 Signal Squadron". Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 5 November 2017.
  112. ^ Ryan 1957.
  113. ^ Middlesex Yeomanry 1897 at Hugh Evelyn Prints.
  114. ^ Harris, Plate 13.
  115. ^ Ryan 1960.
  116. ^ Smith, R.J. (December 1987). The Yeomanry Force at the 1911 Coronation. p. 19. ISBN 0-948251-26-3.
  117. ^ "Uniforms of the British Yeomanry Regiments". Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  118. ^ Lord & Watson, pp. 309–10.
  119. ^ "No. 30675". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 May 1918. p. 5555.
  120. ^ "No. 31340". The London Gazette. 15 May 1919. p. 6085.
  121. ^ Watson at CWGC Register.
  122. ^ Battle Honours at Stepping Forward London.
  123. ^ IWM War Memorial Register Ref 11723.
  124. ^ St Martin's in the wider community.

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  • H.C.B. Rogers, The Mounted Troops of the British Army 1066–1945, London: Seeley Service, 1959.
  • Lt-Col Ernest Ryan 'Arms, Uniforms and Equipment of the Yeomanry Cavalry', Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, September 1957, Vol 35, pp. 124–33.
  • Lt-Col Ernest Ryan, 'The Post-South African War Yeomanry', Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, June 1960, Vol 38, pp. 57–62.
  • Colin Smith, England's Last War Against France: Fighting Vichy 1940–1942, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2009, ISBN 978-0-297-85218-6.
  • Edward M. Spiers, The Army and Society 1815–1914, London: Longmans, 1980, ISBN 0-582-48565-7.
  • Stonham, Charles & Freeman, Benson, (1930). Historical Records of The Middlesex Yeomanry 1797-1927, Regimental Committee, Duke of York's Headquarters, London
  • Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army, London: War Office, 7 November 1927.
  • Steve Watt, 'The Imperial Yeomanry, Part 1 – 1900', South African Military History Society, Military History Journal, Vol 13, No 6, December 2006.
  • Alan Wakefield and Simon Moody, Under the Devil's Eye: Britain's Forgotten Army at Salonika 1915–1918, Stroud: Sutton, 2004, ISBN 0-7509-3537-5.
  • Ray Westlake, British Regiments at Gallipoli, Barnsley: Leo Cooper, 1996, ISBN 0-85052-511-X.

External links edit

  • Anglo Boer War site
  • Commonwealth War Graves Commission
  • The Long, Long Trail
  • Imperial War Museum, War Memorials Register
  • Roll of Honour
  • Stepping Forward: A Tribute to the Volunteer Military Reservists and Supporting Auxiliaries of Greater London

middlesex, yeomanry, volunteer, cavalry, regiment, british, army, originally, raised, 1797, mounted, dismounted, action, second, boer, first, world, gallipoli, salonika, palestine, where, officers, victoria, cross, battle, buqqar, ridge, regiment, rode, into, . The Middlesex Yeomanry was a volunteer cavalry regiment of the British Army originally raised in 1797 It saw mounted and dismounted action in the Second Boer War and in the First World War at Gallipoli Salonika and in Palestine where one of its officers won a Victoria Cross at the Battle of Buqqar Ridge and the regiment rode into Damascus with Lawrence of Arabia Between the world wars the regiment was converted to the signals role and it provided communications for armoured formations in the Second World War including service in minor operations in Iraq Palestine Syria and Iran as well as the Western Desert Italian and North West European campaigns It continued in the postwar Territorial Army and its lineage is maintained today by 31 Middlesex Yeomanry and Princess Louise s Kensington Signal Squadron Royal Corps of Signals which forms part of the Army Reserve Middlesex YeomanryMiddlesex Yeomanry badge reign of King George VI 1 Active1797 18021830 presentCountry Kingdom of Great Britain 1797 1800 United Kingdom 1801 present Branch British ArmySize3 Regiments First World War 2 Signal units Second World War Squadron current Motto s Pro Aris et Focis For Hearth and Home literally For Altars and Hearths AnniversariesLafone Day 27 October EngagementsSecond Boer War Senekal GroenkopFirst World War Scimitar Hill Buqqar Ridge Afula and Besian Capture of DamascusSecond World War Fallujah Mechili Alamein Tunisia Normandy RhineBattle honoursSee Battle honours belowCommandersHonorary ColonelColonel Simon G Hutchinson MBE 2 NotablecommandersSir Christopher Baynes 1st BaronetLt Col Hon Somerset Maxwell MPLt Col Viscount Malden Contents 1 Formation and early history 2 Imperial Yeomanry 3 First World War 3 1 1 1st County of London Yeomanry 3 1 1 Gallipoli 3 1 2 Salonika 3 1 3 Palestine 3 2 2 1st County of London Yeomanry 3 3 3 1st County of London Yeomanry 4 Interwar 5 Second World War 5 1 1st Cavalry Divisional Signals 5 1 1 Kingcol 5 2 9th Armoured Brigade Signals 5 2 1 Persia 5 2 2 Calforce 5 2 3 Alamein 5 2 4 Italy 5 3 2nd Armoured Divisional Signals 5 4 22nd Armoured Brigade Signals 5 4 1 North Africa and Italy 5 4 2 Normandy 5 4 3 Low Countries and Germany 6 Postwar 7 Uniforms and insignia 8 Commanders 8 1 Commanding officers 8 2 Honorary Colonels 9 Honours 9 1 Victoria Crosses 9 2 Battle honours 10 Memorial 11 See also 12 Footnotes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 External linksFormation and early history editIn 1793 the Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger proposed that the English Counties form a force of Volunteer Yeoman Cavalry that could be called on by the King to defend the country against invasion or by the Lord Lieutenant to subdue any civil disorder within the country 3 4 A cavalry troop entitled the Uxbridge Volunteer Cavalry was raised by Christopher Baynes later Sir Christopher Baynes 1st Baronet in 1797 By 1798 the unit consisted of over 100 men organised in two Troops It was once called out in 1801 to prevent rioting 5 6 7 8 9 After the Treaty of Amiens was concluded in 1802 the regiment was disbanded 5 following a spate of industrial unrest and rioting authorisation was given on 10 December 1830 to raise two new troops of Yeomanry in the Uxbridge district It was raised as the Uxbridge Squadron of Yeomanry Cavalry with troops at Harefield and West Drayton in 1830 The regiment was called upon to provide an escort for King William IV as he passed through Uxbridge to visit the Marquess of Westminster at Moor Park in 1834 The unit was called out on several occasions notably in 1832 and at the time of the 1848 Chartist meeting on Kennington Common but merely stood by in barracks and saw no action 5 6 7 8 10 The Uxbridge Squadron became the Middlesex Yeomanry Cavalry in 1838 with the following organisation 5 A Troop in London B Troop in Uxbridge C Troop in London D Troop in West Middlesex including a contingent at Brighton Sussex Following the Cardwell Reforms a mobilisation scheme began to appear in the Army List from December 1875 This assigned Regular and Yeomanry units places in an order of battle of corps divisions and brigades for the Active Army even though these formations were entirely theoretical with no staff or services assigned The Middlesex Yeomanry were assigned as divisional troops to 3rd Division of II Corps based at Dorking alongside Regular units of infantry artillery and engineers 11 In the early 1880s the regiment s headquarters HQ moved to 43 Albemarle Street in London s West End later to 25 Chapel Street off Edgware Road and it had the following organisation 5 11 nbsp Group of different ranks Middlesex Yeomanry 1896A Troop in Brighton B Troop in London C Troop in London D Troop in West MiddlesexThe regiment evolved to become the Middlesex Regiment of Yeomanry Cavalry Uxbridge in 1871 and by order of Field Marshal the Duke of Cambridge serving at that time as Commander in Chief of the