fbpx
Wikipedia

4th Horse (Hodson's Horse)

4th Horse (Hodson's Horse) is a part of the Armoured Corps of the Indian Army, which had its beginnings as an irregular cavalry regiment during the time of the Indian Rebellion of 1857.

4th Horse (Hodson's Horse)
Active1857 – present
Country British India
 India
Branch British Indian Army
Indian Army
TypeCavalry
SizeRegiment
Nickname(s)The Flamingoes
Motto(s)तैयार बार तैयार
Tyar Bar Tyar (Always and ever ready)
AnniversariesRaising Day, 30 November 1857
Cambrai Day
Basantar Day
Battle honoursDelhi, 1857
Lucknow
Abyssinia
Afghanistan, 1878-80
Suakin, 1885
Chitral
Punjab Frontier
World War I
Givenchy, 1914
Somme, 1916
Bazentin
Flers-Courcelette
Cambrai, 1917
France and Flanders, 1914–18
Megiddo
Sharon
Damascus
Palestine, 1918
Khan Baghdadi
Mesopotamia, 1916–18
Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
Phillora
Punjab 1965
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971
Basantar River
Punjab 1971
Commanders
Colonel of
the Regiment
Lt Gen AS Bhinder, VSM[1]
Insignia
Abbreviation4 H
British and Native Officers of Hodson's Horse, 1858 (Photograph by Felix Beato)[nb 1]
Afghan Sikh Officers of Hodson's Horse during the Indian Rebellion, 1858

Formation edit

The regiment was raised during the turbulent times of the Indian Rebellion of 1857. During the siege of Delhi, on 19 May 1857, an order was issued by the Commander-in-Chief, Major General George Anson to appoint Lieutenant (later Brevet Major) William Stephen Raikes Hodson as the Commandant of a corps of Irregular Horse, which he was directed to raise, while at Kurnaul.

Hodson sought assistance from Robert Montgomery, Judicial Commissioner of the Punjab. Montgomery asked two Sirdars to raise a rissalah (troop) each, and he raised one himself. The three rissalahs left for Delhi on 23 June 1857 under the command of Man Singh, who was Risaldar-Major of the 1st Regiment from 1866 to 1877. Mr Montgomery sent two more rissalahs on 9 July 1857. The troops were mainly from the Lahore and Amritsar districts of the Punjab.[3][4][5]

History edit

Indian Rebellion of 1857

The rissalahs sent to Delhi saw their first action on 14 and 18 July 1857 in the Delhi suburb of Sabzi Mandi. The regiment then fought against the rebels on 17 and 18 August at Khurkowdeh and Rohtak.[3]

 
Capture of the Mughal Emperor of Delhi by Captain Hodson (Hand coloured steel engraving from Charles Ball's The History of the Indian Mutiny)

Following the siege of Delhi, on 20 September 1857, Hodson took 50 men from the regiment, rode to Humayun's Tomb, and captured the Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar. Hodson returned there the next day and captured the Mughal princes, Bahadur Shah Zafar's sons Mirza Mughal and Mirza Khizr Sultan, and grandson Mirza Abu Bakht.[6] While escorting the princes, Hodson's force was threatened by a large hostile crowd. Rather than let the princes escape, Hodson shot them at the Khooni Darwaza, near the Delhi Gate.[3][7][8]

A detachment from Hodson's Horse was sent out on 27 September 1857 to pursue rebels heading for Rohilkhand. The regiment also saw action against the rebels near Agra on 10 October 1857, in Cawnpore, at Alambagh on 12 November 1857, the Siege of Lucknow, against the Gwalior rebels under Tantia Tope, at Gangiri in Aligarh district on 7 December 1857, at the battle at Patiyali, and at Mainpuri. On 25 January 1858, Hodson with 200 of his men and three other British officers were part of a column commanded by Brigadier Adrian Hope against an army of 5,000 rebels encamped at Shamshabad. In the fierce battle, Lieutenant CTM McDowell was killed and Hodson and Lieutenant Charles Gough were badly wounded.[9]

Lieutenant Hugh Henry Gough was awarded the Victoria Cross for his bravery at Alambagh on 12 November 1857 and at Jellalabad, Lucknow on 25 February 1858. A detachment of the regiment was sent with Colonel Hope Grant’s column from Kanpur to protect the road to Lucknow. They laid siege to a town called Mianganj and cleared the enemy, but lost an Indian officer, Naib-Risaldar Hukm Singh. On 25 February 1858, 374 men of Hodson's Horse were part of a cavalry force at Alambagh led by Colonel Campbell of the Queen's Bays. They were under the command of Lieutenant General Sir James Outram against Begum Hazrat Mahal, the Begum of Oudh (Awadh). This was one of the first occasions where the Hodson's Horse saw fierce action as a complete regiment.[3][10]

While the regiment remained at Alamagh, Hodson went alone to Lucknow for a meeting with Sir Colin Campbell. Following lunch with him, he joined Brigadier-General Robert Napier who was inspecting a breach in the wall. They became separated and he went to look around the palace with a Captain Taylor. The enemy had been cleared from most parts of the city, but areas remained where rebels were hidden. The two men had a look inside one dark room. which turned out to contain rebels. One of them shot Hodson in the chest. He was conscious, but became weaker and died around 1.30 am that night. He was buried on the evening of 12 March 1858 in the grounds of La Martiniere School in Lucknow.[3][11]

Following Hodson's death, command of the regiment was given to Henry Daly of the Guides Cavalry. Daly played a major role in reorganising the regiment: more troops were recruited, including Pathans, muster rolls were created, and accounts were organised. The regiment was reorganized into three regiments: 1st and 2nd Regiment of Hodson's Horse on 26 August 1858, and 3rd Regiment on 9 September 1858. 3rd Regiment was disbanded on 5 January 1860.

On 13 June 1858, the regiment was involved in a fierce battle at Nawabganj under Hope Grant. The regiment lost 3 men and 24 were wounded.[3][12][13]

The regiments of Hodson's Horse were involved in multiple smaller conflicts to suppress the mutiny – in Daudpur on 20 October 1858 against the Nasirabad brigade; at Dholpur on 27 October 1858; at Gonda on 25 November 1858 where they routed a large force led by the Rajah of Gonda; at Basantpur on 23 December 1858; at Jarwa Pass on 31 March 1859 and at Lalpur in May 1859.[14]

Name changes edit

The two regiments of the Hodson's horse went through various changes in their designation before amalgamating into a single unit.[15][16][17]

1st Regiment
  • 1857 Hodson's Horse
  • 1858 1st Regiment of Hodson's Horse
  • 1861 9th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry
  • 1886 9th Regiment of Bengal Lancers
  • 1901 9th Bengal Lancers (Hodson's Horse)
  • 1903 9th Hodson's Horse
  • 1921 Amalgamated with the 10th Hodson's Horse to form 9th/10th Hodson's Horse
  • 1922 4th Duke of Cambridge's Own Hodson's Horse
  • 1927 Hodson's Horse (4th Duke of Cambridge's Own)
  • 1947 Post-Partition (To India) - Hodson's Horse
  • 1966 4th Horse
2nd Regiment
  • 1857 Hodson's Horse
  • 1858 2nd Regiment of Hodson's Horse
  • 1861 10th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry
  • 1864 10th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry (Lancers)
  • 1874 10th Regiment of Bengal Lancers
  • 1878 10th Bengal (Duke of Cambridge's Own) Lancers
  • 1901 10th (Duke of Cambridge's Own) Bengal Lancers (Hodson's Horse)
  • 1903 10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse)
  • 1921 Amalgamated with the 9th Hodson's Horse to form 9th/10th Hodson's Horse

