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Wikipedia

Royal Bermuda Regiment

The Royal Bermuda Regiment (RBR), formerly the Bermuda Regiment, is the home defence unit of the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda. It is a single territorial[1] infantry battalion that was formed on the amalgamation in 1965 of two originally voluntary units, the mostly black Bermuda Militia Artillery (BMA) and the almost entirely white Bermuda Rifles (titled the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (BVRC) until 1949), and the only remaining component of the Bermuda Garrison since the 1957 withdrawal of regular units and detachments from Bermuda.

Royal Bermuda Regiment
Cap Badge of the Royal Bermuda Regiment
Active1 September 1965
Country Bermuda
BranchArmy
TypeLine Infantry
RoleInternal security
SizeOne Battalion
~609 soldiers
Garrison/HQWarwick Camp
MarchQuickBermuda
Anniversaries21 November 1965, presentation of the first colours.
Websitewww.bermudaregiment.bm
Commanders
Commanding OfficerLt. Col. Benjamin Beasley, BEM
Colonel-in-ChiefThe Duchess of Gloucester
Honorary ColonelCol. David Gibbons

History

 
Soldiers of the Bermuda Contingent of the Royal Garrison Artillery (BMA) in a Casualty Clearing Station on the Western Front in July 1916
 
Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps soldiers serving on the Western Front with the Lincolnshire Regiment, 1918
 
Remembrance Day parade, at the Cenotaph, in the City of Hamilton, 1990. HE The Governor, Major-General Sir Desmond Langley, inspects war veterans, and is speaking with former Second-in-Command of the Royal Bermuda Regiment Major Donald Henry "Bob" Burns, MC, ED.

The two original units, the mostly black Bermuda Militia Artillery and the almost entirely white Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps, were raised 1895 and 1894, respectively, in accordance with two of three acts passed by the Bermudian parliament in 1892 at the insistence of the British Government, which had been attempting to encourage, entice, or coerce the local government to restore reserve military units since the last Militia Act had been allowed to lapse following the Napoleonic Wars and the American War of 1812.[2] The regulations of the two units were the same as those of militia and volunteer units in the British Isles at the time, with a few additions specific to the units. The units were fully funded by the War Office as parts of the British Army, rather than as auxiliary to it.[3] Contingents from both units were deployed to France and Belgium in June 1915 and saw action on the Western Front during the First World War.[2]

Following the First World War, the British Government's policy of austerity resulted in a substantial reduction of the regular army, including reducing the regular infantry in Bermuda and removing the Royal Artillery and the Royal Engineers Fortress companies from Bermuda in 1928, with the local reserve units shouldering more responsibility. This resulted in the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps being re-organised on territorial lines in 1921. Those other ranks who chose to continue serving were re-attested, committing to terms of service which meant they could no longer quit the corps with fourteen days notice. The name of the corps was not modified to reflect the change, however.[4] Militia soldiers were already engaged for terms of service, and the Bermuda Militia Artillery was not similarly re-organised until 1928 (its name, also, was not modified to reflect the change).[5] The Bermuda Volunteer Engineers was created as a unit to operate the search lights at coastal artillery batteries in June 1931 (previously, the third act of 1892 had authorised the creation of a militia unit to assist the Royal Engineers company tasked with maintaining and operating Bermuda's submarine mining defences, but this unit had not been raised),[6] while the Bermuda Militia Infantry was raised in October 1939, originally relieving the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps of the task of protecting St David's Battery from attack by enemy landing parties, but taking on new roles as it expanded to a strength of two companies, with the infantry defence of the colony being split between the regular infantry (by then a detachment of 4th Battalion, Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders),[7][8][9] the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps and the Bermuda Militia Infantry.[10][4]

 
RSM of the Bermuda Regiment WO1 Herman Eve in 1992

A contingent of volunteers for overseas service from the Bermuda Militia Artillery (one officer), Bermuda Volunteer Engineers (four sappers), and Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (sixteen officers and other ranks) was sent to Britain in June, 1940, where the contingent members separated to join their parent corps (Royal Artillery, Royal Engineers, and the Lincolnshire regiment, respectively). With the regular garrison having been drastically reduced due to post-First World War economic austerity by the British Government, concern over further weakening the garrison meant the local-service units, which had been embodied for full-time service for the duration of the war, were barred from sending further contingents abroad until 1943, by which time the threat of enemy attacks on Bermuda and its strategic defence infrastructure had greatly diminished and the United States Army and United states Marine Corps had garrisoned the colony. Following this, a contingent of volunteers from the Bermuda Militia Artillery and Bermuda Militia Infantry was attached to the 1st Caribbean Regiment and saw action in Europe and North Africa during the Second World War while a company from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was attached to the Lincolnshire Regiment and saw action in North West Europe and in Burma during that war.[2] The two contingents had been grouped together in 1943 as the Command Training Battalion, stationed at Prospect Camp while training in preparation for deployment to Europe.[11]

 
Margaret Thatcher reviewing the Royal Bermuda Regiment in early 1990

After the war the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was belatedly renamed the Bermuda Rifles.[2] The Bermuda Militia Artillery, however, was not renamed. Following the closure of the Royal Navy's dockyard commenced in 1951 (a process that lasted until 1958, leaving only a small naval base, HMS Malabar, within the former dockyard),[12] the military garrison, which had existed primarily to protect the Royal Navy base, was also closed.[13]

 
John F. Kennedy, escorted by a Bermuda Militia Artillery officer in Royal Artillery blue No. 1 Dress, inspects green-uniformed riflemen of the Bermuda Rifles in 1961

The Bermuda Militia Artillery and the Bermuda Rifles amalgamated to form the Bermuda Regiment on 1 September 1965.[2] The new Bermuda Regiment's stand of colours was presented in November 1965 by Princess Margaret. Princess Margaret presented a second stand of colours to replace the first in November 1990 to mark the Bermuda Regiment's 25th anniversary.[14] The latest set of Colours were presented by Duchess of Gloucester, GCVO, at the National Sports Centre on 13 November 2010.[2] In 1945, the part-time reserve units in Bermuda, the Channel Islands and Malta had numbered collectively as 28th in the British Army order of precedence (the number varied before and after 1945 depending on the make-up of the British Army),[15][16] but were ordered within that according to the order of precedence of their parent corps in the regular army. This meant, that the Bermuda Militia Artillery (BMA), as part of the Royal Regiment of Artillery and the Militia, preceded the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (BVRC) (as part of the infantry and the Volunteer Force) despite being the second of the two to be raised. Today, the Royal Bermuda Regiment, as an amalgam of the BMA and BVRC, is 29th and was formerly 28th which changed in 2007 with the Special Reconnaissance Regiment being added to the Order of Precedence.[17][18]

On 1 September 2015, Queen Elizabeth II awarded the title "Royal" to the regiment to mark the 50th anniversary of its formation.[19]

Badge

The badge of the Royal Bermuda Regiment combines elements from those of the Royal Regiment of Artillery, and the BVRC.

The full badge, as displayed on the Colours, features two crossed cannons creating an X behind a Maltese cross (the symbol of rifle regiments in the British Army, and used on the white metal BVRC badge), set on a circular shield with "THE BERMUDA REGIMENT" inscribed around it, and the whole enclosed within a wreath and surmounted by the Crown.

The cap badge is bi-metal – all brass, except a white metal Maltese cross, which is set inside the wheel of a cannon (taken from the badge of the Royal Artillery), with a half-wreath about the lower hemisphere of the badge. Flashes, and other colour marks used on dress and elsewhere (such as backgrounds on signs about Warwick Camp) are blue and red, reflecting the colours of the Royal Artillery, but the stable belt (issued only to permanent staff, officers and senior ranks) worn is rifle green, with black edges, referring to the colours used by the BVRC.[20]

 
The badge of the Royal Bermuda Regiment (bottom) draws elements from those of the BMA (Royal Artillery, second from left) and the BVRC (second from right). The badge at the left is that of the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment, affiliated to the BVRC, and that at the right belongs to the Royal Anglian Regiment, its successor.

Dress

 
Bermuda Regiment Warrant Officers in the No. 1 dress
 
Potential Non-Commissioned Officers (PNCO) Cadre Promotion Parade in No. 3 (Summer) Dress at Warwick Camp in June, 1994.

The dress uniform itself is closer to the old Royal Artillery pattern, and to the generic No. 1 dress uniform used by many British regiments today, being composed of dark blue, almost black, tunic and trousers, and differing only in the red cuffs and collar added to the tunic. The trousers have a broad red stripe running down the outside of each leg. A generic dark blue peaked cap with red hat band is worn with this uniform. During the summer months, the No. 3 uniform is worn (identical to the No. 1 except that a light-weight generic, white tunic is worn). As the majority of public ceremonial duties actually take place during the summer months, the No. 1 uniform was little used by comparison to the No. 3 and has been withdrawn from general ceremonial usage. The No. 3 uniform is now worn for ceremonial parade year round. Although neither the BMA nor the BVRC were line infantry, a Full Dress with red tunic (historically worn by line infantry) is worn only by regimental drummers.

 
Bermuda Regiment Warrant Officer in the old DPM No.9: Tropical Combat Dress trousers and Soldier 95 shirt

The combat uniform is now the British Army Multi-Terrain Pattern, which replaced the Soldier 95 uniform of the previous decade beginning in 2012. For much of the Regiment's history, its dress included a mixed collection of British uniform items. As with its predecessors, the Royal Bermuda Regiment has a tradition of wearing temperate uniforms (including combat jackets and pullovers) for much of the year; and tropical uniforms during the summer months. This is a result of the peculiar climate of Bermuda, which is chilly, wet, and windy during the winter, and can reach 30 °C (86 °F) during the summer with high humidity.

For many years, and unusually for an infantry unit, the regiment wore the Denison parachute smock which it inherited from its predecessors, only adopting the 1968 pattern DPM combat jacket in the 1980s (which it issued into the new millennium, although the 1968 uniform actually became obsolete with Regular British Army regiments in the 1980s). At the time of amalgamation, the basic combat uniform worn under the Denison was composed of the Second World War-era green tropical shirt and trousers, ankle boots and puttees. Carrying equipment was initially the 1937 Pattern. By the early 1980s, these uniform items had been replaced by the green lightweight trousers, green shirt and sweater, 1968 Pattern combat jacket, high boots (otherwise identical to the old ankle boot), and the 1958 Pattern carrying equipment. Green shirts and lightweight combat trousers began to be supplemented by DPM tropical uniforms in the 1980s, and by the mid-1990s had been entirely replaced by them (although the green kit, like the Denison smocks, was handed down to the Regiment's Junior Leaders and to the Bermuda Cadet Corps, which continued to wear it). The tropical DPM uniform (worn in colder weather with the '68 Pattern Combat Jacket and the green pullover) was fully adopted by 1994, and continued to be issued for some time after its replacement in Britain by the Soldier 95 uniform. The beret worn is the dark blue one worn by the Royal Artillery and by various British Army units not authorised to wear distinctive colours of their own.

Little use is made of Service Dress, which is only issued to a handful of permanent staff members. The colour varies slightly from the standard British Army khaki (being greener), and during the summer months, the long trousers might be replaced with shorts. The Royal Bermuda Regiment service dress is composed of a jacket and trousers worn with an olive green peaked cap, tan shirt and tie. Whereas its predecessors often used the tropical-weight No. 4 Service Dress during the summer months, the Royal Bermuda Regiment uses the same uniform year-round, worn during the summer in shirt sleeve order – usually, a short-sleeved tan shirt with no tie, whether worn with long trousers or shorts of the same weight and colour. A stable belt is worn in shirt sleeve order. Mess dress is also worn for many functions by members of the Officers' Mess, and of the Sergeants' (and Warrant Officers') Mess.

Ranks

Ranks are as follows:[21]

Rank group General/flag officers Field/senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet
  Royal Bermuda Regiment            
Lieutenant colonel Major Captain Lieutenant Second lieutenant Officer cadet
Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
  Royal Bermuda Regiment        
    No insignia
Warrant officer class 1 Warrant officer class 2 Colour Sergeant Sergeant Corporal Lance corporal Private

Organisation

Leadership

 
A Command Centre during IS training.
 
PNCO Cadre train in Internal Security (IS) role.
 
Bermuda Regiment soldiers aboard a motor boat, off the North Shore of Bermuda, 1996.

