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Hertfordshire Yeomanry

The Hertfordshire Yeomanry was a Yeomanry Cavalry regiment of the British Army that could trace its formation to the late 18th century. First seeing mounted service in the Second Boer War and World War I, it subsequently converted to artillery. Three regiments saw service in World War II, one of which was captured at the fall of Singapore. It continued through various postwar amalgamations and its lineage was maintained by 201 (Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry) Battery, 100th (Yeomanry) Regiment Royal Artillery until that unit was placed in suspended animation in 2014.

Hertfordshire Yeomanry
Active1794–1824
1831–2014
Country Kingdom of Great Britain (1794–1800)
 United Kingdom (1801–2014)
Branch Territorial Army
TypeYeomanry
RoleBoer War
Yeomanry
World War I
Yeomanry
World War II
Artillery
Postwar
Artillery
SizeBoer War
One Regiment
World War I
Three Regiments
World War II
Three Regiments
Postwar
Part of one Battery
EngagementsSecond Boer War
World War I
Gallipoli
Suez Canal
Palestine

World War II

Battle of France
Malaya
Tunisia
Italy
Normandy
North West Europe
Battle honoursSee Battle Honours below

French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars edit

After Britain was drawn into the French Revolutionary Wars, Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger proposed on 14 March 1794 that the counties should form a force of Volunteer Yeoman Cavalry (Yeomanry) that could be called on by the King to defend the country against invasion or by the Lord Lieutenant to subdue any civil disorder within the county. By the end of the year 27 counties had raised Yeomanry, including Hertfordshire.[1][2][3]

On 7 May 1794 the Lord Lieutenant of Hertfordshire, the Marquess of Salisbury, called a meeting at Hertford that opened a subscription list to provide arms and uniforms, and resolved to raise a force of yeomanry that could be embodied in defence of the county. The first were recruited on 21 June and by the end of the year five independent troops of 50 sabres had been raised:[4][5][6][7][8][9]

In the spring of 1798 the threat of invasion seemed more acute, and the government encouraged the formation of local armed associations of cavalry and infantry for purely local defence. The following Volunteer Cavalry units were formed in Hertfordshire:[4][8][10]

There was little difference between the Yeomanry and the Volunteer Cavalry, and they were treated similarly. All seven Troops were on parade at Hatfield Park (the Marquess of Salisbury's country house) when the Militia, Yeomanry and Volunteers of the county were reviewed by King George III on 13 June 1800. The Yeomanry of Hertfordshire seem to have rarely been called out on service. The 'Hitchin Cavalry' (presumably the Northern Troop from nearby King's Walden) once went to Ware to deal with riotous behaviour by strikers, but little is known of the events.[4][11]

All the Volunteer Cavalry were disbanded after the Treaty of Amiens, but the peace was short-lived, and on the resumption of war the Hertfordshire units were reformed in August 1803 with an additional Troop, giving the county the following Yeomanry and Volunteer Cavalry by 1805:[4][2][8][12][13]

  • Southern Troop, Major Sir Abraham Hume, 135 men
    • Horse Artillery, Capt John Cook
  • Northern Troop, Capt Adolphus Meetkerke of Rushden, 70 men
  • Eastern Troop, Capt John Calvert, 70 men
  • Beechwood Troop, Capt Sir John Sebright, 70 men
  • Sawbridgeworth Troop, Capt Michael Hankin
  • Ashridge Troop, Lt-Gen the Earl of Bridgewater, 50 men
  • Midland Troop, Capt the Hon Penistone Lamb, 120 men
  • Western Troop, Capt the Hon G. Villiers, 80 men

On 20 August 1803 Sir Abraham Hume assumed command of the South Hertfordshire Legion, an all-arms 'battle group' consisting of the Southern Troop of Yeomanry Cavalry, the Horse Artillery Troop, and the Cheshunt and Wormley Volunteer Infantry, one of the infantry units that had been raised in the county.[12][13][14] After the death of Capt Penistone Lamb in January 1805 he was succeeded in command by his brother the Hon William Lamb. Similarly, after the resignation of Capt George Villiers, his elder brother the Earl of Clarendon was promoted from Cornet to command in his place.[12][13] As the threat of French invasion declined after the Battle of Trafalgar, funding for the Volunteer Cavalry was reduced from 1806, and interest and numbers declined. During the Great Fire of Stevenage, troopers from the Herts Yeomanry assisted the local volunteer firefighters.[15] The Beechwood Troop was disbanded by July 1807, and the Ashridge and Sawbridgeworth Troops by early March 1809. The Yeomanry Troops continued in existence, but resisted being organised into a single regiment.[16]

19th century edit

The Yeomanry declined in importance and strength after the end of the French wars,[17] and by 1824 all the Hertfordshire Troops had been disbanded.[6][7] However, a wave of civil unrest across Britain from 1830 led to a revival of the Yeomanry and new Troops were formed in Hertfordshire from December that year. First came two troops of Light Dragoons designated the South Herts Yeomanry Cavalry, shortly joined by a third troop at Hertford. Then came a number of independent troops across the county so that by March 1831 they totalled seven:[5][7][6][18][19][20]

South Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry (Light Dragoons)

The Cashio Troop joined the South Herts as its fourth troop on 14 February 1832, when the Marquess of Salisbury was promoted to lieutenant-colonel and Viscount Grimston to major. In 1835 the Cashio Trp was called out to guard the courthouse at Ampthill in neighbouring Bedfordshire, and later in the year to guard Hatfield House against looters after a fire. Grimston (by then 2nd Earl of Verulam) took over the command in 1847, while the Marquess of Salisbury dropped back to major. By 1850 the troops were designated A, B, C and D (Cashio). The North Herts Troop remained independent as the North Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry, and may have reached the strength of four troops required for an independent regiment, but had been reduced to one by 1850. Both regiments (except the Cashio Trp) were designated as Hussars. Arthur De Vere Capell, Viscount Malden, formerly of the Royal Horse Guards, who had been second-in-command, was promoted lt-col to command the South Herts regiment on 9 September 1864.[5][7][18][19][20][21]

Cardwell Reforms edit

Under the Cardwell Reforms the two regiments were amalgamated as the Hertfordshire Yeomanry in August 1870, with regimental headquarters (RHQ) at Hertford (later at St Albans), and the North Herts as E Trp. The regiment was designated as Dragoons in 1874.[5][6][7][18][22][23] Viscount Malden died in March 1879, and his second-in-command, Edward Villiers, 5th Earl of Clarendon, was promoted lt-col in command on 19 July 1879. A Troop relocated from the Hoddesdon–Cheshunt area to Aldenham in 1880, which spread the troops more evenly across the county. In 1886 the troop established a drill station (later troop headquarters) at Hendon, allowing the regiment to recruit in neighbouring Middlesex. E Troop, the old North Herts Yeomanry, was disbanded in 1887, reflecting the drift towards the south of the county and the North London suburbs.[21][24][25]

Following the Cardwell Reforms a mobilisation scheme began to appear in the Army List from December 1875. This assigned Yeomanry units places in an order of battle of corps, divisions and brigades for the 'Active Army', even though these formations were entirely theoretical, with no staff or services assigned. The Hertfordshire Yeomanry were assigned as 'divisional troops' to 2nd Division of I Corps based at Chelmsford, alongside Regular Army units of infantry, artillery and engineers stationed in Eastern England. This was never more than a paper organisation, but from April 1893 the Army List showed the Yeomanry regiments grouped into brigades for collective training. They were commanded by the senior regimental commanding officer (CO) but they did have a Regular Army Brigade major. The Hertfordshire Yeomanry together with the Suffolk Yeomanry formed the 7th Yeomanry Brigade. The Yeomanry brigades disappeared from the Army List after the Second Boer War. The troops were grouped into pairs as squadrons on 1 April 1893.[7][24][26]

Imperial Yeomanry edit

 
A typical Imperial Yeoman on campaign

Following a string of defeats during Black Week in early December 1899, the British government realised that it would need more troops than just the regular army to fight the Second Boer War. On 13 December, the decision to allow volunteer forces to serve in South Africa was made, and a Royal Warrant was issued on 24 December. This officially created the Imperial Yeomanry (IY). The force was organised as county service companies of approximately 115 men signed up for one year, and volunteers from the Yeomanry and civilians (usually middle and upper class) quickly filled the new force, which was equipped to operate as Mounted infantry.[27][28][29][30] The Hertfordshire Yeomanry raised the 42nd (Hertfordshire) Company and a machine gun (MG) section, which landed in South Africa on 28 March.[5][6][7][31][30][32][33][34][35]

From May 1900 the 12th Bn IY was serving as Corps Troops with Lord Roberts' main army north of the Orange River. It served on the Rhenoster River and in the Brandwater Basin operations. 42nd (Herts) Company then operated around Krugersdorp and Potchefstroom for the rest of its service, seeing a good deal of action.[36][37] The First Contingent of the Imperial Yeomanry completed their year's term of service in 1901 and 42nd Company went home in May, having earned the Hertfordshire Yeomanry its first Battle honour: South Africa 1900–01.[6][7][24][38][39] Among the civilian volunteers who joined the 42nd Company was Dr Arthur Martin-Leake from Hemel Hempstead District Hospital, who enlisted as a trooper. After his year's service Martin-Leake became a medical officer in the South African Constabulary and won the Victoria Cross (VC) for rescuing wounded under fire in February 1902. He won a Bar to his VC – one of only three ever awarded – for his conduct at the First Battle of Ypres in 1914.[40]

The mounted infantry concept was considered a success and before the war ended the existing Yeomanry regiments at home (including the Hertfordshires) were converted into Imperial Yeomanry, with an establishment of RHQ and four squadrons with an MG section.[7][22][24][41][42] On his return from South Africa (where he had served as second-in-command of 12th Bn IY), Maj the Earl of Essex (son of Viscount Malden, the former CO) was promoted to succeed Lt-Col the Earl of Clarendon as CO of the Hertfordshire Imperial Yeomanry.[21][24][43]

Territorial Force edit

The Imperial Yeomanry were subsumed into the new Territorial Force (TF) under the Haldane Reforms of 1908.[44][45][46] The Hertfordshire Yeomanry, which also recruited from North London suburbs, were organised as follows:[5][6][7][24][47][2][48][49]

 
Yeomanry House, Hertford, RHQ of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry from 1910.

