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Royal Military Academy Sandhurst

The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (RMAS or RMA Sandhurst), commonly known simply as Sandhurst, is one of several military academies of the United Kingdom and is the British Army's initial officer training centre. It is located in the town of Sandhurst, Berkshire, though its ceremonial entrance is in Camberley, Surrey, southwest of London. The academy's stated aim is to be "the national centre of excellence for leadership". All British Army officers, including late-entry officers who were previously Warrant Officers, as well as other men and women from overseas, are trained at the academy. Sandhurst is the British Army equivalent of the Britannia Royal Naval College and the Royal Air Force College Cranwell.

Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
New College buildings
MottoServe to lead
TypeMilitary academy
Established1947 (1947) (merger of Royal Military Academy, founded 1741, and Royal Military College, founded 1801)
Parent institution
Army Recruiting and Initial Training Command
AffiliationBritish Army
CommandantMajor-General Zachary Stenning
Location,
MarchScipio (Slow) British Grenadiers (Quick)
ColorsRed, yellow and blue
Websitewww.army.mod.uk/who-we-are/our-schools-and-colleges/rma-sandhurst/

Location

Despite its name, the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst's address is located in Camberley;[1] the boundaries of the academy straddle the counties of Berkshire and Surrey. The county border is marked by a small stream known as the Wish Stream, after which the academy journal is named. The "Main Gate" is located on the east of the Academy on the London Road in Camberley.[2] The "College Town Gate", which is used for regular access, is located on the west of the Academy on Yorktown Road in Sandhurst.[2]

History

 
Old College buildings
 
A RMAS community open day

The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst was formed on the site of the former Royal Military College (founded in 1801 for the training of officers for arms other than the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers) in 1947 when it amalgamated with the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich (founded in 1741 for the training of officers for the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers).[3]

Following the ending of National Service in the UK and the closing of the Mons Officer Cadet School in Aldershot in 1972, the RMAS became the sole establishment for male initial officer training in the British Army,[4] taking over the responsibilities of Mons for training Short Service Officer Cadets, Territorial Army officers, and those joining the Regular Army as graduates.[5] In 1984, the Women's Officer Training College Bagshot was also merged into Sandhurst. In 1992, a new Commissioning Course finally unified the training of male, female, and overseas cadets.[6]

The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Collection illustrates the history of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. The collection includes the Gentlemen Cadet registers, historic archives, uniforms, paintings, photographs, and other artefacts.[7]

For the 1948 Summer Olympics in London, the newly created Academy hosted the running leg of the modern pentathlon competition.[8]

In 2012 Sandhurst accepted a £15 million donation from the government of United Arab Emirates for the Zayed Building, an accommodation block, named after the UAE's founding ruler.[9] In 2013 Sandhurst accepted a donation of £3 million from the Government of Bahrain for the refurbishment of Mons Hall, named in honour of the men who fell in the Battle of Mons. It was renamed as King Hamad Hall in honour of the King of Bahrain, which generated some controversy in the United Kingdom.[9][10]

In 2015 Sandhurst appointed Colonel Lucy Giles as the first female college commander in its history.[11]

In 2019 Sandhurst gained widespread media attention in Britain after cadet Olivia Perks committed suicide after an alleged affair with a superior at Sandhurst and amid fears she was going to be dismissed.[12][13][14][15] An inquest into her death is set to take place in 2022.[16]

Selection

Potential officers, for regular, reserve, or professional qualified service, are identified by the Army Officer Selection Board (formerly the Regular Commissions Board, or RCB) situated in Westbury in Wiltshire.[17] Assessment for regular or reserve direct entry service is undertaken at the same time, in the same groups, to the same standard. Nearly 10 percent of British cadets are female and nearly 10 percent of all cadets come from overseas. More than eighty percent of entrants are university graduates, although a degree is not required for admission.[18]

Instructors

The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst instructors' cadre (group of trainers) is run once every year. The aim is to select 30 Senior Non-Commissioned Officers (SNCOs) from 60 over the course of 3–4 weeks. Instructors can come from any part of the British Army although most are historically from the Infantry. Typically before the 60 candidates arrive on the cadre, they would have had to have passed a 'Divisional pre-selection' course, meaning it would not be unusual for over double the 60 places to be contested. Sergeants and Colour Sergeants (Staff Sergeants from non-Infantry units) attend the Instructors Cadre. The Instructors Cadre is known to be demanding, both physically and mentally, compressing all the prominent physical tests and mental assessments that each officer cadet undertakes over the year course, into 3/4 weeks. This proves and produces the best instructors the British Army has at their disposal. No other instructor posting has a selection to pass in order to be a part of a training team.[19]

Courses

 
Passing out parade
 
New colours are presented to RMAS, June 2005. Prince Harry (at attention, to left of horse) is on parade.