As Bermuda is a British overseas territory, and defence is therefore the responsibility of the United Kingdom, the Royal Bermuda Regiment is under the control of the Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the island. However, pay and financing is the responsibility of the Ministry of Labour, Home Affairs and Housing. The Royal Bermuda Regiment (RBR) is listed in the British Army Order of Battle as number 29th in order of precedence. The RBR traditionally was number 28th in the order of precedence but due to the first time listing on the order of precedence of the Special Reconnaissance Regiment which is the newest Combat Arm/Corp.[22]

On its formation, the regiment's Honorary Colonel was Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, who became Colonel-in-Chief in 1984. After her death in 2002, the position was assumed, in 2004 by The Duchess of Gloucester. The unit is directly commanded by a lieutenant-colonel, as is typical of a battalion in the British Army, who is appointed by the governor upon the advice of a Defence Board. Brian Gonsalves was appointed on 28 May 2009, to serve for a standard three-year tenure. In some cases that tenure can be extended by the governor for a further year. In Lieutenant Colonel Gonsalves' case, he filled the role until passing command to Lieutenant Colonel Foster-Brown in June 2013. The current visiting EU advisor of the regiment is Commandant H. Kunz of Coburg, Germany.

Manpower

The Regiment's original strength was about 400, including all ranks. Following discipline problems during an exercise in the West Indies, a report on the unit was commissioned from Major-General Glyn Gilbert, the highest-ranking Bermudian in the British Army. Maj-Gen. Gilbert also took into account the difficulties the regiment had experienced in meeting its obligations when deployed during the civil unrest of 1977 (its existing strength did not allow for a reserve). He made a number of recommendations, including the increase of the Regiment's strength to a full battalion of about 750, with three rifle companies (A, B, and C) and a support company. As the support functions (Regimental Quartermaster Stores and Internal Security Stores, Signals, Armourers, Motor Transport, Boat Troop, Gun Troop/Assault Pioneers, Medics, cooks, et cetera) and the Band now fell under Support Company (commanded by the Regimental Quartermaster), the battalion headquarters was no longer considered a company in its own right. Initially, the three rifle companies rotated through the role of training company. Eventually, C Company was renamed permanent Training Company. Recruits spent their first year in Training Company, then transferred as a unit to whichever rifle company was losing its third-year conscripts, or were reassigned individually to other sub-units.

Structure

 
Colour party of the Royal Bermuda Regiment at Queen's Birthday Parade on 10 June 2017

With the end of conscription, it is no longer possible to maintain a dedicated Training Company in which recruits spend their first year. Recruits now spend three months, after their two-week initial training, being trained under Training Wing before being posted to one of the Companies. The current (2022) establishment[23] is:

  • Regimental Headquarters
  • A Company (rifle company: Operational Support Units (OSU's), Boat Troop, the Regiment Police, the Operational Support Divers (OSD) and the Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) Section which form the Joint Service EOD unit with the Bermuda Police Service)
  • B Company (rifle company: Humanitarian and Disaster Relief and ceremonial duties)
  • Logistics Company
  • Training Wing
  • Coast Guard

One of the units amalgamated into the Royal Bermuda Regiment, the BMA, was nominally an artillery unit, although it had converted to the infantry role in 1953. Other than a ceremonial Gun Troop, equipped with two 25-pdr. field guns, the Royal Bermuda Regiment is wholly an infantry unit.

Conscription

 
Recruits clean their Mini-14 rifles, prior to a shoot at Warwick Camp, during the 1994 Recruit Camp.

The majority of the regiment was made up of conscripts up to July 2018, making it unique among all of the land forces under the British Crown.[24]

Conscription was based on a random lottery of men through the ages of 18 to 23, with exemptions granted to Police and Prison officers, members of the British regular forces (or men who have served for two years), church ministers, prisoners or those judged to be of "unsound mind". Temporary deferment was granted for full-time students (attending either the Bermuda College or schools abroad), for the length of their studies, and individuals medically unfit but likely to become fit again. Conscientious objectors had the opportunity to either serve in a non-combatant role or perform an alternative community service chosen by the governor.

Both Bermudians and non-Bermudians criticised conscription for its alleged sexism and similarity to slavery (a sensitive issue given the historic background of Bermuda), and this has been noted in the British Parliament.[25][26][27] It received support from the community, however, and was hailed for causing interaction between social and racial groups.

At its height, three-quarters of the strength of the Bermuda Regiment was made up of conscripts, although many soldiers, whether they initially volunteered or were conscripted, elected to re-engage annually after their initial three years and two months term of service was completed, with some serving for decades (such as WO2 Bernard Pitman, who retired in 2013 after forty years of service).[28]

In 2018, the House of Assembly of Bermuda voted to abolish conscription, effective of 1 July 2018.[29][30]

Recent assessments

Towards the end of 2005, the regiment took part in a fitness for role exercise, this time in the form of an inspection by the Ministry of Defence. The review noted that equipment was substandard and major items would be deemed to be unserviceable by 2010 (half of the vehicles and signal equipment were noted to be "out of action") and that command and control was poor, though it also noted high morale and firearms proficiency.[31]

Royal Bermuda Regiment Junior Leaders and the Bermuda Cadet Corps

The Bermuda Regiment operated its own Junior Leaders programme for many years, until it was absorbed into the separate Bermuda Cadet Corps in the 1990s. The Junior Leaders had been part of the Bermuda Regiment, wearing the same cap badge and operating from Warwick Camp, whereas the Bermuda Cadet Corp was a separate organisation, operating through the island's secondary schools (having been reformed from the old Cadet Corps in 1965, at the same time as the amalgamation of the BMA and Bermuda Rifles).

In 2012, due to financial constraints, the Bermuda Cadet Corps was disbanded and replaced by the resurrected Bermuda Regiment Junior Leaders.[32][33][34][35] Many of the Bermuda Regiment's officers, warrant officers and NCOs began their service in the Junior Leaders, including former Commanding Officers, Lieutenant-Colonel Brian Gonsalves[36] and Lieutenant-Colonel David Curley.

A bill was tabled in the House of Assembly of Bermuda in 2015 to formalise the organisation of the Royal Bermuda Regiment's Junior Leaders.[37]

Operations

 
Bermuda Regiment soldiers armed with Mini-14s and a Barbados Police officer conduct a joint patrol of an oil facility during the 2007 Cricket World Cup in Bridgetown, Barbados

The primary role of the regiment has recently become disaster relief. Other roles include ceremonial duties, and supporting the Bermuda police department in internal security issues (both in the forms of riot-control and anti-terrorism). In 2001, following the September 11 attacks on the nearby United States, the Bermuda Regiment was deployed, taking over responsibility for the security of the Bermuda International Airport (Bermuda has always been a point of importance in trans-Atlantic aviation, and a large number of aircraft diverted to the Island when US airspace was closed) and other potential targets. In 2004 and 2005 the regiment deployed to the Cayman Islands and Grenada to assist in post Hurricane Ivan restoration efforts.

The Bermuda Regiment successfully deployed a platoon of internal security trained soldiers to Barbados in 2007. There they took part in forming the security infrastructure for the WCC Cricket World Cup. They worked alongside soldiers from Barbados, Guyana, India and South Africa, in ensuring a secure environment for the Super 8 series of matches. Although little has been made of this deployment, this was the first time since the First World War that a formed unit from Bermuda has deployed overseas for an operation other than disaster relief (the Second World War drafts from the BMA, BVRC, and BVE were all absorbed into other units, and the cadre of officers and NCOs sent to Belize in the 1980s were attached to a battalion of the Royal Anglians).

The Bermuda Regiment also provided a cordon at the Bermuda International Airport in October, 1996, when the Chinese ship, Xing Da, was brought to the island. The ship had been detained on the Atlantic by the United States Coast Guard carrying over a hundred illegal migrants with the intent of smuggling them into Massachusetts. It was intended to transfer the passengers and crew to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, but the ship was deemed unseaworthy. Taking the ship into a US port to transfer the detainees to Cuba was undesirable as the US Government would have then been obliged to allow any who requested to enter the process for asylum application. The only other port within reach was Bermuda, roughly 640 miles from North Carolina and 1,061.4 miles from Guantanamo Bay. As the UK Government was wary of allowing the detainees to set foot on British territory for the same reason, the ship was kept offshore while the two governments negotiated. A Company of the Bermuda Regiment was deployed, pending the outcome. On 9 October, it provided a cordon to close off the Weapons Pier of the former United States Navy NAS Bermuda, while Bermuda Government ferry boats brought the detainees into Castle Harbour. Bermuda Police and US Coast Guard powerboats transferred the detainees to the Weapons Pier, where they were handcuffed and loaded, one-by-one, aboard waiting US Coast Guard C-130 Hercules, with each aeroplane taking off and heading for Cuba as soon as it was full.[38][39]

The regiment also performs a wide variety of community service operations, and is involved in many cultural events on the island, especially in parades.

Overseas connections

 
Royal Bermuda Regiment and US Navy NAS Bermuda personnel at Camp Lejeune.

During the First World War, the Bermuda Regiment's predecessor, the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (BVRC) sent two contingents to serve with the Lincolnshire Regiment on the Western Front. After the War, the connection to the Lincolns was made official. When the UK Volunteer Force, Yeomanry, and Militia had been reorganised into the Territorial Force in 1908 (renamed the Territorial Army after the First World War), the many former Volunteer Rifle Corps became numbered battalions of British (Regular) Army regiments, with the regular regiments adopting paternal roles by providing the part-time units with loaned officers, warrant officers and NCOs, and taking other steps to give them the benefit of their experience. Although the Territorial Force, like the Volunteer Force, was tasked only with home defence, and its soldiers could not originally be compelled to take part in overseas campaigns, the Territorials would send drafts of volunteers to the Regular battalions during wartime, or (once the restriction on sending Territorials overseas without their consent was lifted) the entire TA battalion might be sent. The role the Lincolnshire Regiment adopted with the BVRC was similar to that it played with its own TA battalions, although the BVRC remained a separate unit.

The BVRC again provided two drafts to the Lincolns during the Second World War. When the BVRC (renamed the Bermuda Rifles) was amalgamated with the Bermuda Militia Artillery (BMA), to create the Bermuda Regiment, the Royal Anglian Regiment, into which the (Royal) Lincolnshire Regiment had itself been amalgamated, continued the paternal role.

Throughout the Bermuda Regiment's history, the Royal Anglians have provided it with its staff officer, and with Permanent Staff Instructors (PSI) (now called full-time instructors (FTI)) warrant officers (WO2) for each of its companies, as well as other personnel on long-term and short-term attachments (although other Regiments have occasionally also provided personnel on loan). Although the Bermuda Regiment had, prior to 2013, always managed to provide commanding officers from within its own strength, it has occasionally had to use seconded officers when unable to provide its own personnel to fill roles such as Second-In-Command (2-i-c), adjutant, regimental sergeant major (RSM), and training officer. Its first nine Adjutants (1965–1984) were all seconded from the Royal Anglians. Ten of its regimental sergeant majors have been seconded, including three from the Royal Anglians (WO1 R. Jones (1976-1978), WO1 B. Bear (1985-1986), and WO1 JJ Wilcox (1987-1989)). In 1996, its Second-in-Command, staff officer, and adjutant were all on loan from the Royal Anglians. This frequent resort to seconded officers is due to a problem common to many Territorial units in Britain, also. These positions are all full-time ones, ideally filled by officers who volunteer from within the regiment, but whose service in these roles is restricted to three years. As relatively few officers can afford to leave their civil careers for three years, the problem is not so much caused by a lack of suitable officers, as a lack of willing ones.

The Lincolnshire Regiment was also affiliated to The Lincoln and Welland Regiment of the Canadian Army. Although joint training has occurred in the past, and short-term loans of NCOs from the Lincoln & Welland Regiment have been frequent (especially for Recruit Camps and Overseas Camps), numerous attempts to formalise the affiliation with the Bermuda Regiment have been unsuccessful.

Members of the ceremonial Gun Troop carry out occasional ceremonial training with the Royal Regiment of Artillery, which provides its sergeant major instructor of gunnery to conduct local courses, although the troop has no combat artillery role. As one of the units amalgamated into the Bermuda Regiment, the BMA, was an artillery unit (which history the Gun Troop commemorates), members of the regiment are entitled to join the Royal Artillery Association (RAA), which has a branch located on the grounds of the former St. George's Garrison (which had been predominantly a Royal Garrison Artillery establishment). The Bermuda Regiment shares this unusual heritage of a combined infantry and artillery unit with the Royal Gibraltar Regiment.

Corps Warrant

In late 2001, the Bermuda Regiment and the Royal Gibraltar Regiment were presented with Corps Warrants dated 21 February 2000.

In 2017, the Corps Warrant ceased on the 30 July. A new Corps Warrant which included the Royal Bermuda Regiment was confirmed as a Corps of the British Army and took effect 1 August 2017 and was signed at St. James Court by Her Majesty's Command dated 17 July 2017.[40]

The 2017 Corp Warrant notes that the competition of Corps composition 'The under mentioned bodies of the [British] Army comprising Regular Forces, Army Reserves, Regular Reserve, including any raised hereafter and any local units overseas: of which the Royal Bermuda Regiment was listed with the composition note; All units and personnel of The Royal Bermuda Regiment.'[41]

Other

 
Royal Bermuda Regiment and US Marine Corps Sergeants, 1989
 
Bermuda Regiment soldiers board a USMC CH-46 Sea Knight at USMC Camp Lejeune, in North Carolina, USA.
 