Forces the Middlesex Duke of Cambridge s Hussars Yeomanry Cavalry in 1884 5 7 8 By 1899 RHQ was at 1 Cathcart Road South Kensington and the regiment was in the 1st Yeomanry Brigade together with the Berkshire Yeomanry 11 Imperial Yeomanry edit nbsp Imperial yeoman on the Veldt Following a string of defeats during Black Week in early December 1899 the British government realised that it would need more troops than just the regular army to fight the Second Boer War particularly mounted troops On 13 December the War Office decided to allow volunteer forces to serve in the field and a Royal Warrant was issued on 24 December that officially created the Imperial Yeomanry IY This was organised as county service companies of approximately 115 men enlisted for one year Existing yeomen and fresh volunteers mainly middle and upper class quickly filled the new force which was equipped to operate as Mounted infantry 12 13 14 15 The Middlesex Yeomanry raised the 34th and 35th Middlesex Companies which served alongside two Royal East Kent Yeomanry in 11th Battalion arriving in South Africa on 20 March and 62nd Middlesex Company in 14th Battalion which disembarked on 4 May In 1901 it raised 112th Middlesex Company for the second contingent and this company also served with 11th Bn In 1902 14th Bn was disbanded and 62nd Middlesex Company joined 11th Bn 5 10 16 17 18 19 At the beginning of May 1900 the 11th Battalion IY under the command of Lt Col W K Mitford of the Middlesex Yeomanry was with 8th Division in Lt Gen Sir Leslie Rundle s column 20 Lord Roberts resumed his advance into the Orange Free State on 3 May ordering Rundle to prevent any Boers from re occupying the south east of the country On 25 May Maj Henry Dalbiac a former Royal Artillery officer and veteran of Tel el Kebir with 34th Middlesex Company acting as advance guard entered the empty town of Senekal The Boers attacked the town later in the day killing Dalbiac and three others Four of the troopers were wounded and 13 surrendered while seven made their escape The rest of the division reoccupied the town later in the day 19 21 22 23 The war ground on as the Imperial forces tried to control the Boer Commandos with a system of blockhouse lines Rundle s force was building one such line that had reached Tweefontein just before Christmas 1901 watched by a large commando under Christiaan de Wet 11th Battalion IY was the main part of a covering force of 400 yeomanry and two guns camped on the nearby hill of Groenkop under the command of Maj Williams The approaches were inadequately picketed and at 02 00 on Christmas morning de Wet led his men up the hill They were already half way up before they were challenged by a sentry and immediately stormed the camp sweeping through the tents and transport lines in the dark Of around 550 men in camp almost 350 were killed or captured in the Battle of Groenkop and the camp was looted by the hungry Boers However it was their last major success and the war ended in April 1902 19 24 25 The Middlesex IY companies earned the regiment its first Battle honour South Africa 1900 01 5 11 26 27 The IY concept was considered a success and before the war ended the existing Yeomanry regiments at home were converted into Imperial Yeomanry the Middlesex becoming the Middlesex Imperial Yeomanry Duke of Cambridge s Hussars in 1901 It HQ was at Rutland Yard Knightsbridge 5 11 The Imperial Yeomanry were subsumed into the new Territorial Force TF under the Haldane Reforms of 1908 28 29 30 the Middlesex becoming the 1st County of London Yeomanry Middlesex Duke of Cambridge s Hussars It formed part of the TF s London Mounted Brigade Regimental HQ moved to the Duke of York s Headquarters in Chelsea in 1912 5 7 11 19 31 32 First World War editIn accordance with the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 7 Edw 7 c 9 which brought the TF into being it was intended to be a home defence force for service during wartime and members could not be compelled to serve outside the country However on the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914 many members volunteered for Imperial Service Therefore TF units were split in August and September 1914 into 1st Line liable for overseas service and 2nd Line home service for those unable or unwilling to serve overseas units Later a 3rd Line was formed to act as a reserve providing trained replacements for the 1st and 2nd Line regiments 34 35 1 1st County of London Yeomanry edit The 1st Line regiment was mobilised in August 1914 and moved with the London Mounted Brigade to Hounslow before joining the 2nd Mounted Division at Streatley 36 37 38 In mid November 1914 the division moved to Norfolk as part of the coast defences In April 1915 the regiment was at Mundesley when the brigade was ordered overseas The regiment entrained for Avonmouth Docks where the men embarked on the Nile on 14 April and sailed for Egypt The horses were loaded aboard the cramped and insanitary Crispin and 32 died during the voyage On arrival the brigade was sent to the Suez Canal defences near Ismailia being redesignated the 4th London Mounted Bde 36 37 38 39 Gallipoli edit On 10 August the 2nd Mounted Division was ordered to reorganise as a dismounted formation and prepare to proceed overseas Each regiment left a squadron HQ and the officers and men of two troops to look after the horses On 13 August the rest of the regiment 16 officers and 320 other ranks entrained for Alexandria where they boarded the Caledonia the next day It arrived at Mudros on 16 August transhipped them to the Doris next day and on 18 August they landed at Suvla Bay to join in the Gallipoli Campaign 36 37 38 39 On the afternoon of 21 August the division was ordered to advance from Lala Baba across the plain to Chocolate Hill and then attack the Turkish positions on the W Hills The advance across the plain was described by a Turkish artillery officer as presenting a target such as artillerymen thought impossible outside the world of dreams On reaching Chocolate Hill the dismounted Yeomen continued towards Scimitar Hill and Hill 112 without having a chance to reconnoitre the position or be properly briefed Part of the hill was captured but the surviving Yeomen came under enfilade fire and by nightfall were hanging onto a ragged line halfway up the hills By the time the Middlesex Yeomanry were withdrawn to Lala Baba the following day they had suffered casualties of 10 killed or died of wounds and 46 wounded This the Battle of Scimitar Hill was the last British attack delivered on the Suvla Front 36 39 40 From now on the regiment took its turns holding the front line By 4 September the Yeomanry were so weak from casualties and sickness that the brigade 1 1st County of London Middlesex 1 1st City of London Rough Riders and 1 3rd County of London Sharpshooters was formed into a composite 4th London Regiment of Yeomanry The regiment was relieved on 17 September by the Scottish Horse one look out mistakenly reporting the arrival of some Scottish Gaelic speaking soldiers as a Turkish break in When the Middlesex Yeomanry were withdrawn to Lala Baba on 1 November they were reduced to fewer than 50 men They were evacuated to Mudros and then Egypt to recuperate the regiment regaining its independence in December 32 36 37 38 39 nbsp Yeomanry move down a track into the Struma Valley Salonika front summer 1916 Salonika edit During December 1915 and January 1916 the 2nd Mounted Division was broken up and its units distributed to other formations 4th London Mounted Brigade was redesignated 8th Mounted Brigade and sent to Abbassia to return to the Suez Canal defences In November the