There are three commissioning courses run at the academy. All are accredited by various academic and professional institutions, in particular the Chartered Management Institute. The Regular Commissioning Course, and increasingly the Short Course, are attended by international officer cadets from other nations' land forces. The three courses are:

1. The Regular Commissioning Course, which lasts 44 weeks, for Direct Entry officers into the Regular service.[20]

2. The Short Commissioning Course, which is for Army Reserve officers and both regular and reserve service professionally qualified officers (e.g., doctors, dentists, nurses, lawyers, pharmacists, veterinary surgeons and chaplains).[21] which lasts eight weeks. The short course consists of four training modules; the first two, Modules A and B, can be completed under the supervision of RMAS with University Officer Training Corps over a number of weekends, or at RMAS where each module lasts two weeks. The final two modules, modules C and D, of the Officers' training and assessment must be conducted at Sandhurst. This training can all be completed in an eight-week period at RMAS, or over a number of years. Upon completion, Officer Cadets become Second Lieutenants in the AR or Officer Training Corps (OTC), or Captains in PQO roles.[22]

3. The Late Entry Officer Course (LEOC) for senior soldiers commissioning from the ranks.[23]

The RMAS has an academic faculty staffed by civilian researchers with expertise in Communication and Applied Behavioural Science, Defence and International Affairs, and War Studies.[24]

Unlike some other national military academies such as West Point in the United States, the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr in France, the Pakistan Military Academy in Pakistan, the Nigerian Defence Academy in Nigeria or the Australian Defence Force Academy in Australia, Sandhurst is not a university. It only works with the Open University to award the Regular Commissioning Course 120 credit points towards a distance learning Honours Degree in International Studies which ultimately requires 360 points. Graduate entrants can gain a Postgraduate Certificate in Leadership and Conflict Studies from the Regular Commissioning Course and then embark on a pathway post-commissioning to complete a full master's degree from a university through further electives and a dissertation.[25] Alternatively, non-graduate cadets have the opportunity to earn a BSc in Leadership and Strategic Studies through their military service, which is awarded by the University of Reading.[26]

Organisation

In overall command of the RMAS is the commandant of the academy, usually an officer of Major General rank. The senior warrant officer, the Academy Sergeant Major (AcSM), is one of the most senior warrant officers in the British Army. The regular commissioning course is split into three terms, each lasting fourteen weeks (referred to as the Junior, Intermediate and Senior Divisions, identified by differently coloured badges). Basic army training is covered in the first five weeks, which, by reputation, are the most gruelling (the families of the cadets are encouraged to support the cadets' morale by maintaining home contacts). The main RMAS Commissioning Courses start in January, May and September of each year. Each intake numbers approximately 200 cadets, each of whom is assigned to a platoon within one of two companies. Platoons are commanded by captains, with a colour sergeant who takes the main burden of day-to-day training, especially during the first term (unlike West Point, RMAS entrusts the majority of officer training to Senior Non-Commissioned Officers). There can be as many as ten companies within the RMAS at any one time, for all courses, each commanded by a Major and named after a famous battle or campaign in which the British Army has fought.[27]

Cadets on the regular course nominate two regiments or corps that they seek to join; this may be influenced by their instructors, if particular strengths or weaknesses or aptitudes are seen to be important. In the middle term, interviews are held and final selections are made by the recruiting regiments and corps; there is competition for strong cadets by the units and, conversely, by cadets for prestigious or specialised units. Exceptionally, so-called "confirmed cadets" may have guaranteed places in regiments before the formal selections or even before starting at Sandhurst. Cadets on the short course will have already been sponsored by a reserve unit, a professionally qualified unit, or a University Officers' Training Corps, and will return to their unit post completion of the course.[28]

Regular Army

 
Open Day at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst

A small number of regular army units are based at the RMAS to provide support for the colleges and their training:

  • Gurkha Demonstration Company (Sittang): this is a company-sized unit drawn from all units of the Brigade of Gurkhas, to provide an opposing force in battle training for the cadets.[29]
  • 44 Support Squadron, Royal Logistic Corps: this is the RMAS's permanently based transport, logistic and signals support unit.[30]
  • Until 1984, the RMAS had its own band—The RMAS Band Corps.[31]

Sovereign's Parade

 
The 149th Sovereign's Parade in front of Old College

The first Sovereign's Parade was held on 14 July 1948, in front of King George VI. Three Sovereign's Parades are held each year outside the Old College to mark the "passing-out" and the final parade at Sandhurst of the Senior Division. All cadets, except for those who have been back-termed through injury or other reasons, are inspected by the Sovereign (or their representative), participate in the Trooping the Colour and parade past the Sovereign (or his representative) and guests. Guests consist of invited dignitaries and friends and families of the graduating cadets.[6]

One of the highlights of the Parade is Trooping the Colour. The Colour trooped is the Sovereign's Banner and the current banner is the third generation of itself, presented by HM the Queen in March 1999;[32] the first Sovereign's Banner, known as the "King George V's Banner", was presented by George V on 6 November 1918[33] and the second one was presented by Elizabeth II on 27 October 1978.[34]

