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Paget's Horse

The 19th (Paget's Horse) Battalion was a unit of the Imperial Yeomanry raised by George Paget as auxiliaries to the British Army during the Second Boer War. The men were mainly upper middle class and recruited from the gentlemen's clubs of London. The unit saw action at Faber's Put, Elands River, Lichtenburg, and numerous engagements on the lines of communication. The battalion was disbanded after the war.

Paget's Horse
19th (Paget's Horse) Battalion, Imperial Yeomanry
Active1900–1902
Country United Kingdom
Branch British Army
TypeYeomanry
RoleMounted infantry
Size4 Companies
Garrison/HQChelsea Barracks
Nickname(s)Piccadilly Heroes
Engagements

Recruitment edit

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 service companies each of approximately 121 officers and men enlisted for one year. Existing Yeomanry and fresh volunteers quickly filled the new force, which was equipped to operate as mounted infantry.[1][2]

Besides the companies raised directly by the Yeomanry Cavalry regiments, a number of battalions were formed by enthusiasts, including Paget's Horse, enlisted by George Paget the son of Lord Alfred Paget and grandson of Field Marshal Henry Page, the 1st Marquess of Anglesey. Paget recruited largely from upper middle class members of London gentlemen's clubs and professional men (Trooper Cosmo Rose-Innes, who wrote an account of the first months of the unit,[3] was a barrister at Gray's Inn). Paget's Horse was accepted as the 19th Battalion of the IY[2][4][5]

The unit was organised as follows:[6][7][8][9]

  • 51st (Paget's) Company
  • 52nd (Paget's) Company
  • 68th (Paget's) Company
  • 73rd (Paget's) Company

Paget himself was not a regular soldier, but had seen some service as a volunteer in the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) and the Anglo-Zulu War (1879–80). He served as the battalion's second-in-command with the temporary rank of major.[4][10][page needed][11]

Service edit

 
A typical Imperial Yeoman on campaign

The recruits did their basic training daily at Chelsea Barracks (many of the gentlemen arriving for morning drill by Hansom cab), their riding twice-weekly at Knightsbridge Barracks, and their musketry course at Bisley Ranges, all under Regular non-commissioned officers (NCOs) and a Colonial lieutenant attached to the unit.[12] The first three companies embarked at Southampton aboard the troopship SS Tagus on 16 March and disembarked at Cape Town on 4 April; the 73rd Company followed on the SS Delphic on 31 March, arriving on 24 April. The battalion was sent to Maitland Camp outside Cape Town where it awaited the arrival of its horses and carried out fatigues and further training. It was next sent to the base camp at Stellenbosch.[4][9][13]

The battalion then went up-country to join Lord Roberts' main army on the Orange River. It travelled by train to Belmont, where it continued field training.[14] At the end of April the battalion was assigned to Lieutenant-General Sir Charles Warren's column, which was ordered to suppress Boer rebels in Griqualand West and the Bechuanaland Protectorate. Warren arrived at the Orange River on 4 May and set about organising his column.[15][16]

Faber's Put edit

The IY part of the column, consisting of Pagets Horse, and the 23rd (Lancashire) and 24th (Westmorland and Cumberland) companies of the 8th Bn, were commanded by Charles Hay, the Earl of Erroll. Warren began his advance before all the troops had assembled, and entered Douglas on 21 May. Paget's Horse followed behind. The Boers were at Campbell, blocking the route up onto the Kaap Plateau. On 26 May Warren's column camped at Faber's Put, a farmstead a few miles south of Campbell where he prepared to assault the position. He ordered two companies of Paget's Horse up to cover Schmidt's Drift on the Vaal River by 30 May to prevent the Boers escaping northwestwards, while another detachment of 52nd Company under Lieutenant J.G.B. Lethbridge escorted the column's supply convoy up from Belmont; this arrived on 29 May. Warren had placed insufficient pickets and before dawn on 30 May a force of Boers surrounded the camp at Faber's Put, infiltrated into the garden and prepared to attack. Spotted by a Yeomanry sentry who fired on them, the Boers fired back and a furious firefight ensued, while the Boers stampeded the Yeomanry's horses and shot down gun crews. The 23rd and 24th IY Companies advanced to support their picket on the southern ridge and brought their two Colt machine guns into action. The small group of Paget's Horse protected the machine guns while the rest of the IY advanced by rushes over open ground towards the ridge and drove off the Boers. The Boer force rode off before the Yeomanry could recover their own horses. Lieutenant Lethbridge was among the casualties, his left forearm being shattered, and Trooper Mather was mentioned in despatches for bringing Lethbridge in under heavy fire. Following the action at Faber's Put Warren was able to clear Griqualand West without further trouble, the column entering Campbell and then Griquatown.[4][16][17] [18]