brigade was sent to the Macedonian front disembarking at Salonika and going up country to serve as GHQ troops On occasions mounted parties of the Middlesex Yeomanry riding with muffled bits were sent out at night into No man s land here about 1 mile 1 6 km wide to erect barbed wire obstacles 36 38 41 Palestine edit In June 1917 the regiment was withdrawn with 8th Mounted Brigade to Egypt and then moved up to the Palestine Front where it joined the Yeomanry Mounted Division that was forming at Khan Yunis in the Egyptian Expeditionary Force EEF 36 42 43 nbsp Detail of the el Girheir to el Buqqar defensive lineThe campaign was coming to the end of a period of stalemate with the EEF preparing to renew its offensive The Turkish Yildirim Army Group carried out a reconnaissance in force in late October against 8th Mounted Brigade which was holding a 14 miles 23 km outpost line along the el Buqqar ridge to cover railway construction parties At 04 10 on 27 October a post on Point 630 held by the Middlesex Yeomanry was attacked by an Ottoman cavalry patrol in great strength bringing on the Battle of Buqqar Ridge Two Yeomanry troops ordered forward in support advanced through heavy fire to find the post almost surrounded A squadron of the City of London Yeomanry in reserve advanced also under heavy fire to occupy a position 200 yards 180 m south of the threatened post which stopped the Ottoman forces from completely surrounding the Middlesex men By 10 55 an Ottoman infantry attack was developing against the post The defenders were driven off the hill but withdrew to a trench just below the crest and held out there during the day against odds of 20 to 1 with the attackers closing to within 40 yards 37 m Fighting continued until late in the afternoon when troops from the 53rd Welsh Division drove off the attackers The Yeomanry post had lost 4 dead and 14 wounded 44 45 46 nbsp Major Alexander Lafone VC Meanwhile Point 720 held by two troops from B Squadron Middlesex Yeomanry commanded by Major Alexander Malins Lafone had been attacked by several Ottoman cavalry squadrons and later by heavy rifle and machine gun fire and occasional artillery shells The post was out of communication from 06 00 and reinforcements were unable to break through After six hours and two unsuccessful mounted charges the final attack on Hill 720 was made by 1200 Ottoman cavalry supported by machine gun and artillery fire All except three of the Yeomanry on Hill 720 were killed Major Lafone was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for encouraging his men to resist the Ottoman attack 44 45 46 47 On 31 October 1917 the EEF opened its own offensive with the Third Battle of Gaza The Yeomanry were initially held in reserve but on 6 November the division went into action as part of the Desert Mounted Corps DMC at the Capture of the Sheria Position There followed a pursuit towards Jerusalem in which the Yeomanry took part in the battles of Mughar Ridge 13 November and Nebi Samwil outside Jerusalem 17 24 November The Turks counter attacked on 27 November and the Yeomanry held the line for two days Jerusalem surrendered on 9 December 42 48 The crisis on the Western Front caused by the German spring offensive in March 1918 led to an urgent call for reinforcements from Palestine A number of formations were Indianised roughly two thirds of their British units being sent to France and replaced by Indian Army units The Yeomanry Division was one such becoming the 1st Mounted Division and later the 4th Cavalry Division while the 8th Mounted Brigade became the 11th Cavalry Brigade The Middlesex Yeomanry remained with the 11th now brigaded with the 29th Lancers and 36th Jacob s Horse 42 49 The EEF launched its final offensive the Battle of Megiddo on 19 September 1918 The DMC was on the coast massed behind the infantry to exploit the breakthrough 4th Cavalry Division was launched four hours after Zero at 08 40 and advanced against slight resistance The division paused after 12 hours then overran the Turks primitive third line defences It paused to water the horses in the evening then moved off again an hour before midnight riding into the German Turkish HQ at Afulah and then heading east to Beisan to cut off Turkish retreat The division rode 70 miles 110 km in 34 hours There was still a 25 miles 40 km gap through which the Turks could escape across the River Jordan and on 23 September 11th Cavalry Brigade was ordered to ride south down both banks of the river to cut off this route It encountered the HQ elements of the German Asia Corps at Makhadet abu Naji after a fight the cavalry charged to seal off both sides of the ford capturing 4000 prisoners The following morning the brigade completed the closure of the net by seizing the fords at Makhadet el Masudi and gathering another 5000 prisoners 4th Cavalry Division now turned north to cooperate with the Arab Northern Army s advance on Damascus The men were beginning to suffer from malaria influenza and hunger and the advance slowed but on 30 September 11th Brigade was pushed on ahead and caught up with Col T E Lawrence and the Arab irregulars attacking the Turkish rearguard Lawrence asked for help and was sent the Middlesex Yeomanry and the Hampshire Royal Horse Artillery The gunners fired over open sights until darkness fell then the Yeomanry and Arabs charged the Turks in the rear forcing them into the Arab trap Damascus fell the following morning The Turkish Army was broken and the Armistice of Mudros ended the war in the Middle East a month later 50 51 2 1st County of London Yeomanry edit The 2nd Line regiment was formed at Chelsea in 1914 and in November 1914 it was at Ranelagh Park By June 1915 it was with 2 1st London Mounted Brigade in 2 2nd Mounted Division and was at Bylaugh Park north east of East Dereham in Norfolk In October it was at Blickling Hall 52 38 53 On 31 March 1916 the remaining Mounted Brigades were ordered to be numbered in a single sequence 54 the brigade was numbered as 12th Mounted Brigade and the division as 3rd Mounted Division 52 53 In July 1916 the regiment was converted to a cyclist unit in 4th Cyclist Brigade 1st Cyclist Division in the North Walsham area In November 1916 the division was broken up and regiment was merged with the 2 3rd County of London Yeomanry Sharpshooters to form 6th 1st and 3rd County of London Yeomanry Cyclist Regiment in 2nd Cyclist Brigade probably at Reepham In March 1917 it resumed its identity as 2 1st County of London Yeomanry and moved to Overstrand in the autumn it moved to Melton Constable In May 1918 the regiment moved to Ireland and was stationed at The Curragh still in 2nd Cyclist Brigade until the end of the war 38 52 53 3 1st County of London Yeomanry edit The 3rd Line regiment was formed in April 1915 at Ranelagh and in the summer it was affiliated to a Reserve Cavalry Regiment in Eastern Command In the summer of 1916 it was affiliated to the 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment at The Curragh Early in 1917 it was absorbed into the 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiment at The Curragh 38 53 Interwar editAfter the war it was clear that there were more cavalry units than needed and it was decided that only the 14 most senior Yeomanry regiments would retain their mounts forming the 2nd Cavalry Division in the reorganised Territorial Army TA Most of the remainder chose to convert to armoured cars or artillery in 1920 Uniquely the Middlesex Yeomanry elected to become a signal unit joining the new Royal Corps of Signals when that was formed two months later It became 2nd Cavalry Divisional Signals Middlesex Yeomanry a of two