Two soldiers from the Bermuda Regiment's Guns/Assault Pioneers with a US Marine Corps engineer at Camp Lejeune in 2013

The Bermuda Regiment also developed a relationship with the United States Marine Corps, which had supplied a detachment to Bermuda for many years to guard United States Navy facilities. In addition to occasional training with the US Marines in Bermuda, the Bermuda Regiment used facilities and training areas of the US Marines' Camp Lejeune and Camp Geiger in North Carolina for training, with the two rifle companies having been sent there every second year for their annual camps. The Training Company's Potential Non-Commissioned Officers (PNCO) Cadre is also sent there each June (it had previously been sent to Canada).

Following the increased usage of those bases, after 2001, by US forces preparing for deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan, the Bermuda Regiment briefly moved the location for its annual camps to Florida, where it was developing a relationship with the Florida National Guard, although it subsequently recommenced the use of Camp Lejeune.

The Bermuda Regiment took part in its first exercise overseas in 1968, when twenty-eight personnel were deployed to Jamaica on 26 October, along with "A" Company of the York and Lancaster Regiment, for a four-week introduction to jungle warfare in the vicinity of Berriedale, in Portland. Jamaica became the location of annual camps in alternate years, but in March, 2013, it was announced that a new location would be sought.[42][43] This was due to the cost of deploying to Jamaica (a flight of 1,249 miles, compared to 725 miles for the flight to MCAS Cherry Point, North Carolina), given the budgetary constraints, and as Jamaica provided little opportunity for training in Internal Security roles, such as is available at USMCB Camp Lejeune with its Military Operations in Urban Terrain (MOUT) facility.[44][45] In 2014, the annual camp was held at the Land Force Central Area Training Centre Meaford of the Canadian Army at Meaford, in Ontario, Canada.[46]

The Bermuda Regiment's training in the US, Jamaica and Canada is self-contained, rarely involving local units, but friendly relationships have been developed with both the US Marine Corps, and the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF). Specialist Bermuda Regiment sub-units, such as the Reconnaissance Platoon and the Medics, have trained with equivalent US Marine Corps units at Camp Lejeune.[47][48][49][50] The Royal Bermuda Regiment's Boat Troop has also trained in the United States alongside the US Coast Guard (which formerly operated Air-Sea Rescue services from the American bases in Bermuda, and currently provides Air-Sea Rescue services in the area around Bermuda from its base at Elizabeth City, North Carolina).

Over the last decade, a relationship has also been developed with the Royal Gibraltar Regiment, and small detachments sent with that regiment on its annual training deployments to Morocco.[51] In 2007, for the first time, the annual camp was held in England, with detachments training at the Cinque Ports Training Area (CPTA); part of the Defence Training Estate (DTE) South-East, near Dover.[52][53]

As the new Cayman Regiment is being developed, the Royal Bermuda Regiment has been tasked to train the first few batches of recruits from the Cayman Islands at Warwick Camp. The first batch of Caymanian recruits had joined the February 2020 intake of Bermudian recruits.[54][55]

Alliances

Commanding officers

 
Lieutenant-Colonel (then-Lieutenant) William White in Jamaica, 1996.

The commanding officer of the Bermuda Regiment (as also the quartermaster, training officer, the staff officer (UK Loan Service), the adjutant, the aide-de-camp, and the regimental sergeant major) is a full-time position, requiring those appointed to the role to take leave of their civilian employments. Originally, there was a four-year limit to the term of a commanding officer, which could be extended if required. Following Lieutenant-Colonel Gavin A. Shorto's six years in the office, a three-year appointment was made the norm. The commanding officer is normally chosen from among the majors of the Battalion, and is promoted to lieutenant-colonel. Following the death of Major Christian Wheddon in a motor accident in England in 2012,[56][57] while training in preparation for assuming command, Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Foster-Brown, a professional soldier from The Rifles, assumed command in June 2013, the first non-Bermudian to fill the role.[58][59][60] Foster-Brown was succeeded by Lieutenant-Colonel David Curley on 27 February 2016.[61] In March 2020, Lieutenant-Colonel Benjamin Beasley replaced Curley in command.[62][63]

Equipment

 
Royal Bermuda Regiment soldier with a Ruger Mini-14 at Ferry Reach in 1994
 
Royal Bermuda Regiment soldier with an L85A2 at USMC Camp Lejeune in 2018

The BMA and Bermuda Rifles had re-equipped from the .303 inch No. 4, Mk. 1 rifle to the 7.62mm NATO L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle (SLR) the year before amalgamation.[64][65] The .303 inch Bren light machine gun and Vickers machine gun were replaced by the 7.62mm NATO General Purpose Machine Gun (GPMG). The Bermuda Regiment inherited the SLR and the GPMG from its predecessors. For Internal Security use, the Federal Riot Gun being used in Northern Ireland for firing baton rounds and gas canisters was also adopted. The Bermudian reserve forces had been equipped with standard British Army weapons since their restoration in 1895 (the Sten sub-machine gun had been replaced in the 1960s with the Sterling submachine gun, but this had then been replaced with the Israeli Uzi).[66] A non-standard rifle was to replace the SLR, however.

During the 1950s, the British forces had been pressured into dropping the .280 British sub-calibre round and EM-2 rifle that had been intended to replace respectively .303 inch ammunition and the No. 4 rifle, adopting instead the American 7.62mm ammunition as NATO standard and the SLR, which was a variant of the Belgian FN FAL.[67] Despite forcing the adoption of the 7.62mm round by NATO, the US re-equipped during the Vietnam War with the M16 rifle, chambered for the 5.56×45mm M193 sub-calibre ammunition.[68][69] Dissatisfaction with the 7.62mm round led NATO to seek a replacement during the 1970s, and the Belgian SS109 variant of the American M193 was adopted as 5.56mm NATO.[70] Although it had also been intended to establish a NATO standard rifle, this did not materialise and different countries developed their own small arms.

The Royal Small Arms Factory at Enfield Lock had actually begun work in 1969 on a family of weapons mechanically based on the ArmaLite AR-18, but chambered for a 4.85 × 49mm cartridge and with a bullpup configuration similar to the EM-2. This design was rechambered for the 5.56mm NATO and re-designated the SA80 (Small Arms for the 1980s). The family included two basic weapons: the XL64E5 rifle (also called the Enfield Individual Weapon) and a light support weapon known as the XL65E4 light machine gun (which were to be standardised as the L85A1 rifle and L86A1 Light-Support Weapon). The SA80 would remain stuck in development, however, until 1987, when the L85A1 and L86A1 began replacing respectively the SLR and the GPMG (together with the remaining Brens, which had been retained for jungle use and re-chambered for 7.62mm) in the British armed forces. Re-equipment was slow, and many second-line units were still equipped with the older weapons during the 1990 to 1991 Gulf War.

The Bermuda Regiment decided not to wait for the SA80 and replaced the SLR with the American-made Ruger Mini-14 self-loading (in American parlance, "semi automatic") rifle in 1983. The GPMG was retained in the light-, as well as the medium-, machine gun role. The Ruger has a 20-round detachable box magazine and can be fitted with a US M7 bayonet. The original wooden stocks were replaced with Choate black plastic stocks by 1992 and no further modifications have been made since.[71] Small numbers of the SA80 (L85A1 and L85A2) were held from about 1990 specifically for familiarisation training. This was necessary as large numbers of personnel must attend courses (for training, commissioning, or qualification) in Britain, and many serve on active duty attachments (particularly with the Royal Anglian Regiment), and needed to already be knowledgeable of the standard rifle.

A replacement for the aging Rugers was sought at the end of the Century, with small numbers of the German Heckler & Koch G36 and the American Colt M4 (a carbine variant of the M16) obtained for trials, following which the G36 had been selected as a replacement for the Ruger and the Uzi sub-machine gun. However, budgetary issues delayed the acquisition of the G36, which also became surrounded by controversy in Germany over reported inaccuracy in warm temperatures.[72] The Ruger was instead replaced by the L85A2 version of the SA80 rifle, with 400 having been delivered in August, 2015. The Ruger was phased out completely by the Recruit Camp of January, 2016.

Rifles and shotguns

  •   L85A2 SA-80 selective-fire rifle (Standard issue to riflemen as of January 2016)
  •   Mini-14GB/20 self-loading rifle with Choate stock (standard issue to riflemen from 1983 to January 2016)
  •   L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle (standard issue to riflemen from 1965 to 1983, but stocks still held)
  •   Heckler & Koch G36 (selected to replace the Uzi as second-tier weapon, issued to specialist companies i.e. Boat Troop and OSU)
  •   Colt M4 (stocks obtained for trials to determine replacement for Mini-14 and Uzi)
  •   L42A1 sniper-rifle (a 7.62mm variant of the Lee–Enfield No. 4)
  •   Mossberg 500 shotgun
  •   Greener shotgun (obsolete, but stocks still held)

Pistols and submachine guns

Machine guns

  •   FN MAG General-purpose machine gun, used in light role only

Internal Security (IS)

Artillery

Vehicles

Boats

Radio

  •   Sepura SC20, replaced Sepura STP8200 radios
  •   Sepura STP8200, replaced Bendix King radios