Pre World War edit

The 9th Bengal Cavalry was stationed at Faizabad, when on 8 April 1862, they were sent to Bhutan with the three squadrons were sent to different places - one squadron with the headquarters went to Jalpaigori, the second to Barhampur, and the third to Raniganj. The regiment returned to Benares in April 1863. The regiment moved on to Cawnpore on 29 April 1863, then to Peshawar from January 1864 till November 1866. The regiment then spent four years at Mian Mir and in 1868, were part of a punitive expedition to the Black mountains in Hazara, but they saw no action. They spent another four years at Deoli, with a detachment at Jhansi, then moved to Meerut on 8 March 1878.[14]

 
Indian Officers of the 9th Bengal Cavalry - Suakin Field Force, 1885

In 1871, the 10th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry fought in Abyssinia. A squadron of the 10th went to Malta with the 9th regiment in 1878 while the rest of the regiment went to Afghanistan.[18] The 9th travelled from Meerut to Bombay by train in April 1878. They were brought up to strength with a squadron from the 10th Bengal Cavalry, making them around 550 men. From Bombay, they embarked for Malta via Aden and Suez. They disembarked at Malta on 6 June 1878 and pitched camp at San Antonio. The 9th/10th were brigaded with the 1st Bombay Cavalry. Whilst in Malta, the force was inspected by the Duke of Cambridge, who bestowed his title on the 10th Bengal Cavalry, which was represented by one squadron. The eventual destination of the forces stationed in Malta was Cyprus, which had been ceded to Britain by Turkey in exchange for their support against Russia. But a day or so before departure for Cyprus, the regiment was prevented from embarking with the rest of the army, because 48 men were poisoned. Three men died in agony and the rest were permanently disabled. As a result, the regiment stayed in Malta until October, when they sailed back to Bombay.[14][4]

In February 1885, the 9th was ordered to convert to lancers and move off to join the British Army in Sudan. The regiment moved from Wazirabad to Kanpur, where they received lances and related equipment and reached Suakin in March 1885 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel AP Palmer.[19] It saw action in Hashin, Tofrek, Tamai and T'Hakul. The regiment less one squadron left Sudan in June 1885 for Bombay, from where they travelled to Ambala. The 3rd squadron was required to stay in Suakin until 20 November 1885. The 9th stayed at Ambala until 1888, moved to Nowshera until 1891 – where it was part of the Buner Field Force to ensure the pacification of the Bunerwals. The regiment moved to Peshawar and took part in the durbar and review at Lahore for the Viceroy, Lord Elgin in November 1894. Following this, at Muridki, on the night of 20 December 1894, Daffadar Kartar Singh, bearing a grudge through loss of promotion, shot two officers, Risaldar Kesar Singh and the Commanding Officer, Colonel Ernle Money. He was overpowered, court martialled and publicly hanged on 31 January 1895. Two Sikh officers, who had encouraged the Daffadar were tried in a civil court and sentenced to life.[14]

The 9th were part of the Chitral Relief Force in April 1895 and received the battle honour 'Chitral'. They moved to Rawalpindi in May 1895. Following the re-organisation of 1895, the regiment retained their name and came under Punjab Command. On 10 August 1897, the regiment was ordered to proceed by train from Rawalpindi to Peshawar and became part of the ‘Peshawar column’ of the Tirah Expeditionary Force.[14] Many men and a large number of horses were sent for remount duties to South Africa and many British officers for active service for the Second Boer War. Hodson's Horse was the first Indian regiment to appear and win medals at the Royal Tournament in 1902.[4] The 9th regiment took part in the Rawalpindi Parade on 8 December 1905 to honour the Prince and Princess of Wales.[20]

World War I edit

 
A troop of Hodson's Horse during the First World War

On 31 August 1914, 9th Hodson's Horse, located at Ambala, got the orders to prepare to move as part of the 3rd (Ambala) Cavalry Brigade for war in France. Its convoy reached Marseille on 7 November, moved to Orléans, where it was trained with British soldiers for trench warfare for 10 days.[15] It became part of the 1st Indian Cavalry Division (till it joined the 2nd Indian Cavalry Division on 15 September 1915).[21] On 21 December, Hodson's Horse was inducted to La Bassée, where it fought in the trenches full of water and dirt. Thereafter, it moved near Norrent-Fontes for training with the division followed by another phase of trench battle in very adverse weather for which it was awarded the battle honour "Givenchy". In June 1916, it fought protracted actions earning more battle honours – Somme, Bazentin and Flers – Courcelette.[22]

 
Men of the 9th Hodson's Horse, practising a charge with the lance near Querrieu, September 1916.

It was in Cambrai towards the end of November and early December, 1917, that the Regiment fought its toughest action. It came under heavy fire with the forward most troops facing the brunt of it. The heavy toll of fatal casualties included two brave officers, Majors A.I. Fraser and F.S.T. Atkinson.[23] It was in this battle that the Regimental Medical Officer, Captain Som Dutt, MC, treated an enemy German officer, who was so overcome that he took off his Iron Cross and presented it to him. The battle honour Cambrai awarded to the Regiment, became an important one celebrated every year on 30 November. The regiment was also awarded the theatre honour France and Flanders.[22][15][4]

In March 1918, the 2nd Indian Cavalry Division was broken up in France. The Canadian and British units remained in France and the Indian elements were sent to Egypt. The regiment briefly served as part of the 5th Mounted Brigade, Australian Mounted Division before it became part of the 13th Cavalry Brigade of the 5th Cavalry Division, where they saw service in General Edmund Allenby's final campaign against the Turks and Germans. They marched from Nazareth to Damascus, where Risaldar Nur Ahmed of Hodson's Horse made hundreds of Turks surrender to him.[22][15] On 18 September the Division moved to El Jelil and next day early morning attacked the front line and right flank and captured lt. Thus, Infantry got its safe lane for further advance. At 0600 hours, 9th Hodson's Horse reached Nahr El Falik. ‘C’ and ‘D’ Squadrons of the Regiment captured 70 prisoners, guns and other war material while crossing Nahr El Falik and Murkhalid.[22]

 
Forward scouts of the 9th Hodson's Horse, pause to consult a map, near Vraignes, France, April 1917

On 30 September, in an action where 9th Hodson's Horse was leading, Major MD Vigors commanding ‘D’ Squadron got an input of 70 Turkish soldiers advancing to Kiswe. In a number of more actions that ensued, not only those 70 but a total of 900 Turkish soldiers with a lot of arms and equipment were captured. Turkish Army had lost most of its soldiers, but Gen Allenby decided to finish the rest of the Turkish Army. Around Aleppo, there were about 20,000 Germans and Turkish soldiers, of which 8000 had already lost hope. On 20 March the Division advanced towards Aleppo. On 26 October, 9 Hodson's Horse was inducted into Aleppo and by 31 October the Turkish Army surrendered. In these 38 days, the Regiment covered a total of 567 miles and made a major contribution to the Division's tally of 1100 prisoners of war and 58 canons. The battle honours awarded to 9th Hodson's Horse in the Middle Eastern theatre were Megiddo, Palestine, Sharon, Damascus, Khan-Baghdadi and Mesopotamia.[22] The regiment continued to stay in the Middle East after the war and returned to India in December 1920.[15] The regiment's overseas tenure of five years was the longest for a cavalry regiment in the British Indian Army.[citation needed]

The 10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse) was stationed at Loralai in Balochistan under the 4th (Quetta) Division, when the First World War broke out in August 1914. It had arrived from Jullundur on 18 November 1912 and had detachments at Gumbaz, Maratangi, Murgha and Musa Khel. While the regiment did not proceed overseas until 1916, the Regiment supplied drafts of officers and men to other cavalry regiments. Over 350 officers and men of the Regiment were sent abroad, before the 10th Lancers received orders to mobilize for service in Mesopotamia in August 1916, the first two squadrons arriving in September and the other two squadrons and headquarters in October 1916. The 10th Lancers initially served as part of the Tigris Defences, guarding the lines of communication between Amara and Sheikh Sa’ad. From 1 January to 3 March 1917 a squadron of the regiment formed part of III (Tigris) Corps Cavalry Regiment in the advance to Capture Baghdad.[24][25] The Regiment spent the next three years serving in Mesopotamia, but it would be during the Iraqi revolt of 1920, that the 10th Lancers suffered its heaviest casualties. On 3 September 1920, an armoured train at Samawa which was guarded by ‘D’ Squadron was overwhelmed and the 10th Lancers lost 28 men. The Regiment left Mesopotamia on 30 October 1920 and returned to India.[16][4]