The honour of Trooping the Colour falls to the Sovereign's Platoon, the then-Champion Company/Platoon. The Sovereign's Platoon, which wears multi-coloured lanyards, using the colours of all three Divisions, is selected on merit and is the best platoon amongst the Division; these officer cadets are chosen from a competition in drill, orienteering, shooting and a cross-country race, ensuring they are of the best in endurance and teamwork.[35]

In the past, the Sovereign's Platoon from the Senior Division formed the Colour Party with the Banner on the left flank of the parade; after the inspecting officer had completed inspection, the Colour Party would move to the centre place of the parade before the Saluting Base, awaiting the new Sovereign's Platoon to take possession of the Banner.[36][37] The new Sovereign's Platoon would keep the Banner until handing it to the next Sovereign's Platoon in the next Sovereign's Parade; they had the privilege of leaving the parade before other divisions after the Senior Division officer cadets had marched into the Old College and the remainders of the parade would salute the banner while they were leaving the parade square.[36]

Nowadays, the handover of the Sovereign's Banner from the senior Sovereign's Platoon to a new one dissipates. What replaces it is that the Sovereign's Platoon of Senior Division, instead of the new one, marches to receive the Banner. The Ensign, at the end of the parade, also marches into the Old College whilst carrying the Banner.[38]

At the end of the Parade, the Colours and the Senior Division leave the parade ground via the Grand Steps of the Old College building. They are followed by the Academy Adjutant on horseback (the origins of this tradition are unclear).[6]

Awards

Each Commissioning Course has awards granted to outstanding cadets. The following awards are presented during the Sovereign's Parade. Others are merely listed in the Parade programme. A system of Cadet Government also recognises merit by the appointment of Senior Under Officers, Junior Under Officers, Cadet Sergeants and Cadet Corporals.[6]

Sword of Honour

The Sword of Honour is awarded to the British Army Officer Cadet considered by the Commandant to be, overall, the best of the Regular Commissioning Course. The swords were formerly made by Wilkinson Sword but after the closure of their sword making division they are now presented by Pooley Sword.[39]

Queen's Medal

The Queen's Medal is awarded to the British Army Officer Cadet who achieved the highest scores in military, practical and academic studies on the Regular Commissioning Course.[40]

 
Royal Memorial Chapel south aspect

Overseas Sword

The Overseas Sword is awarded to one of the many cadets from other Commonwealth countries and from foreign armies. The Overseas Sword goes to the Overseas Cadet considered by the Commandant to be the best on each course.[40]

Overseas Award

The Overseas Award is the equivalent of the Queen's Medal, and is awarded to the Overseas Officer Cadet who achieved the best overall results in military, academic and practical studies.[40]

MacRobert Sword

The MacRobert Sword is awarded to the Officer Cadet considered by the Commandant to be, overall, the best of the Short Commissioning Course. This sword is also donated by the MacRobert Trust and produced by Pooley Sword.[41]

Sandhurst Medal

 
Sandhurst Medal ribbon bar

In December 2016, the academy and its charitable trust created the Sandhurst Medal. Unlike most British medals, it is not awarded or authorised by the Sovereign and is instead awarded privately by the Sandhurst Trust. It may only be awarded to international cadets who have passed out from Sandhurst, not British graduates, and must be purchased for £215.[42] Notable graduates such as Abdullah II of Jordan have mounted the medal on their military uniforms.[43]

Alumni

Chapel

There are two chapels within the academy, The Roman Catholic Chapel (Christ the King) and The Royal Memorial Chapel, dedicated as Christ Church, which also contains the South Africa Chapel, which was originally the sanctuary of the second Chapel before it was enlarged. The original chapel was what is now known as the Indian Army Memorial Room. The Royal Engineers designed the original Chapel, which features red brick, terracotta moulding, interlocking pediment copies and corbels in 1879. The chapel was dedicated by King George VI on 2 May 1937, after architect Captain Arthur C. Martin enlarged the building in a Byzantine style. The Memorial stained glass and Windows in the chapel honour the Brigade of Guards, Rifle Brigade, Royal Fusiliers, and the Hampshire Regiment, among other units. Some memorials, including one honouring alumni of the US Military Academy at West Point, are carved into the black marble flooring.[44] On panels devoted to the particular campaigns in which they died, are the names of former cadets killed in action. At intervals above the panels are circular tablets to the memory of College Governors. The names of former cadets who have died on active service in the field, or elsewhere are listed in the spaces between the panels. Other tablets on the walls of the porch of the Church were moved there from the old Chapel. At the nave near the chancel steps, old Regimental colours hang from the pillars.[45]

The college cemetery has (in 2017) 21 graves and headstones maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.[46]