After the action Paget's Horse continued guarding Schmidt's Drift and escorting supply convoys from Kimberley for the column, which camped at Blickfontein. When Warren moved on, a detachment of Paget's Horse escorted the Royal Canadian Artillery's guns from Faber's Put to Schmidt's Drift. The concentrated battalion then marched from Schmidt's Drift to Kimberley for rest and refitting before entraining for Mafeking.[19]

Elands River edit

 
Imperial Yeomanry galloping over a plain during the Second Boer War.

Lord Roberts now decided that his isolated garrisons were a waste of manpower, and he ordered most of them to be evacuated. In early July Warren sent Erroll with a column, including Paget's Horse, to relieve Klerksdorp, but it had surrendered to the Boers on 25 July before he arrived. So he continued to Lichtenburg, taking away the garrison there. Paget's Horse marched through hostile territory from Mafeking to Lichtenburg, posting advance, flank and rear guards, and having daily brushes with small detachments of Boers. Erroll then marched through Ottoshoop to join Lt-Gen Sir Frederick Carrington at Zeerust on 2 August. Carrington's column had come down from Rhodesia to evacuate some of the isolated garrisons in Western Transvaal. Carrington marched the combined force towards the Elands River to cover the retirement of the garrison at Brakfontein. The column was hampered by long train of empty ox-wagons to bring away the supplies at Eland's River, and there was a running fight with the Boers.[16][20] [21] The action was described by Rose-Innes of Paget's Horse:[22]

'We galloped about from place to place the whole morning without firing a shot, although all round us our guns and pom-poms were throwing a continuous stream of shells, and we could hear the crack-cracking from the opposite kopjes. We were not, I think, under actual fire altogether for more than an hour, although the engagement itself lasted all day'

Lines of communication edit

After this inconclusive engagement, Carrington gave up the attempt to reach Brakfontein and returned to Mafeking. Paget's Horse had to fight a dismounted action to clear a Boer force blocking the road back, and Maj Paget was slightly wounded. Paget's Horse went back to its camp at Ottoshoop and spent the following weeks patrolling the road between Zeerust and Lichtenberg, fighting three separate engagements with parties of Boers. In one of these Paget's Horse had to saddle-up and gallop out of Ottoshoop to relieve a detachment of the Victorian Rifles pinned down on a kopje. On arrival they dismounted and fired volleys of suppressive fire at the Boers hidden on the opposing kopje, until the Boers withdrew.[23] A large detachment of Paget's Horse was sent by train to Vryburg to join a relief column for Schweizer-Reneke, which was being besieged by the Boers. The march was unopposed and the unit spent a few days patrolling the surrounding country, experiencing a few contacts with small parties of Boers. Paget's having returned to Vryburg, the Boers once again besieged Schweizer-Reneke. This time the unit had to escort a slow convoy of ox-carts, taking a week to cover 35 miles (56 km). This work was typical of the Guerrilla warfare that characterised the next two years of the war. After two such convoys, the detachment returned to the rest of the battalion at Mafeking.[24]

 
A yeoman standing by his horse in South Africa

Lichtenburg edit

In early 1901 a group of Paget's Horse formed part of the garrison of Lichtenburg under the command of Lt-Col C.G.C. Money of the Northumberland Fusiliers. The town contained a large quantity of supplies, but was isolated in hostile territory. At the beginning of March, with the nearest British columns 70–80 miles away, the garrison was attacked by Koos de la Rey. On the night of 2/3 March the Boers penetrated into the town, isolating the outlying pickets and bringing the inner defence line under fire. The defence was obstinate and firing continued until 17.30 on 3 March, all but one of the pickets having been able to hold out. De la Rey withdrew during the following night.[25]