 
9th Hodson's Horse (Bengal Lancers), near Vraignes, April 1917

The two regiments won the following gallantry awards during the Great War – [26]

  • Distinguished Service Order : Major Arthur Ion Fraser[27]
  • Military Cross : Jemadar Hasan Shah, Risaldar Nur Ahmad Khan (9th Hodson Horse), Ressaidar Laurasib Khan (10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse))
  • Order of British India : Risaldar Major Malik Khan, Risaldar Muhammad Akram Khan, Risaldar Jai Ram, Risaldar Ram Singh (9th Hodson Horse),Risaldar Ajab Khan (9th Hodson Horse), Risaldar Nur Khan (10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse))
  • Indian Order of Merit : Sowar Abdullah Khan, Dafadar Hakim Singh, Ressaidar Nur Ahmad Khan, Ressaidar Nur Ahmad Khan, IOM, Lance Daffadar Muhammad Azam, Jemadar Sardar Khan, Risaldar Dost Muhammed, Jemadar Nawab Ali Khan (9th Hodson Horse), Sowar Hayat Muhammad, Dafadar Sarfaraz Khan, Sowar Mansa Ram (10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse))
  • Indian Distinguished Service Medal : 9th Hodson Horse – 25 medals, 10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse) – 13 medals.
  • Indian Meritorious Service Medal : 9th Hodson Horse – 38 medals, 10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse) – 12 medals.
  • Croix de guerre (Belgium) : Dafadar Nawab Ali Khan, Lance Dafadar Sorain Singh (9th Hodson Horse)
  • Order of the Nile, 4th Class : Ressaidar Hasan Singh (9th Hodson Horse)
 
9th Hodson's Horse in Damascus, 2 October 1918

World War II edit

In 1921, the British decided to cut down on the number of cavalry regiments, and re-amalgamated the two as the 10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse). At the time of the war, the regiment was part of the 2nd Indian Armoured Brigade, which was later designated as the 252nd Indian Armoured Brigade.[28] The brigade was under 31st Indian Armoured Division and served in the Middle East in Iraq and Palestine. It received the M3 Stuart light tanks in November 1942.[29][30] Major General FW Messervy of the regiment was awarded a Companion of the Order of the Bath, a Distinguished Service Order and a mention, while Major MR Smeeton was awarded a Military Cross.[31][32]

Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 edit

 
Officers and Jawans of 4 Horse standing on a destroyed Pakistani tank during the 1965 Indo-Pak War

In the 1965 war, Hodson's Horse was equipped with the Centurion tanks.[33] It was part of the divisional reserve of the 1st Armoured Division, tasked for the massive attack at the Phillora sector against the Pakistani 6th Armoured Division.[34] From Rurki Kalan, two regiments (4 Horse and 17 Horse) were to open out and encircle Phillora by a pincer movement from both flanks, while 16th Light Cavalry was to provide flank protection from the right.[35] 43rd Lorried Brigade was tasked to capture Phillora. This armada of tanks destroyed the maximum number of enemy tanks (most of which were newly acquired and technologically superior Patton tanks) and recoilless guns.[36][37]

The Commandant, Lieutenant Colonel (later Brigadier) MMS Bakshi's tank got detached from the main body of the regiment owing to moving through the tall sugarcane crops. Reaching a stretch of open ground, he spotted four Pakistan's army Patton tanks. Immediately, he gave out fire orders for engaging them. Three of the Pattons were hit by his gunner one after another and it was only then that the fourth Patton had homed on to his tank. Both tanks fired simultaneously at each other and both were hit. With his tank catching fire, he ordered the crew to bail out. With him apart from the gunner and driver of the tank was his regimental signal cum intelligence officer, Lieutenant (later Brigadier) Ravi Malhotra, who was performing the duties of the radio operator-cum–loader. Having bailed out, they came under small arms fire from the Pakistani crew of the four destroyed Pattons, who had all bailed out too. Bakshi then fired back at them with his revolver and ordered his crew to get into the sugarcane crop, through which they moved on foot and after some time they were fortunate to be picked up by a squadron of the Poona Horse and eventually joined up with their own regiment.[38][39]

The regiment won the following gallantry awards –

Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 edit

In the 1971 war, the regiment, equipped with Centurion tanks was part of the 54th Infantry Division,[47] commanded by Lieutenant Colonel (later Lieutenant General) Raj Mohan Vohra in the Shakargarh sector of the western front. His regiment spearheaded the advance capturing in its wake several Pakistan Army positions in villages namely Bhairo Nath, Thakurdwara, Bari Lagwal, Chamrola, Darman, Chakra and Dehlra and took in the famous Battle of Basantar.[48][49]

The regiment won the following gallantry awards –

  • Maha Vir Chakra : Lieutenant Colonel RM Vohra[50]
  • Vir Chakra : Major Kamal Nanda, Major Suraj Jit Chaudhari, Major Govind Singh[51]
  • 8 mentioned in despatches[52]
  • The regiment was awarded the Battle Honour ‘Basantar River’ and Theatre Honour ‘Punjab 1971’.[53]

Other achievements edit

  • The regiment was awarded with the 'Guidon' on 4 March 1976, at Pathankot, Punjab.
  • Dafadar Harbhajan Singh was awarded the Shaurya Chakra posthumously in 2006 for his act of gallantry in Jammu and Kashmir, while serving with 8 Rashtriya Rifles.[54]
  • The regiment has produced sportsmen of international repute like Pardumman Singh and Karnail Singh, who have represented India in the Olympics, Asian and Commonwealth Games.[55]

Regimental insignia edit

The regimental badge consists of crossed lances with pennants; the Lions of Ashoka above the cross-over point and a scroll across the bottom with embossed inscription: HODSON'S HORSE.[56] Prior to independence, the badge had a crown instead of the lion capital. The shoulder title is ‘4H’ in brass.

Regimental Composition edit

4 Horse celebrating the 56th anniversary of Battle of Phillora, 21 September 2021.
 
 
  • In the time immediately after the mutiny, the 1st Regiment consisted of one squadron of Sikhs, one squadron of Punjabi Musalmans, one troop of Pathans and border tribesmen, and one troop of Dogras.
  • In 1886, the class constitution was changed a little and an extra squadron was added, making 4 squadrons consisting of two troops each as follows: Sikhs – 3 troops, Dogras – 1 troop, Punjabi Muslims – 1 troop, Punjabi Musalmans – 2 troops, Pathans – 1 troop and Hazaras – 1 troop.[14]
  • Prior to amalgamation, the 9th Horse had a composition of 1 ¼ squadron of Sikhs, 1 ¼ squadron of Dogras, 1 ¼ squadron of Punjabi Musalmans and ½ squadron of Pathans; whereas the 10th Horse had 1 ¼ squadron of Sikhs, 1 squadron of Dogras, 1 squadron of Punjabi Musalmans and ½ squadron of Pathans.[15][16]
  • At present, the regiment is composed of two Sikh and one Dogra Squadrons.[57]

Notable officers edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This is a photograph about whose subjects there is disagreement in reputable academic circles. (1) www.britishempire.co.uk states the Europeans to be: Lt. Clifford Henry Mecham (standing); Major Henry Dermot Daly (seated); The Sikh officer standing at the far left with long beard is given as Man Sing; the Sikh seated on floor as Jai Singh.[2] (2) National Army Museum, London, names the European officers as: Lt. Clifford Henry Mecham (standing); Asst. Surgeon Thomas Anderson (seated). (3) The Bridgman Art Library gives the European officer seated as Major William Stephen Raikes Hodson; officer standing: Lt. McDowell and seated on the ground is Sikh officer Risalder major Man Singh. The attribution to Hodson is surely incorrect, unfortunately, as there is apparently otherwise only one extant image of this famous officer, the engraving printed as frontispiece to his biography "Rider on a Grey Horse", by B.J. Cork, 1958. There appears to be no disagreement as to the title of the photograph, or its year.