Gallery

See also

Order of precedence

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 July 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "History". The Royal Bermuda Regiment. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  3. ^ Maurice-Jones, DSO, RA, Colonel KW (1959). History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army. UK: Royal Artillery Institution.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b Ingham-Hind, Jennifer M. (1992). Defence, Not Defiance: A History Of The Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps. Bermuda: The Island Press. ISBN 0969651716.
  5. ^ Maurice-Jones, DSO, RA, Colonel KW (1959). History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army. UK: Royal Artillery Institution.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ The Bermuda Volunteer Engineers, by Jennifer M. Hind (formerly Jennifer M. Ingham) of The Royal Gazette. Transcript of typescript document held at the Bermuda Maritime Museum.
  7. ^ King Carol Arrives In Bermuda Dublin Issue. Bermuda: British Pathé. 29 May 1941. 1115.33. King Carol and Madame Lupescu of Rumania seek refuge in Bermuda. Description. Title reads: "King Carol in Bermuda". Bermuda. Various shots of King Carol of Rumania and Madame Lupescu arrive at port and disembark from ship separately. Madame Lupescu waves back towards the ship. Various shots of King Carol posing for press photographers and newsreel cameramen at their hotel. Various shots of Madame Lupescu on terrace of hotel with two Pekinese dogs. King Carol has escaped from his home country due to war. Note: alternative spelling of Romania / Roumania.
  8. ^ "CHANGES IN STRENGTH OF THE LOCAL COMMAND". The Royal Gazette. City of Hamilton, Pembroke, Bermuda. 30 August 1940. It is learned from Command Orders that Major D. R. G. Cameron, Brigade Major, has been struck off the strength of the Bermuda Command with effect from Tuesday, and that Captain R. F. Arden-Close, K.S.L.I., has assumed the duties of Brigade Major. Struck off the strength of the Bermuda Command are the under-mentioned officers of the Detachment, Winnipeg Grenadiers; Major G. Trist, Captain J. A. Norris, Lieut. N. O. Bardal and Lieut. F. N. Symes. The following officers of the detachment, 4 Camerons, have been taken on the strength of the Command: Major A. Murray, Captain D. B. Mitchell, 2/Lt. R. L. Gibson, 2/Lt. D. H. Burns, 2/Lt. L. MacDonald, 2/Lt. A. Sinclair and 2/Lt. A. C. McAslam. Also taken on the strength of the Command is Lieut. J. R. Faulkener, Army Dental Corps.
  9. ^ "MILITARY WEDDING AT CATHEDRAL YESTERDAY: Miss Audrey H. C. Wilson Weds Lieut. D. H. Burns". The Royal Gazette. City of Hamilton, Pembroke, Bermuda. 20 March 1942. A brilliant wedding ceremony was solemnised at the Cathedral yesterday afternoon at 5.30 o'clock when Miss Audrey Hunt Chute Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Murray Franklln Wilson of "Westcliffe," Fairylands, became the bride of Lieut. Donald Henry Burns, 4th.Battalion, The Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Donald Burns of Birkenhead, Cheshire, England. A large crowd thronged the church, while hundreds of people were lined up on both sides of the street. Yesterday's ceremony was one of the largest military weddings in these Islands so far this year- His Lordship the Bishop of Bermuda officiated, assisted by the Venerable Archdeacon H. Marriott, Rector of Paget Parish. At the conclusion of the ceremony the Bridal party was met at the western exit of the Cathedral by two pipers of the Cameron Highlanders, who piped them to the horseless carriage on Church Street, after which the carriage was drawn through the principal streets of Hamilton by a group of Cameron Highlanders led by the pipers. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, looked charming in a gown of brocaded white satin with long veil. She carried a bouquet of calla lilies. The bride was attended by her cousin, Miss Carol Burrows, as maid of honour and by Miss Natalie Conyers and Miss Lee Wadson as bridesmaids. Flower girls were the Misses Ann Walker and Helene Harnett. The maid of honour was attired in a gown of rose taffeta and she carried a bouquet of purple larkspur with pink gerbera. The bridesmaids wore dresses of turquoise blue taffeta and each carried bouquets of purple larkspur with different tones of stock. The flower girls wore frocks of mauve taffeta and carried old fashioned bouquets of violets and pink roses. Lieut, Edward Cameron, 4th. Batt., the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders was the best man, the ushers being Captain Faulkner, Lieut. J. Stirling, Lieut. Rex Graham and 2nd Lieut. M. Watson. The service was choral, Miss Susan Oatham singing "O Perfect Love." Mr. John Bridge was the organist. Noted among the congregation in the Cathedral during the ceremony were Brigadier H. D. Maconochie, M.C., Officer Commanding, British Troops at Bermuda, Major C. W. R. Hill, O. C. Det. 4th. Batt. Cameron Highlanders, Major O'Connor, G.S.O. 2 at Bermuda Command, Captain F. W. Jefferies, Staff Captain, Bermuda Command, Lieut. Paul Curtis, Seaforth Highlanders, brother officers of the Bridegroom and also officers of local units attached to the Command. After the ceremony, the bridal couple received congratulations from their many friends at a reception held at "Westcliffe," Fairylands, home of the bride's parents. Both Lieut. Burns and his bride are well known in these Islands.
  10. ^ "Guardian of the Eastern approaches". Royal Gazette. 30 January 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  11. ^ "OVERSEAS CONTINGENT IS INSPECTED AT PROSPECT: O.C British Troops Praises Unit On Training Results". The Royal Gazette. City of Hamilton, Pembroke, Bermuda. 13 March 1944. A ceremonial parade and inspection of the Bermuda Command Training Battalion by Brigadier the Hon. H. D. Maconochie, M.C, Officer Commanding British Troops, Bermuda, was carried out on the Parade Ground, Prospect, at-10.15 on Saturday morning. The Parade, under the command of Major R. M. Jefferis, Leicestershire Regiment, G.S.O. II, Bermuda Command, was witnessed by a large gathering of civilians who had been attracted by the sound of the Band. The Brigadier, attended by Captain J. G. Barber, Irish Guards, G.S.O. III, Bermuda Command, was accompanied by Lieut.-Col. J. C. Astwood as Officer Commanding the Battalion. Major D. H. Brabner, R.A., D.A.A. & Q.M.G., Bermuda, and Major Ian Buchanan, Liverpool Scottish, who has been assisting in fieldcraft and battle training, were also-present. On the arrival of the Officer Commanding British Troops the parade was brought to attention and presented arms, upon which the band played the customary bars of the "General Salute". Subsequently the parade was Inspected by the Brigadier, the band playing the "Review March". Upon completion of the inspection the Training Battalion marched past the saluting base in column of route, the band playing an appropriate march. Later the Battalion reassembled by Companies on the parade ground and was photographed. An inspection of quarters and sleeping accommodation was then made by the Brigadier. At the conclusion of the inspection, Brigadier Maconochie expressed his satisfaction with the general improvement in the smartness and military bearing of the personnel. Though there was still room for improvement, he said he considered that in four weeks training great credit was due to the Officers, N.C.O's. and men for their standard of efficiency. The attainment of this high standard was only made possible by the keenness and cooperation of all ranks. Continuing, the Brigadier declared that the morale of the unit was obviously extremely high. There seemed little doubt that when the contingent went overseas from this Island and eventually met the enemy, they would do credit to the Colony. The population of the Island need have no qualms that they would not uphold the fine traditions of fighting efficiency which had always been attributed to Bermudians whenever they had been called upon by the Empire to rally to the colours, he added.
  12. ^ "Royal Navy, including HMS Affray, 1951–1960". naval-history.net. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  13. ^ "United Kingdom Garrison, Bermuda (Withdrawal)". House of Commons. 22 May 1957. Retrieved 15 July 2017.
  14. ^ "Amalgamation". Bermuda Regiment. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  15. ^ THE MONTHLY ARMY LIST, JANUARY, 1937. Corrected to 30th December, 1936. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office (now Her Majesty's Stationery Office). 1937. p. xvii. 27 Militia units in Bermuda, Channel Islands and Malta (c).
  16. ^ THE ARMY LIST, APRIL, 1951. Corrected to 15th March, 1951. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office (now Her Majesty's Stationery Office). 1951. p. xv. 41 Militia units in Bermuda and The Channel Islands (d).
  17. ^ "Special forces regiment created". 5 April 2005 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  18. ^ "The Queen's regulations for the army 1975 (amendment number 37), The Quarterly Army List, DECEMBER, 1946. Corrected generally to 8 October 1946. Volume 1. Page 14. ORDER OF PRECEDENCE OF REGIMENTS, ETC., IN THE ARMY. His Majesty's Stationery Office, London. The Order of Precedence for the Army and within the Infantry, 09: Honours, Awards, Royal and Ceremonial Events, Defence Instruction and Notices released 1 August 2007, MoD PS12(A), Reference: 2007DIN09-027 and Army General and Admin Instructions, Volume 2, Chapter 69, Legal Matters (AGAI69) dated August 2017 and page 8/1-1, Chapter 8, Ceremonial Part 1- Precedence, Precedence of Corps and Regiments, paragraph 8.001., The Queen's Regulations for the Army 1975, Amendment 37, dated May 2019".
  19. ^ "Regiment gets 'Royal' name change as gift – The Royal Gazette:Bermuda News". The Royal Gazette. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  20. ^ "BERMUDA". stablebelts.co.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  21. ^ "Pay, resources and benefits". Royal Bermuda Regiment. Retrieved 29 October 2021.
  22. ^ "The Order of Precedence for the Army and within the Infantry, 09: Honours, Awards, Royal and Ceremonial Events, Defence Instruction and Notices released 1 August 2007, MoD PS12(A), Reference: 2007DIN09-027 and Army General and Admin Instructions, Volume 2, Chapter 69, Legal Matters (AGAI69) dated August 2017 and page 8/1-1, Chapeter 8, Ceremonial Part 1- Precedence, Precedence of Corps and Regiments, paragraph 8.001., The Queen's Regulations for thee Army 1975, Amendment 37, dated May 2019".
  23. ^ "Organisation". Royal Bermuda Regiment. Royal Bermuda Regiment. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  24. ^ Horrocks, Chris (1 June 2001). "Called to arms: Conscription in a British regiment? It's not as far-fetched as it sounds". SOLDIER: Magazine of the British Army. UK: British Government.
  25. ^ "House of Commons – Foreign Affairs – Written Evidence". parliament.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  26. ^ "House of Commons – Foreign Affairs – Written Evidence". parliament.uk. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  27. ^ "Foreign Affairs Committee: Press Notice". UK Parliament. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  28. ^ "The Royal Gazette: Pitman's 40 years in the Regiment recognised, By Ceola Wilson. 4 June 2013".
  29. ^ "MPs Pass Bill To Abolish Regiment Conscription". Bernews. 23 June 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  30. ^ Johnston, Paul (23 June 2018). "House votes to end conscription | The Royal Gazette:Bermuda News". The Royal Gazette. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  31. ^ . British Defence Staff. November 2005. Archived from the original on 3 April 2015.
  32. ^ The Royal Gazette: Cadet Corp to be replaced as budget savings are made. Published 21 March 2012 (Updated 21 March 2012)
  33. ^ The Bermuda Regiment: 29 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Bermuda Cadet Corps
  34. ^ The Bermuda Regiment: Request for volunteer instructors for the Junior Leaders
  35. ^ Simons, Duncan. "Junior Leaders Head to UK - Royal Bermuda Regiment". bermudaregiment.bm.
  36. ^ Outward Bound, Bermuda. Our People. Board of Directors: Lt Col BN Gonsalves, ED, tacsc
  37. ^ "A BILL entitled ROYAL BERMUDA REGIMENT (JUNIOR LEADERS) ACT 2015. Parliament of Bermuda" (PDF).
  38. ^ "Bermuda Regiment 50th Anniversary: The Bermuda Regiment SYNOPSIS"
  39. ^ "3 Are Indicted in Plot to Smuggle Chinese Aliens Into New York". The New York Times. 10 October 1996. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  40. ^ "Army General and Admin Instructions, Volume 2, Chapter 69, Legal Matters (AGAI69) dated August 2017".
  41. ^ "Royal Warrant/Corps Warrant by Command of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth dated 17 July 2017 and Army General and Admin Instructions, Volume 2, Chapter 69, Legal Matters (AGAI69) dated August 2017. and The Order of Precedence for the Army and within the Infantry, 09: Honours, Awards, Royal and Ceremonial Events, Defence Instruction and Notices released 1 August 2007, MoD PS12(A), Reference: 2007DIN09-027 and Army General and Admin Instructions, Volume 2, Chapter 69, Legal Matters (AGAI69) dated August 2017 and page 8/1-1, Chapter 8, Ceremonial Part 1- Precedence, Precedence of Corps and Regiments, paragraph 8.001., The Queen's Regulations for the Army 1975, Amendment 37, dated May 2019".
  42. ^ "Bermuda Regiment to end training camps in Jamaica". jamaica-gleaner.com. 18 March 2013.
  43. ^ "Jamaica Observer Limited". Jamaica Observer.
  44. ^ "Special Operations.com The Camp Lejeune MOUT Facility. Familiarization Images.".
  45. ^ "UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS: Marine Corps Base, Camp Lejeune Range and Training Regulations (BO 3570.1C) Standing Operating Procedures for Range Control" (PDF).
  46. ^ "Meaford 2014 (1)". 7 May 2014 – via Flickr.
  47. ^ The Globe: Bermuda recce team recon Lejeune. by Lance Corporal E.V. Walsh. 20 April 1989
  48. ^ "Halifax Media Group, Jacksonville Caily News: Bermuda Regiment trains in casualty care at Camp Johnson. By THOMAS BRENNAN - Daily News Staff. Published: Tuesday, 7 May 2013 at 16:27 PM".
  49. ^ Bermuda soldiers have medical training with local Marines. WCTI NewsChannel 12 (ABC affiliate), Bonten Media Group, Inc, New Bern, North Carolina
  50. ^ "Engineers: different uniforms, identical mission". 2nd Marine Logistics Group. 13 May 2013. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  51. ^ Administrator. "Royal Bermuda Regiment". bermudaregiment.bm. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  52. ^ Ministry of Defence Defence Training Estate (DTE) South-East: Public Information Leaflet
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  54. ^ "Sergeant takes RBR into new territory". www.royalgazette.com. 15 February 2020.
  55. ^ Ragoonath, Reshma (30 January 2020). "Regiment senior officers appointed". Cayman Compass.
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  57. ^ "Bermuda officer killed in A34 crash near Drayton". BBC News. 12 September 2012.
  58. ^ "The Royal Gazette: Foster-Brown takes over as Regiment CO".
  59. ^ "The Royal Gazette: War veteran CO: Regiment offers a huge amount".
  60. ^ "The Royal Gazette: Lt Col Foster-Brown takes over at Warwick Camp".
  61. ^ says, Interesting (29 February 2016). "Lt Col David Curley Assumes Command Of RBR".
  62. ^ "New Commanding Officer, Royal Bermuda Regiment". www.gov.bm. 7 February 2020.
  63. ^ "Beasley to command Royal Bermuda Regiment". www.royalgazette.com. 8 February 2020.
  64. ^ B.M.A. Begin 2-Week Camp At Warwick. The Bermuda Recorder, 22 January 1964. Page 1.
  65. ^ Rifles go to Camp At Week's End. The Bermuda Recorder, 5 February 1964. Page 1.
  66. ^ "Bermuda Regiment Equipment: Uzi Sub-machine gun". Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  67. ^ "The EM-2 (Rifle No. 9, Mk 1)". Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  68. ^ Ezell, Edward Clinton (1984). The Great Rifle Controversy: Search for the Ultimate Infantry Weapon from World War II Through Vietnam and Beyond. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Halsted Press. ISBN 978-0-8117-0709-1.
  69. ^ Hughes, David R. (1990). The History and Development of the M16 Rifle and its Cartridge. Oceanside, California: Armory Publications. ISBN 0-9626096-0-9.
  70. ^ [ss109.com 5.56mm (.223) PARAMILITARY AMMUNITION, by John Schaefer. Rifle magazine, January/February, 1988, pages 36, 37, 70 and 71.]
  71. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  72. ^ Berlin, Reuters in (22 April 2015). "German military to stop using gun 'that can't shoot straight when hot'". The Guardian.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Royal Bermuda Regiment - Government of Bermuda