squadrons A and B with HQ still at the Duke of York s Headquarters 5 7 8 11 19 32 56 In the late 1930s mechanisation of the British Army was proceeding and an experimental armoured formation was created as The Mobile Division later 1st Armoured Division In 1938 the Middlesex Yeomanry became Mobile Divisional Signals Middlesex Yeomanry When the TA was doubled in size after the Munich Crisis the unit raised a second line as the Horse Cavalry Brigade Signal Troops Shortly afterwards the two units became1st and 2nd Middlesex Yeomanry Armoured Divisional Signals 5 11 8 32 Second World War edit1st Cavalry Divisional Signals edit Soon after the outbreak of war the first line unit became 1st Cavalry Divisional Signals Middlesex Yeomanry the 1st and only Cavalry Division being composed mainly of horsed Yeomanry regiments It joined Divisional HQ when the formation assembled in Northern Command on 1 November 1939 It then left the UK on 18 January 1940 and travelled across France to embark at Marseille for Palestine arriving on 31 January A divisional signal unit provided communications line wireless and despatch rider from divisional HQ down to the level of individual unit HQs each brigade was allocated a squadron and the establishment for cavalry divisional signals included its own Light Aid Detachment of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps 7 8 57 58 Kingcol edit At first the division s role was internal security while its mounted units underwent mechanisation The signal unit detached Troops that formed new signal units for service at Tobruk and on Crete Then after a German backed coup d etat in Iraq in April 1941 the Royal Air Force RAF training base at Habbaniya came under siege by Iraqi Nationalist forces A relief column known as Habforce was organised from the troops available in Palestine On 8 May Brigadier Joe Kingstone of 4th Cavalry Brigade the only one yet motorised was sent on ahead with his brigade HQ and signals leading a Flying column named Kingcol to effect a relief of the airbase as soon as possible 8 32 59 60 61 62 Kingcol operated as a self contained unit with 12 days rations and five days water It moved out from Transjordan following the Amman Baghdad road and Mosul Haifa oil pipeline to the fort of Rutba which had been recaptured by the Arab Legion and 2nd RAF Armoured Car Squadron on 10 May Kingcol moved out from Rutba on 15 May crossing the desert in exceptionally hot weather digging the heavy vehicles out when they broke through the surface of the poor tracks and under attack by German aircraft The direct road to Habbaniya was blocked by Iraqi troops at Ramadi but engineers from Habbaniya had bridged the canal to the south and Kingcol arrived from that direction on 18 May Kingcol and the Habbaniya garrison now attacked Fallujah moving up both sides of the Euphrates on 19 May and capturing the bridge in only half an hour the Battle of Fallujah An Iraqi counter attack was driven off on 22 May but the British and Assyrian troops fought back ferociously and the Iraqis withdrew Kingcol now advanced on Baghdad rumour magnifying the size of the small British forces and the Iraqis asked for an armistice on 30 May 62 63 64 In mid June Habforce joined the campaign against Vichy French forces in Syria Its role was to advance across the desert from Iraq and capture Palmyra while a direct attack Operation Exporter was made from Palestine towards Damascus by a force including part of 1st Cavalry Division 4th Cavalry Brigade s advance with Habforce was continually harried by Vichy Air Force attacks and it lost a lot of men and vehicles After the fall of Damascus and Palmyra the Syria Lebanon campaign ended on 14 July with the Armistice of Saint Jean d Acre 62 65 66 67 9th Armoured Brigade Signals edit nbsp 9th Armoured Brigade s formation sign the horse referencing its mounted Yeomanry origins 68 Persia edit Having progressed with its mechanisation 1st Cavalry Division was reorganised as 10th Armoured Division on 1 August 1941 in Syria though it was still short of vital units and equipment 4th Cavalry Brigade became 9th Armoured Brigade in fact motorised rather than armoured and was immediately detached to cross Iraq with Hazelforce and take part in the Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran 9th Armoured and 2nd Indian Brigades advanced to Shahabad in conjunction with other columns and on 28 August the pro Axis Persian government fell British and Soviet forces entered Teheran on 17 September and 9th Armoured Brigade returned to Palestine the following month 69 70 In March 1942 F Divisional Signals arrived from the UK having been detached from 11th Armoured Division It merged with the former cavalry divisional signals and became the larger part of 10th Armoured Divisional Signals while the Middlesex Yeomanry provided 9th Armoured Brigade Signal Squadron The former CO of 11th Armoured Divisional Signals Lt Col R H O Coryton took command and the CO of Cavalry Division Signals Lt Col the Hon Somerset Maxwell MP a pre war Middesex Yeomanry officer moved to take command of 7th Armoured Division Signals he was mortally wounded at Alamein later in the year 7 8 11 71 72 Calforce edit 10th Armoured Division remained in Palestine until the end of April 1942 when part of it moved up to Libya and was engaged in the confused Second Battle of Ruweisat Ridge El Mreir 21 22 July 7 57 73 74 9th Armoured Bde did not follow to Egypt until May and remained in the Nile Delta area as an independent brigade until August It was then sent up to join Calforce under the command of Brig Percy Calvert Jones of 12th Anti Aircraft Brigade who had gathered a heterogeneous collection of artillery units in a series of rearguard actions during Eighth Army s long retreat to the El Alamein position Eighth Army used Calforce as a blocking force and 9th Armoured Bde was attached to it from 26 August to 8 September 69 75 Alamein edit nbsp Inside an Armoured Command Vehicle in Action sketch by Anthony Gross Egypt 1942 As an independent formation 9th Armoured Bde was assigned to support the 2nd New Zealand Division in the Second Battle of El Alamein In the first phase Operation Lightfoot on 23 October the New Zealanders took most of their objectives but 9th Armoured ran into an undetected minefield and was held up At daybreak it was in the open and under fire During the Dog fight phase of the battle over succeeding days the New Zealand Division and 9th Armoured Bde were withdrawn into reserve and 9th Armoured was given priority for re equipment It went into action again in the second phase of the battle Operation Supercharge tasked with advancing beyond the New Zealanders first objective to smash through the deeper Axis defences It left its rest area near El Alamein station by 20 00 on 1 November and made a difficult approach march through darkness and dust and its delayed attack began just before dawn The brigade ran into heavy opposition and lost most of its tanks but tried to hold the ground taken so that 1st Armoured Division could pass through and continue the attack 69 76 77 After Alamein 9th Armoured Bde was sent off with 2nd New Zealand Division to pursue the beaten Axis forces though it was badly held up by road congestion and only managed 12 miles 19 km on the first day 4 November Two days later it was running short of fuel On 11 November while the New Zealanders continued their pursuit 9th Armoured Bde was withdrawn and returned to join 10th Armoured Division in the Delta By the beginning of 1943 it was back in Syria 73 69 78 10th Armoured Division was not required for the Sicilian or Italian campaigns where the terrain was