References edit

  1. ^ "Gazette of India No 45" (PDF). 7 November 2020. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
  2. ^ "British and Native Officers 1858". Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Hodson's Horse in 'British Empire'". Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e Jackson, Donovan (1940). India's Army. Sampson Low, Marston & Co Ltd. pp. 47–54.
  5. ^ Smeeton, Miles (1961). A Taste of the Hills (First ed.). Hart-Davis. p. 102.
  6. ^ "A Forgotten Past: On Stumbling Upon William Hodson's Grave at a School". 20 October 2020. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  7. ^ "Two battalions of Hodson's Horse". The Times of India. 10 September 2018. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  8. ^ "William Hodson, Indian perspective". 8 August 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  9. ^ Dodd, George (2003). History Indian Revolt Expeditions Persia, China, Japan, 1856-7-8. Adamant Media Corporation. p. 394. ISBN 978-1402187421.
  10. ^ Gough, Hugh (1897). Old Memories. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London. p. 209.
  11. ^ The Spectator (Literary Supplement), 2 November 1911 – article: 'Hodson of Hodson's Horse, pp.631-632.
  12. ^ Gough, Hugh (1897). Old Memories. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London. p. 224.
  13. ^ Daly, Hugh (1905). Memories of General Sir Henry Dermot Daly. John Murray, London. pp. 192–200.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "9th Bengal Lancers". Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  15. ^ a b c d e f "9th Hodson's Horse in the First World War". Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  16. ^ a b c "10th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers (Hodson's Horse)". Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  17. ^ "Hodson's Horse". Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  18. ^ "10th Bengal Lancers". Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  19. ^ "Battle of Abu Klea". Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  20. ^ "Rawalpindi Parade 1905". Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  21. ^ "Appendix I: Order of Battle of The Indian Army Corps in France, 1914-15" (PDF). Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  22. ^ a b c d e "The legend of Hodson's Horse". 29 August 2014. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  23. ^ "Fraser A I Major DSO Indian Army". Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  24. ^ Brig-Gen F.J. Moberly, History of the Great War: The Campaign in Mesopotamia, Vol III, London: HM Stationery Office, 1925/Imperial War Museum and Battery Press, 1997, ISBN 978-089839289-0, p. 111; Appendix XXXVI.
  25. ^ Lt-Col J.D. Sainsbury, The Hertfordshire Yeomanry: An Illustrated History' 1794–1920', Welwyn: Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Historical Trust/Hart Books, 1994, ISBN 0-948527-03-X, pp. 182–8.
  26. ^ India, Adjutant General of (1930). List of Honours Awarded to the Indian Army August 1914 to August 1921. Committee Indian War Memorial Delhi.
  27. ^ "The Edinburgh Gazette, Issue:13033, Page:22". 1 January 1917. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  28. ^ "31st Indian Armoured Division" (PDF). 13 August 2020. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  29. ^ "4 Horse to commemorate 150 years of its raising". Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  30. ^ "India's Armour". 1 December 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  31. ^ The Tiger Strikes. Director of Public Relations, India Command, Government of India. 1942. p. 147.
  32. ^ The Tiger Kills. Director of Public Relations, India Command, Government of India. 1944. p. 310.
  33. ^ "Tank Battle at Chawinda – III". 8 September 2020. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  34. ^ Singh, Harbaksh (2012). War Despatches: Indo-Pak Conflict 1965. Lancer Publishers LLC. ISBN 978-8170621171.
  35. ^ "Golden Jubilee of 1965 War Operations of 1 Corps". 15 September 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  36. ^ "Hodson's Horse: Fight to the very end". 20 September 2015. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  37. ^ "Battle of Phillora 1965 War". 20 October 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  38. ^ "Cavalry Week-Remembering War Heroes". 1 January 2014. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  39. ^ "Recalling epic tank battles of 1965 war: When Pakistan Army began avoiding Indian Army tanks". 4 January 2021. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  40. ^ "Gazette of India, No 7" (PDF). 12 February 1966. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  41. ^ "Gazette of India, No 1" (PDF). 1 January 1966. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  42. ^ "Vir Chakra (VrC) Awardee: L/Dfr Udham Singh, VrC". Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  43. ^ "Gazette of India, No 1" (PDF). 7 January 1967. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  44. ^ "Gazette of India, No 1" (PDF). 7 January 1967. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  45. ^ "Gazette of India, No 45" (PDF). 5 November 1966. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  46. ^ "4 HORSE remembers the heroes of Phillora". 11 September 2007. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  47. ^ Gill, JH (2003). An Atlas Of 1971 India Pakistan War - Creation of Bangladesh. National Defense University, Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies. p. 85.
  48. ^ "Former Eastern Army Commander Lt Gen RM Vohra passes away". 15 June 2020. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  49. ^ "India-Pak tank warfare and Pak military's drawbacks". 21 December 2017. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  50. ^ "Gazette of India, No 7" (PDF). 7 February 1972. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  51. ^ "Gazette of India, No 34" (PDF). 19 August 1972. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  52. ^ "Gazette of India, No 19" (PDF). 11 May 1974. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  53. ^ "Hodson's Horse Celebrate 39th 'Basantar' Day". 31 July 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  54. ^ "Kalam confers bravery, distinguished service awards to 62". 23 March 2006. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  55. ^ "4 Horse to commemorate 150 years of its raising". 27 November 2007. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  56. ^ "Badge of Hodson's Horse". Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  57. ^ "The equestrian legend". 12 July 2014. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  58. ^ "Man Singh". Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  59. ^ "Soldier and author who always counted himself as Irish". The Irish Times. 6 December 2003. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  60. ^ "PIB release" (PDF). 31 May 1989. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  61. ^ "Dy Chief of Army Staff retires on 28 Feb" (PDF). 27 February 1998. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  62. ^ "Lt General PPS Bhandari takes over a Corps". 31 August 2002. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
  63. ^ "Deputy Chief of Army Staff Lt Gen Bhandari retires". 1 February 2006. Retrieved 1 May 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Cork, Barry Joynson (1958). Rider on a Grey Horse: A Life of Hodson of Hodson's Horse. Cassell & Company Ltd.
  • Harris, Ronald (1979). Bengal Cavalry Regiments 1857–1914. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-0850453089
  • Hodson, GH (2011). Hodson Of Hodson’s Horse Or Twelve Years Of A Soldier’s Life In India. Nabu Press. ISBN 978-1173862688
  • Trotter, Lionel J (1901). The life of Hodson of Hodson’s Horse. William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh and London.
  • Kempton, Chris. A Register of Titles of the Units of the H.E.I.C. & Indian Armies 1666–1947.
  • Gaylor, John. Sons of John Company: The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903–1991.