Lineage

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Contact us". The Sandhurst Collection. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b "CC 173 Commandant's Parade". Sandhurst Trust. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  3. ^ . war-letters.com. 31 January 1937. Archived from the original on 6 January 2009.
  4. ^ "Mons Officer Cadet School". Retrieved 6 July 2009.
  5. ^ Some key dates in the history of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and its predecessors The Churchill Society
  6. ^ a b c d Sovereign's Parade Programme. RMA Sandhurst. April 2012.
  7. ^ "RMAS Archive". Retrieved 29 June 2009.
  8. ^ 1948 Summer Olympics official report. p. 47.
  9. ^ a b Matthew Teller (26 August 2014). "Sandhurst's sheikhs: Why do so many Gulf royals receive military training in the UK?". BBC. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  10. ^ Tom Whitehead (17 February 2013). "Row over renaming of Sandhurst hall after Bahrain donation". Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
  11. ^ "Royal Military Academy Sandhurst to get first female college commander". BBC News. 12 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  12. ^ Brown, Larisa (25 October 2021). "Seven could be charged over Sandhurst cadet's suicide". The Times. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  13. ^ Southworth, Phoebe (26 September 2021). "Sandhurst Cadet Took Her Own Life After Alleged Affairs". The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  14. ^ Nicholls, Dominic (2 November 2021). "'Exasperated' Ben Wallace summons Army chiefs over sex and bullying scandals". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  15. ^ "Sandhurst death cadet Olivia Perks 'thought she faced discharge'". BBC. 18 October 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  16. ^ Sirrell, Ollie (20 May 2021). "Inquest into Sandhurst cadet Olivia Perks will take place next year". Bracknell News. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 May 2009. Retrieved 29 June 2009.
  18. ^ RMAS: The Officer Cadet 22 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  19. ^ "The Sandhurst Group SNCO Instructors' cadre". Boot Camp Military Fitness Institute. 18 September 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  20. ^ Commissioning Course Royal Military Academy Sandhurst 23 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ PQO Course at army.mod.uk, accessed 13 October 2018
  22. ^ "Choosing a Commission". He is placed on the strength of a AR Unit but completes Modules 1–3 of the AR Commissioning Course (ARCC) with the UOTC and Module 4 at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst.
  23. ^ Late Entry Officer Course 28 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 December 2009.
  25. ^ "Academic departments". Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  26. ^ "Officer Skills and Learning". 3 January 2021.
  27. ^ Robins, Colin (2016). "Recording The Commonplace - Sandhurst in the 1950s". Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research. pp. 54–64. Retrieved 28 September 2022.
  28. ^ "Officer class?". Royal Marines – Join the Regular and RMR Commandos.
  29. ^ Tanner, James (2014). The British Army since 2000. Osprey. p. 39. ISBN 978-1782005933.
  30. ^ "44 Support Squadron". British Army Units 1945 on. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  31. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2008. Retrieved 20 February 2008.
  32. ^ "New Banner Parade of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (CC 982)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021.
  33. ^ "Court Circular". The Times. 7 November 1918. p. 9. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  34. ^ "Court Circular". The Times. 28 October 1978. p. 14. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  35. ^ "The Sovereign's Parade, April 1985". YouTube. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021.
  36. ^ a b "THE SOVEREIGN'S PARADE AT SANDHURST – SOUND – COLOUR". AP Archive.
  37. ^ "The Sovereign's Parade At Sandhurst – 1962". YouTube. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021.
  38. ^ "Sandhurst Commissioning Parade - 15/04/16 - CC152". YouTube. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021.
  39. ^ "Exeter man awarded Sword of Honour". Radio Exe. 3 October 2018.
  40. ^ a b c "178th Sovereign's Parade". Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  41. ^ "London Officer Cadet tops course at RMA Sandhurst". The Reserve Forces' and Cadets' Association for Greater London. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
  42. ^ "Sandhurst Medal – RMAS INTERNATIONAL GRADUATES ONLY". shop.sandhursttrust.org. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  43. ^ "King Abdullah of Jordan warns Daesh on the rise again". Arab News. 13 January 2020. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  44. ^ "Royal Memorial Chapel Sandhurst". royalmemorialchapel.com.
  45. ^ Mockler-Ferryman, Augustus Ferryman (1900). Annals of Sandhurst: a chronicle of the Royal Military College from its foundation to the present day, with a sketch of the history of the Staff College. London: William Heinemann – via ebooksread.com.
  46. ^ "Sandhurst Royal Military Academy Cemetery". Retrieved 19 October 2017.

Bibliography

  • Mockler-Ferryman, A. F. Annals of Sandhurst: A Chronicle of the Royal Military College From Its Foundation to the Present. Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2007 (reprint; original 1900). ISBN 1-4326-6558-8.
  • Thomas, Hugh, 1931– The story of Sandhurst London, Hutchinson 1961
  • Christchurch the Chapel of The Royal Military College: Enlarged and Beautified to the Glory of God and in memory of The Sandhurst Cadets who have died in the service of their country Gale & Polden Ltd, Aldershot, 1937.
  • Goodley, Heloise An Officer and a Gentlewoman Constable and Robinson, London, 2012