Second and third contingents edit

By now the First Contingent of the Imperial Yeomanry had completed their contracted service. Although a few stayed in South Africa with their companies or transferred to other units in the theatre, most went home. They were replaced by raw recruits of the Second Contingent raised under a special Army Order of 17 January 1901. Unlike the original companies based on county Yeomanry regiments, these men were directly recruited into the IY and were drafted as required, but four named battalions (Paget's, the Roughriders, the Sharpshooters and the Duke of Cambridge's Own) were apparently permitted to continue recruiting.[26] The returning men of the first contingent of Paget's Horse paraded at Horse Guards on 26 July 1901 to receive their medals from Queen Alexandra.[27]

On 23 February 1902, 80 men of Paget's Horse were sent as part of an escort for a convoy from Wolmaransstad to Klerksdorp, 50 miles (80 km) away. Towards evening on 24 February the convoy camped and the men of Paget's Horse were allowed to ride on into Klerksdorp. They therefore avoided the following day's disaster when the convoy was ambushed by De la Rey and the escort overwhelmed and taken prisoner after a running battle.[28]

 
Richard Simkin's painting of an Imperial Yeoman

A Third Contingent for the IY was authorised at the end of 1901 and a number of new battalions went out fully trained. During 1902 the remaining companies still serving in South Africa were consolidated into a smaller number of battalions.[29] The 51st and 73rd (Paget's Horse) Companies transferred to the 12th Battalion.[6][7][8]

The war ended with the Treaty of Vereeniging on 31 May 1902, and the IY were progressively repatriated over the following months. Unlike the Roughriders and the Sharpshooters, which were perpetuated by the City of London Yeomanry (Rough Riders) and 3rd County of London Yeomanry (Sharpshooters) respectively, Paget's Horse was not continued as a permanent unit after the war.[8] [2]

Uniform and insignia edit

Paget's Horse wore the standard khaki foreign service uniform with a bandolier; IY units wore leather gaiters rather than puttees.[2] The headgear (initially the colonial pattern helmet, later the slouch hat) carried a dark grey–blue flash with the letters 'PH' embroidered in yellow, surmounted by a rosette in six alternating segments of blue-grey and yellow.[4][30] The letters 'PH' gave rise to the unit's nickname of the 'Piccadilly Heroes', but some wits chose to believe that they stood for 'Public House', 'Perfectly Harmless', or even 'Phat-head'.[31]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dunlop, pp. 104–12.
  2. ^ a b c d Money Barnes, pp. 242–5.
  3. ^ Rose-Innes.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Paget's Horse in the Boer War | Military Sun Helmets". Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  5. ^ Amery Vol III, p. 18.
  6. ^ a b Frederick, pp. 370–1.
  7. ^ a b "Anglo Boer War - Imperial Yeomanry". www.angloboerwar.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  8. ^ a b c . 26 December 2005. Archived from the original on 26 December 2005. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  9. ^ a b "Roll of Honour - Regiments - Boer War Imperial Yeomanry Battalions". www.roll-of-honour.com. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  10. ^ Burke's: 'Anglesey'.
  11. ^ "No. 27179". The London Gazette. 3 April 1900. p. 2196.
  12. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 3–16, 20–1, 44–6.
  13. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 27–33, 41–4, 47–54, 62–4.
  14. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 64–7.
  15. ^ Amery, Vol IV, Appendix to Chapters I-XIV, pp. 503–14.
  16. ^ a b c Amery, Vol IV, pp. 229–36.
  17. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 74–82, 89–90.
  18. ^ Warren's report of 29 June 1900, London Gazette 8 February 1901, pp. 906–9.
  19. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 86–9, 98–102, 107.
  20. ^ Amery, Vol IV, pp. 357–9.
  21. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 54, 107, 116, 124–36.
  22. ^ Rose-Innes, p. 118.
  23. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 119, 137–54.
  24. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 155–70.
  25. ^ Amery, Vol V, pp. 222–3.
  26. ^ Dunlop, pp. 112–7.
  27. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 68–9.
  28. ^ Amery, Vol V, pp. 497–500.
  29. ^ Dunlop, pp. 117–8.
  30. ^ V&A Museum photograph of Paget in uniform before departure for South Africa.
  31. ^ Rose-Innes, pp. 23–4.