External links edit

  • Uniforms of the late 19th Century

horse, hodson, horse, part, armoured, corps, indian, army, which, beginnings, irregular, cavalry, regiment, during, time, indian, rebellion, 1857, active1857, presentcountry, british, india, indiabranch, british, indian, army, indian, armytypecavalrysizeregime. 4th Horse Hodson s Horse is a part of the Armoured Corps of the Indian Army which had its beginnings as an irregular cavalry regiment during the time of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 4th Horse Hodson s Horse Active1857 presentCountry British India IndiaBranch British Indian Army Indian ArmyTypeCavalrySizeRegimentNickname s The FlamingoesMotto s त य र ब र त य रTyar Bar Tyar Always and ever ready AnniversariesRaising Day 30 November 1857Cambrai DayBasantar DayBattle honoursDelhi 1857LucknowAbyssiniaAfghanistan 1878 80Suakin 1885ChitralPunjab FrontierWorld War I Givenchy 1914Somme 1916BazentinFlers CourceletteCambrai 1917 France and Flanders 1914 18MegiddoSharonDamascusPalestine 1918Khan BaghdadiMesopotamia 1916 18Indo Pakistani War of 1965PhilloraPunjab 1965Indo Pakistani War of 1971Basantar RiverPunjab 1971CommandersColonel ofthe RegimentLt Gen AS Bhinder VSM 1 InsigniaAbbreviation4 H British and Native Officers of Hodson s Horse 1858 Photograph by Felix Beato nb 1 Afghan Sikh Officers of Hodson s Horse during the Indian Rebellion 1858Contents 1 Formation 2 History 3 Name changes 4 Pre World War 5 World War I 6 World War II 7 Indo Pakistani War of 1965 8 Indo Pakistani War of 1971 9 Other achievements 10 Regimental insignia 11 Regimental Composition 12 Notable officers 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksFormation editThe regiment was raised during the turbulent times of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 During the siege of Delhi on 19 May 1857 an order was issued by the Commander in Chief Major General George Anson to appoint Lieutenant later Brevet Major William Stephen Raikes Hodson as the Commandant of a corps of Irregular Horse which he was directed to raise while at Kurnaul Hodson sought assistance from Robert Montgomery Judicial Commissioner of the Punjab Montgomery asked two Sirdars to raise a rissalah troop each and he raised one himself The three rissalahs left for Delhi on 23 June 1857 under the command of Man Singh who was Risaldar Major of the 1st Regiment from 1866 to 1877 Mr Montgomery sent two more rissalahs on 9 July 1857 The troops were mainly from the Lahore and Amritsar districts of the Punjab 3 4 5 History editIndian Rebellion of 1857The rissalahs sent to Delhi saw their first action on 14 and 18 July 1857 in the Delhi suburb of Sabzi Mandi The regiment then fought against the rebels on 17 and 18 August at Khurkowdeh and Rohtak 3 nbsp Capture of the Mughal Emperor of Delhi by Captain Hodson Hand coloured steel engraving from Charles Ball s The History of the Indian Mutiny Following the siege of Delhi on 20 September 1857 Hodson took 50 men from the regiment rode to Humayun s Tomb and captured the Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar Hodson returned there the next day and captured the Mughal princes Bahadur Shah Zafar s sons Mirza Mughal and Mirza Khizr Sultan and grandson Mirza Abu Bakht 6 While escorting the princes Hodson s force was threatened by a large hostile crowd Rather than let the princes escape Hodson shot them at the Khooni Darwaza near the Delhi Gate 3 7 8 A detachment from Hodson s Horse was sent out on 27 September 1857 to pursue rebels heading for Rohilkhand The regiment also saw action against the rebels near Agra on 10 October 1857 in Cawnpore at Alambagh on 12 November 1857 the Siege of Lucknow against the Gwalior rebels under Tantia Tope at Gangiri in Aligarh district on 7 December 1857 at the battle at Patiyali and at Mainpuri On 25 January 1858 Hodson with 200 of his men and three other British officers were part of a column commanded by Brigadier Adrian Hope against an army of 5 000 rebels encamped at Shamshabad In the fierce battle Lieutenant CTM McDowell was killed and Hodson and Lieutenant Charles Gough were badly wounded 9 Lieutenant Hugh Henry Gough was awarded the Victoria Cross for his bravery at Alambagh on 12 November 1857 and at Jellalabad Lucknow on 25 February 1858 A detachment of the regiment was sent with Colonel Hope Grant s column from Kanpur to protect the road to Lucknow They laid siege to a town called Mianganj and cleared the enemy but lost an Indian officer Naib Risaldar Hukm Singh On 25 February 1858 374 men of Hodson s Horse were part of a cavalry force at Alambagh led by Colonel Campbell of the Queen s Bays They were under the command of Lieutenant General Sir James Outram against Begum Hazrat Mahal the Begum of Oudh Awadh This was one of the first occasions where the Hodson s Horse saw fierce action as a complete regiment 3 10 While the regiment remained at Alamagh Hodson went alone to Lucknow for a meeting with Sir Colin Campbell Following lunch with him he joined Brigadier General Robert Napier who was inspecting a breach in the wall They became separated and he went to look around the palace with a Captain Taylor The enemy had been cleared from most parts of the city but areas remained where rebels were hidden The two men had a look inside one dark room which turned out to contain rebels One of them shot Hodson in the chest He was conscious but became weaker and died around 1 30 am that night He was buried on the evening of 12 March 1858 in the grounds of La Martiniere School in Lucknow 3 11 Following Hodson s death command of the regiment was given to Henry Daly of the Guides Cavalry Daly played a major role in reorganising the regiment more troops were recruited including Pathans muster rolls were created and accounts were organised The regiment was reorganized into three regiments 1st and 2nd Regiment of Hodson s Horse on 26 August 1858 and 3rd Regiment on 9 September 1858 3rd Regiment was disbanded on 5 January 1860 On 13 June 1858 the regiment was involved in a fierce battle at Nawabganj under Hope Grant The regiment lost 3 men and 24 were wounded 3 12 13 The regiments of Hodson s Horse were involved in multiple smaller conflicts to suppress the mutiny in Daudpur on 20 October 1858 against the Nasirabad brigade at Dholpur on 27 October 1858 at Gonda on 25 November 1858 where they routed a large force led by the Rajah of Gonda at Basantpur on 23 December 1858 at Jarwa Pass on 31 March 1859 and at Lalpur in May 1859 14 Name changes editThe two regiments of the Hodson s horse went through various changes in their designation before amalgamating into a single unit 15 16 17 1st Regiment1857 Hodson s Horse 1858 1st Regiment of Hodson s Horse 1861 9th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry 1886 9th Regiment of Bengal Lancers 1901 9th Bengal Lancers Hodson s Horse 1903 9th Hodson s Horse 1921 Amalgamated with the 10th Hodson s Horse to form 9th 10th Hodson s Horse 1922 4th Duke of Cambridge s Own Hodson s Horse 1927 Hodson s Horse 4th Duke of Cambridge s Own 1947 Post Partition To India Hodson s Horse 1966 4th Horse2nd Regiment1857 Hodson s Horse 1858 2nd Regiment of Hodson s Horse 1861 10th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry 1864 10th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry Lancers 1874 10th Regiment of Bengal Lancers 1878 10th Bengal Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers 1901 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Bengal Lancers Hodson s Horse 1903 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse 1921 Amalgamated with the 9th Hodson s Horse to form 9th 10th Hodson s HorsePre World War editThe 9th Bengal Cavalry was stationed at Faizabad when on 8 April 1862 they were sent to Bhutan with the three squadrons were sent to different places one squadron with the headquarters went to Jalpaigori the second to Barhampur and the third to Raniganj The regiment returned to Benares in April 1863 The regiment moved on to Cawnpore on 29 April 1863 then to Peshawar from January 1864 till November 1866 The regiment then spent four years at Mian Mir and in 1868 were part of a punitive expedition to the Black mountains in Hazara but they saw no action They spent another four years at Deoli with a detachment at Jhansi then moved to Meerut on 8 March 1878 14 nbsp Indian Officers of the 9th Bengal Cavalry Suakin Field Force 1885In 1871 the 10th Regiment of Bengal Cavalry fought in Abyssinia A squadron of the 10th went to Malta with the 9th regiment in 1878 while the rest of the regiment went to Afghanistan 18 The 9th travelled from Meerut to Bombay by train in April 1878 They were brought up to strength with a squadron from the 10th Bengal Cavalry making