The Hertfordshire Yeomanry was attached for training to the TF's Eastern Mounted Brigade.[24][47][59][60][61][62] The Earl of Essex retired from the regimental command in 1913 and was succeeded by Lt-Col Abel Henry Smith.[24][50]

World War I edit

Mobilisation edit

The Hertfordshire Yeomanry completed its 1914 annual camp at the end of the first week in June. On the outbreak of World War I the embodiment of the TF was proclaimed on 4 August and the regiment mobilised at its squadron HQs next day. The men were billeted nearby until they had been equipped and the horses requisitioned, and then set off on the two-day march to their war station at Mountnessing, Essex, to link up with Eastern Mounted Brigade. The regiment was moved around Essex and Suffolk, finally reaching Culford, near Bury St Edmonds, on 21 August.[64]

Under the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 (7 Edw. 7, c.9), the TF was intended as a home defence force and its members could not be compelled to serve outside the country. However, after the outbreak of war, TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service. The Herts Yeomanry held squadron parades at Culford on 22 August where the officers and men were invited to volunteer, and more than 80 per cent of the regiment did so at once. On 31 August 1914, the War Office authorised the formation of Reserve or 2nd-Line units for each existing TF unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered. Initially these were formed from men who had not volunteered or were unfit for overseas service, and the recruits who were flooding in. The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original, but they were distinguished by '1/' and '2/' prefixes. In this way duplicate units were created, mirroring those being sent overseas. Later they were mobilised for active service in their own right and 3rd Line units were created to supply reinforcement drafts to the 1st and 2nd Lines.[65][66][67]

1/1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry edit

 
1/1st Herts Yeomanry and the Bikaner Camel Corps on a reconnaissance into the Sinai Desert, February 1915.

On 31 August the 1/1st Herts Yeomanry was warned for service in Egypt. The regiment's CO, Lt-Col Abel Smith, was not passed medically fit for overseas service, so Col T.E. Harrison, DSO, retired from the Leicestershire Yeomanry, was 'dug out' to take the 1/1st Herts Yeomanry overseas. Lieutenant-Col Abel Smith took command of the 2/1st Herts Yeomanry. The war establishment of a cavalry regiment overseas was three rather than four squadrons: C Sqn 1/1st Herts Yeomanry was broken up and the manpower distributed to the other three; its officer commanding, Maj Reginald Halsey, formed the Regimental Depot at RHQ, but had rejoined 1/1st Herts Yeomanry before it sailed.[67][68]

In February 1915 1/1st Herts Yeomanry joined the Yeomanry Mounted Brigade formed to pursue to the Turks who had carried out a Raid on the Suez Canal: it gained the Battle Honours Suez Canal and Egypt 1915 without firing a shot. In August 1915 the brigade (now designated 5th Mounted Brigade) was sent to the Gallipoli Campaign as dismounted troops attached to the 2nd Mounted Division. The regiment was engaged in the disastrous Battle of Scimitar Hill and then served in the trenches until November. Casualties from Trench warfare and sickness were such that by September the 1/1st Herts Yeomanry and the Westminster Dragoons were temporarily combined as 5th Yeomanry Regiment in 1st Composite Mounted Brigade. After the evacuation of Gallipoli the regiment returned to Egypt in November 1915 and was remounted. It was able to raise two mounted squadrons in December for service with the Western Frontier Force for the Senussi Campaign.[47][60][69]

In February 1916 the regiment was split up to provide divisional cavalry squadrons to the infantry divisions evacuated from Gallipoli:[47][60][70]

XXI Corps Cavalry edit

A Squadron 1/1st Herts Yeomanry joined XXI Corps Cavalry Regiment on 26 August 1917. The other two squadrons of the regiment were A Sqn 1/1st Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry and C Sqn 1/1st Queen's Own Royal Glasgow Yeomanry (QORGY). In November the composite regiment formed part of the pursuing force after the Third Battle of Gaza. In May 1918 B Sqn 1/1st Herts Yeomanry at Zeitoun exchanged with C Sqn QORGY, and both Herts squadrons served together in XXI Corps Cavalry Regiment for the rest of the war. The regiment fought in the final Battle of Megiddo and then carried out an epic march up the coast of Ottoman Syria to liberate the ports.[47][60][71][72][80][a]

2/1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry edit

The 2nd Line regiment was formed under Lt-Col Abel Smith at Hertford on 1 September 1914 and quickly recruited up to the war establishment for a yeomanry regiment. The Hertfordshire Territorial Association was able rapidly to provide uniforms and reasonably modern equipment. It spent the winter of 1914–15 in billets at Hertford then took over the old militia barracks in the town with temporary stabling when the horses arrived.[60][47][54][82] In mid-1915 the 3rd Line regiment took over the role of draft-finding for the 1/1st Herts Yeomanry overseas, and the remaining home service men were transferred to join a squadron to a Provisional Brigade. The 2/1st left Hertford in June 1915 for two months' training on Epsom Downs, and then went to the ThetfordBrandon area to join 69th (2nd East Anglian) Division in First Army of Central Force, responsible for the defence of Eastern England. At the end of October it moved into winter quarters in billets in Huntingdon. In February 1916 Lt-Col Abel Smith, who was no longer fit for active service, moved to the Regimental Depot; Maj J.B. Gilliat (who had commanded 42nd (Herts) Company, IY, in the Boer War) was promoted to take command. On 28 April 1916 the regiment joined the 16th (2/1st Southern) Mounted Brigade of the 4th Mounted Division in the Manningtree area. The division's role was to be a mobile reserve in case of invasion and was regularly on alert, such as during the Battle of Jutland.[60][82][83][84][85]

In July 1916 4th Mounted Division was converted into a Bicycle infantry division, but 2/1st Herts Yeomanry was one of three of its regiments selected to remain mounted, and it was exchanged into 3rd Mounted Bde of 1st Mounted Division in General Reserve of Home Forces, with the regiment billeted at Westerham. Despite some false alerts of invasion or riot duty, and rumours that the division was to be sent overseas, the regiment remained in Kent. In the spring of 1917 it moved to Wildernesse, near Sevenoaks, and carried out mounted training in Knole Park. However, by mid-August 1917 the 1st Mounted Division was also converted to cyclists (as The Cyclist Division), and 2/1st Herts Yeomanry gave up its horses and converted to the four-company organisation of a cyclist battalion, except one mounted squadron that joined 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment. The role of the Cyclist Division was to train and provide reinforcement drafts for cycle units serving overseas, but many of the remaining trained cavalrymen were transferred to the reserve cavalry regiments.[60][82][84][85][86]

2/1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry remained in 3rd Mounted Bde (renamed 13th Cyclist Bde) but on 26 October it transferred under conditions of secrecy to 214th (Special) Bde in 71st Division. Popularly known as the 'Hush Brigade', this force was being assembled at Colchester for operations at Murmansk. The regiment moved into billets at West Bergholt and was brought up to establishment with men of 'A1' medical category: Lt-Col Gilliat reverted to the retired list and Lt-Col W. Byron of the Leicestershire Yeomanry assumed the command. The battalion was issued with steel helmets and trained for beach landings from naval destroyers, to wade ashore with their bicycles on their shoulders. 71st Division was broken up at the beginning of 1918 and on 12 February 214th Bde joined 67th Division, still at Colchester. The brigade retained its special mission, but this was cancelled in March after the German Spring Offensive was launched on the Western Front. The regiment immediately supplied large numbers of A1 men as infantry reinforcements for the Western Front, and continued to do so in its depleted state for the rest of the war, taking in men from disbanded units and recruits from training regiments and preparing them for active service. It was demobilised at Ipswich in January 1919.[60][47][82][87]

3/1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry edit

The 3rd Line regiment was formed at Hertford in December 1914 and received its formal designation in January 1915. At first in squadron strength, it was commanded by Maj E.J. Upton, transferred to the Herts Yeomanry from the Eastern Mounted Bde's Transport and Supply Column of the Army Service Corps. In April 1915 it absorbed all the training staff from 2/1st Herts Yeomanry and assumed its role of training reinforcements. In March it had been affiliated to the 13th Reserve Cavalry Regiment at Colchester, and from June it sent all its trained men to a separate squadron with this regiment, retaining only the training staff and incoming recruits at Hertford. In November the establishment of 3rd Line Yeomanry regiments was increased to match the 2nd Line, so 3/1st Herts Yeomanry reorganised with RHQ and two squadrons at Hertford and the 'Overseas' Squadron at Colchester. However, in April 1916 the 3rd Line Yeomanry regiments were ordered to join their affiliated reserve cavalry regiments, and 3/1st Herts Yeomanry joined 13th Reserve Rgt, which had just moved to Maresfield in Sussex. Here 3/1st Herts Yeomanry was assembled as a full regiment for the first time, under the command of Maj Barré A.H. Goldie, with a basic training squadron, a continuation training squadron, and the overseas squadron holding men waiting to be drafted.[60][47][88]

However, with the exception of Palestine there was little requirement for cavalry during World War I, and the large cavalry training organisation was reduced in February 1917. 3/1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry was absorbed into the reorganised 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment at Tidworth Camp, which was responsible for training reinforcements for dragoon regiments. The new unit supplied its first draft to 1/1st Herts Yeomanry in April 1917.[60][47][88]

The Regimental Depot remained in existence at Hertford as an administrative centre, first under Capt Barré Goldie, then under Col Abel Smith, until April 1917, when the Yeomanry lancer and dragoon depots were concentrated at Canterbury.[89]

Interwar edit

Before the TF reformed on 7 February 1920 the War Office had decided that only a small number of mounted Yeomanry regiments would be required in future, and the remainder would have to be re-roled, mainly as artillery.[b] The Hertfordshire Territorial Force Association decided to combine the Hertfordshire Yeomanry with the two Hertfordshire batteries of the former 4th East Anglian Brigade, Royal Field Artillery (RFA) to form a complete (4-battery) field artillery brigade in the county. Initially it was to be called the '3rd East Anglian Brigade, RFA', and two of the batteries would carry the title 'Hertfordshire Yeomanry', but after the TF had been reorganised as the Territorial Army (TA) in 1921, the final title settled upon was 86th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Brigade, RFA, which retained links to both lineages. The men of all four batteries wore the Royal Artillery (RA) cap badge, with the Hertfordshire Yeomanry's hart badge on the shoulder strap together with the shoulder title 'Y-RFA' for Yeomanry RFA rather than 'T-RFA' worn by other Territorial RFA units. The two units' Honorary Colonels continued to serve jointly. The new brigade had the following organisation:[2][5][6][7][24][92][93][94][95]

  • Brigade HQ at Yeomanry House, Hertford
  • 341 (Hertfordshire) Battery at Riding School, Harpenden Road, St Albans
  • 342 (Hertfordshire) Battery at Hertford
  • 343 (Hertfordshire) Battery at Clarendon Hall, Watford
  • 344 (Hertfordshire) Battery (Howitzer) at Bearton Camp, Hitchin

The brigade was part of the TA's 54th (East Anglian) Division.[96][97] The RFA was subsumed into the Royal Artillery (RA) in 1924 and the word 'Field' was inserted into the titles of its brigades and batteries. The four batteries were unofficially designated by their home towns in 1930, but it was not until August 1937 that these titles were made official:[24][92][98]