References edit

  • Amery, L.S. (ed.), The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899-1902, London: Sampson Low, Marston 6 Vols 1900–09.
  • Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 100th Edn, London, 1953.
  • Dunlop, Col John K. (1938), The Development of the British Army 1899–1914, London: Methuen.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol I, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-007-3.
  • Maj R. Money Barnes, The Soldiers of London, London: Seeley Service, 1963.
  • Tpr Cosmo Rose-Innes, With Paget's Horse to the Front, London: John McQueen, 1901/Leopold Classic Library, 2015, ASIN: B019SZWY6K.
  • Anglo Boer War site
  • Militarysunhelmets.com
  • Roll of Honour

paget, horse, 19th, battalion, unit, imperial, yeomanry, raised, george, paget, auxiliaries, british, army, during, second, boer, were, mainly, upper, middle, class, recruited, from, gentlemen, clubs, london, unit, action, faber, elands, river, lichtenburg, nu. The 19th Paget s Horse Battalion was a unit of the Imperial Yeomanry raised by George Paget as auxiliaries to the British Army during the Second Boer War The men were mainly upper middle class and recruited from the gentlemen s clubs of London The unit saw action at Faber s Put Elands River Lichtenburg and numerous engagements on the lines of communication The battalion was disbanded after the war Paget s Horse19th Paget s Horse Battalion Imperial YeomanryActive1900 1902Country United KingdomBranchBritish ArmyTypeYeomanryRoleMounted infantrySize4 CompaniesGarrison HQChelsea BarracksNickname s Piccadilly HeroesEngagementsSecond Boer War Faber s Put Elands River Lichtenburg Contents 1 Recruitment 2 Service 2 1 Faber s Put 2 2 Elands River 2 3 Lines of communication 2 4 Lichtenburg 2 5 Second and third contingents 3 Uniform and insignia 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesRecruitment editFollowing 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 service companies each of approximately 121 officers and men enlisted for one year Existing Yeomanry and fresh volunteers quickly filled the new force which was equipped to operate as mounted infantry 1 2 Besides the companies raised directly by the Yeomanry Cavalry regiments a number of battalions were formed by enthusiasts including Paget s Horse enlisted by George Paget the son of Lord Alfred Paget and grandson of Field Marshal Henry Page the 1st Marquess of Anglesey Paget recruited largely from upper middle class members of London gentlemen s clubs and professional men Trooper Cosmo Rose Innes who wrote an account of the first months of the unit 3 was a barrister at Gray s Inn Paget s Horse was accepted as the 19th Battalion of the IY 2 4 5 The unit was organised as follows 6 7 8 9 51st Paget s Company 52nd Paget s Company 68th Paget s Company 73rd Paget s CompanyPaget himself was not a regular soldier but had seen some service as a volunteer in the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 and the Anglo Zulu War 1879 80 He served as the battalion s second in command with the temporary rank of major 4 10 page needed 11 Service edit nbsp A typical Imperial Yeoman on campaignThe recruits did their basic training daily at Chelsea Barracks many of the gentlemen arriving for morning drill by Hansom cab their riding twice weekly at Knightsbridge Barracks and their musketry course at Bisley Ranges all under Regular non commissioned officers NCOs and a Colonial lieutenant attached to the unit 12 The first three companies embarked at Southampton aboard the troopship SS Tagus on 16 March and disembarked at Cape Town on 4 April the 73rd Company followed on the SS Delphic on 31 March arriving on 24 April The battalion was sent to Maitland Camp outside Cape Town where it awaited the arrival of its horses and carried out fatigues and further training It was next sent to the base camp at Stellenbosch 4 9 13 The battalion then went up country to join Lord Roberts main army on the Orange River It travelled by train to Belmont where it continued field training 14 At the end of April the battalion was assigned to Lieutenant General Sir Charles Warren s column which was ordered to suppress Boer rebels in Griqualand West and the Bechuanaland Protectorate Warren arrived at the Orange River on 4 May and set about organising his column 15 16 Faber s Put edit The IY part of the column consisting of Pagets Horse and the 23rd Lancashire and 24th Westmorland and Cumberland companies of the 8th Bn were commanded by Charles Hay the Earl of Erroll Warren began his advance before all the troops had assembled and entered Douglas on 21 May Paget s Horse followed behind The Boers were at Campbell blocking the route up onto the Kaap Plateau On 26 May Warren s column camped at Faber s Put a farmstead a few miles south of Campbell where he prepared to assault the position He ordered two companies of Paget s Horse up to cover Schmidt s Drift on the Vaal River by 30 May