royal, bermuda, regiment, formerly, bermuda, regiment, home, defence, unit, british, overseas, territory, bermuda, single, territorial, infantry, battalion, that, formed, amalgamation, 1965, originally, voluntary, units, mostly, black, bermuda, militia, artill. The Royal Bermuda Regiment RBR formerly the Bermuda Regiment is the home defence unit of the British Overseas Territory of Bermuda It is a single territorial 1 infantry battalion that was formed on the amalgamation in 1965 of two originally voluntary units the mostly black Bermuda Militia Artillery BMA and the almost entirely white Bermuda Rifles titled the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps BVRC until 1949 and the only remaining component of the Bermuda Garrison since the 1957 withdrawal of regular units and detachments from Bermuda Royal Bermuda RegimentCap Badge of the Royal Bermuda RegimentActive1 September 1965Country BermudaBranchArmyTypeLine InfantryRoleInternal securitySizeOne Battalion 609 soldiersGarrison HQWarwick CampMarchQuick BermudaAnniversaries21 November 1965 presentation of the first colours Websitewww wbr bermudaregiment wbr bmCommandersCommanding OfficerLt Col Benjamin Beasley BEMColonel in ChiefThe Duchess of GloucesterHonorary ColonelCol David Gibbons Contents 1 History 2 Badge 3 Dress 4 Ranks 5 Organisation 5 1 Leadership 5 2 Manpower 5 3 Structure 5 4 Conscription 5 5 Recent assessments 5 6 Royal Bermuda Regiment Junior Leaders and the Bermuda Cadet Corps 6 Operations 7 Overseas connections 7 1 Corps Warrant 7 2 Other 8 Alliances 9 Commanding officers 10 Equipment 10 1 Rifles and shotguns 10 2 Pistols and submachine guns 10 3 Machine guns 10 4 Internal Security IS 10 5 Artillery 10 6 Vehicles 10 7 Boats 10 8 Radio 11 Gallery 12 See also 13 Order of precedence 14 References 15 External linksHistory Edit Soldiers of the Bermuda Contingent of the Royal Garrison Artillery BMA in a Casualty Clearing Station on the Western Front in July 1916 Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps soldiers serving on the Western Front with the Lincolnshire Regiment 1918 Remembrance Day parade at the Cenotaph in the City of Hamilton 1990 HE The Governor Major General Sir Desmond Langley inspects war veterans and is speaking with former Second in Command of the Royal Bermuda Regiment Major Donald Henry Bob Burns MC ED The two original units the mostly black Bermuda Militia Artillery and the almost entirely white Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps were raised 1895 and 1894 respectively in accordance with two of three acts passed by the Bermudian parliament in 1892 at the insistence of the British Government which had been attempting to encourage entice or coerce the local government to restore reserve military units since the last Militia Act had been allowed to lapse following the Napoleonic Wars and the American War of 1812 2 The regulations of the two units were the same as those of militia and volunteer units in the British Isles at the time with a few additions specific to the units The units were fully funded by the War Office as parts of the British Army rather than as auxiliary to it 3 Contingents from both units were deployed to France and Belgium in June 1915 and saw action on the Western Front during the First World War 2 Following the First World War the British Government s policy of austerity resulted in a substantial reduction of the regular army including reducing the regular infantry in Bermuda and removing the Royal Artillery and the Royal Engineers Fortress companies from Bermuda in 1928 with the local reserve units shouldering more responsibility This resulted in the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps being re organised on territorial lines in 1921 Those other ranks who chose to continue serving were re attested committing to terms of service which meant they could no longer quit the corps with fourteen days notice The name of the corps was not modified to reflect the change however 4 Militia soldiers were already engaged for terms of service and the Bermuda Militia Artillery was not similarly re organised until 1928 its name also was not modified to reflect the change 5 The Bermuda Volunteer Engineers was created as a unit to operate the search lights at coastal artillery batteries in June 1931 previously the third act of 1892 had authorised the creation of a militia unit to assist the Royal Engineers company tasked with maintaining and operating Bermuda s submarine mining defences but this unit had not been raised 6 while the Bermuda Militia Infantry was raised in October 1939 originally relieving the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps of the task of protecting St David s Battery from attack by enemy landing parties but taking on new roles as it expanded to a strength of two companies with the infantry defence of the colony being split between the regular infantry by then a detachment of 4th Battalion Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders 7 8 9 the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps and the Bermuda Militia Infantry 10 4 RSM of the Bermuda Regiment WO1 Herman Eve in 1992 A contingent of volunteers for overseas service from the Bermuda Militia Artillery one officer Bermuda Volunteer Engineers four sappers and Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps sixteen officers and other ranks was sent to Britain in June 1940 where the contingent members separated to join their parent corps Royal Artillery Royal Engineers and the Lincolnshire regiment respectively With the regular garrison having been drastically reduced due to post First World War economic austerity by the British Government concern over further weakening the garrison meant the local service units which had been embodied for full time service for the duration of the war were barred from sending further contingents abroad until 1943 by which time the threat of enemy attacks on Bermuda and its strategic defence infrastructure had greatly diminished and the United States Army and United states Marine Corps had garrisoned the colony Following this a contingent of volunteers from the Bermuda Militia Artillery and Bermuda Militia Infantry was attached to the 1st Caribbean Regiment and saw action in Europe and North Africa during the Second World War while a company from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was attached to the Lincolnshire Regiment and saw action in North West Europe and in Burma during that war 2 The two contingents had been grouped together in 1943 as the Command Training Battalion stationed at Prospect Camp while training in preparation for deployment to Europe 11 Margaret Thatcher reviewing the Royal Bermuda Regiment in early 1990 After the war the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was belatedly renamed the Bermuda Rifles 2 The Bermuda Militia Artillery however was not renamed Following the closure of the Royal Navy s dockyard commenced in 1951 a process that lasted until 1958 leaving only a small naval base HMS Malabar within the former dockyard 12 the military garrison which had existed primarily to protect the Royal Navy base was also closed 13 John F Kennedy escorted by a Bermuda Militia Artillery officer in Royal Artillery blue No 1 Dress inspects green uniformed riflemen of the Bermuda Rifles in 1961 The Bermuda Militia Artillery and the Bermuda Rifles amalgamated to form the Bermuda Regiment on 1 September 1965 2 The new Bermuda Regiment s stand of colours was presented in November 1965 by Princess Margaret Princess Margaret presented a second stand of colours to replace the first in November 1990 to mark the Bermuda Regiment s 25th anniversary 14 The latest set of Colours were presented by Duchess of Gloucester GCVO at the National Sports Centre on 13 November 2010 2 In 1945 the part time reserve units in Bermuda the Channel Islands and Malta had numbered collectively as 28th in the British Army order of precedence the number varied before and after 1945 depending on the make up of the British Army 15 16 but were ordered within that according to the order of precedence of their parent corps in the regular army This meant that the Bermuda Militia Artillery BMA as part of the Royal Regiment of Artillery and the Militia preceded the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps BVRC as part of the infantry and the Volunteer Force despite being the second of the two to be raised Today the Royal Bermuda Regiment as an amalgam of the BMA and BVRC is 29th and was formerly 28th which changed in 2007 with the Special Reconnaissance Regiment being added to the Order of Precedence 17 18 On 1 September 2015 Queen Elizabeth II awarded the title Royal to the regiment to mark the 50th anniversary of its formation 19 Badge EditThe badge of the Royal Bermuda Regiment combines elements from those of the Royal Regiment of Artillery and the BVRC The full badge as displayed on the Colours features two crossed cannons creating an X behind a Maltese cross the symbol of rifle regiments in the British Army and used on the white metal BVRC badge set on a circular shield with THE BERMUDA REGIMENT inscribed around it and the whole enclosed within a wreath and surmounted by the Crown The cap badge is bi metal all brass except a white metal Maltese cross which is set inside the wheel of a cannon taken from the badge of the Royal Artillery with a half wreath about the lower hemisphere of the badge Flashes and other colour marks used on dress and elsewhere such as backgrounds on signs about Warwick Camp are blue and red reflecting the colours of the Royal Artillery but the stable belt issued only to permanent staff officers and senior ranks worn is rifle green with black edges referring to the colours used by the BVRC 20 The badge of the Royal Bermuda Regiment bottom draws elements from those of the BMA Royal Artillery second from left and the BVRC second from right The badge at the left is that of the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment affiliated to the BVRC and that at the right belongs to the Royal Anglian Regiment its successor Dress Edit Bermuda Regiment Warrant Officers in the No 1 dress Potential Non Commissioned Officers PNCO Cadre Promotion Parade in No 3 Summer Dress at Warwick Camp in June 1994 The dress uniform itself is closer to the old Royal Artillery pattern and to the generic No 1 dress uniform used by many British regiments today being composed of dark blue almost black tunic and trousers and differing only in the red cuffs and collar added to the tunic The trousers have a broad red stripe running down the outside of each leg A generic dark blue peaked cap with red hat band is worn with this uniform During the summer months the No 3 uniform is worn identical to the No 1 except that a light weight generic white tunic is worn As the majority of public ceremonial duties actually take place during the summer months the No 1 uniform was little used by comparison to the No 3 and has been withdrawn from general ceremonial usage The No 3 uniform is now worn for ceremonial parade year round Although neither the BMA nor the BVRC were line infantry a Full Dress with red tunic historically worn by line infantry is worn only by regimental drummers Bermuda Regiment Warrant Officer in the old DPM No 9 Tropical Combat Dress trousers and Soldier 95 shirt The combat uniform is now the British Army Multi Terrain Pattern which replaced the Soldier 95 uniform of the previous decade beginning in 2012 For much of the Regiment s history its dress included a mixed collection of British uniform items As with its predecessors the Royal Bermuda Regiment has a tradition of wearing temperate uniforms including combat jackets and pullovers for much of the year and tropical uniforms during the summer months This is a result of the peculiar climate of Bermuda which is chilly wet and windy during the winter and can reach 30 C 86 F during the summer with high humidity For many years and unusually for an infantry unit the regiment wore the Denison parachute smock which it inherited from its predecessors only adopting the 1968 pattern DPM combat jacket in the 1980s which it issued into the new millennium although the 1968 uniform actually became obsolete with Regular British Army regiments in the 1980s At the time of amalgamation the basic combat uniform worn under the Denison was composed of the Second World War era green tropical shirt and trousers ankle boots and puttees Carrying equipment was initially the 1937 Pattern By the early 1980s these uniform items had been replaced by the green lightweight trousers green shirt and sweater 1968 Pattern combat jacket high boots otherwise identical to the old ankle boot and the 1958 Pattern carrying equipment Green shirts and lightweight combat trousers began to be supplemented by DPM tropical uniforms in the 1980s and by the mid 1990s had been entirely replaced by them although the green kit like the Denison smocks was handed down to the Regiment s Junior Leaders and to the Bermuda Cadet Corps which continued to wear it The tropical DPM uniform worn in colder weather with the 68 Pattern Combat Jacket and the green pullover was fully adopted by 1994 and continued to be issued for some time after its replacement in Britain by the Soldier 95 uniform The beret worn is the dark blue one worn by the Royal Artillery and by various British Army units not authorised to wear distinctive colours of their own Little use is made of Service Dress which is only issued to a handful of permanent staff members The colour varies slightly from the standard British Army khaki being greener and during the summer months the long trousers might be replaced with shorts The Royal Bermuda Regiment service dress is composed of a jacket and trousers worn with an olive green peaked cap tan shirt and tie Whereas its predecessors often used the tropical weight No 4 Service Dress during the summer months the Royal Bermuda Regiment uses the same uniform year round worn during the summer in shirt sleeve order usually a short sleeved tan shirt with no tie whether worn with long trousers or shorts of the same weight and colour A stable belt is worn in shirt sleeve order Mess dress is also worn for many functions by members of the Officers Mess and of the Sergeants and Warrant Officers Mess Ranks EditRanks are as follows 21 Rank group General flag officers Field senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet Royal Bermuda Regiment Lieutenant colonel Major Captain Lieutenant Second lieutenant Officer cadetRank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted Royal Bermuda Regiment No insigniaWarrant officer class 1 Warrant officer class 2 Colour Sergeant Sergeant Corporal Lance