  • 341 (St Albans) Field Bty
  • 342 (Hertford) Field Bty
  • 343 (Watford) Field Bty
  • 344 (Hitchin) Field Bty (How)

In 1938 the RA modernised its nomenclature and a lieutenant-colonel's command was designated a 'regiment' rather than a 'brigade'.[93][5][7][2][24][95]

World War II edit

Mobilisation edit

Following the Munich crisis in 1938, the TA was rapidly doubled in size, with most units forming duplicates of themselves. In fact the Hertfordshire Yeomanry eventually contributed to four separate regiments during World War II:[7][5][6][95][c]

86th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment edit

 
Sexton 25-pdr self-propelled guns of 86th Field Regiment firing against enemy positions in April 1945

The 86th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment, Royal Artillery was mobilised in September 1939. In 1940 the regiment was equipped with 8 x 4.5 inch Howitzers & 4 x 18/25-pounder guns. On 18 November 1940 it formed an additional 343 Bty, renumbered as 462 Bty 18 January 1941.[100][101] It remained in the United Kingdom until 1944 being attached to various formations: 54th (East Anglian) Infantry Division from mobilisation until 9 June 1942, then 42nd Armoured Division until 3 May 1943,[101][109] during which time it was converted to self-propelled guns, first with the Bishop and then the Priest. When 21st Army Group was formed in July 1943 to prepare for the Allied invasion of Normandy (Operation Overlord), 86th (HY) Fd Rgt was assigned to I Corps.[110] When XXX Corps was brought back from Italy to spearhead the invasion, 86th (HY) Fd Rgt joined it, training with 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division in amphibious assault techniques for the Overlord landings including developing the technique of firing its Sexton SP guns from landing craft on the run-in to the beach. The regiment was among the first units to land on D-Day (6 June 1944).[101][111][112] It later supported various formations of XXX Corps throughout the campaign in North West Europe, including in Normandy, the liberation of Antwerp, Operations and Market Garden and Clipper, the Battle of the Bulge and the Reichswald battles (Operations Veritable and Blockbuster, the Rhine crossing (Operation Plunder) and the advance across Germany to Bremen.[101][113]

135th (East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment edit

135th Field Regiment was being formed on the outbreak of war and became independent of 86th Field Rgt on 7 September 1939. The regiment was part of 18th Division, the duplicate of 54th (East Anglian) Division. It served in the East Coast defences with extemporised equipment until 1941 when it was fully equipped, formed its third battery (numbered 499), and undertook mobile training preparatory to overseas service. 18th Division sailed on 31 October 1941 bound for Basra as reinforcements for Middle East Forces, but while it was at sea news arrived of the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor and Malaya. The convoy was diverted to India, but the troopship carrying 53rd Brigade and the personnel of 135th Field Rgt was sent straight to Singapore. Fighting with whatever guns were available until its own 25-pdrs arrived, 135th Field Rgt took part in the final stages of the disastrous Malayan campaign and the defence of Fortress Singapore. It was captured at the Fall of Singapore on 15 February. Although officers of the regiment wore Hertfordshire Yeomanry badges, formal authorisation for the regiment to adopt the '(East Anglian) (Hertfordshire Yeomanry)' subtitles was not issued until 17 February 1942, after it had gone into captivity.[102][104][103][114]

As prisoners of war (PoWs) many of the men of 135th Field Rgt were forced to work on the Wan Po viaduct on the Burma Railway, which inspired the book and film The Bridge on the River Kwai. The regiment's commanding officer Lt-Col Philip Toosey was the senior Allied officer in the associated Prisoner-of-war camp, but unlike the fictional Colonel Nicholson did not collaborate with the Japanese.[103][115]

191st (Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry) Field Regiment edit

In 1942 both 86th (East Anglian) (Herts Yeomanry) and 147th (Essex Yeomanry) Field Regiments supplied cadres to help form 191st (Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry) Field Regiment, Royal Artillery. This regimenta also served through the campaign in North West Europe, supporting varied formations in the battles in Normandy, the liberation of Le Havre and the battles of the Scheldt under First Canadian Army. It was broken up in December 1944 to provide infantry reinforcements.[108][116]

79th (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment edit

79th (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery was formed in 1939 with headquarters at Watford.It served in the Battle of France, The Blitz, Operation Torch and the Italian Campaign before being placed in suspended animation in early 1945.[106][117][95]

Postwar edit

The regiment was reconstituted as 286 (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment (later Medium Regiment) in 1947 and absorbed 479 (Hertfordshire Yeomanry) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment in 1955.[7][95][118] The regiment amalgamated with the 305th (Bedfordshire Yeomanry) Light Regiment to form the 286th (Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry) Field Regiment in 1961.[7] The unit was disbanded in 1967 but reformed as 201 (Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry) Battery, 100th (Yeomanry) Regiment Royal Artillery in 1971.[119] Under Army 2020, this unit was placed in suspended animation in 2014.[120]

Heritage and ceremonial edit

Uniforms and insignia edit

At the time of the Royal Review in 1800, the five Yeomanry Troops wore blue coats with red cuffs and collars and buff waistcoats. They wore Tarleton helmets helmets with a feather. The Western and Centre Troops were distinguished by having lace on the chest of their coats. The Beechwood Troop of Volunteers had green coats with buff waistcoats, the Sawbridgeworth Troop blue jackets with red facings. These uniform colours were still in use in 1806.[4][121]

The Hart (male deer) is frequently used as a punning badge by organisations in Hertfordshire (pronounced and occasionally written as 'Hartfordshire'). A Hart 'Trippant' was adopted by the Northern Troop as its badge at some point in the period 1794–1824 and was used by the regiment thereafter. In this case the hart is surrounded by a garter inscribed 'NORTH HARTS YEOMANRY' surmounted by a crown. From 1831 the South Herts and the Dacorum Trp wore the hart in the centre of a crowned Maltese cross as their Shako plate. On the 1852 pattern helmet the South Herts' badge was a hart trippant in a ford.[122] The button adopted by the South Herts in 1831 had a crown within a garter inscribed 'HARTS YEOMANRY CAVALRY'; this design remained in use for all ranks until the formation of the Imperial Yeomanry (when the garter became a plain circle inscribed "HERTS IMPERIAL YEOMANRY'), but officers continued to wear the original design until 1919.[123]

From their formation in 1831, A,B and C Trps of the South Herts wore light dragoon uniforms of a dark green long-tailed Coatee with a scarlet plastron front and black mohair lace, together with 'Oxford mixture' (dark blue-grey) trousers with a red stripe The headgear was a dark green (later black) shako. D (Cashio) Troop was dressed as heavy dragoons in a scarlet coatee with green facings and a white metal helmet with black plume. The light troops replaced the shako with a black lacquered helmet in 1852.[20][124]

 
Hertfordshire Yeomanry in the 1890s.
 
A mounted trooper of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry in 1896.

In the mid-1860s the distinction between the heavy and light troops of the regiment was abandoned, and all wore a new uniform with a single-breasted scarlet tunic and a white metal spiked Dragoon helmet bearing the hart badge. With the addition of a black horsehair plume for parade dress in 1880, this remained the uniform of the regiment into the early 20th Century. A pillbox cap was used for drill and undress wear. All the Yeomanry adopted blue riding pantaloons and 'butcher boots' in 1873 in place of the old booted overalls, which were retained for dismounted parades; the Hertfordshires wore red stripes on the pantaloons. Other ranks (ORs) wore a white shoulder-belt over the left shoulder; in marching order a white leather Bandolier was also worn, across the right shoulder. The cloak was blue, lined red. The horse furniture included a throat plume to match the helmet plume, and a black sheepskin saddle cover until 1896. Most Yeomanry regiments adopted white head-ropes in 1898, but the Hertfordshires retained the old steel collar chains.[22][125][126]

Upon conversion to Imperial Yeomanry in 1906 the regiment adopted the standard khaki IY uniform with scarlet collars and cuffs; ORs wore a Slouch hat with the left side turned up and secured with the hart badge on a red rosette. Officers wore a khaki peaked cap, which was used by all ranks after 1906.Although officers might continue to purchase the full dress uniform, ORs had a 'substitute full dress' consisting of a scarlet 'frock' or jacket with pockets, worn with a pillbox cap until 1906 when a blue peaked cap with white piping was introduced. All ranks wore dark blue overalls with double red stripes. After 1908 the Hertfordshire Yeomanry wore the standard khaki service dress of the British Army, with regimental insignia, for nearly all occasions. This included leather bandoliers during the regiment's remaining years as a mounted unit. After 1938 khaki battledress was adopted.[127][128]

When converted to artillery, the regiment had to adopt the Royal Artillery's 'gun' cap badge. However, all four batteries of the 86th Brigade also wore the Hertfordshire Yeomanry's hart badge, on the shoulder strap for officers, on the upper arm for ORs, later as collar badges and on the Field service cap worn in walking-out dress. The officers' blue patrol jacket retained cavalry-style shoulder chains. On 4 April 1943, as a unit of armoured artillery, the regiment unofficially adopted the black beret of the Royal Armoured Corps and wore the silver hart badge on it.[95][129]

When the regiment was reformed in 1947 the hart collar badge was continued and all ranks wore shoulder-chains on blue patrol jackets. At the same time the pre-1900 'Harts Yeomanry Cavalry' button was reintroduced.[95] 286 (Hertfordshire & Bedfordshire Yeomanry) Field Rgt wore the hart as a cap badge, with the Bedfordshire Yeomanry badge on the collar.[95]

Standards and guidons edit

In 1795 at Theobald's Park, Lady Prescott presented her husband's Southern Troop of Yeomanry with a standard bearing the Coat of arms of Hertfordshire. The Marchioness of Salisbury presented a new guidon to the reformed South Herts after 1831. This is crimson with the Royal cypher 'WIVR' in intertwined letters in the centre of one side, with 'SOUTH HERTS' above and 'YEOMANRY' below; the reverse side probably bore the arms of Hertfordshire. However, on his death in 1839 Sir Abraham Hume left the old Southern Trp standard to the new Hoddesdon Trp with the wish that it should be carried once more, and this was done. Mrs Ward, wife of the commanding officer, presented the Gilston Trp with a pair of guidons similar to Marchioness's: the royal cypher on one side surrounded by the wording 'Gilston Troop of Herts Yeomanry' and on the other the county arms of the hart crossing a stream.[4][130]

The regiment received an official guidon in 1909. This was red with a circle inscribed HERTS YEOMANRY' inside a union wreath of roses, thistles and shamrocks, with a crown above and the battle honour 'SOUTH AFRICA 1900–01' on a scroll beneath. After 1924 the battle honours (South Africa and nine from World War I) appeared in two columns of scrolls, but it was never paraded after the regiment converted to artillery.[131]