to prevent the Boers escaping northwestwards while another detachment of 52nd Company under Lieutenant J G B Lethbridge escorted the column s supply convoy up from Belmont this arrived on 29 May Warren had placed insufficient pickets and before dawn on 30 May a force of Boers surrounded the camp at Faber s Put infiltrated into the garden and prepared to attack Spotted by a Yeomanry sentry who fired on them the Boers fired back and a furious firefight ensued while the Boers stampeded the Yeomanry s horses and shot down gun crews The 23rd and 24th IY Companies advanced to support their picket on the southern ridge and brought their two Colt machine guns into action The small group of Paget s Horse protected the machine guns while the rest of the IY advanced by rushes over open ground towards the ridge and drove off the Boers The Boer force rode off before the Yeomanry could recover their own horses Lieutenant Lethbridge was among the casualties his left forearm being shattered and Trooper Mather was mentioned in despatches for bringing Lethbridge in under heavy fire Following the action at Faber s Put Warren was able to clear Griqualand West without further trouble the column entering Campbell and then Griquatown 4 16 17 18 After the action Paget s Horse continued guarding Schmidt s Drift and escorting supply convoys from Kimberley for the column which camped at Blickfontein When Warren moved on a detachment of Paget s Horse escorted the Royal Canadian Artillery s guns from Faber s Put to Schmidt s Drift The concentrated battalion then marched from Schmidt s Drift to Kimberley for rest and refitting before entraining for Mafeking 19 Elands River edit nbsp Imperial Yeomanry galloping over a plain during the Second Boer War Lord Roberts now decided that his isolated garrisons were a waste of manpower and he ordered most of them to be evacuated In early July Warren sent Erroll with a column including Paget s Horse to relieve Klerksdorp but it had surrendered to the Boers on 25 July before he arrived So he continued to Lichtenburg taking away the garrison there Paget s Horse marched through hostile territory from Mafeking to Lichtenburg posting advance flank and rear guards and having daily brushes with small detachments of Boers Erroll then marched through Ottoshoop to join Lt Gen Sir Frederick Carrington at Zeerust on 2 August Carrington s column had come down from Rhodesia to evacuate some of the isolated garrisons in Western Transvaal Carrington marched the combined force towards the Elands River to cover the retirement of the garrison at Brakfontein The column was hampered by long train of empty ox wagons to bring away the supplies at Eland s River and there was a running fight with the Boers 16 20 21 The action was described by Rose Innes of Paget s Horse 22 We galloped about from place to place the whole morning without firing a shot although all round us our guns and pom poms were throwing a continuous stream of shells and we could hear the crack cracking from the opposite kopjes We were not I think under actual fire altogether for more than an hour although the engagement itself lasted all day Lines of communication edit After this inconclusive engagement Carrington gave up the attempt to reach Brakfontein and returned to Mafeking Paget s Horse had to fight a dismounted action to clear a Boer force blocking the road back and Maj Paget was slightly wounded Paget s Horse went back to its camp at Ottoshoop and spent the following weeks patrolling the road between Zeerust and Lichtenberg fighting three separate engagements with parties of Boers In one of these Paget s Horse had to saddle up and gallop out of Ottoshoop to relieve a detachment of the Victorian Rifles pinned down on a kopje On arrival they dismounted and fired volleys of suppressive fire at the Boers hidden on the opposing kopje until the Boers withdrew 23 A large detachment of Paget s Horse was sent by train to Vryburg to join a relief column for Schweizer Reneke which was being besieged by the Boers The march was unopposed and the unit spent a few days patrolling the surrounding country experiencing a few contacts with small parties of Boers Paget s having returned to Vryburg the Boers once again besieged Schweizer Reneke This time the unit had to escort a slow convoy of ox carts taking a week to cover 35 miles 56 km This work was typical of the Guerrilla warfare that characterised the next two years of the war After two such convoys the detachment returned to the rest of the battalion at Mafeking 24 nbsp A yeoman standing by his horse in South AfricaLichtenburg edit In early 1901 a group of Paget s Horse formed part of the garrison of Lichtenburg under the command of Lt Col C G C Money of the Northumberland Fusiliers The town contained a large quantity of supplies but was isolated in hostile territory At the beginning of March with the nearest British columns 70 80 miles away the garrison was attacked by Koos de la Rey