not suitable for large armoured formations and divisional HQ and signals were finally disbanded on 15 June 1944 7 73 Its component brigades however continued as independent formations 9th Armoured Bde joined Ninth Army in May 1943 and remained with it Palestine and Syria until returning to Egypt in March 1944 On 30 April the brigade embarked and joined Eighth Army in Italy on 5 May 32 69 Italy edit The brigade was allotted to XIII Corps which in turn assigned it to 78th Infantry Division for the Battle of Lake Trasimeno beginning on 20 June While the fighting continued 10th Indian Infantry Division of X Corps took up the advance and 9th Armoured Bde was transferred to its command The brigade protected the corps right flank during the advance towards Florence then was switched to the left to support the success of 4th Indian Infantry Division For the next phase of the campaign Operation Olive to breach the Gothic Line 9th Armoured Bde was back with 10th Indian Division in X Corps Brigade HQ controlled two armoured car regiments patrolling the mountainous country 69 79 80 9th Armoured Bde HQ was then pulled out of the line for a new role commanding specialist armour for the future crossing of the River Po This included Duplex Drive amphibious tanks and armoured personnel carriers The brigade began training in October but the advance to the Po was delayed by the onset of winter The brigade took up normal duties in the line until February 1945 when it resumed specialist training The actual crossing in the final stages of the Spring offensive Operation Grapeshot began on 23 April and the German forces in Italy surrendered on 2 May 81 82 9th Armoured Bde Group was then selected for operations in the Far East The personnel were airlifted back to the UK from Italy in August but before they could reorganise and retrain the Surrender of Japan ended the war 69 2nd Armoured Divisional Signals edit nbsp 2nd Armoured Division formation sign as painted on vehicles The second line unit of the Middlesex Yeomanry joined 2nd Armoured Division HQ in Northern Command on 4 March 1940 When the Battle of France was lost and the British Expeditionary Force was being evacuated from Dunkirk without its equipment at the end of May the incomplete 2nd Armoured Division was the only armoured formation available to Home Forces It was moved into the area between Northampton and Newmarket to be ready to counter attack in the event of invasion 83 84 85 86 However even at the time of greatest invasion threat the British Government was prepared to send armoured units to reinforce Middle East Forces facing the Italians As the threat of invasion of the United Kingdom receded it became possible to spare more troops and equipment for the Middle East 2nd Armoured Division less 22nd Armoured Brigade was the first significant formation sent It embarked on 26 October 1940 and landed in Egypt on 1 January 1941 83 87 nbsp An AEC Armoured Command Vehicle in the desert The British offensive into Libya Operation Compass was already under way and part of the division was sent up into Cyrenaica in early February before it was really ready where it reinforced the near exhausted 7th Armoured Division in the final stages of the operation The rest of the division remained on the lines of communication There was now a pause in operations but even by the end of March the division was short of serviceable equipment On 31 March 2nd Armoured Division under the command of Maj Gen Michael Gambier Parry was holding the front when Gen Erwin Rommel opened the Axis counter offensive Operation Sonnenblume and began pushing it back It was taking almost two hours to transmit messages to Cyrenaica Command and the fighting became confused On 6 April Cyrenaica Command ordered 2nd Armoured Division HQ to withdraw but it is unlikely that the order ever got through though it was picked up by 3rd Armoured Brigade s HQ Divisional HQ and a collection of other units was caught by Rommel s forces at Mechili on 7 April Gambier Parry rejected two offers to surrender while his troops and HQ staff fought off attacks and some units broke out at dawn the following day but most of 2nd Armoured Division HQ and Signals became Prisoners of War 7 83 88 89 22nd Armoured Brigade Signals edit nbsp 22nd Armoured Brigade s formation sign North Africa and Italy edit 22nd Armoured Brigade and its signal squadron had been left in the UK while the rest of 2nd Armoured Division sailed to Egypt It finally arrived on 2 October long after 2nd Armoured Division had been captured The brigade served through the rest of the Western Desert Campaign under the command alternately of 1st and 7th Armoured Divisions seeing action at the Relief of Tobruk in November 1941 and the battles of Gazala Mersa Matruh First Alamein and Alam el Halfa From the Second Battle of El Alamein the brigade became a permanent part of 7th Armoured Division It served through the Tunisian Campaign at Medenine the Mareth Line Wadi Akarit Enfidaville and the capture of Tunis It then took part in the landings at Salerno on the Italian mainland the advance on Naples and the Volturno crossing before being withdrawn to the UK Equipment was transferred to 5th Canadian Armoured Division and the personnel sailed from Naples to Glasgow docking on 7 January 1944 7 8 90 91 nbsp A wireless operator in an Armoured Command Vehicle painting by Thomas Freeth 1942 Normandy edit By 1944 an armoured brigade signal squadron 4 Sqn of divisional signals was organised as Sqn HQ 2 officers and 23 other ranks ORs W Troop 1 officer and 51 ORs with brigade HQ V Trp 19 ORs with the motor battalion and X Y and Z Trps each of 15 ORs with the three armoured regiments 92 22nd Armoured Brigade was re equipped and trained in the area round Brandon Suffolk to take part in the Allied landings in Normandy Operation Overlord The brigade was to sail in assault landing craft and land on D Day and D 1 followed by the rest of 7th Armoured Division It embarked on Landing Craft Tank LCTs at Felixstowe on 4 June and landed successfully on Gold Beach during the morning of D 1 7 June 7 90 93 On 10 June 22nd Armoured Bde led the division s advance towards Villers Bocage but progress was slow through the restricted Bocage country and the brigade was badly beaten at the Battle of Villers Bocage on 13 June 94 95 In July the division was moved to the area north of Caen to take part in Operation Goodwood The armour crossed the River Orne on 18 July and attacked behind massive artillery and air bombardment but 7th Armoured was caught in traffic congestion and barely got into action 90 96 97 The division was shifted west again to take part in Operation Bluecoat 1 2 August but failed to gain its objective the commanders of 7th Armoured Division and 22nd Armoured Bde being sacked 90 98 99 The division came into its own after the breakout from the Normandy beachhead when it advanced rapidly across northern France and Belgium liberating towns as they went including Ghent on 5 September 100 101 Low Countries and Germany edit nbsp The Cromwell command tank with multiple wireless aerials of Brig Tony Wingfield commanding 22nd Armoured Bde 31 March 1945 The rest of September and October was spent in probing operations while 21st Army Group s emphasis shifted to Antwerp and Operation Market Garden where the division was called in to clear XXX Corps severed supply lines 22nd Armoured Bde cooperated with 51st Highland Division around s Hertogenbosch but much of the country was unsuitable for tanks It was not until 13 January 1945 that the division participated in a major attack Operation Blackcock towards Roermond The division then