Honorary Colonels edit

The following served as Honorary Colonel of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry:[24] x

Other prominent members edit

  • Algernon Capell, 8th Earl of Essex, was commissioned into the regiment as a 2nd Lieutenant under his courtesy title Viscount Malden on 10 December 1904 when his father was in command. He became a Lieutenant in the 7th Hussars and during World War I he served in the Remount Service as a Temporary Captain.[24][21][135][136]
  • Francis Fremantle, who had served as a civilian doctor with the field force in the Second Boer War, was commissioned into the Herts Yeomanry in 1902 and was promoted to Surgeon-Captain on 12 May 1906. During World War I He served as a senior Royal Army Medical Corps staff officer at Gallipoli and in Mesopotamia. Postwar he was elected MP for St Albans and was knighted.[24][137]

Battle honours edit

The Hertfordshire Yeomanry was awarded the following Battle Honours:[24]

  • Second Boer War: South Africa 1900–01
  • World War I: Suvla, Scimitar Hill, Gallipoli 1915, Suez Canal, Egypt, 1915–16, Megiddo, Sharon, Damascus, Palestine, 1918

The regiment claimed the World War I battle honours to which it was entitled, but as it had been converted to artillery the guidon on which they were emblazoned was never paraded. (The Royal Artillery does not carry battle honours: instead the guns are regarded as the colours, and the regiment bears the motto Ubique ('everywhere').)[93]

Memorials edit

There are three stone tablets in the War Memorial Chapel of St Albans Cathedral commemorating the dead of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry:

  • The first was erected by the regiment to the nine members of 42nd (Hertfordshire) Company, IY, who died on service during the Second Boer War.[138]
  • A second was unveiled on 31 July 1921 to the 64 men of the regiment who died in World War I.[139]
  • The third, to the men of all four Hertfordshire Yeomanry artillery regiments who died during World War II, was unveiled on 19 September 1954.[140][141]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ With two squadrons of the regiment present, the Hertfordshire Yeomanry was eligible for the battle honours awarded for the rest of the campaign: Palestine 1918, Megiddo, Sharon and Damascus, the latter covering the advance into Syria.[81]
  2. ^ The 14 senior Yeomanry regiments and 2 regiments of Scouts remained as horsed cavalry; of the remainder, 1 became a mounted signals unit, 8 became armoured car companies, and the remainder (27) transferred to the Royal Artillery.[90][91]
  3. ^ In 1939 the Hertfordshire Territorial Association proposed that the two field regiments should drop the 'East Anglian' subtitle and became '86th (South Hertfordshire Yeomanry)' and '135th (North Hertfordshire Yeomanry)' reflecting the pre-1870 regiments, but the War Office rejected this.[99]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rogers, p. 145.
  2. ^ a b c d e Sainsbury (1969), Appendix I.
  3. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Busby.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Frederick, pp. 30–1.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Mileham, pp 88–9.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o . Archived from the original on 15 July 2007. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  8. ^ a b c Sainsbury (1969), pp. 16–9.
  9. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 23–5.
  10. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 27–8.
  11. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 25.
  12. ^ a b c Sainsbury (1994), pp. 32–5.
  13. ^ a b c WO List, 1805.
  14. ^ Sainsbury (1969). pp. 19, 47.
  15. ^ Herts local military forces
  16. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 36–8.
  17. ^ Spiers, p. 79.
  18. ^ a b c Sainsbury (1969), pp. 20–1.
  19. ^ a b Sainsbury (1994), pp. 39–65.
  20. ^ a b c Sleigh.
  21. ^ a b c d e Burke's: 'Essex'.
  22. ^ a b c Ryan.
  23. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 56, 66–8.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Army List, various dates.
  25. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 73–8.
  26. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 80.
  27. ^ Rogers, p. 228.
  28. ^ Spiers, p. 239.
  29. ^ Dunlop, pp. 104–18.
  30. ^ a b IY at Anglo-Boer War.
  31. ^ Frederick, p. 370.
  32. ^ IY Companies at Roll of Honour.
  33. ^
  34. ^ Sainsbury (1969), p. 22.
  35. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 88–92.
  36. ^ Amery, Vol IV, Appendix to Chapters I-XIV, pp. 503–14.
  37. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 92–101.
  38. ^ Leslie.
  39. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 102.
  40. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 100.
  41. ^ Sainsbury (1969), pp. 22–3.
  42. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 103–16.
  43. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 85.
  44. ^ London Gazette, 20 March 1908.
  45. ^ Dunlop, Chapter 14.
  46. ^ Spiers, Chapter 10.
  47. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hertfordshire Yeomanry at Long, Long Trail.
  48. ^ Sainsbury (1969), pp. 23–4.
  49. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 116–29.
  50. ^ a b Sainsbury (1994), pp. 125–7.
  51. ^ Hertfordshire at Great War Drill Halls.
  52. ^ Watford at Drill Hall Project.
  53. ^ a b c Hertfordshire Drill Stations at Drill Hall Project.
  54. ^ a b Hertford at Drill Hall Project.
  55. ^ St Albans at Drill Hall Project.
  56. ^ Middlesex at Great War Drill Halls.
  57. ^ Barnet at Stepping Out.
  58. ^ High Barnet at Drill Hall Project.
  59. ^
  60. ^ a b c d e f g h i j James, p. 20.
  61. ^ James, pp. 35–6.
  62. ^ Mounted Brigades at Long, Long Trail.
  63. ^ Conrad, Mark (1996). "The British Army, 1914".
  64. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 127–32.
  65. ^ Frederick, pp. viii–ix.
  66. ^ Rinaldi 2008, p. 35
  67. ^ a b Sainsbury (1994), pp. 132–3.
  68. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 201, 214.
  69. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 134–57.
  70. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 157–8.
  71. ^ a b Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 125–31.
  72. ^ a b 54th (EA) Division at Long, Long Trail.
  73. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 159–64.
  74. ^ Becke, Pt 3a, pp. 19–25.
  75. ^ 11th (N) Division at Long, Long Trail.
  76. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 179–80.
  77. ^ Becke, Pt 3a, pp. 35–44.
  78. ^ 13th (W) Division at Long, Long Trail.
  79. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 181–99.
  80. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 164–79.
  81. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p.180.
  82. ^ a b c d Sainsbury (1994), pp. 200–9.
  83. ^ Becke, Pt 2b, pp. 91–8.
  84. ^ a b Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 27–30.
  85. ^ a b James, Appendix III to Part I.
  86. ^ Becke, Pt 2a, pp. 19–26.
  87. ^ Becke, Pt 2b, pp. 75–82, 101–5.
  88. ^ a b Sainsbury (1994), pp. 210–13.
  89. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 214.
  90. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 21, 75.
  91. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 January 2007.
  92. ^ a b Frederick, pp. 491–5, 522.
  93. ^ a b c d Sainsbury (1994), pp. 218–20.
  94. ^ Sainsbury (1999), pp. 31–4.
  95. ^ a b c d e f g h Litchfield, pp. 101–4.
  96. ^ Litchfield, p. 293; Appendix VII.
  97. ^ Titles & Designations 1927.
  98. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 46.
  99. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 65.
  100. ^ a b Frederick, pp. 491–3, 522.
  101. ^ a b c d e 86 Fd Rgt at RA 39–45.
  102. ^ a b Frederick, pp. 491–3, 531.
  103. ^ a b c Sainsbury (1999), pp. 153–214.
  104. ^ a b 135 Fd Rgt at RA 39–45.
  105. ^ Frederick, pp. 756–9, 775.
  106. ^ a b 79 HAA at RA 39–45.
  107. ^ Frederick, pp. 487, 541.
  108. ^ a b 191 Fd Rgt at RA 39–45.
  109. ^ Joslen, pp. 29, 89.
  110. ^ Order of Battle of the Forces in the United Kingdom, Part 2: 21 Army Group, 24 July 1943, with amendments, The National Archives (TNA), Kew, file WO 212/238.
  111. ^ Sainsbury (1999), pp. 84–100.
  112. ^ Joslen, p. 581.
  113. ^ Sainsbury (1999), pp. 100–52.
  114. ^ Farndale, Far East, Annex A.
  115. ^ Farndale, Far East, Annex D.
  116. ^ Sainsbury (1999), pp. 215–48.
  117. ^ Sainsbury (2003), pp. 27–114.
  118. ^ Sainsbury (2003), pp. 193–238.
  119. ^ . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 18 October 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
  120. ^ Summary of Reserve Structure and Basing Changes 2013-08-10 at the Wayback Machine
  121. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 30–5; Plates I, 16, 20, 22.
  122. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 29, 39; Plates 19, 24, 32.
  123. ^ Sainsbury (1994), Plates 23, 73.
  124. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 40–3, 59; Plates 29, 33.
  125. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 65; Plates II, 36, 39–53.
  126. ^ Hertfordshire Yeomanry 1895–1900 Uniformology.
  127. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 109; Plates 65–6, 70–9, 85.
  128. ^ Smith, p. 12.
  129. ^ Sainsbury (1999), pp. 47, 84–5.
  130. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 25, 44–6, 51; Plate 26.
  131. ^ Sainsbury (1994), pp. 122, 220; Plates III, 80.
  132. ^ Burke's: 'Clarendon'.
  133. ^ Sainsbury (1994), p. 127.
  134. ^ Burke's: 'Salisbury'.
  135. ^ London Gazette, 23 December 1904.
  136. ^ London Gazette, 14 July 1915.
  137. ^ Royal College of Surgeons of England, 'Plarr's Lives of the Fellows': Sir Francis Edward Fremantle.
  138. ^ IWM WMR Ref 14681.
  139. ^ IWM WMR Ref 14685.
  140. ^ Sainsbury (2003), pp. 204–5.
  141. ^ IWM WMR Ref 49184.