corporal PrivateOrganisation EditLeadership Edit A Command Centre during IS training PNCO Cadre train in Internal Security IS role Bermuda Regiment soldiers aboard a motor boat off the North Shore of Bermuda 1996 As Bermuda is a British overseas territory and defence is therefore the responsibility of the United Kingdom the Royal Bermuda Regiment is under the control of the Governor and Commander in Chief of the island However pay and financing is the responsibility of the Ministry of Labour Home Affairs and Housing The Royal Bermuda Regiment RBR is listed in the British Army Order of Battle as number 29th in order of precedence The RBR traditionally was number 28th in the order of precedence but due to the first time listing on the order of precedence of the Special Reconnaissance Regiment which is the newest Combat Arm Corp 22 On its formation the regiment s Honorary Colonel was Princess Margaret Countess of Snowdon who became Colonel in Chief in 1984 After her death in 2002 the position was assumed in 2004 by The Duchess of Gloucester The unit is directly commanded by a lieutenant colonel as is typical of a battalion in the British Army who is appointed by the governor upon the advice of a Defence Board Brian Gonsalves was appointed on 28 May 2009 to serve for a standard three year tenure In some cases that tenure can be extended by the governor for a further year In Lieutenant Colonel Gonsalves case he filled the role until passing command to Lieutenant Colonel Foster Brown in June 2013 The current visiting EU advisor of the regiment is Commandant H Kunz of Coburg Germany Manpower Edit The Regiment s original strength was about 400 including all ranks Following discipline problems during an exercise in the West Indies a report on the unit was commissioned from Major General Glyn Gilbert the highest ranking Bermudian in the British Army Maj Gen Gilbert also took into account the difficulties the regiment had experienced in meeting its obligations when deployed during the civil unrest of 1977 its existing strength did not allow for a reserve He made a number of recommendations including the increase of the Regiment s strength to a full battalion of about 750 with three rifle companies A B and C and a support company As the support functions Regimental Quartermaster Stores and Internal Security Stores Signals Armourers Motor Transport Boat Troop Gun Troop Assault Pioneers Medics cooks et cetera and the Band now fell under Support Company commanded by the Regimental Quartermaster the battalion headquarters was no longer considered a company in its own right Initially the three rifle companies rotated through the role of training company Eventually C Company was renamed permanent Training Company Recruits spent their first year in Training Company then transferred as a unit to whichever rifle company was losing its third year conscripts or were reassigned individually to other sub units Structure Edit Colour party of the Royal Bermuda Regiment at Queen s Birthday Parade on 10 June 2017 With the end of conscription it is no longer possible to maintain a dedicated Training Company in which recruits spend their first year Recruits now spend three months after their two week initial training being trained under Training Wing before being posted to one of the Companies The current 2022 establishment 23 is Regimental Headquarters A Company rifle company Operational Support Units OSU s Boat Troop the Regiment Police the Operational Support Divers OSD and the Explosive Ordinance Disposal EOD Section which form the Joint Service EOD unit with the Bermuda Police Service B Company rifle company Humanitarian and Disaster Relief and ceremonial duties Logistics Company Training Wing Coast GuardOne of the units amalgamated into the Royal Bermuda Regiment the BMA was nominally an artillery unit although it had converted to the infantry role in 1953 Other than a ceremonial Gun Troop equipped with two 25 pdr field guns the Royal Bermuda Regiment is wholly an infantry unit Conscription Edit Recruits clean their Mini 14 rifles prior to a shoot at Warwick Camp during the 1994 Recruit Camp The majority of the regiment was made up of conscripts up to July 2018 making it unique among all of the land forces under the British Crown 24 Conscription was based on a random lottery of men through the ages of 18 to 23 with exemptions granted to Police and Prison officers members of the British regular forces or men who have served for two years church ministers prisoners or those judged to be of unsound mind Temporary deferment was granted for full time students attending either the Bermuda College or schools abroad for the length of their studies and individuals medically unfit but likely to become fit again Conscientious objectors had the opportunity to either serve in a non combatant role or perform an alternative community service chosen by the governor Both Bermudians and non Bermudians criticised conscription for its alleged sexism and similarity to slavery a sensitive issue given the historic background of Bermuda and this has been noted in the British Parliament 25 26 27 It received support from the community however and was hailed for causing interaction between social and racial groups At its height three quarters of the strength of the Bermuda Regiment was made up of conscripts although many soldiers whether they initially volunteered or were conscripted elected to re engage annually after their initial three years and two months term of service was completed with some serving for decades such as WO2 Bernard Pitman who retired in 2013 after forty years of service 28 In 2018 the House of Assembly of Bermuda voted to abolish conscription effective of 1 July 2018 29 30 Recent assessments Edit Towards the end of 2005 the regiment took part in a fitness for role exercise this time in the form of an inspection by the Ministry of Defence The review noted that equipment was substandard and major items would be deemed to be unserviceable by 2010 half of the vehicles and signal equipment were noted to be out of action and that command and control was poor though it also noted high morale and firearms proficiency 31 Royal Bermuda Regiment Junior Leaders and the Bermuda Cadet Corps Edit The Bermuda Regiment operated its own Junior Leaders programme for many years until it was absorbed into the separate Bermuda Cadet Corps in the 1990s The Junior Leaders had been part of the Bermuda Regiment wearing the same cap badge and operating from Warwick Camp whereas the Bermuda Cadet Corp was a separate organisation operating through the island s secondary schools having been reformed from the old Cadet Corps in 1965 at the same time as the amalgamation of the BMA and Bermuda Rifles In 2012 due to financial constraints the Bermuda Cadet Corps was disbanded and replaced by the resurrected Bermuda Regiment Junior Leaders 32 33 34 35 Many of the Bermuda Regiment s officers warrant officers and NCOs began their service in the Junior Leaders including former Commanding Officers Lieutenant Colonel Brian Gonsalves 36 and Lieutenant Colonel David Curley A bill was tabled in the House of Assembly of Bermuda in 2015 to formalise the organisation of the Royal Bermuda Regiment s Junior Leaders 37 Operations Edit Bermuda Regiment soldiers armed with Mini 14s and a Barbados Police officer conduct a joint patrol of an oil facility during the 2007 Cricket World Cup in Bridgetown Barbados The primary role of the regiment has recently become disaster relief Other roles include ceremonial duties and supporting the Bermuda police department in internal security issues both in the forms of riot control and anti terrorism In 2001 following the September 11 attacks on the nearby United States the Bermuda Regiment was deployed taking over responsibility for the security of the Bermuda International Airport Bermuda has always been a point of importance in trans Atlantic aviation and a large number of aircraft diverted to the Island when US airspace was closed and other potential targets In 2004 and 2005 the regiment deployed to the Cayman Islands and Grenada to assist in post Hurricane Ivan restoration efforts The Bermuda Regiment successfully deployed a platoon of internal security trained soldiers to Barbados in 2007 There they took part in forming the security infrastructure for the WCC Cricket World Cup They worked alongside soldiers from Barbados Guyana India and South Africa in ensuring a secure environment for the Super 8 series of matches Although little has been made of this deployment this was the first time since the First World War that a formed unit from Bermuda has deployed overseas for an operation other than disaster relief the Second World War drafts from the BMA BVRC and BVE were all absorbed into other units and the cadre of officers and NCOs sent to Belize in the 1980s were attached to a battalion of the Royal Anglians The Bermuda Regiment also provided a cordon at the Bermuda International Airport in October 1996 when the Chinese ship Xing Da was brought to the island The ship had been detained on the Atlantic by the United States Coast Guard carrying over a hundred illegal migrants with the intent of smuggling them into Massachusetts It was intended to transfer the passengers and crew to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base but the ship was deemed unseaworthy Taking the ship into a US port to transfer the detainees to Cuba was undesirable as the US Government would have then been obliged to allow any who requested to enter the process for asylum application The only other port within reach was Bermuda roughly 640 miles from North Carolina and 1 061 4 miles from Guantanamo Bay As the UK Government was wary of allowing the detainees to set foot on British territory for the same reason the ship was kept offshore while the two governments negotiated A Company of the Bermuda Regiment was deployed pending the outcome On 9 October it provided a cordon to close off the Weapons Pier of the former United States Navy NAS Bermuda while Bermuda Government ferry boats brought the detainees into Castle Harbour Bermuda Police and US Coast Guard powerboats transferred the detainees to the Weapons Pier where they were handcuffed and loaded one by one aboard waiting US Coast Guard C 130 Hercules with each aeroplane taking off and heading for Cuba as soon as it was full 38 39 The regiment also performs a wide variety of community service operations and is involved in many cultural events on the island especially in parades Overseas connections Edit Royal Bermuda Regiment and US Navy NAS Bermuda personnel at Camp Lejeune During the First World War the Bermuda Regiment s predecessor the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps BVRC sent two contingents to serve with the Lincolnshire Regiment on the Western Front After the War the connection to the Lincolns was made official When the UK Volunteer Force Yeomanry and Militia had been reorganised into the Territorial Force in 1908 renamed the Territorial Army after the First World War the many former Volunteer Rifle Corps became numbered battalions of British Regular Army regiments with the regular regiments adopting paternal roles by providing the part time units with loaned officers warrant officers and NCOs and taking other steps to give them the benefit of their experience Although the Territorial Force like the Volunteer Force was tasked only with home defence and its soldiers could not originally be compelled to take part in overseas campaigns the Territorials would send drafts of volunteers to the Regular battalions during wartime or once the restriction on sending Territorials overseas without their consent was lifted the entire TA battalion might be sent The role the Lincolnshire Regiment adopted with the BVRC was similar to that it played with its own TA battalions although the BVRC remained a separate unit The BVRC again provided two drafts to the Lincolns during the Second World War When the BVRC renamed the Bermuda Rifles was amalgamated with the Bermuda Militia Artillery BMA to create the Bermuda Regiment the Royal Anglian Regiment into which the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment had itself been amalgamated continued the paternal role Throughout the Bermuda Regiment s history the Royal Anglians have provided it with its staff officer and with Permanent Staff Instructors PSI now called full time instructors FTI warrant officers WO2 for each of its companies as well as other personnel on long term and short term attachments although other Regiments have occasionally also provided personnel on loan Although the Bermuda Regiment had prior to 2013 always managed to provide commanding officers from within its own strength it has occasionally had to use seconded officers when unable to provide its own personnel to fill roles such as Second In Command 2 i c adjutant regimental sergeant major RSM and training officer Its first nine Adjutants 1965 1984 were all seconded from the Royal Anglians Ten of its regimental sergeant majors have been seconded including three from the Royal Anglians WO1 R Jones 1976 1978 WO1 B Bear 1985 1986 and WO1 JJ Wilcox 1987 1989 In 1996 its Second in Command staff officer and adjutant were all on loan from the Royal Anglians This frequent resort to seconded officers is due to a problem common to many Territorial units in Britain also These positions are all full time ones ideally filled by officers who volunteer from within the regiment but whose service in these roles is restricted to three years As relatively few officers can afford to leave their civil careers for three years the problem is not so much caused by a lack of suitable officers as a lack of willing ones The Lincolnshire Regiment was also affiliated to The Lincoln and Welland Regiment of the Canadian Army Although joint training has occurred in the past and short term loans of NCOs from the Lincoln amp Welland Regiment have been frequent especially for Recruit Camps and Overseas Camps numerous attempts to formalise the affiliation with the Bermuda Regiment have been unsuccessful Members of the ceremonial Gun Troop carry out occasional ceremonial training with the Royal Regiment of Artillery which provides its sergeant major instructor of gunnery to conduct local courses although the troop has no combat artillery role As one of the units amalgamated into the Bermuda Regiment the BMA was an artillery unit which history the Gun Troop commemorates members of the regiment are entitled to join the Royal Artillery Association RAA which has a branch located on the grounds of the former St George s Garrison which had been predominantly a Royal Garrison Artillery establishment The Bermuda Regiment