rested and prepared for the crossing of the Rhine Operation Plunder The infantry began their assault crossing on the night of 23 24 March followed by an airborne landing Operation Varsity next day By 27 March the Sappers had bridged the river and 7th Armoured began to cross At first progress was slow but on 29 March 22nd Armoured Bde fanned out leading the advance the division made 120 miles 190 km by 2 April only halted by the River Ems 11th Armoured Division having captured a bridge intact 22nd Armoured Bde resumed its advance now a pursuit Hamburg surrendered to 7th Armoured Division on 3 May and the German surrender at Luneburg Heath followed next day 90 102 103 Postwar edit nbsp Sign at the headquarters of 31 Middlesex Yeomanry and Princess Louise s Kensington Signal Squadron formerly 47 Middlesex Yeomanry Signal SquadronPostwar the unit initially reformed as 40 Signal Regiment RCS but when the TA was reconstituted in 1947 it formed 16th Airborne Divisional Signal Regiment Middlesex Yeomanry with RHQ at Uxbridge and four squadrons together with 22 Armoured Brigade Signal Troop in 56th London Armoured Division 5 7 8 32 104 105 When 16th Division was reduced to a single parachute brigade in 1956 the airborne part of the regiment was similarly reduced to No 3 Sqn as 44 Independent Parachute Brigade Signal Squadron while the rest took on general signal duties including a Phantom Signals element That year the unit s title was changed to Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Regiment becoming 40 Signal Regiment Middlesex Yeomanry in 1959 when 44 Parachute Brigade Squadron was renumbered 305 Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Squadron Parachute Brigade and the independent 32 Guards Brigade Signals became 301 Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Squadron Guards Brigade 22 Armoured Brigade Signals also became 303 Sqn 5 7 8 32 106 107 The TA was reduced in 1961 when the regiment amalgamated with 47 London Signal Regiment to form 47 Signal Regiment Middlesex Yeomanry with the Middlesex Yeomanry contributing RHQ 301 and 305 Sqns while 303 Sqn went to 57 Signal Regiment 5 7 106 The TA was further reduced in 1967 with the formation of the Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve TAVR The regiment was reduced squadron status as 47 Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Squadron in 31 City of London Signal Regiment with Sqn HQ at Harrow London 5 7 32 108 At the same time a separate Airhead Signal Unit was formed at Chelsea from 305 Sqn which was part of the Ever Ready TAVR Category I 55 Thames and Mersey Signal Squadron It later regained the 44 Parachute Brigade Signal Troop title 107 109 After the Front Line First defence study 47 Middlesex Yeomanry Sqn moved from 31 City of London to 39 Skinners Signal Regiment in 1995 and Sqn HQ moved back to Uxbridge 5 7 It moved again to 71 City of London Yeomanry Signal Regiment in 2006 32 10 47 MY Sqn was affiliated to the Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers in the City of London 110 The squadron amalgamated with 41 Princess Louise s Kensington Signal Squadron to form a new entity 31 Middlesex Yeomanry and Princess Louise s Kensington Signal Squadron in 2014 111 Uniforms and insignia editThe full dress uniform of the unit raised in 1830 comprised a green coatee with black facings and turnbacks brass shoulder scales for other ranks epaulettes for officers and gilt buttons inscribed U Y C The coatee was worn with dark blue overalls with scarlet welts soon afterwards replaced by double scarlet stripes white trousers were worn in summer until 1841 The headdress was a wide topped light dragoon shako with black plume and cap line and a brass Maltese cross with the Coat of arms of Middlesex in the centre The accoutrements were black sword belts carbine belts and pouches with scarlet and yellow girdles scarlet and gold for officers In 1856 the regiment wore a Yeomanry version of the Dragoon helmet with the 1855 pattern double breasted tunic 6 The regiment adopted a Hussar uniform in 1872 but with dark green substituted for the blue of the regular cavalry regiments of that designation the facings were black and dark blue overalls were on with double scarlet stripes gold stripes for officers The headdress was a Busby with a green bag and green over red plume Equipment was black and knee boots were worn when mounted all ranks had black lambskin saddle covers and officers chargers had green jowl plumes tipped with scarlet 19 6 11 112 113 The Middlesex Yeomanry disregarded War Office instructions to adopt silver braiding the traditional distinction of volunteer units and in a display of independence added additional gold braiding to their officers tunics 114 The group photograph above shows the range of uniforms worn during the 1890s with relatively plain service and ordinary duty dress the most commonly worn garments Khaki uniforms with Slouch hats were laid down for the Imperial Yeomanry after the Second Boer War but they were allowed coloured facings and plumes A form of full dress was reinstated in 1905 the Middlesex Yeomanry wearing blue jackets with the slouch hat and khaki drab breeches blue overalls with yellow gold stripes when mounted Slouch hats were replaced by service caps in 1907 see photo of Major Lafone above The old full dress was reinstated in 1910 but with the Busby bag changed to scarlet and the overall stripes to yellow for all ranks 11 19 115 116 The khaki service dress of the regular cavalry was adopted for training and ordinary duties about 1907 becoming the standard uniform worn on all occasions following the outbreak of the First World War 117 When the Middlesex Yeomanry converted to Royal Signals they retained their cap badge 1 19 and wore the brass Royal Corps of Signals shoulder title with Y above to indicate yeomanry 7 56 During the Second World War signals units would have worn the formation badge of their respective HQs as a shoulder flash Since the Second World War parachute signal units have worn a Drop Zone DZ flash in the RCS colours of white over blue 16 Airborne Signal Rgt Middlesex Yeomanry adopted a non standard DZ flash with yellow and green vertical stripes over which the red letters TA appeared the T on the green stripe 44 Parachute Brigade Signal Sqn and 305 Middlesex Yeomanry Parachute Signal Sqn wore the red numbers 44 or 305 on the white over blue DZ flash 118 47 Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Rgt 1961 67 wore the Middlesex Yeomanry cap and collar badges on battledress but Royal Signals collar badges on Service Dress or No 1 Dress The former red yellow green shoulder flash of the Middlesex Yeomanry was replaced by an eight pointed star derived from the divisional flash of the 47th 1 2nd London Division in the First World War The regiment had its own system of rank badges corporals and lance corporals both wore two chevrons with a crown above sergeants and lance sergeants wore three chevrons with a crown above staff sergeants and the Squadron Quartermaster Sergeant SQMS wore four chevrons and a crown 7 47 Middlesex Yeomanry Signal Sqn wear a lanyard of parachute cord in dull green and gold to remember their service as airborne signals The squadron collar badges and buttons are those of the Middlesex Yeomanry and the squadron has retained Middlesex Yeomanry Stable belts and Side caps Officers wear a woven wire Middlesex Yeomanry badge with the side cap The SQMS has the distinction of wearing four chevrons 7 Commanders editCommanding officers edit The following officers have commanded the regiment and its successors 8 11 Uxbridge Volunteer Cavalry Sir