References edit

  • L.S. Amery (ed), The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899-1902, London: Sampson Low, Marston, 6 Vols 1900–09.
  • Anon, History of the 359 (4th West Lancs.) Medium Regiment R.A. (T.A.) 1859–1959, Liverpool: 359 Medium Regiment, 1959.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2a: The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st-Line Territorial Force Divisions (42–56), London: HM Stationery Office, 1935/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-39-8.
  • Maj A.F. Becke,History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2b: The 2nd-Line Territorial Force Divisions (57th–69th), with the Home-Service Divisions (71st–73rd) and 74th and 75th Divisions, London: HM Stationery Office, 1937/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, ISBN 1-847347-39-8.
  • Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 100th Edn, London, 1953.
  • Maj J.H. Busby, 'Local Military Forces in Hertfordshire 1793–1814', Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, Vol 31, No 125 (Spring 1953), pp. 15–24.
  • Col John K. Dunlop, The Development of the British Army 1899–1914, London: Methuen, 1938.
  • Gen Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Far East Theatre 1939–1946, London: Brasseys, 2002, ISBN 1-85753-302-X.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol I, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-007-3.
  • J.B.M. Frederick, Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660–1978, Vol II, Wakefield: Microform Academic, 1984, ISBN 1-85117-009-X.
  • Brig E.A. James, British Regiments 1914–18, London: Samson Books, 1978/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2001, ISBN 978-1-84342-197-9.
  • Joslen, H. F. (2003) [1960]. Orders of Battle: Second World War, 1939–1945. Uckfield, East Sussex: Naval and Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84342-474-1.
  • N.B. Leslie, Battle Honours of the British and Indian Armies 1695–1914, London: Leo Cooper, 1970, ISBN 0-85052-004-5.
  • Norman E.H. Litchfield, The Territorial Artillery 1908–1988 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1992, ISBN 0-9508205-2-0.
  • Mileham, Patrick (1994). The Yeomanry Regiments; 200 Years of Tradition. Edinburgh: Canongate Academic. ISBN 1-898410-36-4.
  • Rinaldi, Richard A (2008). Order of Battle of the British Army 1914. Ravi Rikhye. ISBN 978-0-97760728-0.
  • Col H.C.B. Rogers, The Mounted Troops of the British Army 1066–1945, London: Seeley Service, 1959.
  • Lt-Col Ernest Ryan 'Arms, Uniforms and Equipment of the Yeomanry Cavalry', Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, September 1957, Vol 35, pp. 124–33.
  • J.D. Sainsbury (1969), Hertfordshire's Soldiers: A Survey of the Auxiliary Military Forces Raised in Hertfordshire from 1757 to the Present Day, Hitchin: Hertfordshire Local History Council, 1969.
  • Maj J.D. Sainsbury (1980), Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Uniforms, Arms and Equipment, Vol 1: Yeomanry and Light Horse, Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Historical Trust, 1980, ISBN 0-903823-02-0.
  • Lt-Col J.D. Sainsbury (1994), The Hertfordshire Yeomanry: An Illustrated History 1794–1920, Welwyn: Hart Books/Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Historical Trust, 1994, ISBN 0-948527-03-X.
  • Lt-Col J.D. Sainsbury (1999), The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments, Royal Artillery, Part 1: The Field Regiments 1920-1946, Welwyn: Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust/Hart Books, 1999, ISBN 0-948527-05-6.
  • Col J.D. Sainsbury (2003), The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments, Royal Artillery, Part 2: The Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment 1938–1945 and the Searchlight Battery 1937–1945; Part 3: The Post-war Units 1947–2002, Welwyn: Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust/Hart Books, 2003, ISBN 0-948527-06-4.
  • Arthur Sleigh, The Royal Militia and Yeomanry Cavalry Army List, April 1850, London: British Army Despatch Press, 1850/Uckfield: Naval and Military Press, 1991, ISBN 978-1-84342-410-9.
  • R.J.Smith,The Yeomanry Force at the 1911 Coronation, 1987, ISBN 0-948251-26-3.
  • Edward M. Spiers, The Army and Society 1815–1914, London: Longmans, 1980, ISBN 0-582-48565-7.
  • War Office, A List of the Officers of the Militia, the Gentlemen & Yeomanry Cavalry, and Volunteer Infantry of the United Kingdom, 11th Edn, London: War Office, 14 October 1805/Uckfield: Naval and Military Press, 2005, ISBN 978-1-84574-207-2.
  • War Office, Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army, London: War Office, 7 November 1927 (RA sections also summarised in Litchfield, Appendix IV).

External links edit

  • Anglo-Boer War
  • Chris Baker, The Long, Long Trail
  • Bruce Bassett-Powell's Uniformology.
  • The Drill Hall Project
  • Great War Centenary Drill Halls
  • Imperial War Museum, War Memorials Register
  • Roll of Honour
  • Royal Artillery 1939–45.
  • Stepping Forward: A Tribute to the Volunteer Military Reservists and Supporting Auxiliaries of Greater London