them around 550 men From Bombay they embarked for Malta via Aden and Suez They disembarked at Malta on 6 June 1878 and pitched camp at San Antonio The 9th 10th were brigaded with the 1st Bombay Cavalry Whilst in Malta the force was inspected by the Duke of Cambridge who bestowed his title on the 10th Bengal Cavalry which was represented by one squadron The eventual destination of the forces stationed in Malta was Cyprus which had been ceded to Britain by Turkey in exchange for their support against Russia But a day or so before departure for Cyprus the regiment was prevented from embarking with the rest of the army because 48 men were poisoned Three men died in agony and the rest were permanently disabled As a result the regiment stayed in Malta until October when they sailed back to Bombay 14 4 In February 1885 the 9th was ordered to convert to lancers and move off to join the British Army in Sudan The regiment moved from Wazirabad to Kanpur where they received lances and related equipment and reached Suakin in March 1885 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel AP Palmer 19 It saw action in Hashin Tofrek Tamai and T Hakul The regiment less one squadron left Sudan in June 1885 for Bombay from where they travelled to Ambala The 3rd squadron was required to stay in Suakin until 20 November 1885 The 9th stayed at Ambala until 1888 moved to Nowshera until 1891 where it was part of the Buner Field Force to ensure the pacification of the Bunerwals The regiment moved to Peshawar and took part in the durbar and review at Lahore for the Viceroy Lord Elgin in November 1894 Following this at Muridki on the night of 20 December 1894 Daffadar Kartar Singh bearing a grudge through loss of promotion shot two officers Risaldar Kesar Singh and the Commanding Officer Colonel Ernle Money He was overpowered court martialled and publicly hanged on 31 January 1895 Two Sikh officers who had encouraged the Daffadar were tried in a civil court and sentenced to life 14 The 9th were part of the Chitral Relief Force in April 1895 and received the battle honour Chitral They moved to Rawalpindi in May 1895 Following the re organisation of 1895 the regiment retained their name and came under Punjab Command On 10 August 1897 the regiment was ordered to proceed by train from Rawalpindi to Peshawar and became part of the Peshawar column of the Tirah Expeditionary Force 14 Many men and a large number of horses were sent for remount duties to South Africa and many British officers for active service for the Second Boer War Hodson s Horse was the first Indian regiment to appear and win medals at the Royal Tournament in 1902 4 The 9th regiment took part in the Rawalpindi Parade on 8 December 1905 to honour the Prince and Princess of Wales 20 World War I edit nbsp A troop of Hodson s Horse during the First World WarOn 31 August 1914 9th Hodson s Horse located at Ambala got the orders to prepare to move as part of the 3rd Ambala Cavalry Brigade for war in France Its convoy reached Marseille on 7 November moved to Orleans where it was trained with British soldiers for trench warfare for 10 days 15 It became part of the 1st Indian Cavalry Division till it joined the 2nd Indian Cavalry Division on 15 September 1915 21 On 21 December Hodson s Horse was inducted to La Bassee where it fought in the trenches full of water and dirt Thereafter it moved near Norrent Fontes for training with the division followed by another phase of trench battle in very adverse weather for which it was awarded the battle honour Givenchy In June 1916 it fought protracted actions earning more battle honours Somme Bazentin and Flers Courcelette 22 nbsp Men of the 9th Hodson s Horse practising a charge with the lance near Querrieu September 1916 It was in Cambrai towards the end of November and early December 1917 that the Regiment fought its toughest action It came under heavy fire with the forward most troops facing the brunt of it The heavy toll of fatal casualties included two brave officers Majors A I Fraser and F S T Atkinson 23 It was in this battle that the Regimental Medical Officer Captain Som Dutt MC treated an enemy German officer who was so overcome that he took off his Iron Cross and presented it to him The battle honour Cambrai awarded to the Regiment became an important one celebrated every year on 30 November The regiment was also awarded the theatre honour France and Flanders 22 15 4 In March 1918 the 2nd Indian Cavalry Division was broken up in France The Canadian and British units remained in France and the Indian elements were sent to Egypt The regiment briefly served as part of the 5th Mounted Brigade Australian Mounted Division before it became part of the 13th Cavalry Brigade of the 5th Cavalry Division where they saw service in General Edmund Allenby s final campaign against the Turks and Germans They marched from Nazareth to Damascus where Risaldar Nur Ahmed of Hodson s Horse made hundreds of Turks surrender to him 22 15 On 18 September the Division moved to El Jelil and next day early morning attacked the front line and right flank and captured lt Thus Infantry got its safe lane for further advance At 0600 hours 9th Hodson s Horse reached Nahr El Falik C and D Squadrons of the Regiment captured 70 prisoners guns and other war material while crossing Nahr El Falik and Murkhalid 22 nbsp Forward scouts of the 9th Hodson s Horse pause to consult a map near Vraignes France April 1917On 30 September in an action where 9th Hodson s Horse was leading Major MD Vigors commanding D Squadron got an input of 70 Turkish soldiers advancing to Kiswe In a number of more actions that ensued not only those 70 but a total of 900 Turkish soldiers with a lot of arms and equipment were captured Turkish Army had lost most of its soldiers but Gen Allenby decided to finish the rest of the Turkish Army Around Aleppo there were about 20 000 Germans and Turkish soldiers of which 8000 had already lost hope On 20 March the Division advanced towards Aleppo On 26 October 9 Hodson s Horse was inducted into Aleppo and by 31 October the Turkish Army surrendered In these 38 days the Regiment covered a total of 567 miles and made a major contribution to the Division s tally of 1100 prisoners of war and 58 canons The battle honours awarded to 9th Hodson s Horse in the Middle Eastern theatre were Megiddo Palestine Sharon Damascus Khan Baghdadi and Mesopotamia 22 The regiment continued to stay in the Middle East after the war and returned to India in December 1920 15 The regiment s overseas tenure of five years was the longest for a cavalry regiment in the British Indian Army citation needed The 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse was stationed at Loralai in Balochistan under the 4th Quetta Division when the First World War broke out in August 1914 It had arrived from Jullundur on 18 November 1912 and had detachments at Gumbaz Maratangi Murgha and Musa Khel While the regiment did not proceed overseas until 1916 the Regiment supplied drafts of officers and men to other cavalry regiments Over 350 officers and men of the Regiment were sent abroad before the 10th Lancers received orders to mobilize for service in Mesopotamia in August 1916 the first two squadrons arriving in September and the other two squadrons and headquarters in October 1916 The 10th Lancers initially served as part of the Tigris Defences guarding the lines of communication between Amara and Sheikh Sa ad From 1 January to 3 March 1917 a squadron of the regiment formed part of III Tigris Corps Cavalry Regiment in the advance to Capture Baghdad 24 25 The Regiment spent the next three years serving in Mesopotamia but it would be during the Iraqi revolt of 1920 that the 10th Lancers suffered its heaviest casualties On 3 September 1920 an armoured train at Samawa which was guarded by D Squadron was overwhelmed and the 10th Lancers lost 28 men The Regiment left Mesopotamia on 30 October 1920 and returned to India 16 4 nbsp 9th Hodson s Horse Bengal Lancers near Vraignes April 1917The two regiments won the following gallantry awards during the Great War 26 Distinguished Service Order Major Arthur Ion Fraser 27 Military Cross Jemadar Hasan Shah Risaldar Nur Ahmad Khan 9th Hodson Horse Ressaidar Laurasib Khan 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse Order of British India Risaldar Major Malik Khan Risaldar Muhammad Akram Khan Risaldar Jai Ram Risaldar Ram Singh 9th Hodson Horse Risaldar Ajab Khan 9th Hodson Horse Risaldar Nur Khan 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse Indian Order of Merit Sowar Abdullah Khan Dafadar Hakim Singh Ressaidar Nur Ahmad Khan Ressaidar Nur Ahmad Khan IOM Lance Daffadar Muhammad Azam Jemadar Sardar Khan Risaldar Dost