External links

  • Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Official website

Coordinates: 51°20′25″N 00°46′07″W / 51.34028°N 0.76861°W / 51.34028; -0.76861

royal, military, academy, sandhurst, rmas, sandhurst, commonly, known, simply, sandhurst, several, military, academies, united, kingdom, british, army, initial, officer, training, centre, located, town, sandhurst, berkshire, though, ceremonial, entrance, cambe. The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst RMAS or RMA Sandhurst commonly known simply as Sandhurst is one of several military academies of the United Kingdom and is the British Army s initial officer training centre It is located in the town of Sandhurst Berkshire though its ceremonial entrance is in Camberley Surrey southwest of London The academy s stated aim is to be the national centre of excellence for leadership All British Army officers including late entry officers who were previously Warrant Officers as well as other men and women from overseas are trained at the academy Sandhurst is the British Army equivalent of the Britannia Royal Naval College and the Royal Air Force College Cranwell Royal Military Academy SandhurstNew College buildingsMottoServe to leadTypeMilitary academyEstablished1947 1947 merger of Royal Military Academy founded 1741 and Royal Military College founded 1801 Parent institutionArmy Recruiting and Initial Training CommandAffiliationBritish ArmyCommandantMajor General Zachary StenningLocationSandhurst Berkshire United KingdomMarchScipio Slow British Grenadiers Quick ColorsRed yellow and blueWebsitewww wbr army wbr mod wbr uk wbr who we are wbr our schools and colleges wbr rma sandhurst wbr Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Selection 4 Instructors 5 Courses 6 Organisation 6 1 Regular Army 7 Sovereign s Parade 8 Awards 8 1 Sword of Honour 8 2 Queen s Medal 8 3 Overseas Sword 8 4 Overseas Award 8 5 MacRobert Sword 8 6 Sandhurst Medal 9 Alumni 10 Chapel 11 Lineage 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Bibliography 14 External linksLocation EditDespite its name the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst s address is located in Camberley 1 the boundaries of the academy straddle the counties of Berkshire and Surrey The county border is marked by a small stream known as the Wish Stream after which the academy journal is named The Main Gate is located on the east of the Academy on the London Road in Camberley 2 The College Town Gate which is used for regular access is located on the west of the Academy on Yorktown Road in Sandhurst 2 History Edit Old College buildings A RMAS community open day The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst was formed on the site of the former Royal Military College founded in 1801 for the training of officers for arms other than the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers in 1947 when it amalgamated with the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich founded in 1741 for the training of officers for the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers 3 Following the ending of National Service in the UK and the closing of the Mons Officer Cadet School in Aldershot in 1972 the RMAS became the sole establishment for male initial officer training in the British Army 4 taking over the responsibilities of Mons for training Short Service Officer Cadets Territorial Army officers and those joining the Regular Army as graduates 5 In 1984 the Women s Officer Training College Bagshot was also merged into Sandhurst In 1992 a new Commissioning Course finally unified the training of male female and overseas cadets 6 The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Collection illustrates the history of the Royal Military Academy Woolwich the Royal Military College Sandhurst and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst The collection includes the Gentlemen Cadet registers historic archives uniforms paintings photographs and other artefacts 7 For the 1948 Summer Olympics in London the newly created Academy hosted the running leg of the modern pentathlon competition 8 In 2012 Sandhurst accepted a 15 million donation from the government of United Arab Emirates for the Zayed Building an accommodation block named after the UAE s founding ruler 9 In 2013 Sandhurst accepted a donation of 3 million from the Government of Bahrain for the refurbishment of Mons Hall named in honour of the men who fell in the Battle of Mons It was renamed as King Hamad Hall in honour of the King of Bahrain which generated some controversy in the United Kingdom 9 10 In 2015 Sandhurst appointed Colonel Lucy Giles as the first female college commander in its history 11 In 2019 Sandhurst gained widespread media attention in Britain after cadet Olivia Perks committed suicide after an alleged affair with a superior at Sandhurst and amid fears she was going to be dismissed 12 13 14 15 An inquest into her death is set to take place in 2022 16 The Wellington Room after Arthur Wellesley showing a depiction of the Battle of Waterloo and his bust RMAS Collection Marlborough Room showing triptych on leather of the Battle of Blenheim by Horensburg RMAS CollectionSelection EditPotential officers for regular reserve or professional qualified service are identified by the Army Officer Selection Board formerly the Regular Commissions Board or RCB situated in Westbury in Wiltshire 17 Assessment for regular or reserve direct entry service is undertaken at the same time in the same groups to the same standard Nearly 10 percent of British cadets are female and nearly 10 percent of all cadets come from overseas More than eighty percent of entrants are university graduates although a degree is not required for admission 18 Instructors EditThe Royal Military Academy Sandhurst instructors cadre group of trainers is run once every year The aim is to select 30 Senior Non Commissioned Officers SNCOs from 60 over the course of 3 4 weeks Instructors can come from any part of the British Army although most are historically from the Infantry Typically before the 60 candidates arrive on the cadre they would have had to have passed a Divisional pre selection course meaning it