Christopher Baynes BtMiddlesex Yeomanry Capt later Lt Col Hubert de Burgh 5 January 1831 Lt Col Frederick Cox 3 August 1872 Lt Col William H Harfield 7 June 1880 Lt Col W H Mitford 23 April 1892 Lt Col F Heygate Lambert 28 October 1903 Lt Col W Duncan 28 April 19102nd Cavalry Divisional Signals Maj W D Marcuse TD 1920 Maj A L Brodrick 1921 Maj H D Roberts MC TD 23 February 1929 Lt Col G S Sale MC TD 1932 Maj L F Messel 19381st Cavalry Divisional Signals Lt Col L F Messel 1939 Lt Col Hon S A Maxwell MP 1941 422nd Armoured Divisional Signals Lt Col W P Doyle 1939 Lt Col B B Kennett MBE 1940 4116th Airborne Divisional Signals Lt Col Viscount Malden TD 1947 Lt Col N E Pease MBE TD 1950 Lt Col J J Collins MC TDHonorary Colonels edit The following officers have served as Honorary Colonel of the unit 5 11 Frederick Cox former CO appointed 23 March 1878 FM The Duke of Cambridge who had given his name to the regiment 10 years earlier appointed 6 January 1894 FM Earl Kitchener of Khartoum appointed 5 July 1910 Lt Col Lord Denman GCMG KCVO former officer in 11th Bn IY and Middlesex Imperial Yeomanry appointed 11 April 1923 Maj H D Roberts MC TD former CO appointed 6 April 1935 Brig B B Kennett CBE former CO Lt Col Reginald Capell Viscount Malden later 9th Earl of Essex TD former CO appointed 6 April 1957Honours edit nbsp Lt Col Oliver Watson depicted in the uniform of the King s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry Victoria Crosses edit Major Alexander Malins Lafone was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross VC for his actions at the Battle of el Buqqar Ridge see above 47 Major Oliver Cyril Spencer Watson had been a Regular Army officer seeing action on the North West Frontier and against the Boxer Rebellion After retiring from the army he joined the Middlesex Yeomanry in 1909 and saw action with the regiment at Gallipoli After returning to the UK he was attached to the 2 5th Battalion King s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry on the Western Front On 28 March 1918 he was commanding the battalion as an acting Lt Col when he won a posthumous VC leading a counter attack at Rossignol Wood north of Hebuterne France Watson has no known grave and is commemorated on the Arras Memorial his regiment listed as Middlesex Hussars 119 120 121 The Middlesex Yeomanry consequently lays claim to two of the three Victoria Crosses awarded to the Yeomanry as a whole Battle honours edit The Middlesex Yeomanry was awarded the following battle honours honours in bold were emblazoned on the regimental standard 5 11 26 Second Boer War South Africa 1900 01First World War Macedonia 1916 17 Suvla Scimitar Hill Gallipoli 1915 Egypt 1915 16 Gaza El Mughar Nebi Samwil Megiddo Sharon Damascus Palestine 1917 18Battle honours of Yeomanry regiments are held by their descendant units irrespective of their current arm or service even if they like the Royal Signals do not themselves display battle honours 122 Memorial editThe regiment s memorial designed by Basil Gotto is in the Nelson Chamber of the crypt of St Paul s Cathedral in the City of London Unveiled in 1906 the plaque commemorated the 55 members of the Middlesex Yeomanry s Imperial Yeomanry companies who were killed in action in the Second Boer war Subsequently flanking panels were added for the First World War and a panel underneath for the Second World War 123 The Church of St Martin within Ludgate is the Middlesex Yeomanry s Regimental Chapel it is the starting point for the regiment s annual Lafone Day service and parade up Ludgate Hill to St Paul s where a wreath is laid at the memorial in the crypt 124 See also edit nbsp United Kingdom portalCounty of London Yeomanry Imperial Yeomanry List of Yeomanry Regiments 1908 Yeomanry Yeomanry order of precedence British yeomanry during the First World War Second line yeomanry regiments of the British ArmyFootnotes edit Divisional signal units of the Royal Signals 1920 45 were battalion sized and commanded by a Major or Lieutenant Colonel they were not termed regiments until 1946 55 References edit a b Anon Regimental Badges No 63516 The London Gazette Supplement 2 November 2021 p 19472 Rogers p 145 Worcestershire Yeomanry Cavalry 1794 1994 Archived from the original on 15 August 2004 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s 1st County of London Yeomanry Middlesex Duke of Cambridge s Hussars at regiments org by T F Mills Archived from the original on 15 July 2007 Retrieved 2 May 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d Money Barnes pp 194 7 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Lord amp Watson pp 156 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l Nalder pp 594 5 Redford amp Riches 1818 p 149 a b c An introduction to the Middlesex Yeomanry PDF Royal Signals Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 4 November 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Army List various dates Dunlop pp 104 18 Money Barnes pp 242 5 Rogers p 228 Spiers p 239 IY at Regiments org IY Companies at Roll of Honour IY at Anglo Boer War a b c d e f g h Money Barnes pp 262 4 Amery 1909 Appendix to Chapters I XIV pp 503 14 Watt Dalbiac at Anglo Boer War Maurice p 139 Kruger pp 468 9 Pakenham pp 264 5 a b Leslie Stonham amp Freeman London Gazette 20 March 1908 Dunlop Chapter 14 Spiers Chapter 10 Barnes pp 272 4 a b c d e f g h i j 1st CoLY at Stepping Forward London Conrad Mark 1996 The British Army 1914 Becke Pt 2b p 6 Rinaldi 2008 p 35 a b c d e f g Becke Pt 2a pp 9 17 a b c d 2nd Mounted Division at Long Long Trail a b c d e f g h Baker Chris The 1st County of London Yeomanry The Long Long Trail Retrieved 6 April 2015 a b c d Westlake pp 265 6 North pp 182 5 Wakefield amp Moody pp 9 126 9 Appendix a b c Becke Pt 2a pp 31 4 Bullock p 62 a b Falls Vol II p 38 a b Massey p 29 a b Preston p 21 a b No 30433 The London Gazette Supplement 14 December 1917 p 13222 Bullock pp 73 6 80 1 91 5 Bullock pp 111 3 Appendices Bullock p 130 3 136 7 142 4 Lawrence pp 661 2 a b c Becke Pt 2a pp 19 26 a b c d James 1978 p 23 James 1978 p 36 Lord amp Watson p 21 a b TA 1927 a b Joslen p 33 Joslen p 132 Joslen p 189 Playfair Vol II pp 177 87 Smith pp 174 5 a b c H Stafford Northcote Revolt in the Desert in Purnell s History of the Second World War pp 540 9 Smith p 180 Playfair Vol II pp 187 97 H Stafford Northcote Desert Tragedy The Conquest of Vichy Syria in Purnell s History of the Second World War pp 550 60 Playfair Vol II pp 203 209 14 Smith pp 221 32 236 246 50 Badge formation 9th Armoured Brigade amp 9th Independent Armoured Brigade TA Imperial War Museum Retrieved 5 November 2017 a b c d e f g Joslen pp 162 3 Playfair Vol II pp 252 3 Nalder p 592 3 Burke s Farnham a b c Joslen pp 25 6 Playfair Vol III pp 249 281 353 7 Routledge pp 139 40 Joslen p 573 Playfair amp Molony Vol IV pp 7 9 37 8 46 57 64 7 Playfair amp Molony Vol IV pp 81 3 221 Molony Vol VI Pt I pp 13 243 Jackson Vol VI Pt II pp 5 23 39 42 46 7 76 7 145 8 225 6 Jackson Vol VI Pt II pp 234 298 Jackson Vol VI Pt III pp 209 222 Appendix 6 a b c Joslen p 16 Collier Chapter VII Collier Chapter VIII Collier Chapter XIV Playfair Vol I pp 190 244 7 Playfair Vol I pp 291 355 357 365 Playfair Vol II pp 2 7 19 30 a b c d e Joslen pp 168 9 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 4 20 Lord amp Watson p 263 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 21 3 27 31 Ellis Vol I pp 251 6 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 32 43 Ellis Vol I pp 335 43 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 46 8 Hunt pp 66 8 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 52 8 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 