Muhammed Jemadar Nawab Ali Khan 9th Hodson Horse Sowar Hayat Muhammad Dafadar Sarfaraz Khan Sowar Mansa Ram 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse Indian Distinguished Service Medal 9th Hodson Horse 25 medals 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse 13 medals Indian Meritorious Service Medal 9th Hodson Horse 38 medals 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse 12 medals Croix de guerre Belgium Dafadar Nawab Ali Khan Lance Dafadar Sorain Singh 9th Hodson Horse Order of the Nile 4th Class Ressaidar Hasan Singh 9th Hodson Horse nbsp 9th Hodson s Horse in Damascus 2 October 1918World War II editIn 1921 the British decided to cut down on the number of cavalry regiments and re amalgamated the two as the 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse At the time of the war the regiment was part of the 2nd Indian Armoured Brigade which was later designated as the 252nd Indian Armoured Brigade 28 The brigade was under 31st Indian Armoured Division and served in the Middle East in Iraq and Palestine It received the M3 Stuart light tanks in November 1942 29 30 Major General FW Messervy of the regiment was awarded a Companion of the Order of the Bath a Distinguished Service Order and a mention while Major MR Smeeton was awarded a Military Cross 31 32 Indo Pakistani War of 1965 editMain article Indo Pakistani War of 1965 nbsp Officers and Jawans of 4 Horse standing on a destroyed Pakistani tank during the 1965 Indo Pak WarIn the 1965 war Hodson s Horse was equipped with the Centurion tanks 33 It was part of the divisional reserve of the 1st Armoured Division tasked for the massive attack at the Phillora sector against the Pakistani 6th Armoured Division 34 From Rurki Kalan two regiments 4 Horse and 17 Horse were to open out and encircle Phillora by a pincer movement from both flanks while 16th Light Cavalry was to provide flank protection from the right 35 43rd Lorried Brigade was tasked to capture Phillora This armada of tanks destroyed the maximum number of enemy tanks most of which were newly acquired and technologically superior Patton tanks and recoilless guns 36 37 The Commandant Lieutenant Colonel later Brigadier MMS Bakshi s tank got detached from the main body of the regiment owing to moving through the tall sugarcane crops Reaching a stretch of open ground he spotted four Pakistan s army Patton tanks Immediately he gave out fire orders for engaging them Three of the Pattons were hit by his gunner one after another and it was only then that the fourth Patton had homed on to his tank Both tanks fired simultaneously at each other and both were hit With his tank catching fire he ordered the crew to bail out With him apart from the gunner and driver of the tank was his regimental signal cum intelligence officer Lieutenant later Brigadier Ravi Malhotra who was performing the duties of the radio operator cum loader Having bailed out they came under small arms fire from the Pakistani crew of the four destroyed Pattons who had all bailed out too Bakshi then fired back at them with his revolver and ordered his crew to get into the sugarcane crop through which they moved on foot and after some time they were fortunate to be picked up by a squadron of the Poona Horse and eventually joined up with their own regiment 38 39 The regiment won the following gallantry awards Maha Vir Chakra Lieutenant Colonel MMS Bakshi 40 Major Bhupinder Singh 41 Vir Chakra Lance Dafadar Udham Singh 42 Sena Medal Captain Arun Kumar Nehra Dafadar Didar Singh A Lance Dafadar Onkar Datt 43 Naib Risaldar Piara Singh Sowar Harbhajan Singh 44 Mentioned in despatches 11 45 The Regiment was bestowed with the battle honour Phillora and the theatre honour Punjab 1965 46 Indo Pakistani War of 1971 editMain article Indo Pakistani War of 1971 In the 1971 war the regiment equipped with Centurion tanks was part of the 54th Infantry Division 47 commanded by Lieutenant Colonel later Lieutenant General Raj Mohan Vohra in the Shakargarh sector of the western front His regiment spearheaded the advance capturing in its wake several Pakistan Army positions in villages namely Bhairo Nath Thakurdwara Bari Lagwal Chamrola Darman Chakra and Dehlra and took in the famous Battle of Basantar 48 49 The regiment won the following gallantry awards Maha Vir Chakra Lieutenant Colonel RM Vohra 50 Vir Chakra Major Kamal Nanda Major Suraj Jit Chaudhari Major Govind Singh 51 8 mentioned in despatches 52 The regiment was awarded the Battle Honour Basantar River and Theatre Honour Punjab 1971 53 Other achievements editThe regiment was awarded with the Guidon on 4 March 1976 at Pathankot Punjab Dafadar Harbhajan Singh was awarded the Shaurya Chakra posthumously in 2006 for his act of gallantry in Jammu and Kashmir while serving with 8 Rashtriya Rifles 54 The regiment has produced sportsmen of international repute like Pardumman Singh and Karnail Singh who have represented India in the Olympics Asian and Commonwealth Games 55 Regimental insignia editThe regimental badge consists of crossed lances with pennants the Lions of Ashoka above the cross over point and a scroll across the bottom with embossed inscription HODSON S HORSE 56 Prior to independence the badge had a crown instead of the lion capital The shoulder title is 4H in brass Regimental Composition edit4 Horse celebrating the 56th anniversary of Battle of Phillora 21 September 2021 nbsp nbsp In the time immediately after the mutiny the 1st Regiment consisted of one squadron of Sikhs one squadron of Punjabi Musalmans one troop of Pathans and border tribesmen and one troop of Dogras In 1886 the class constitution was changed a little and an extra squadron was added making 4 squadrons consisting of two troops each as follows Sikhs 3 troops Dogras 1 troop Punjabi Muslims 1 troop Punjabi Musalmans 2 troops Pathans 1 troop and Hazaras 1 troop 14 Prior to amalgamation the 9th Horse had a composition of 1 squadron of Sikhs 1 squadron of Dogras 1 squadron of Punjabi Musalmans and squadron of Pathans whereas the 10th Horse had 1 squadron of Sikhs 1 squadron of Dogras 1 squadron of Punjabi Musalmans and squadron of Pathans 15 16 At present the regiment is composed of two Sikh and one Dogra Squadrons 57 Notable officers editMajor William Stephen Raikes Hodson Commanding officer on formation General Sir Hugh Henry Gough VC GCB Was a Lieutenant in the Bengal European Light Cavalry and serving in the Guides Cavalry received the Victoria Cross for his acts of bravery during the mutiny while serving in the Hodson s Horse General Sir Charles John Stanley Gough VC GCB Brother of Hugh Gough joined the 8th Bengal Cavalry and served in the Guides Cavalry received the Victoria Cross for his acts of bravery during the mutiny while serving in the Hodson s Horse General Sir Henry Dermot Daly GCB CIE Second Commandant of the Regiment Risaldar Major Man Singh Raised the first troop risallah decorated with the Order of Merit 1st class and the Order of British India 1st class On 9 March 1866 he was appointed as the first Risaldar Major of the 9th Bengal Cavalry a post he held until his retirement in 1877 Having left military service he was made Honorary Magistrate at Amritsar and then manager of the Golden Temple at Amritsar 58 Colonel Osmond Barnes CB Commanded the 10th Bengal Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers and was Herald who proclaimed Queen Victoria as the Empress of India at the Great Imperial Assemblage on 1 January 1877 General Sir Arthur Power Palmer GCB GCIE Commander in Chief India between March 1900 and December 1902 Major General Sir Charles Metcalfe MacGregor KCB CSI CIE Quartermaster General for the British Army in India the head of the Intelligence Department for the British Indian Army and founder of the United Service Institution of India Major General Sir Guy Archibald Hastings Beatty KBE CB CSI CMG DSO amp Bar Was Aide de Camp to King George V commander of the 4th Indian Cavalry Brigade in August 1925 and Military Adviser in Chief Indian State Forces Major General Austin Timeous Miller CB MC amp Bar Lieutenant General Thomas William Corbett CB MC amp Bar General Officer Commanding GOC of the 1st Indian Armoured Division and commanded the IV Corps during the Second World War General Sir Frank Walter Messervy KCSI KBE CB DSO amp Bar General Officer Commanding in Chief Northern Command India in 1946 and 1947 and the first Commander in Chief of the Pakistan Army Colonel George Lindsay Garstin Joined the 9th Bengal Cavalry on 3 August 1877 and served in the Second Afghan War 1880 Battle of Suakin and led the regiment in the Chitral relief column He possibly invented the wristwatch in the 1890s getting a relative Arthur Garstin trading leather