hertfordshire, yeomanry, yeomanry, cavalry, regiment, british, army, that, could, trace, formation, late, 18th, century, first, seeing, mounted, service, second, boer, world, subsequently, converted, artillery, three, regiments, service, world, which, captured. The Hertfordshire Yeomanry was a Yeomanry Cavalry regiment of the British Army that could trace its formation to the late 18th century First seeing mounted service in the Second Boer War and World War I it subsequently converted to artillery Three regiments saw service in World War II one of which was captured at the fall of Singapore It continued through various postwar amalgamations and its lineage was maintained by 201 Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry Battery 100th Yeomanry Regiment Royal Artillery until that unit was placed in suspended animation in 2014 Hertfordshire YeomanryActive1794 18241831 2014Country Kingdom of Great Britain 1794 1800 United Kingdom 1801 2014 BranchTerritorial ArmyTypeYeomanryRoleBoer WarYeomanryWorld War IYeomanryWorld War IIArtilleryPostwarArtillerySizeBoer War One RegimentWorld War IThree RegimentsWorld War IIThree RegimentsPostwarPart of one BatteryEngagementsSecond Boer WarWorld War I Gallipoli Suez Canal PalestineWorld War II Battle of France Malaya Tunisia Italy Normandy North West EuropeBattle honoursSee Battle Honours below Contents 1 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 2 19th century 2 1 Cardwell Reforms 3 Imperial Yeomanry 4 Territorial Force 5 World War I 5 1 Mobilisation 5 2 1 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry 5 3 XXI Corps Cavalry 5 4 2 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry 5 5 3 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry 6 Interwar 7 World War II 7 1 Mobilisation 7 2 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment 7 3 135th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment 7 4 191st Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry Field Regiment 7 5 79th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment 8 Postwar 9 Heritage and ceremonial 9 1 Uniforms and insignia 9 2 Standards and guidons 9 3 Honorary Colonels 9 3 1 Other prominent members 9 4 Battle honours 9 5 Memorials 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 External linksFrench Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars editAfter Britain was drawn into the French Revolutionary Wars Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger proposed on 14 March 1794 that the counties should form a force of Volunteer Yeoman Cavalry Yeomanry that could be called on by the King to defend the country against invasion or by the Lord Lieutenant to subdue any civil disorder within the county By the end of the year 27 counties had raised Yeomanry including Hertfordshire 1 2 3 On 7 May 1794 the Lord Lieutenant of Hertfordshire the Marquess of Salisbury called a meeting at Hertford that opened a subscription list to provide arms and uniforms and resolved to raise a force of yeomanry that could be embodied in defence of the county The first were recruited on 21 June and by the end of the year five independent troops of 50 sabres had been raised 4 5 6 7 8 9 Northern Troop commanded by Captain W Hale of King s Walden Western Troop commanded by Capt the Hon George Villiers of The Grove Watford Southern Troop commanded by Capt Sir George Prescott 1st Baronet of Theobalds Park Cheshunt Eastern Troop commanded by Capt John Calvert of Albury Centre Troop commanded by Capt the Hon Penistone Lamb of Brocket HallIn the spring of 1798 the threat of invasion seemed more acute and the government encouraged the formation of local armed associations of cavalry and infantry for purely local defence The following Volunteer Cavalry units were formed in Hertfordshire 4 8 10 Beechwood Troop commanded by Capt Sir John Sebright 7th Baronet of Beechwood Park Sawbridgeworth Troop commanded by Capt Michael Hankin A Troop was raised in the parishes of Layston Wyddial and Throcking under Capt J G Franklin with the Rev John Hull as Lieutenant but this was short lived In addition a Troop of horse or flying artillery was formed to support the Yeomanry commanded by Sir Abraham Hume 2nd Baronet of WormleyburyThere was little difference between the Yeomanry and the Volunteer Cavalry and they were treated similarly All seven Troops were on parade at Hatfield Park the Marquess of Salisbury s country house when the Militia Yeomanry and Volunteers of the county were reviewed by King George III on 13 June 1800 The Yeomanry of Hertfordshire seem to have rarely been called out on service The Hitchin Cavalry presumably the Northern Troop from nearby King s Walden once went to Ware to deal with riotous behaviour by strikers but little is known of the events 4 11 All the Volunteer Cavalry were disbanded after the Treaty of Amiens but the peace was short lived and on the resumption of war the Hertfordshire units were reformed in August 1803 with an additional Troop giving the county the following Yeomanry and Volunteer Cavalry by 1805 4 2 8 12 13 Southern Troop Major Sir Abraham Hume 135 men Horse Artillery Capt John Cook Northern Troop Capt Adolphus Meetkerke of Rushden 70 men Eastern Troop Capt John Calvert 70 men Beechwood Troop Capt Sir John Sebright 70 men Sawbridgeworth Troop Capt Michael Hankin Ashridge Troop Lt Gen the Earl of Bridgewater 50 men Midland Troop Capt the Hon Penistone Lamb 120 men Western Troop Capt the Hon G Villiers 80 menOn 20 August 1803 Sir Abraham Hume assumed command of the South Hertfordshire Legion an all arms battle group consisting of the Southern Troop of Yeomanry Cavalry the Horse Artillery Troop and the Cheshunt and Wormley Volunteer Infantry one of the infantry units that had been raised in the county 12 13 14 After the death of Capt Penistone Lamb in January 1805 he was succeeded in command by his brother the Hon William Lamb Similarly after the resignation of Capt George Villiers his elder brother the Earl of Clarendon was promoted from Cornet to command in his place 12 13 As the threat of French invasion declined after the Battle of Trafalgar funding for the Volunteer Cavalry was reduced from 1806 and interest and numbers declined During the Great Fire of Stevenage troopers from the Herts Yeomanry assisted the local volunteer firefighters 15 The Beechwood Troop was disbanded by July 1807 and the Ashridge and Sawbridgeworth Troops by early March 1809 The Yeomanry Troops continued in existence but resisted being organised into a single regiment 16 19th century editThe Yeomanry declined in importance and strength after the end of the French wars 17 and by 1824 all the Hertfordshire Troops had been disbanded 6 7 However a wave of civil unrest across Britain from 1830 led to a revival of the Yeomanry and new Troops were formed in Hertfordshire from December that year First came two troops of Light Dragoons designated the South Herts Yeomanry Cavalry shortly joined by a third troop at Hertford Then came a number of independent troops across the county so that by March 1831 they totalled seven 5 7 6 18 19 20 South Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry Light Dragoons Commanding Officer Major James Gascoyne Cecil 2nd Marquess of Salisbury 1st South Hertfordshire Troop of Yeomanry Cavalry formed 6 December 1830 at Hoddesdon 2nd South Hertfordshire Troop of Yeomanry Cavalry formed 6 December 1830 at Hatfield 3rd South Hertfordshire Troop of Yeomanry Cavalry formed 18 December 1830 at Hertford under Capt Baron Dimsdale from 1833 Capt Viscount Fordwich Cashio Troop of Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry Heavy Dragoons formed 23 December 1830 at Gorhambury House near St Albans under Capt Viscount Grimston son and heir of the Lord Lieutenant the Earl of Verulam Northern Troop of Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry formed 16 February 1831 at Baldock under Capt Commandant Samuel H Unwin Heathcote of Shephall Dacorum Troop of Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry Heavy Dragoons formed 16 February 1831 at Beechwood under Capt Thomas Gage Saunders Sebright disbanded March 1836 Gilston Troop of Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry formed 9 March 1831 under Capt Henry George Ward disbanded 12 November 1842The Cashio Troop joined the South Herts as its fourth troop on 14 February 1832 when the Marquess of Salisbury was promoted to lieutenant colonel and Viscount Grimston to major In 1835 the Cashio Trp was called out to guard the courthouse at Ampthill in neighbouring Bedfordshire and later in the year to guard Hatfield House against looters after a fire Grimston by then 2nd Earl of Verulam took over the command in 1847 while the Marquess of Salisbury dropped back to major By 1850 the troops were designated A B C and D Cashio The North Herts Troop remained independent as the North Hertfordshire Yeomanry Cavalry and may have reached the strength of four troops required for an independent regiment but had been reduced to one by 1850 Both regiments except the Cashio Trp were designated as Hussars Arthur De Vere Capell Viscount Malden formerly of the Royal Horse Guards who had been second in command was promoted lt col to command the South Herts regiment on 9 September 1864 5 7 18 19 20 21 Cardwell Reforms edit Under the Cardwell Reforms the two regiments were amalgamated as the Hertfordshire Yeomanry in August 1870 with regimental headquarters RHQ at Hertford later at St Albans and the North Herts as E Trp The regiment was designated as Dragoons in 1874 5 6 7 18 22 23 Viscount Malden died in March 1879 and his second in command Edward Villiers 5th Earl of Clarendon was promoted lt col in command on 19 July 1879 A Troop relocated from the Hoddesdon Cheshunt area to Aldenham in 1880 which spread the troops more evenly across the county In 1886 the troop established a drill station later troop headquarters at Hendon allowing the regiment to recruit in neighbouring Middlesex E Troop the old North Herts Yeomanry was disbanded in 1887 reflecting the drift towards the south of the county and the North London suburbs 21 24 25 Following the Cardwell Reforms a mobilisation scheme began to appear in the Army List from December 1875 This assigned Yeomanry units places in an order of battle of corps divisions and brigades for the Active Army even though these formations were entirely theoretical with no staff or services assigned The Hertfordshire Yeomanry were assigned as divisional troops to 2nd Division of I Corps based at Chelmsford alongside Regular Army units of infantry artillery and engineers stationed in Eastern England This was never more than a paper organisation but from April 1893 the Army List showed the Yeomanry regiments grouped into brigades for collective training They were commanded by the senior regimental commanding officer CO but they did have a Regular Army Brigade major The Hertfordshire Yeomanry together with the Suffolk Yeomanry formed the 7th Yeomanry Brigade The Yeomanry brigades disappeared from the Army List after the Second Boer War The troops were grouped into pairs as squadrons on 1 April 1893 7 24 26 Imperial Yeomanry editMain article 42nd Hertfordshire Company Imperial Yeomanry nbsp A typical Imperial Yeoman on campaignFollowing a string of defeats during Black Week in early December 1899 the British government realised that it would need more troops than just the regular army to fight the Second Boer War On 13 December the decision to allow volunteer forces to serve in South Africa was made and a Royal Warrant was issued on 24 December This officially created the Imperial Yeomanry IY The force was organised as county service companies of approximately 115 men signed up for one year and volunteers from the Yeomanry and civilians usually middle and upper class quickly filled the new force which was equipped to operate as Mounted infantry 27 28 29 30 The Hertfordshire Yeomanry raised the 42nd Hertfordshire Company and a machine gun MG section which landed in South Africa on 28 March 5 6 7 31 30 32 33 34 35 From May 1900 the 12th Bn IY was serving as Corps Troops with Lord Roberts main army north of the Orange River It served on the Rhenoster River and in the Brandwater Basin operations 42nd Herts Company then operated around Krugersdorp and Potchefstroom for the rest of its service seeing a good deal of action 36 37 The First Contingent of the Imperial Yeomanry completed their year s term of service in 1901 and 42nd Company went home in May having earned the Hertfordshire Yeomanry its first Battle honour South Africa 1900 01 6 7 24 38 39 Among the civilian volunteers who joined the 42nd Company was Dr Arthur Martin Leake from Hemel Hempstead District Hospital who enlisted as a trooper After his year s service Martin Leake became a medical officer in the South African Constabulary and won the Victoria Cross VC for rescuing wounded under fire in February 1902 He won a Bar to his VC one of only three ever awarded for his conduct at the First Battle of Ypres in 1914 40 The mounted infantry concept was considered a success and before the war ended the existing Yeomanry regiments at home including the Hertfordshires were converted into Imperial Yeomanry with an establishment of RHQ and four squadrons with an MG section 7 22 24 41 42 On his return from South Africa where he had served as second in command of 12th Bn IY Maj the Earl of Essex son of Viscount Malden the former CO was promoted to succeed Lt Col the Earl of Clarendon as CO of the Hertfordshire Imperial Yeomanry 21 24 43 Territorial Force editThe Imperial Yeomanry were subsumed into the new Territorial Force TF under the Haldane Reforms of 1908 44 45 46 The Hertfordshire Yeomanry which also recruited from North London suburbs were organised as follows 5 6 7 24 47 2 48 49 nbsp Yeomanry House Hertford RHQ of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry from 1910 RHQ at St Albans moved into Yeomanry House 28 St Andrew s Street Hertford in 1910 50 51 A Squadron at 32 Market Street Watford 52 with detachments at Berkhamsted and St John s Wood 53 B Squadron at 24 Raynham Road Hertford 54 then to Yeomanry House with detachments at Broxbourne 53 Enfield Lock Hoddesdon and Sawbridgeworth 53 C Squadron at 23 Prospect Road St Albans moved to Ramsbury Road by 1914 55 with detachments at Hendon 56 57 Harpenden Davies Street Mayfair Islington Hemel Hempstead Radlett and Redbourn D Squadron at 51 Salisbury Road High Barnet 58 with detachments at Enfield Finsbury Park Harringay Hitchin and IslingtonThe Hertfordshire Yeomanry was attached for training to the TF s Eastern Mounted Brigade 24 47 59 60 61 62 The Earl of Essex retired from the regimental command in 1913 and was succeeded by Lt Col Abel Henry Smith 24 50 World War I editMobilisation edit The Hertfordshire Yeomanry completed