shares this unusual heritage of a combined infantry and artillery unit with the Royal Gibraltar Regiment Corps Warrant Edit In late 2001 the Bermuda Regiment and the Royal Gibraltar Regiment were presented with Corps Warrants dated 21 February 2000 In 2017 the Corps Warrant ceased on the 30 July A new Corps Warrant which included the Royal Bermuda Regiment was confirmed as a Corps of the British Army and took effect 1 August 2017 and was signed at St James Court by Her Majesty s Command dated 17 July 2017 40 The 2017 Corp Warrant notes that the competition of Corps composition The under mentioned bodies of the British Army comprising Regular Forces Army Reserves Regular Reserve including any raised hereafter and any local units overseas of which the Royal Bermuda Regiment was listed with the composition note All units and personnel of The Royal Bermuda Regiment 41 Other Edit Royal Bermuda Regiment and US Marine Corps Sergeants 1989 Bermuda Regiment soldiers board a USMC CH 46 Sea Knight at USMC Camp Lejeune in North Carolina USA Two soldiers from the Bermuda Regiment s Guns Assault Pioneers with a US Marine Corps engineer at Camp Lejeune in 2013 The Bermuda Regiment also developed a relationship with the United States Marine Corps which had supplied a detachment to Bermuda for many years to guard United States Navy facilities In addition to occasional training with the US Marines in Bermuda the Bermuda Regiment used facilities and training areas of the US Marines Camp Lejeune and Camp Geiger in North Carolina for training with the two rifle companies having been sent there every second year for their annual camps The Training Company s Potential Non Commissioned Officers PNCO Cadre is also sent there each June it had previously been sent to Canada Following the increased usage of those bases after 2001 by US forces preparing for deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan the Bermuda Regiment briefly moved the location for its annual camps to Florida where it was developing a relationship with the Florida National Guard although it subsequently recommenced the use of Camp Lejeune The Bermuda Regiment took part in its first exercise overseas in 1968 when twenty eight personnel were deployed to Jamaica on 26 October along with A Company of the York and Lancaster Regiment for a four week introduction to jungle warfare in the vicinity of Berriedale in Portland Jamaica became the location of annual camps in alternate years but in March 2013 it was announced that a new location would be sought 42 43 This was due to the cost of deploying to Jamaica a flight of 1 249 miles compared to 725 miles for the flight to MCAS Cherry Point North Carolina given the budgetary constraints and as Jamaica provided little opportunity for training in Internal Security roles such as is available at USMCB Camp Lejeune with its Military Operations in Urban Terrain MOUT facility 44 45 In 2014 the annual camp was held at the Land Force Central Area Training Centre Meaford of the Canadian Army at Meaford in Ontario Canada 46 The Bermuda Regiment s training in the US Jamaica and Canada is self contained rarely involving local units but friendly relationships have been developed with both the US Marine Corps and the Jamaica Defence Force JDF Specialist Bermuda Regiment sub units such as the Reconnaissance Platoon and the Medics have trained with equivalent US Marine Corps units at Camp Lejeune 47 48 49 50 The Royal Bermuda Regiment s Boat Troop has also trained in the United States alongside the US Coast Guard which formerly operated Air Sea Rescue services from the American bases in Bermuda and currently provides Air Sea Rescue services in the area around Bermuda from its base at Elizabeth City North Carolina Over the last decade a relationship has also been developed with the Royal Gibraltar Regiment and small detachments sent with that regiment on its annual training deployments to Morocco 51 In 2007 for the first time the annual camp was held in England with detachments training at the Cinque Ports Training Area CPTA part of the Defence Training Estate DTE South East near Dover 52 53 As the new Cayman Regiment is being developed the Royal Bermuda Regiment has been tasked to train the first few batches of recruits from the Cayman Islands at Warwick Camp The first batch of Caymanian recruits had joined the February 2020 intake of Bermudian recruits 54 55 Alliances Edit United Kingdom The Royal Anglian Regiment Canada The Lincoln and Welland Regiment Jamaica The Jamaica Defence ForceCommanding officers Edit Lieutenant Colonel then Lieutenant William White in Jamaica 1996 The commanding officer of the Bermuda Regiment as also the quartermaster training officer the staff officer UK Loan Service the adjutant the aide de camp and the regimental sergeant major is a full time position requiring those appointed to the role to take leave of their civilian employments Originally there was a four year limit to the term of a commanding officer which could be extended if required Following Lieutenant Colonel Gavin A Shorto s six years in the office a three year appointment was made the norm The commanding officer is normally chosen from among the majors of the Battalion and is promoted to lieutenant colonel Following the death of Major Christian Wheddon in a motor accident in England in 2012 56 57 while training in preparation for assuming command Lieutenant Colonel Michael Foster Brown a professional soldier from The Rifles assumed command in June 2013 the first non Bermudian to fill the role 58 59 60 Foster Brown was succeeded by Lieutenant Colonel David Curley on 27 February 2016 61 In March 2020 Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Beasley replaced Curley in command 62 63 Equipment Edit Royal Bermuda Regiment soldier with a Ruger Mini 14 at Ferry Reach in 1994 Royal Bermuda Regiment soldier with an L85A2 at USMC Camp Lejeune in 2018 The BMA and Bermuda Rifles had re equipped from the 303 inch No 4 Mk 1 rifle to the 7 62mm NATO L1A1 Self Loading Rifle SLR the year before amalgamation 64 65 The 303 inch Bren light machine gun and Vickers machine gun were replaced by the 7 62mm NATO General Purpose Machine Gun GPMG The Bermuda Regiment inherited the SLR and the GPMG from its predecessors For Internal Security use the Federal Riot Gun being used in Northern Ireland for firing baton rounds and gas canisters was also adopted The Bermudian reserve forces had been equipped with standard British Army weapons since their restoration in 1895 the Sten sub machine gun had been replaced in the 1960s with the Sterling submachine gun but this had then been replaced with the Israeli Uzi 66 A non standard rifle was to replace the SLR however During the 1950s the British forces had been pressured into dropping the 280 British sub calibre round and EM 2 rifle that had been intended to replace respectively 303 inch ammunition and the No 4 rifle adopting instead the American 7 62mm ammunition as NATO standard and the SLR which was a variant of the Belgian FN FAL 67 Despite forcing the adoption of the 7 62mm round by NATO the US re equipped during the Vietnam War with the M16 rifle chambered for the 5 56 45mm M193 sub calibre ammunition 68 69 Dissatisfaction with the 7 62mm round led NATO to seek a replacement during the 1970s and the Belgian SS109 variant of the American M193 was adopted as 5 56mm NATO 70 Although it had also been intended to establish a NATO standard rifle this did not materialise and different countries developed their own small arms The Royal Small Arms Factory at Enfield Lock had actually begun work in 1969 on a family of weapons mechanically based on the ArmaLite AR 18 but chambered for a 4 85 49mm cartridge and with a bullpup configuration similar to the EM 2 This design was rechambered for the 5 56mm NATO and re designated the SA80 Small Arms for the 1980s The family included two basic weapons the XL64E5 rifle also called the Enfield Individual Weapon and a light support weapon known as the XL65E4 light machine gun which were to be standardised as the L85A1 rifle and L86A1 Light Support Weapon The SA80 would remain stuck in development however until 1987 when the L85A1 and L86A1 began replacing respectively the SLR and the GPMG together with the remaining Brens which had been retained for jungle use and re chambered for 7 62mm in the British armed forces Re equipment was slow and many second line units were still equipped with the older weapons during the 1990 to 1991 Gulf War The Bermuda Regiment decided not to wait for the SA80 and replaced the SLR with the American made Ruger Mini 14 self loading in American parlance semi automatic rifle in 1983 The GPMG was retained in the light as well as the medium machine gun role The Ruger has a 20 round detachable box magazine and can be fitted with a US M7 bayonet The original wooden stocks were replaced with Choate black plastic stocks by 1992 and no further modifications have been made since 71 Small numbers of the SA80 L85A1 and L85A2 were held from about 1990 specifically for familiarisation training This was necessary as large numbers of personnel must attend courses for training commissioning or qualification in Britain and many serve on active duty attachments particularly with the Royal Anglian Regiment and needed to already be knowledgeable of the standard rifle A replacement for the aging Rugers was sought at the end of the Century with small numbers of the German Heckler amp Koch G36 and the American Colt M4 a carbine variant of the M16 obtained for trials following which the G36 had been selected as a replacement for the Ruger and the Uzi sub machine gun However budgetary issues delayed the acquisition of the G36 which also became surrounded by controversy in Germany over reported inaccuracy in warm temperatures 72 The Ruger was instead replaced by the L85A2 version of the SA80 rifle with 400 having been delivered in August 2015 The Ruger was phased out completely by the Recruit Camp of January 2016 Rifles and shotguns Edit L85A2 SA 80 selective fire rifle Standard issue to riflemen as of January 2016 Mini 14GB 20 self loading rifle with Choate stock standard issue to riflemen from 1983 to January 2016 L1A1 Self Loading Rifle standard issue to riflemen from 1965 to 1983 but stocks still held Heckler amp Koch G36 selected to replace the Uzi as second tier weapon issued to specialist companies i e Boat Troop and OSU Colt M4 stocks obtained for trials to determine replacement for Mini 14 and Uzi L42A1 sniper rifle a 7 62mm variant of the Lee Enfield No 4 Mossberg 500 shotgun Greener shotgun obsolete but stocks still held Pistols and submachine guns Edit Beretta 92 semi automatic pistol Glock 17 semi automatic pistolMachine guns Edit FN MAG General purpose machine gun used in light role onlyInternal Security IS Edit ARWEN 37 riot weapon Federal Riot Gun replaced by the ARWEN 37 Artillery Edit Ordnance QF 25 Pounder Field Gun Ordnance SBML 2 inch mortarVehicles Edit Toyota Land Cruiser J70 Mitsubishi L 300 van Ford 350 Ambulance UD 2300DH truck Toyota Dyna truck Toyota HiAce van Toyota LiteAce MinivanBoats Edit Dell Quay Dory Mk 1 boats 18 foot Rigid Raider boats Halmatic RHIB boatsRadio Edit Sepura SC20 replaced Sepura STP8200 radios Sepura STP8200 replaced Bendix King radiosGallery Edit Bermuda Regiment Soldiers armed with Mini 14s on OPs in Barbados for Cricket World Cup 2007 The Royal Bermuda Regiment Band A Permanent Staff Instructor PSI with senior Non Commissioned Officers of the Bermuda Regiment The main gate of Warwick Camp as it appears today from the South Shore Road formerly The Military Road A platoon of the Training Company of the Bermuda Regiment at Warwick Camp during Recruit Camp 1993 Bermuda Regiment Corporal s Mess at Warwick Camp Bermuda Regiment soldiers play football on the parade ground of Warwick Camp 25 Pounder 88 mm field gun of the Bermuda Regiment s ceremonial Gun Troop A motorboat of the Bermuda Regiment Boat Troop moves out of the Great Sound past the HMD Bermuda on Ireland Island An NCO of The Lincoln and Welland Regiment attached to a rifle company of the affiliated Bermuda Regiment training in Jamaica 1996 Jamaica Defence Force soldier with a sergeant of the Bermuda Regiment in the Blue Mountains of Jamaica An NCO of the Bermuda Regiment armed with a General Purpose Machine Gun aboard a Rigid Raider Mossberg 500 shotgun and Federal Riot Gun of the Bermuda Regiment A Bermuda Regiment NCO in No 5 Desert Combat Dress armed with a Galil AR self loading rifle at USMC Camp Lejeune in 1994 Bermuda Regiment amp Bermuda Police Service boats in July 2011 Bermuda Regiment Medics and US Navy Corspmen at USMCB Camp Lejeune in May 2011 Cpl Erikon C Rosamond left of the US Marines and Royal Bermuda Regiment soldiers at Camp Lejeune in 2013 Royal Bermuda Regiment Guns and Assault Pioneers Platoon soldiers and a US Marine discuss training at Camp Lejeune in 2013 Guns and Assault Pioneers Platoon train with a US Marine at US Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in 2013 Royal Bermuda Regiment soldiers attend a funeral at St James Church in Somerset in August 2016 Royal Bermuda Regiment soldiers undergoing Junior Non Commissioned Officer training at USMC Camp Lejeune in May 2018 Junior Non Commissioned Officers Cadre train at Camp Lejeune in 2018 Junior Non Commissioned Officers Cadre soldiers train at Camp Lejeune in 2018 Junior Non Commissioned Officers Cadre soldier training at Camp Lejeune in 2018 Royal Bermuda Regiment shoot at Stonebay Rifle Range USMCB Camp Lejeune on 12 May 2021 See also EditCayman Islands Regiment Turks and Caicos Islands Regiment Royal Gibraltar Regiment Falkland Islands Defence Force Royal Montserrat Defence Force British Army Training and Support Unit Belize Overseas military bases of the United KingdomOrder of precedence EditPreceded byRoyal Gibraltar Regiment Order of Precedence Succeeded byReferences Edit Territorial Army definition of Territorial Army in English from the Oxford dictionary Archived from the original on 12 July 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2016 a b c d e f History The Royal Bermuda Regiment Retrieved 15 July 2021 Maurice Jones DSO RA Colonel KW 1959 History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army UK Royal Artillery Institution a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Ingham Hind Jennifer M 1992 Defence Not Defiance A History Of The Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps Bermuda The Island Press ISBN 0969651716 Maurice Jones DSO RA Colonel KW 1959 History of The Coast Artillery in the British Army UK Royal Artillery Institution a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Bermuda Volunteer Engineers by Jennifer M Hind