would not be unusual for over double the 60 places to be contested Sergeants and Colour Sergeants Staff Sergeants from non Infantry units attend the Instructors Cadre The Instructors Cadre is known to be demanding both physically and mentally compressing all the prominent physical tests and mental assessments that each officer cadet undertakes over the year course into 3 4 weeks This proves and produces the best instructors the British Army has at their disposal No other instructor posting has a selection to pass in order to be a part of a training team 19 Courses Edit Passing out parade New colours are presented to RMAS June 2005 Prince Harry at attention to left of horse is on parade There are three commissioning courses run at the academy All are accredited by various academic and professional institutions in particular the Chartered Management Institute The Regular Commissioning Course and increasingly the Short Course are attended by international officer cadets from other nations land forces The three courses are 1 The Regular Commissioning Course which lasts 44 weeks for Direct Entry officers into the Regular service 20 2 The Short Commissioning Course which is for Army Reserve officers and both regular and reserve service professionally qualified officers e g doctors dentists nurses lawyers pharmacists veterinary surgeons and chaplains 21 which lasts eight weeks The short course consists of four training modules the first two Modules A and B can be completed under the supervision of RMAS with University Officer Training Corps over a number of weekends or at RMAS where each module lasts two weeks The final two modules modules C and D of the Officers training and assessment must be conducted at Sandhurst This training can all be completed in an eight week period at RMAS or over a number of years Upon completion Officer Cadets become Second Lieutenants in the AR or Officer Training Corps OTC or Captains in PQO roles 22 3 The Late Entry Officer Course LEOC for senior soldiers commissioning from the ranks 23 The RMAS has an academic faculty staffed by civilian researchers with expertise in Communication and Applied Behavioural Science Defence and International Affairs and War Studies 24 Unlike some other national military academies such as West Point in the United States the Ecole speciale militaire de Saint Cyr in France the Pakistan Military Academy in Pakistan the Nigerian Defence Academy in Nigeria or the Australian Defence Force Academy in Australia Sandhurst is not a university It only works with the Open University to award the Regular Commissioning Course 120 credit points towards a distance learning Honours Degree in International Studies which ultimately requires 360 points Graduate entrants can gain a Postgraduate Certificate in Leadership and Conflict Studies from the Regular Commissioning Course and then embark on a pathway post commissioning to complete a full master s degree from a university through further electives and a dissertation 25 Alternatively non graduate cadets have the opportunity to earn a BSc in Leadership and Strategic Studies through their military service which is awarded by the University of Reading 26 Organisation EditIn overall command of the RMAS is the commandant of the academy usually an officer of Major General rank The senior warrant officer the Academy Sergeant Major AcSM is one of the most senior warrant officers in the British Army The regular commissioning course is split into three terms each lasting fourteen weeks referred to as the Junior Intermediate and Senior Divisions identified by differently coloured badges Basic army training is covered in the first five weeks which by reputation are the most gruelling the families of the cadets are encouraged to support the cadets morale by maintaining home contacts The main RMAS Commissioning Courses start in January May and September of each year Each intake numbers approximately 200 cadets each of whom is assigned to a platoon within one of two companies Platoons are commanded by captains with a colour sergeant who takes the main burden of day to day training especially during the first term unlike West Point RMAS entrusts the majority of officer training to Senior Non Commissioned Officers There can be as many as ten companies within the RMAS at any one time for all courses each commanded by a Major and named after a famous battle or campaign in which the British Army has fought 27 Cadets on the regular course nominate two regiments or corps that they seek to join this may be influenced by their instructors if particular strengths or weaknesses or aptitudes are seen to be important In the middle term interviews are held and final selections are made by the recruiting regiments and corps there is competition for strong cadets by the units and conversely by cadets for prestigious or specialised units Exceptionally so called confirmed cadets may have guaranteed places in regiments before the formal selections or even before starting at Sandhurst Cadets on the short course will have already been sponsored by a reserve unit a professionally qualified unit or a University Officers Training Corps and will return to their unit post completion of the course 28 Regular Army Edit Open Day at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst A small number of regular army units are based at the RMAS to provide support for the colleges and their training Gurkha Demonstration Company Sittang this is a company sized unit drawn from all units of the Brigade of Gurkhas to provide an opposing force in battle training for the cadets 29 44 Support Squadron Royal Logistic Corps this is the RMAS s permanently based transport logistic and signals support unit 30 Until 1984 the RMAS had its own band The RMAS Band Corps 31 Sovereign s Parade Edit The 149th Sovereign s Parade in front of Old College The first Sovereign s Parade was held on 14 July 1948 in front of King George VI Three Sovereign s Parades are held each year outside the Old College to mark the passing out and the final parade at Sandhurst of the Senior Division All cadets except for those who have been back termed through injury or other reasons are inspected by the