its 1914 annual camp at the end of the first week in June On the outbreak of World War I the embodiment of the TF was proclaimed on 4 August and the regiment mobilised at its squadron HQs next day The men were billeted nearby until they had been equipped and the horses requisitioned and then set off on the two day march to their war station at Mountnessing Essex to link up with Eastern Mounted Brigade The regiment was moved around Essex and Suffolk finally reaching Culford near Bury St Edmonds on 21 August 64 Under the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 7 Edw 7 c 9 the TF was intended as a home defence force and its members could not be compelled to serve outside the country However after the outbreak of war TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service The Herts Yeomanry held squadron parades at Culford on 22 August where the officers and men were invited to volunteer and more than 80 per cent of the regiment did so at once On 31 August 1914 the War Office authorised the formation of Reserve or 2nd Line units for each existing TF unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered Initially these were formed from men who had not volunteered or were unfit for overseas service and the recruits who were flooding in The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original but they were distinguished by 1 and 2 prefixes In this way duplicate units were created mirroring those being sent overseas Later they were mobilised for active service in their own right and 3rd Line units were created to supply reinforcement drafts to the 1st and 2nd Lines 65 66 67 1 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry edit Main article 1 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry nbsp 1 1st Herts Yeomanry and the Bikaner Camel Corps on a reconnaissance into the Sinai Desert February 1915 On 31 August the 1 1st Herts Yeomanry was warned for service in Egypt The regiment s CO Lt Col Abel Smith was not passed medically fit for overseas service so Col T E Harrison DSO retired from the Leicestershire Yeomanry was dug out to take the 1 1st Herts Yeomanry overseas Lieutenant Col Abel Smith took command of the 2 1st Herts Yeomanry The war establishment of a cavalry regiment overseas was three rather than four squadrons C Sqn 1 1st Herts Yeomanry was broken up and the manpower distributed to the other three its officer commanding Maj Reginald Halsey formed the Regimental Depot at RHQ but had rejoined 1 1st Herts Yeomanry before it sailed 67 68 In February 1915 1 1st Herts Yeomanry joined the Yeomanry Mounted Brigade formed to pursue to the Turks who had carried out a Raid on the Suez Canal it gained the Battle Honours Suez Canal and Egypt 1915 without firing a shot In August 1915 the brigade now designated 5th Mounted Brigade was sent to the Gallipoli Campaign as dismounted troops attached to the 2nd Mounted Division The regiment was engaged in the disastrous Battle of Scimitar Hill and then served in the trenches until November Casualties from Trench warfare and sickness were such that by September the 1 1st Herts Yeomanry and the Westminster Dragoons were temporarily combined as 5th Yeomanry Regiment in 1st Composite Mounted Brigade After the evacuation of Gallipoli the regiment returned to Egypt in November 1915 and was remounted It was able to raise two mounted squadrons in December for service with the Western Frontier Force for the Senussi Campaign 47 60 69 In February 1916 the regiment was split up to provide divisional cavalry squadrons to the infantry divisions evacuated from Gallipoli 47 60 70 Regimental HQ with A Sqn and the MG Section were attached to 54th East Anglian Division and served with it at the First and Second Battles of Gaza In August 1917 A Squadron joined XXI Corps Cavalry Regiment 71 72 73 B Squadron was attached to 11th Northern Division and accompanied it to the Western Front where on 12 July 1916 it joined VI Corps Cavalry Regiment until early in 1917 when it moved to join XVIII Corps Cavalry Regiment In July 1917 the squadron returned to Egypt where it served as the depot squadron in the Cavalry Wing of the Imperial School of Instruction at Zeitoun 74 75 76 D Squadron was attached to 13th Western Division and went with it to the Mesopotamian campaign On 1 January 1917 it joined III Tigris Corps Cavalry Regiment for the Second Battle of Kut It reverted to 13th W Division in March and was one of the first British units to enter Baghdad The squadron later served with 15th Indian Division on the Euphrates and on the lines of communication for the North Persia Force until the end of the war Before demobilisation the squadron served as part of an internal security unit in Calcutta 77 78 79 XXI Corps Cavalry edit Main article XXI Corps Cavalry Regiment A Squadron 1 1st Herts Yeomanry joined XXI Corps Cavalry Regiment on 26 August 1917 The other two squadrons of the regiment were A Sqn 1 1st Duke of Lancaster s Own Yeomanry and C Sqn 1 1st Queen s Own Royal Glasgow Yeomanry QORGY In November the composite regiment formed part of the pursuing force after the Third Battle of Gaza In May 1918 B Sqn 1 1st Herts Yeomanry at Zeitoun exchanged with C Sqn QORGY and both Herts squadrons served together in XXI Corps Cavalry Regiment for the rest of the war The regiment fought in the final Battle of Megiddo and then carried out an epic march up the coast of Ottoman Syria to liberate the ports 47 60 71 72 80 a 2 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry edit The 2nd Line regiment was formed under Lt Col Abel Smith at Hertford on 1 September 1914 and quickly recruited up to the war establishment for a yeomanry regiment The Hertfordshire Territorial Association was able rapidly to provide uniforms and reasonably modern equipment It spent the winter of 1914 15 in billets at Hertford then took over the old militia barracks in the town with temporary stabling when the horses arrived 60 47 54 82 In mid 1915 the 3rd Line regiment took over the role of draft finding for the 1 1st Herts Yeomanry overseas and the remaining home service men were transferred to join a squadron to a Provisional Brigade The 2 1st left Hertford in June 1915 for two months training on Epsom Downs and then went to the Thetford Brandon area to join 69th 2nd East Anglian Division in First Army of Central Force responsible for the defence of Eastern England At the end of October it moved into winter quarters in billets in Huntingdon In February 1916 Lt Col Abel Smith who was no longer fit for active service moved to the Regimental Depot Maj J B Gilliat who had commanded 42nd Herts Company IY in the Boer War was promoted to take command On 28 April 1916 the regiment joined the 16th 2 1st Southern Mounted Brigade of the 4th Mounted Division in the Manningtree area The division s role was to be a mobile reserve in case of invasion and was regularly on alert such as during the Battle of Jutland 60 82 83 84 85 In July 1916 4th Mounted Division was converted into a Bicycle infantry division but 2 1st Herts Yeomanry was one of three of its regiments selected to remain mounted and it was exchanged into 3rd Mounted Bde of 1st Mounted Division in General Reserve of Home Forces with the regiment billeted at Westerham Despite some false alerts of invasion or riot duty and rumours that the division was to be sent overseas the regiment remained in Kent In the spring of 1917 it moved to Wildernesse near Sevenoaks and carried out mounted training in Knole Park However by mid August 1917 the 1st Mounted Division was also converted to cyclists as The Cyclist Division and 2 1st Herts Yeomanry gave up its horses and converted to the four company organisation of a cyclist battalion except one mounted squadron that joined 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment The role of the Cyclist Division was to train and provide reinforcement drafts for cycle units serving overseas but many of the remaining trained cavalrymen were transferred to the reserve cavalry regiments 60 82 84 85 86 2 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry remained in 3rd Mounted Bde renamed 13th Cyclist Bde but on 26 October it transferred under conditions of secrecy to 214th Special Bde in 71st Division Popularly known as the Hush Brigade this force was being assembled at Colchester for operations at Murmansk The regiment moved into billets at West Bergholt and was brought up to establishment with men of A1 medical category Lt Col Gilliat reverted to the retired list and Lt Col W Byron of the Leicestershire Yeomanry assumed the command The battalion was issued with steel helmets and trained for beach landings from naval destroyers to wade ashore with their bicycles on their shoulders 71st Division was broken up at the beginning of 1918 and on 12 February 214th Bde joined 67th Division still at Colchester The brigade retained its special mission but this was cancelled in March after the German Spring Offensive was launched on the Western Front The regiment immediately supplied large numbers of A1 men as infantry reinforcements for the Western Front and continued to do so in its depleted state for the rest of the war taking in men from disbanded units and recruits from training regiments and preparing them for active service It was demobilised at Ipswich in January 1919 60 47 82 87 3 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry edit The 3rd Line regiment was formed at Hertford in December 1914 and received its formal designation in January 1915 At first in squadron strength it was commanded by Maj E J Upton transferred to the Herts Yeomanry from the Eastern Mounted Bde s Transport and Supply Column of the Army Service Corps In April 1915 it absorbed all the training staff from 2 1st Herts Yeomanry and assumed its role of training reinforcements In March it had been affiliated to the 13th Reserve Cavalry Regiment at Colchester and from June it sent all its trained men to a separate squadron with this regiment retaining only the training staff and incoming recruits at Hertford In November the establishment of 3rd Line Yeomanry regiments was increased to match the 2nd Line so 3 1st Herts Yeomanry reorganised with RHQ and two squadrons at Hertford and the Overseas Squadron at Colchester However in April 1916 the 3rd Line Yeomanry regiments were ordered to join their affiliated reserve cavalry regiments and 3 1st Herts Yeomanry joined 13th Reserve Rgt which had just moved to Maresfield in Sussex Here 3 1st Herts Yeomanry was assembled as a full regiment for the first time under the command of Maj Barre A H Goldie with a basic training squadron a continuation training squadron and the overseas squadron holding men waiting to be drafted 60 47 88 However with the exception of Palestine there was little requirement for cavalry during World War I and the large cavalry training organisation was reduced in February 1917 3 1st Hertfordshire Yeomanry was absorbed into the reorganised 6th Reserve Cavalry Regiment at Tidworth Camp which was responsible for training reinforcements for dragoon regiments The new unit supplied its first draft to 1 1st Herts Yeomanry in April 1917 60 47 88 The Regimental Depot remained in existence at Hertford as an administrative centre first under Capt Barre Goldie then under Col Abel Smith until April 1917 when the Yeomanry lancer and dragoon depots were concentrated at Canterbury 89 Interwar editMain article 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Brigade Royal Field Artillery Before the TF reformed on 7 February 1920 the War Office had decided that only a small number of mounted Yeomanry regiments would be required in future and the remainder would have to be re roled mainly as artillery b The Hertfordshire Territorial Force Association decided to combine the Hertfordshire Yeomanry with the two Hertfordshire batteries of the former 4th East Anglian Brigade Royal Field Artillery RFA to form a complete 4 battery field artillery brigade in the county Initially it was to be called the 3rd East Anglian Brigade RFA and two of the batteries would carry the title Hertfordshire Yeomanry but after the TF had been reorganised as the Territorial Army TA in 1921 the final title settled upon was 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Brigade RFA which retained links to both lineages The men of all four batteries wore the Royal Artillery RA cap badge with the Hertfordshire Yeomanry s hart badge on the shoulder strap together with the shoulder title Y RFA for Yeomanry RFA rather than T RFA worn by other Territorial RFA units The two units Honorary Colonels continued to serve jointly The new brigade had the following organisation 2 5 6 7 24 92 93 94 95 Brigade HQ at Yeomanry House Hertford 341 Hertfordshire Battery at Riding School Harpenden Road St Albans 342 Hertfordshire Battery at Hertford 343 Hertfordshire Battery at Clarendon Hall Watford 344 Hertfordshire Battery Howitzer at Bearton Camp HitchinThe brigade was part of the TA s 54th East Anglian Division 96 97 The RFA was subsumed into the Royal Artillery RA in 1924 and the word Field was inserted into the titles of its brigades and batteries The four batteries were unofficially designated by their home towns in 1930 but it was not until August 1937 that these titles were made official 24 92 98 341 St Albans Field Bty 342 Hertford Field Bty 343 Watford Field Bty 344 Hitchin Field Bty How In 1938 the RA modernised its nomenclature and a lieutenant colonel s command was designated a regiment rather than a brigade 93 5 7 2 24 95 World War II editMobilisation edit Following the Munich crisis in 1938 the TA was rapidly doubled in size with most units forming duplicates of themselves In fact the Hertfordshire Yeomanry eventually contributed to four separate regiments during World War II 7 5 6 95 c 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment 100 101 RHQ at Hertford 341 St Albans Field Bty 342 Hertford Field Bty 135th Field Regiment formed 22 July 1939 102 103 104 RHQ at Hitchin 344 Hitchin Field Bty 336 Northamptonshire Field Bty transferred from 84th East Anglian Field Bde this battery had originally formed part of 4th East Anglian Bde alongside the two Hertfordshire batteries see above 79th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Anti Aircraft Regiment formed 1 November 1938 by expansion of 343 Watford Field Bty 105 106 RHQ at Watford 246 1st Watford AA Bty 247 2nd Watford AA Bty 248 Welwyn AA Bty 191st Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery formed 21 December 1942 with cadres drawn from 86th Hertfordshire Yeomanry and 147th Essex Yeomanry Field Rgts while both regiments were serving with 42nd Armoured Division 107 108 532 Field Bty cadre from 413 Bty of 147th Fd Rgt 533 Field Bty cadre from 462 Bty of 86th Fd Rgt 534 Field Bty cadres from both