goods in Bloomsbury London to fashion him straps for his pocket watch He commanded the Regiment between 1894 1901 Brigadier Miles Richard Smeeton DSO MBE MC Traveller and author Charles Chenevix Trench Author and historian 59 Risaldar Major Mir Dad Khan OBI Father of Pakistani general and president Ayub Khan Lieutenant General Raj Mohan Vohra PVSM MVC GOC in C of Eastern Command from May 1988 to May 1990 Lieutenant General Gurinder Singh AVSM GOC in C of Northern Command from June 1989 to September 1991 60 Lieutenant General NS Malik PVSM Deputy Chief of the Army Staff Planning and Systems September 1996 February 1998 61 Lieutenant General PPS Bhandari PVSM AVSM Deputy Chief of the Army Staff Planning and Systems January 2004 to January 2006 62 63 Colonel Ajai Shukla Journalist and defence writer Major Bikramjeet Kanwarpal Indian film and television actorSee also edit4th Cavalry India a former regiment of the British Indian Army 4th Cavalry Pakistan an armoured regiment of the Pakistan ArmyNotes edit This is a photograph about whose subjects there is disagreement in reputable academic circles 1 www britishempire co uk states the Europeans to be Lt Clifford Henry Mecham standing Major Henry Dermot Daly seated The Sikh officer standing at the far left with long beard is given as Man Sing the Sikh seated on floor as Jai Singh 2 2 National Army Museum London names the European officers as Lt Clifford Henry Mecham standing Asst Surgeon Thomas Anderson seated 3 The Bridgman Art Library gives the European officer seated as Major William Stephen Raikes Hodson officer standing Lt McDowell and seated on the ground is Sikh officer Risalder major Man Singh The attribution to Hodson is surely incorrect unfortunately as there is apparently otherwise only one extant image of this famous officer the engraving printed as frontispiece to his biography Rider on a Grey Horse by B J Cork 1958 There appears to be no disagreement as to the title of the photograph or its year References edit Gazette of India No 45 PDF 7 November 2020 Retrieved 24 November 2020 British and Native Officers 1858 Retrieved 28 April 2021 a b c d e f Hodson s Horse in British Empire Retrieved 25 April 2021 a b c d e Jackson Donovan 1940 India s Army Sampson Low Marston amp Co Ltd pp 47 54 Smeeton Miles 1961 A Taste of the Hills First ed Hart Davis p 102 A Forgotten Past On Stumbling Upon William Hodson s Grave at a School 20 October 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Two battalions of Hodson s Horse The Times of India 10 September 2018 Retrieved 26 April 2021 William Hodson Indian perspective 8 August 2017 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Dodd George 2003 History Indian Revolt Expeditions Persia China Japan 1856 7 8 Adamant Media Corporation p 394 ISBN 978 1402187421 Gough Hugh 1897 Old Memories William Blackwood and Sons Edinburgh and London p 209 The Spectator Literary Supplement 2 November 1911 article Hodson of Hodson s Horse pp 631 632 Gough Hugh 1897 Old Memories William Blackwood and Sons Edinburgh and London p 224 Daly Hugh 1905 Memories of General Sir Henry Dermot Daly John Murray London pp 192 200 a b c d e f 9th Bengal Lancers Retrieved 29 April 2021 a b c d e f 9th Hodson s Horse in the First World War Retrieved 28 April 2021 a b c 10th Duke of Cambridge s Own Lancers Hodson s Horse Retrieved 28 April 2021 Hodson s Horse Retrieved 1 May 2021 10th Bengal Lancers Retrieved 28 April 2021 Battle of Abu Klea Retrieved 1 May 2021 Rawalpindi Parade 1905 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Appendix I Order of Battle of The Indian Army Corps in France 1914 15 PDF Retrieved 27 April 2021 a b c d e The legend of Hodson s Horse 29 August 2014 Retrieved 27 April 2021 Fraser A I Major DSO Indian Army Retrieved 2 May 2021 Brig Gen F J Moberly History of the Great War The Campaign in Mesopotamia Vol III London HM Stationery Office 1925 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press 1997 ISBN 978 089839289 0 p 111 Appendix XXXVI Lt Col J D Sainsbury The Hertfordshire Yeomanry An Illustrated History 1794 1920 Welwyn Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Historical Trust Hart Books 1994 ISBN 0 948527 03 X pp 182 8 India Adjutant General of 1930 List of Honours Awarded to the Indian Army August 1914 to August 1921 Committee Indian War Memorial Delhi The Edinburgh Gazette Issue 13033 Page 22 1 January 1917 Retrieved 2 May 2021 31st Indian Armoured Division PDF 13 August 2020 Retrieved 1 May 2021 4 Horse to commemorate 150 years of its raising Retrieved 1 May 2021 India s Armour 1 December 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2021 The Tiger Strikes Director of Public Relations India Command Government of India 1942 p 147 The Tiger Kills Director of Public Relations India Command Government of India 1944 p 310 Tank Battle at Chawinda III 8 September 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Singh Harbaksh 2012 War Despatches Indo Pak Conflict 1965 Lancer Publishers LLC ISBN 978 8170621171 Golden Jubilee of 1965 War Operations of 1 Corps 15 September 2015 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Hodson s Horse Fight to the very end 20 September 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Battle of Phillora 1965 War 20 October 2020 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Cavalry Week Remembering War Heroes 1 January 2014 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Recalling epic tank battles of 1965 war When Pakistan Army began avoiding Indian Army tanks 4 January 2021 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Gazette of India No 7 PDF 12 February 1966 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Gazette of India No 1 PDF 1 January 1966 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Vir Chakra VrC Awardee L Dfr Udham Singh VrC Retrieved 2 May 2021 Gazette of India No 1 PDF 7 January 1967 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Gazette of India No 1 PDF 7 January 1967 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Gazette of India No 45 PDF 5 November 1966 Retrieved 30 April 2021 4 HORSE remembers the heroes of Phillora 11 September 2007 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Gill JH 2003 An Atlas Of 1971 India Pakistan War Creation of Bangladesh National Defense University Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies p 85 Former Eastern Army Commander Lt Gen RM Vohra passes away 15 June 2020 Retrieved 28 April 2021 India Pak tank warfare and Pak military s drawbacks 21 December 2017 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Gazette of India No 7 PDF 7 February 1972 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Gazette of India No 34 PDF 19 August 1972 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Gazette of India No 19 PDF 11 May 1974 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Hodson s Horse Celebrate 39th Basantar Day 31 July 2014 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Kalam confers bravery distinguished service awards to 62 23 March 2006 Retrieved 2 May 2021 4 Horse to commemorate 150 years of its raising 27 November 2007 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Badge of Hodson s Horse Retrieved 28 April 2021 The equestrian legend 12 July 2014 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Man Singh Retrieved 28 April 2021 Soldier and author who always counted himself as Irish The Irish Times 6 December 2003 Retrieved 1 May 2021 PIB release PDF 31 May 1989 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Dy Chief of Army Staff retires on 28 Feb PDF 27 February 1998 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Lt General PPS Bhandari takes over a Corps 31 August 2002 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Deputy Chief of Army Staff Lt Gen Bhandari retires 1 February 2006 Retrieved 1 May 2021 Further reading editCork Barry Joynson 1958 Rider on a Grey Horse A Life of Hodson of Hodson s Horse Cassell amp Company Ltd Harris Ronald 1979 Bengal Cavalry Regiments 1857 1914 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0850453089 Hodson GH 2011 Hodson Of Hodson s Horse Or Twelve Years Of A Soldier s Life In India Nabu Press ISBN 978 1173862688 Trotter Lionel J 1901 The life of Hodson of Hodson s Horse William Blackwood and Sons Edinburgh and London Kempton Chris A Register of Titles of the Units of the H E I C amp Indian Armies 1666 1947 Gaylor John Sons of John Company The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903 1991 External links editUniforms of the late 19th Century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 4th Horse Hodson 27s Horse amp oldid 1161179296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.