Sovereign or their representative participate in the Trooping the Colour and parade past the Sovereign or his representative and guests Guests consist of invited dignitaries and friends and families of the graduating cadets 6 One of the highlights of the Parade is Trooping the Colour The Colour trooped is the Sovereign s Banner and the current banner is the third generation of itself presented by HM the Queen in March 1999 32 the first Sovereign s Banner known as the King George V s Banner was presented by George V on 6 November 1918 33 and the second one was presented by Elizabeth II on 27 October 1978 34 The honour of Trooping the Colour falls to the Sovereign s Platoon the then Champion Company Platoon The Sovereign s Platoon which wears multi coloured lanyards using the colours of all three Divisions is selected on merit and is the best platoon amongst the Division these officer cadets are chosen from a competition in drill orienteering shooting and a cross country race ensuring they are of the best in endurance and teamwork 35 In the past the Sovereign s Platoon from the Senior Division formed the Colour Party with the Banner on the left flank of the parade after the inspecting officer had completed inspection the Colour Party would move to the centre place of the parade before the Saluting Base awaiting the new Sovereign s Platoon to take possession of the Banner 36 37 The new Sovereign s Platoon would keep the Banner until handing it to the next Sovereign s Platoon in the next Sovereign s Parade they had the privilege of leaving the parade before other divisions after the Senior Division officer cadets had marched into the Old College and the remainders of the parade would salute the banner while they were leaving the parade square 36 Nowadays the handover of the Sovereign s Banner from the senior Sovereign s Platoon to a new one dissipates What replaces it is that the Sovereign s Platoon of Senior Division instead of the new one marches to receive the Banner The Ensign at the end of the parade also marches into the Old College whilst carrying the Banner 38 At the end of the Parade the Colours and the Senior Division leave the parade ground via the Grand Steps of the Old College building They are followed by the Academy Adjutant on horseback the origins of this tradition are unclear 6 Awards EditEach Commissioning Course has awards granted to outstanding cadets The following awards are presented during the Sovereign s Parade Others are merely listed in the Parade programme A system of Cadet Government also recognises merit by the appointment of Senior Under Officers Junior Under Officers Cadet Sergeants and Cadet Corporals 6 Sword of Honour Edit The Sword of Honour is awarded to the British Army Officer Cadet considered by the Commandant to be overall the best of the Regular Commissioning Course The swords were formerly made by Wilkinson Sword but after the closure of their sword making division they are now presented by Pooley Sword 39 Queen s Medal Edit The Queen s Medal is awarded to the British Army Officer Cadet who achieved the highest scores in military practical and academic studies on the Regular Commissioning Course 40 Royal Memorial Chapel south aspect Overseas Sword Edit The Overseas Sword is awarded to one of the many cadets from other Commonwealth countries and from foreign armies The Overseas Sword goes to the Overseas Cadet considered by the Commandant to be the best on each course 40 Overseas Award Edit The Overseas Award is the equivalent of the Queen s Medal and is awarded to the Overseas Officer Cadet who achieved the best overall results in military academic and practical studies 40 MacRobert Sword Edit The MacRobert Sword is awarded to the Officer Cadet considered by the Commandant to be overall the best of the Short Commissioning Course This sword is also donated by the MacRobert Trust and produced by Pooley Sword 41 Sandhurst Medal Edit Sandhurst Medal ribbon bar In December 2016 the academy and its charitable trust created the Sandhurst Medal Unlike most British medals it is not awarded or authorised by the Sovereign and is instead awarded privately by the Sandhurst Trust It may only be awarded to international cadets who have passed out from Sandhurst not British graduates and must be purchased for 215 42 Notable graduates such as Abdullah II of Jordan have mounted the medal on their military uniforms 43 Alumni EditMain article List of alumni of the Royal Military Academy SandhurstChapel EditThere are two chapels within the academy The Roman Catholic Chapel Christ the King and The Royal Memorial Chapel dedicated as Christ Church which also contains the South Africa Chapel which was originally the sanctuary of the second Chapel before it was enlarged The original chapel was what is now known as the Indian Army Memorial Room The Royal Engineers designed the original Chapel which features red brick terracotta moulding interlocking pediment copies and corbels in 1879 The chapel was dedicated by King George VI on 2 May 1937 after architect Captain Arthur C Martin enlarged the building in a Byzantine style The Memorial stained glass and Windows in the chapel honour the Brigade of Guards Rifle Brigade Royal Fusiliers and the Hampshire Regiment among other units Some memorials including one honouring alumni of the US Military Academy at West Point are carved into the black marble flooring 44 On panels devoted to the particular campaigns in which they died are the names of former cadets killed in action At intervals above the panels are circular tablets to the memory of College Governors The names of former cadets who have died on active service in the field or elsewhere are listed in the spaces between the panels Other tablets on the walls of the porch of the Church were moved there from the old Chapel At the nave near the chancel steps old Regimental colours hang from the pillars 45 The college cemetery has in 2017 21 graves and headstones maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission 46 The dedication to General Carter Campbell in The Royal Memorial Chapel Royal Memorial Chapel portico Entrance to the cemetery Foreground some of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission maintained headstones amp gravesLineage EditLineageRoyal Military Academy Sandhurst Royal Military Academy Royal Military AcademyEast India Company Military SeminaryRoyal Military College SandhurstMons Officer Cadet SchoolWomen s Royal Army Corps CollegeSee also Edit Berkshire portal War portal United Kingdom portalList of Governors and Commandants of Sandhurst Sandhurst CompetitionReferences EditNotes Edit Contact us The Sandhurst Collection Retrieved 5 September 2018 a b CC 173 Commandant s Parade Sandhurst Trust Retrieved 5 September 2018 Letter from E I J Bell Esq No 3 Company No 11 Platoon in Royal Military College re Facilities in Sandhurst war letters com 31 January 1937 Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Mons Officer Cadet School Retrieved 6 July 2009 Some key dates in the history of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and its predecessors The Churchill Society a b c d Sovereign s Parade Programme RMA Sandhurst April 2012 RMAS Archive Retrieved 29 June 2009 1948 Summer Olympics official report p 47 a b Matthew Teller 26 August 2014 Sandhurst s sheikhs Why do so many Gulf royals receive military training in the UK BBC Retrieved 27 August 2014 Tom Whitehead 17 February 2013 Row over renaming of Sandhurst hall after Bahrain donation Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 27 August 2014 Royal Military Academy Sandhurst to get first female college commander BBC News 12 December 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2015 Brown Larisa 25 October 2021 Seven could be charged over Sandhurst cadet s suicide The Times Retrieved 5 November 2021 Southworth Phoebe 26 September 2021 Sandhurst Cadet Took Her Own Life After Alleged Affairs The Sunday Telegraph Retrieved 5 November 2021 Nicholls Dominic 2 November 2021 Exasperated Ben Wallace summons Army chiefs over sex and bullying scandals The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Sandhurst death cadet Olivia Perks thought she faced discharge BBC 18 October 2021 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Sirrell Ollie 20 May 2021 Inquest into Sandhurst cadet Olivia Perks will take place next year Bracknell News Retrieved 5 November 2021 AOSB Site Archived from the original on 17 May 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2009 RMAS The Officer Cadet Archived 22 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Sandhurst Group SNCO Instructors cadre Boot Camp Military Fitness Institute 18 September 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2017 Commissioning Course Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Archived 23 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine PQO Course at army mod uk accessed 13 October 2018 Choosing a Commission He is placed on the strength of a AR Unit but completes Modules 1 3 of the AR Commissioning Course ARCC with the UOTC and Module 4 at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Late Entry Officer Course Archived 28 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Royal Military Academy Sandhurst RMAS site Archived from the original on 27 December 2009 Academic departments Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Retrieved 23 January 2016 Officer Skills and Learning 3 January 2021 Robins Colin 2016 Recording The Commonplace Sandhurst in the 1950s Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research pp 54 64 Retrieved 28 September 2022 Officer class Royal Marines Join the Regular and RMR Commandos Tanner James 2014 The British Army since 2000 Osprey p 39 ISBN 978 1782005933 44 Support Squadron British Army Units 1945 on Retrieved 8 July 2019 Memorial Chapel PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 February 2008 Retrieved 20 February 2008 New Banner Parade of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst CC 982 YouTube Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Court Circular The Times 7 November 1918 p 9 Retrieved 27 September 2022 Court Circular The Times 28 October 1978 p 14 Retrieved 27 September 2022 The Sovereign s Parade April 1985 YouTube Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 a b THE SOVEREIGN S PARADE AT SANDHURST SOUND COLOUR AP Archive The Sovereign s Parade At Sandhurst 1962 YouTube Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Sandhurst Commissioning Parade 15 04 16 CC152 YouTube Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Exeter man awarded Sword of Honour Radio Exe 3 October 2018 a b c 178th Sovereign s Parade Ministry of Defence Retrieved 21 August 2016 London Officer Cadet tops course at RMA Sandhurst The Reserve Forces and Cadets Association for Greater London Retrieved 9 August 2016 Sandhurst Medal RMAS INTERNATIONAL GRADUATES ONLY shop sandhursttrust org Retrieved 13 July 2020 King Abdullah of Jordan warns Daesh on the rise again Arab News 13 January 2020 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Royal Memorial Chapel Sandhurst royalmemorialchapel com Mockler Ferryman Augustus Ferryman 1900 Annals of Sandhurst a chronicle of the Royal Military College from its foundation to the present day with a sketch of the history of the Staff College London William Heinemann via ebooksread com Sandhurst Royal Military Academy Cemetery Retrieved 19 October 2017 Bibliography Edit Mockler Ferryman A F Annals of Sandhurst A Chronicle of the Royal Military College From Its Foundation to the Present Whitefish Montana Kessinger Publishing 2007 reprint original 1900 ISBN 1 4326 6558 8 Thomas Hugh 1931 The story of Sandhurst London Hutchinson 1961 Christchurch the Chapel of The Royal Military College Enlarged and Beautified to the Glory of God and in memory of The Sandhurst Cadets who have died in the service of their country Gale amp Polden Ltd Aldershot 1937 Goodley Heloise An Officer and a Gentlewoman Constable and Robinson London 2012External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Official websiteCoordinates 51 20 25 N 00 46 07 W 51 34028 N 0 76861 W 51 34028 0 76861 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Military Academy Sandhurst amp oldid 1132167966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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