formerly Jennifer M Ingham of The Royal Gazette Transcript of typescript document held at the Bermuda Maritime Museum King Carol Arrives In Bermuda Dublin Issue Bermuda British Pathe 29 May 1941 1115 33 King Carol and Madame Lupescu of Rumania seek refuge in Bermuda Description Title reads King Carol in Bermuda Bermuda Various shots of King Carol of Rumania and Madame Lupescu arrive at port and disembark from ship separately Madame Lupescu waves back towards the ship Various shots of King Carol posing for press photographers and newsreel cameramen at their hotel Various shots of Madame Lupescu on terrace of hotel with two Pekinese dogs King Carol has escaped from his home country due to war Note alternative spelling of Romania Roumania CHANGES IN STRENGTH OF THE LOCAL COMMAND The Royal Gazette City of Hamilton Pembroke Bermuda 30 August 1940 It is learned from Command Orders that Major D R G Cameron Brigade Major has been struck off the strength of the Bermuda Command with effect from Tuesday and that Captain R F Arden Close K S L I has assumed the duties of Brigade Major Struck off the strength of the Bermuda Command are the under mentioned officers of the Detachment Winnipeg Grenadiers Major G Trist Captain J A Norris Lieut N O Bardal and Lieut F N Symes The following officers of the detachment 4 Camerons have been taken on the strength of the Command Major A Murray Captain D B Mitchell 2 Lt R L Gibson 2 Lt D H Burns 2 Lt L MacDonald 2 Lt A Sinclair and 2 Lt A C McAslam Also taken on the strength of the Command is Lieut J R Faulkener Army Dental Corps MILITARY WEDDING AT CATHEDRAL YESTERDAY Miss Audrey H C Wilson Weds Lieut D H Burns The Royal Gazette City of Hamilton Pembroke Bermuda 20 March 1942 A brilliant wedding ceremony was solemnised at the Cathedral yesterday afternoon at 5 30 o clock when Miss Audrey Hunt Chute Wilson daughter of Mr and Mrs Murray Franklln Wilson of Westcliffe Fairylands became the bride of Lieut Donald Henry Burns 4th Battalion The Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders son of Mr and Mrs Robert Donald Burns of Birkenhead Cheshire England A large crowd thronged the church while hundreds of people were lined up on both sides of the street Yesterday s ceremony was one of the largest military weddings in these Islands so far this year His Lordship the Bishop of Bermuda officiated assisted by the Venerable Archdeacon H Marriott Rector of Paget Parish At the conclusion of the ceremony the Bridal party was met at the western exit of the Cathedral by two pipers of the Cameron Highlanders who piped them to the horseless carriage on Church Street after which the carriage was drawn through the principal streets of Hamilton by a group of Cameron Highlanders led by the pipers The bride who was given in marriage by her father looked charming in a gown of brocaded white satin with long veil She carried a bouquet of calla lilies The bride was attended by her cousin Miss Carol Burrows as maid of honour and by Miss Natalie Conyers and Miss Lee Wadson as bridesmaids Flower girls were the Misses Ann Walker and Helene Harnett The maid of honour was attired in a gown of rose taffeta and she carried a bouquet of purple larkspur with pink gerbera The bridesmaids wore dresses of turquoise blue taffeta and each carried bouquets of purple larkspur with different tones of stock The flower girls wore frocks of mauve taffeta and carried old fashioned bouquets of violets and pink roses Lieut Edward Cameron 4th Batt the Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders was the best man the ushers being Captain Faulkner Lieut J Stirling Lieut Rex Graham and 2nd Lieut M Watson The service was choral Miss Susan Oatham singing O Perfect Love Mr John Bridge was the organist Noted among the congregation in the Cathedral during the ceremony were Brigadier H D Maconochie M C Officer Commanding British Troops at Bermuda Major C W R Hill O C Det 4th Batt Cameron Highlanders Major O Connor G S O 2 at Bermuda Command Captain F W Jefferies Staff Captain Bermuda Command Lieut Paul Curtis Seaforth Highlanders brother officers of the Bridegroom and also officers of local units attached to the Command After the ceremony the bridal couple received congratulations from their many friends at a reception held at Westcliffe Fairylands home of the bride s parents Both Lieut Burns and his bride are well known in these Islands Guardian of the Eastern approaches Royal Gazette 30 January 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2021 OVERSEAS CONTINGENT IS INSPECTED AT PROSPECT O C British Troops Praises Unit On Training Results The Royal Gazette City of Hamilton Pembroke Bermuda 13 March 1944 A ceremonial parade and inspection of the Bermuda Command Training Battalion by Brigadier the Hon H D Maconochie M C Officer Commanding British Troops Bermuda was carried out on the Parade Ground Prospect at 10 15 on Saturday morning The Parade under the command of Major R M Jefferis Leicestershire Regiment G S O II Bermuda Command was witnessed by a large gathering of civilians who had been attracted by the sound of the Band The Brigadier attended by Captain J G Barber Irish Guards G S O III Bermuda Command was accompanied by Lieut Col J C Astwood as Officer Commanding the Battalion Major D H Brabner R A D A A amp Q M G Bermuda and Major Ian Buchanan Liverpool Scottish who has been assisting in fieldcraft and battle training were also present On the arrival of the Officer Commanding British Troops the parade was brought to attention and presented arms upon which the band played the customary bars of the General Salute Subsequently the parade was Inspected by the Brigadier the band playing the Review March Upon completion of the inspection the Training Battalion marched past the saluting base in column of route the band playing an appropriate march Later the Battalion reassembled by Companies on the parade ground and was photographed An inspection of quarters and sleeping accommodation was then made by the Brigadier At the conclusion of the inspection Brigadier Maconochie expressed his satisfaction with the general improvement in the smartness and military bearing of the personnel Though there was still room for improvement he said he considered that in four weeks training great credit was due to the Officers N C O s and men for their standard of efficiency The attainment of this high standard was only made possible by the keenness and cooperation of all ranks Continuing the Brigadier declared that the morale of the unit was obviously extremely high There seemed little doubt that when the contingent went overseas from this Island and eventually met the enemy they would do credit to the Colony The population of the Island need have no qualms that they would not uphold the fine traditions of fighting efficiency which had always been attributed to Bermudians whenever they had been called upon by the Empire to rally to the colours he added Royal Navy including HMS Affray 1951 1960 naval history net Retrieved 8 September 2015 United Kingdom Garrison Bermuda Withdrawal House of Commons 22 May 1957 Retrieved 15 July 2017 Amalgamation Bermuda Regiment Retrieved 9 August 2014 THE MONTHLY ARMY LIST JANUARY 1937 Corrected to 30th December 1936 London His Majesty s Stationery Office now Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1937 p xvii 27 Militia units in Bermuda Channel Islands and Malta c THE ARMY LIST APRIL 1951 Corrected to 15th March 1951 London His Majesty s Stationery Office now Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1951 p xv 41 Militia units in Bermuda and The Channel Islands d Special forces regiment created 5 April 2005 via news bbc co uk The Queen s regulations for the army 1975 amendment number 37 The Quarterly Army List DECEMBER 1946 Corrected generally to 8 October 1946 Volume 1 Page 14 ORDER OF PRECEDENCE OF REGIMENTS ETC IN THE ARMY His Majesty s Stationery Office London The Order of Precedence for the Army and within the Infantry 09 Honours Awards Royal and Ceremonial Events Defence Instruction and Notices released 1 August 2007 MoD PS12 A Reference 2007DIN09 027 and Army General and Admin Instructions Volume 2 Chapter 69 Legal Matters AGAI69 dated August 2017 and page 8 1 1 Chapter 8 Ceremonial Part 1 Precedence Precedence of Corps and Regiments paragraph 8 001 The Queen s Regulations for the Army 1975 Amendment 37 dated May 2019 Regiment gets Royal name change as gift The Royal Gazette Bermuda News The Royal Gazette Retrieved 8 September 2015 BERMUDA stablebelts co uk Retrieved 8 September 2015 Pay resources and benefits Royal Bermuda Regiment Retrieved 29 October 2021 The Order of Precedence for the Army and within the Infantry 09 Honours Awards Royal and Ceremonial Events Defence Instruction and Notices released 1 August 2007 MoD PS12 A Reference 2007DIN09 027 and Army General and Admin Instructions Volume 2 Chapter 69 Legal Matters AGAI69 dated August 2017 and page 8 1 1 Chapeter 8 Ceremonial Part 1 Precedence Precedence of Corps and Regiments paragraph 8 001 The Queen s Regulations for thee Army 1975 Amendment 37 dated May 2019 Organisation Royal Bermuda Regiment Royal Bermuda Regiment Retrieved 19 February 2022 Horrocks Chris 1 June 2001 Called to arms Conscription in a British regiment It s not as far fetched as it sounds SOLDIER Magazine of the British Army UK British Government House of Commons Foreign Affairs Written Evidence parliament uk Retrieved 8 September 2015 House of Commons Foreign Affairs Written Evidence parliament uk Retrieved 8 September 2015 Foreign Affairs Committee Press Notice UK Parliament Retrieved 8 September 2015 The Royal Gazette Pitman s 40 years in the Regiment recognised By Ceola Wilson 4 June 2013 MPs Pass Bill To Abolish Regiment Conscription Bernews 23 June 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Johnston Paul 23 June 2018 House votes to end conscription The Royal Gazette Bermuda News The Royal Gazette Retrieved 15 March 2020 Bermuda Regiment Fitness for Role Inspection British Defence Staff November 2005 Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 The Royal Gazette Cadet Corp to be replaced as budget savings are made Published 21 March 2012 Updated 21 March 2012 The Bermuda Regiment Archived 29 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Bermuda Cadet Corps The Bermuda Regiment Request for volunteer instructors for the Junior Leaders Simons Duncan Junior Leaders Head to UK Royal Bermuda Regiment bermudaregiment bm Outward Bound Bermuda Our People Board of Directors Lt Col BN Gonsalves ED tacsc A BILL entitled ROYAL BERMUDA REGIMENT JUNIOR LEADERS ACT 2015 Parliament of Bermuda PDF Bermuda Regiment 50th Anniversary The Bermuda Regiment SYNOPSIS 3 Are Indicted in Plot to Smuggle Chinese Aliens Into New York The New York Times 10 October 1996 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Army General and Admin Instructions Volume 2 Chapter 69 Legal Matters AGAI69 dated August 2017 Royal Warrant Corps Warrant by Command of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth dated 17 July 2017 and Army General and Admin Instructions Volume 2 Chapter 69 Legal Matters AGAI69 dated August 2017 and The Order of Precedence for the Army and within the Infantry 09 Honours Awards Royal and Ceremonial Events Defence Instruction and Notices released 1 August 2007 MoD PS12 A Reference 2007DIN09 027 and Army General and Admin Instructions Volume 2 Chapter 69 Legal Matters AGAI69 dated August 2017 and page 8 1 1 Chapter 8 Ceremonial Part 1 Precedence Precedence of Corps and Regiments paragraph 8 001 The Queen s Regulations for the Army 1975 Amendment 37 dated May 2019 Bermuda Regiment to end training camps in Jamaica jamaica gleaner com 18 March 2013 Jamaica Observer Limited Jamaica Observer Special Operations com The Camp Lejeune MOUT Facility Familiarization Images UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune Range and Training Regulations BO 3570 1C Standing Operating Procedures for Range Control PDF Meaford 2014 1 7 May 2014 via Flickr The Globe Bermuda recce team recon Lejeune by Lance Corporal E V Walsh 20 April 1989 Halifax Media Group Jacksonville Caily News Bermuda Regiment trains in casualty care at Camp Johnson By THOMAS BRENNAN Daily News Staff Published Tuesday 7 May 2013 at 16 27 PM Bermuda soldiers have medical training with local Marines WCTI NewsChannel 12 ABC affiliate Bonten Media Group Inc New Bern North Carolina Engineers different uniforms identical mission 2nd Marine Logistics Group 13 May 2013 Retrieved 8 September 2015 Administrator Royal Bermuda Regiment bermudaregiment bm Retrieved 8 September 2015 Ministry of Defence Defence Training Estate DTE South East Public Information Leaflet bermudanetworknews com Retrieved 8 May 2016 Sergeant takes RBR into new territory www royalgazette com 15 February 2020 Ragoonath Reshma 30 January 2020 Regiment senior officers appointed Cayman Compass Army major named as A34 crash victim Oxford Mail Bermuda officer killed in A34 crash near Drayton BBC News 12 September 2012 The Royal Gazette Foster Brown takes over as Regiment CO The Royal Gazette War veteran CO Regiment offers a huge amount The Royal Gazette Lt Col Foster Brown takes over at Warwick Camp says Interesting 29 February 2016 Lt Col David Curley Assumes Command Of RBR New Commanding Officer Royal Bermuda Regiment www gov bm 7 February 2020 Beasley to command Royal Bermuda Regiment www royalgazette com 8 February 2020 B M A Begin 2 Week Camp At Warwick The Bermuda Recorder 22 January 1964 Page 1 Rifles go to Camp At Week s End The Bermuda Recorder 5 February 1964 Page 1 Bermuda Regiment Equipment Uzi Sub machine gun Retrieved 8 May 2016 The EM 2 Rifle No 9 Mk 1 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Ezell Edward Clinton 1984 The Great Rifle Controversy Search for the Ultimate Infantry Weapon from World War II Through Vietnam and Beyond Harrisburg Pennsylvania Halsted Press ISBN 978 0 8117 0709 1 Hughes David R 1990 The History and Development of the M16 Rifle and its Cartridge Oceanside California Armory Publications ISBN 0 9626096 0 9 ss109 com 5 56mm 223 PARAMILITARY AMMUNITION by John Schaefer Rifle magazine January February 1988 pages 36 37 70 and 71 Ruger Mini 14 Archived from the original on 26 February 2014 Retrieved 9 August 2014 Berlin Reuters in 22 April 2015 German military to stop using gun that can t shoot straight when hot The Guardian External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Bermuda Regiment Official website Royal Bermuda Regiment Government of Bermuda Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Bermuda Regiment amp oldid 1120206017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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