On the night of 2 3 March the Boers penetrated into the town isolating the outlying pickets and bringing the inner defence line under fire The defence was obstinate and firing continued until 17 30 on 3 March all but one of the pickets having been able to hold out De la Rey withdrew during the following night 25 Second and third contingents edit By now the First Contingent of the Imperial Yeomanry had completed their contracted service Although a few stayed in South Africa with their companies or transferred to other units in the theatre most went home They were replaced by raw recruits of the Second Contingent raised under a special Army Order of 17 January 1901 Unlike the original companies based on county Yeomanry regiments these men were directly recruited into the IY and were drafted as required but four named battalions Paget s the Roughriders the Sharpshooters and the Duke of Cambridge s Own were apparently permitted to continue recruiting 26 The returning men of the first contingent of Paget s Horse paraded at Horse Guards on 26 July 1901 to receive their medals from Queen Alexandra 27 On 23 February 1902 80 men of Paget s Horse were sent as part of an escort for a convoy from Wolmaransstad to Klerksdorp 50 miles 80 km away Towards evening on 24 February the convoy camped and the men of Paget s Horse were allowed to ride on into Klerksdorp They therefore avoided the following day s disaster when the convoy was ambushed by De la Rey and the escort overwhelmed and taken prisoner after a running battle 28 nbsp Richard Simkin s painting of an Imperial YeomanA Third Contingent for the IY was authorised at the end of 1901 and a number of new battalions went out fully trained During 1902 the remaining companies still serving in South Africa were consolidated into a smaller number of battalions 29 The 51st and 73rd Paget s Horse Companies transferred to the 12th Battalion 6 7 8 The war ended with the Treaty of Vereeniging on 31 May 1902 and the IY were progressively repatriated over the following months Unlike the Roughriders and the Sharpshooters which were perpetuated by the City of London Yeomanry Rough Riders and 3rd County of London Yeomanry Sharpshooters respectively Paget s Horse was not continued as a permanent unit after the war 8 2 Uniform and insignia editPaget s Horse wore the standard khaki foreign service uniform with a bandolier IY units wore leather gaiters rather than puttees 2 The headgear initially the colonial pattern helmet later the slouch hat carried a dark grey blue flash with the letters PH embroidered in yellow surmounted by a rosette in six alternating segments of blue grey and yellow 4 30 The letters PH gave rise to the unit s nickname of the Piccadilly Heroes but some wits chose to believe that they stood for Public House Perfectly Harmless or even Phat head 31 See also editList of Imperial Yeomanry units of the Second Boer WarNotes edit Dunlop pp 104 12 a b c d Money Barnes pp 242 5 Rose Innes a b c d e Paget s Horse in the Boer War Military Sun Helmets Retrieved 7 March 2022 Amery Vol III p 18 a b Frederick pp 370 1 a b Anglo Boer War Imperial Yeomanry www angloboerwar com Retrieved 7 March 2022 a b c Imperial Yeomanry UK 26 December 2005 Archived from the original on 26 December 2005 Retrieved 7 March 2022 a b Roll of Honour Regiments Boer War Imperial Yeomanry Battalions www roll of honour com Retrieved 7 March 2022 Burke s Anglesey No 27179 The London Gazette 3 April 1900 p 2196 Rose Innes pp 3 16 20 1 44 6 Rose Innes pp 27 33 41 4 47 54 62 4 Rose Innes pp 64 7 Amery Vol IV Appendix to Chapters I XIV pp 503 14 a b c Amery Vol IV pp 229 36 Rose Innes pp 74 82 89 90 Warren s report of 29 June 1900 London Gazette 8 February 1901 pp 906 9 Rose Innes pp 86 9 98 102 107 Amery Vol IV pp 357 9 Rose Innes pp 54 107 116 124 36 Rose Innes p 118 Rose Innes pp 119 137 54 Rose Innes pp 155 70 Amery Vol V pp 222 3 Dunlop pp 112 7 Rose Innes pp 68 9 Amery Vol V pp 497 500 Dunlop pp 117 8 V amp A Museum photograph of Paget in uniform before departure for South Africa Rose Innes pp 23 4 References editAmery L S ed The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899 1902 London Sampson Low Marston 6 Vols 1900 09 Burke s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage 100th Edn London 1953 Dunlop Col John K 1938 The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol I Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 007 3 Maj R Money Barnes The Soldiers of London London Seeley Service 1963 Tpr Cosmo Rose Innes With Paget s Horse to the Front London John McQueen 1901 Leopold Classic Library 2015 ASIN B019SZWY6K Anglo Boer War site Militarysunhelmets com T F Mills Land Forces of Britain the Empire and Commonwealth Regiments org archive site Roll of Honour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paget 27s Horse amp oldid 1172043312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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