59 88 Ellis Vol II p 6 Lindsay amp Johnstone pp 89 158 Ellis Vol II pp 43 123 6 243 293 305 6 310 338 9 Lord amp Watson p 268 16 Airborne Division at Stepping Forward London a b Lord amp Watson pp 202 3 a b Lord amp Watson pp 308 9 Lord amp Watson p 282 Lord amp Watson pp 167 8 Livery Company affiliations at Stepping Forward London 31 Signal Squadron Ministry of Defence Retrieved 5 November 2017 Ryan 1957 Middlesex Yeomanry 1897 at Hugh Evelyn Prints Harris Plate 13 Ryan 1960 Smith R J December 1987 The Yeomanry Force at the 1911 Coronation p 19 ISBN 0 948251 26 3 Uniforms of the British Yeomanry Regiments Retrieved 19 January 2018 Lord amp Watson pp 309 10 No 30675 The London Gazette Supplement 7 May 1918 p 5555 No 31340 The London Gazette 15 May 1919 p 6085 Watson at CWGC Register Battle Honours at Stepping Forward London IWM War Memorial Register Ref 11723 St Martin s in the wider community Bibliography editL S Amery ed The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899 1902 London Sampson Low Marston 6 Vols 1900 09 Appendix to Chapters I XIV pp 503 14 Anon Regimental Badges and Service Caps London George Philip amp Sons 1941 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 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 A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 4 The Army Council GHQs Armies and Corps 1914 1918 London HM Stationery Office 1944 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 43 6 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 John K Dunlop The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen 1938 L F Ellis History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Victory in the West Vol I The Battle of Normandy London HM Stationery Office 1962 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 1 845740 58 0 L F Ellis History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Victory in the West Vol II The Defeat of Germany London HM Stationery Office 1968 Uckfield Naval amp Military 2004 ISBN 1 845740 59 9 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 R G Harris 50 Years of Yeomanry Uniforms London Frederick Muller 1972 James E A 1978 British Regiments 1914 18 London Samson Books Limited ISBN 0 906304 03 2 Eric Hunt Battleground Europe Normandy Mont Pincon Barnsley Leo Cooper 2003 ISBN 0 85052 944 1 William Jackson History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol VI Victory in the Mediterranean Part I June to October 1944 London HM Stationery Office 1987 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 71 8 William Jackson History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol VI Victory in the Mediterranean Part I I November 1944 to May 1945 London HM Stationery Office 1988 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 72 6 Joslen H F 2003 1960 Orders of Battle Second World War 1939 1945 Uckfield East Sussex Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 84342 474 1 Rayne Kruger Goodbye Dolly Gray London Cassell 1959 Pan 1974 ISBN 0 330 23861 2 T E Lawrence Seven Pillars of Wisdom London Jonathan Cape 1935 Penguin Modern Classics 1962 ISBN 0 14 001696 1 N B Leslie Battle Honours of the British and Indian Armies 1695 1914 London Leo Cooper 1970 ISBN 0 85052 004 5 Martin Lindsay and Capt M E Johnstone History of 7th Armoured Division June 1943 July 1945 British Army of the Rhine 1945 Cliff Lord amp Graham Watson Royal Corps of Signals Unit Histories of the Corps 1920 2001 and its Antecedents Solihull Helion 2003 ISBN 1 874622 92 2 W T Massey How Jerusalem Was Won Being the Record of Allenby s Campaign in Palestine London Constable 1919 J F Maurice The Campaign of 1882 in Egypt London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1887 London Stamp Exchange ca 1984 ISBN 0 948130 00 8 Mileham Patrick 1994 The Yeomanry Regiments 200 Years of Tradition Edinburgh Canongate Academic ISBN 1 898410 36 4 C J C Molony History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol VI Victory in the Mediterranean Part I 1 April to 4 June 1944 London HM Stationery Office 1987 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 70 X R Money Barnes The Soldiers of London London Seeley Service 1963 John North Gallipoli The Fading Vision London Faber amp Faber 1936 Thomas Pakenham The Boer War London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1979 abridged edition 1993 ISBN 0 297 83222 0 Maj Gen I S O Playfair History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol I The Early Successes against Italy to May 1941 London HM Stationery Office 1954 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 65 3 Maj Gen I S O Playfair History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol II The Germans come to the aid of their Ally 1941 London HM Stationery Office 1956 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 66 1 I S O Playfair History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol III September 1941 to September 1942 British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb London HM Stationery Office 1960 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 67 X I S O Playfair amp Brig C J C Molony History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol IV The Destruction of the Axis forces in Africa London HM Stationery Office 1966 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2004 ISBN 1 845740 68 8 R M P Preston The Desert Mounted Corps An Account of the Cavalry Operations in Palestine and Syria 1917 1918 London Constable 1921 Purnell s History of the Second World War London Purnell 1969 71 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 Redford George Riches Thomas 1818 The history of the ancient town and borough of Uxbridge containing copies of intereseting documents William Lake Rinaldi Richard A 2008 Order of Battle of the British Army 1914 Ravi Rikhye ISBN 978 0 97760728 0 H C B Rogers The Mounted Troops of the British Army 1066 1945 London Seeley Service 1959 Lt Col Ernest Ryan Arms Uniforms and Equipment of the Yeomanry Cavalry Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research September 1957 Vol 35 pp 124 33 Lt Col Ernest Ryan The Post South African War Yeomanry Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research June 1960 Vol 38 pp 57 62 Colin Smith England s Last War Against France Fighting Vichy 1940 1942 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2009 ISBN 978 0 297 85218 6 Edward M Spiers The Army and Society 1815 1914 London Longmans 1980 ISBN 0 582 48565 7 Stonham Charles amp Freeman Benson 1930 Historical Records of The Middlesex Yeomanry 1797 1927 Regimental Committee Duke of York s Headquarters London Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army London War Office 7 November 1927 Steve Watt The Imperial Yeomanry Part 1 1900 South African Military History Society Military History Journal Vol 13 No 6 December 2006 Alan Wakefield and Simon Moody Under the Devil s Eye Britain s Forgotten Army at Salonika 1915 1918 Stroud Sutton 2004 ISBN 0 7509 3537 5 Ray Westlake British Regiments at Gallipoli Barnsley Leo Cooper 1996 ISBN 0 85052 511 X External links editAnglo Boer War site Commonwealth War Graves Commission The Long Long Trail Imperial War Museum War Memorials Register Land Forces of Britain the Empire and Commonwealth Regiments org archive site Roll of Honour Stepping Forward A Tribute to the Volunteer Military Reservists and Supporting Auxiliaries of Greater London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middlesex Yeomanry amp oldid 1206357524 Postwar, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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