regiments86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment edit Main article 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery nbsp Sexton 25 pdr self propelled guns of 86th Field Regiment firing against enemy positions in April 1945The 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery was mobilised in September 1939 In 1940 the regiment was equipped with 8 x 4 5 inch Howitzers amp 4 x 18 25 pounder guns On 18 November 1940 it formed an additional 343 Bty renumbered as 462 Bty 18 January 1941 100 101 It remained in the United Kingdom until 1944 being attached to various formations 54th East Anglian Infantry Division from mobilisation until 9 June 1942 then 42nd Armoured Division until 3 May 1943 101 109 during which time it was converted to self propelled guns first with the Bishop and then the Priest When 21st Army Group was formed in July 1943 to prepare for the Allied invasion of Normandy Operation Overlord 86th HY Fd Rgt was assigned to I Corps 110 When XXX Corps was brought back from Italy to spearhead the invasion 86th HY Fd Rgt joined it training with 50th Northumbrian Infantry Division in amphibious assault techniques for the Overlord landings including developing the technique of firing its Sexton SP guns from landing craft on the run in to the beach The regiment was among the first units to land on D Day 6 June 1944 101 111 112 It later supported various formations of XXX Corps throughout the campaign in North West Europe including in Normandy the liberation of Antwerp Operations and Market Garden and Clipper the Battle of the Bulge and the Reichswald battles Operations Veritable and Blockbuster the Rhine crossing Operation Plunder and the advance across Germany to Bremen 101 113 135th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment edit Main article 135th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery 135th Field Regiment was being formed on the outbreak of war and became independent of 86th Field Rgt on 7 September 1939 The regiment was part of 18th Division the duplicate of 54th East Anglian Division It served in the East Coast defences with extemporised equipment until 1941 when it was fully equipped formed its third battery numbered 499 and undertook mobile training preparatory to overseas service 18th Division sailed on 31 October 1941 bound for Basra as reinforcements for Middle East Forces but while it was at sea news arrived of the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor and Malaya The convoy was diverted to India but the troopship carrying 53rd Brigade and the personnel of 135th Field Rgt was sent straight to Singapore Fighting with whatever guns were available until its own 25 pdrs arrived 135th Field Rgt took part in the final stages of the disastrous Malayan campaign and the defence of Fortress Singapore It was captured at the Fall of Singapore on 15 February Although officers of the regiment wore Hertfordshire Yeomanry badges formal authorisation for the regiment to adopt the East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry subtitles was not issued until 17 February 1942 after it had gone into captivity 102 104 103 114 As prisoners of war PoWs many of the men of 135th Field Rgt were forced to work on the Wan Po viaduct on the Burma Railway which inspired the book and film The Bridge on the River Kwai The regiment s commanding officer Lt Col Philip Toosey was the senior Allied officer in the associated Prisoner of war camp but unlike the fictional Colonel Nicholson did not collaborate with the Japanese 103 115 191st Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry Field Regiment edit Main article 191st Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery In 1942 both 86th East Anglian Herts Yeomanry and 147th Essex Yeomanry Field Regiments supplied cadres to help form 191st Hertfordshire and Essex Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery This regimenta also served through the campaign in North West Europe supporting varied formations in the battles in Normandy the liberation of Le Havre and the battles of the Scheldt under First Canadian Army It was broken up in December 1944 to provide infantry reinforcements 108 116 79th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment edit Main article 79th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment Royal Artillery 79th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment Royal Artillery was formed in 1939 with headquarters at Watford It served in the Battle of France The Blitz Operation Torch and the Italian Campaign before being placed in suspended animation in early 1945 106 117 95 Postwar editMain article 286th Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment Royal Artillery The regiment was reconstituted as 286 Hertfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment later Medium Regiment in 1947 and absorbed 479 Hertfordshire Yeomanry Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment in 1955 7 95 118 The regiment amalgamated with the 305th Bedfordshire Yeomanry Light Regiment to form the 286th Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry Field Regiment in 1961 7 The unit was disbanded in 1967 but reformed as 201 Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry Battery 100th Yeomanry Regiment Royal Artillery in 1971 119 Under Army 2020 this unit was placed in suspended animation in 2014 120 Heritage and ceremonial editUniforms and insignia edit At the time of the Royal Review in 1800 the five Yeomanry Troops wore blue coats with red cuffs and collars and buff waistcoats They wore Tarleton helmets helmets with a feather The Western and Centre Troops were distinguished by having lace on the chest of their coats The Beechwood Troop of Volunteers had green coats with buff waistcoats the Sawbridgeworth Troop blue jackets with red facings These uniform colours were still in use in 1806 4 121 The Hart male deer is frequently used as a punning badge by organisations in Hertfordshire pronounced and occasionally written as Hartfordshire A Hart Trippant was adopted by the Northern Troop as its badge at some point in the period 1794 1824 and was used by the regiment thereafter In this case the hart is surrounded by a garter inscribed NORTH HARTS YEOMANRY surmounted by a crown From 1831 the South Herts and the Dacorum Trp wore the hart in the centre of a crowned Maltese cross as their Shako plate On the 1852 pattern helmet the South Herts badge was a hart trippant in a ford 122 The button adopted by the South Herts in 1831 had a crown within a garter inscribed HARTS YEOMANRY CAVALRY this design remained in use for all ranks until the formation of the Imperial Yeomanry when the garter became a plain circle inscribed HERTS IMPERIAL YEOMANRY but officers continued to wear the original design until 1919 123 From their formation in 1831 A B and C Trps of the South Herts wore light dragoon uniforms of a dark green long tailed Coatee with a scarlet plastron front and black mohair lace together with Oxford mixture dark blue grey trousers with a red stripe The headgear was a dark green later black shako D Cashio Troop was dressed as heavy dragoons in a scarlet coatee with green facings and a white metal helmet with black plume The light troops replaced the shako with a black lacquered helmet in 1852 20 124 nbsp Hertfordshire Yeomanry in the 1890s nbsp A mounted trooper of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry in 1896 In the mid 1860s the distinction between the heavy and light troops of the regiment was abandoned and all wore a new uniform with a single breasted scarlet tunic and a white metal spiked Dragoon helmet bearing the hart badge With the addition of a black horsehair plume for parade dress in 1880 this remained the uniform of the regiment into the early 20th Century A pillbox cap was used for drill and undress wear All the Yeomanry adopted blue riding pantaloons and butcher boots in 1873 in place of the old booted overalls which were retained for dismounted parades the Hertfordshires wore red stripes on the pantaloons Other ranks ORs wore a white shoulder belt over the left shoulder in marching order a white leather Bandolier was also worn across the right shoulder The cloak was blue lined red The horse furniture included a throat plume to match the helmet plume and a black sheepskin saddle cover until 1896 Most Yeomanry regiments adopted white head ropes in 1898 but the Hertfordshires retained the old steel collar chains 22 125 126 Upon conversion to Imperial Yeomanry in 1906 the regiment adopted the standard khaki IY uniform with scarlet collars and cuffs ORs wore a Slouch hat with the left side turned up and secured with the hart badge on a red rosette Officers wore a khaki peaked cap which was used by all ranks after 1906 Although officers might continue to purchase the full dress uniform ORs had a substitute full dress consisting of a scarlet frock or jacket with pockets worn with a pillbox cap until 1906 when a blue peaked cap with white piping was introduced All ranks wore dark blue overalls with double red stripes After 1908 the Hertfordshire Yeomanry wore the standard khaki service dress of the British Army with regimental insignia for nearly all occasions This included leather bandoliers during the regiment s remaining years as a mounted unit After 1938 khaki battledress was adopted 127 128 When converted to artillery the regiment had to adopt the Royal Artillery s gun cap badge However all four batteries of the 86th Brigade also wore the Hertfordshire Yeomanry s hart badge on the shoulder strap for officers on the upper arm for ORs later as collar badges and on the Field service cap worn in walking out dress The officers blue patrol jacket retained cavalry style shoulder chains On 4 April 1943 as a unit of armoured artillery the regiment unofficially adopted the black beret of the Royal Armoured Corps and wore the silver hart badge on it 95 129 When the regiment was reformed in 1947 the hart collar badge was continued and all ranks wore shoulder chains on blue patrol jackets At the same time the pre 1900 Harts Yeomanry Cavalry button was reintroduced 95 286 Hertfordshire amp Bedfordshire Yeomanry Field Rgt wore the hart as a cap badge with the Bedfordshire Yeomanry badge on the collar 95 Standards and guidons edit In 1795 at Theobald s Park Lady Prescott presented her husband s Southern Troop of Yeomanry with a standard bearing the Coat of arms of Hertfordshire The Marchioness of Salisbury presented a new guidon to the reformed South Herts after 1831 This is crimson with the Royal cypher WIVR in intertwined letters in the centre of one side with SOUTH HERTS above and YEOMANRY below the reverse side probably bore the arms of Hertfordshire However on his death in 1839 Sir Abraham Hume left the old Southern Trp standard to the new Hoddesdon Trp with the wish that it should be carried once more and this was done Mrs Ward wife of the commanding officer presented the Gilston Trp with a pair of guidons similar to Marchioness s the royal cypher on one side surrounded by the wording Gilston Troop of Herts Yeomanry and on the other the county arms of the hart crossing a stream 4 130 The regiment received an official guidon in 1909 This was red with a circle inscribed HERTS YEOMANRY inside a union wreath of roses thistles and shamrocks with a crown above and the battle honour SOUTH AFRICA 1900 01 on a scroll beneath After 1924 the battle honours South Africa and nine from World War I appeared in two columns of scrolls but it was never paraded after the regiment converted to artillery 131 Honorary Colonels edit The following served as Honorary Colonel of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry 24 x Edward Hyde Villiers 5th Earl of Clarendon TD appointed 7 February 1903 died 2 October 1914 132 George Capell 7th Earl of Essex TD appointed November 1914 died 25 September 1916 21 133 Col Abel Henry Smith TD appointed 26 September 1916 Col Abel Smith from the Herts Yeomanry and James Gascoyne Cecil 4th Marquess of Salisbury himself a former Herts Yeomanry officer from the 4th East Anglian Brigade RFA served as joint Hon Cols of 86th East Anglian Hertfordshire Yeomanry Brigade after the merger in 1921 134 93 Col B A H Goldie CBE TD appointed 21 February 1931Other prominent members edit Algernon Capell 8th Earl of Essex was commissioned into the regiment as a 2nd Lieutenant under his courtesy title Viscount Malden on 10 December 1904 when his father was in command He became a Lieutenant in the 7th Hussars and during World War I he served in the Remount Service as a Temporary Captain 24 21 135 136 Francis Fremantle who had served as a civilian doctor with the field force in the Second Boer War was commissioned into the Herts Yeomanry in 1902 and was promoted to Surgeon Captain on 12 May 1906 During World War I He served as a senior Royal Army Medical Corps staff officer at Gallipoli and in Mesopotamia Postwar he was elected MP for St Albans and was knighted 24 137 Battle honours edit The Hertfordshire Yeomanry was awarded the following Battle Honours 24 Second Boer War South Africa 1900 01 World War I Suvla Scimitar Hill Gallipoli 1915 Suez Canal Egypt 1915 16 Megiddo Sharon Damascus Palestine 1918The regiment claimed the World War I battle honours to which it was entitled but as it had been converted to artillery the guidon on which they were emblazoned was never paraded The Royal Artillery does not carry battle honours instead the guns are regarded as the colours and the regiment bears the motto Ubique everywhere 93 Memorials edit There are three stone tablets in the War Memorial Chapel of St Albans Cathedral commemorating the dead of the Hertfordshire Yeomanry The first was erected by the regiment to the nine members of 42nd Hertfordshire Company IY who died on service during the Second Boer War 138 A second was unveiled on 31 July 1921 to the 64 men of the regiment who died in World War I 139 The third to the men of all four Hertfordshire Yeomanry artillery regiments who died during World War II was unveiled on 19 September 1954 140 141 See also edit nbsp United Kingdom portalImperial Yeomanry List of Yeomanry Regiments 1908 Yeomanry Yeomanry order of precedence British yeomanry during the First World War Second line yeomanry regiments of the British Army List of British Army Yeomanry Regiments converted to Royal ArtilleryFootnotes edit With two squadrons of the regiment present the Hertfordshire Yeomanry was eligible for the battle honours awarded for the rest of the campaign Palestine 1918 Megiddo Sharon and Damascus the latter covering the advance into Syria 81 The 14 senior Yeomanry regiments and 2 regiments of Scouts remained as horsed cavalry of the remainder 1 became a mounted signals unit 8 became armoured car companies and the remainder 27 transferred to the Royal Artillery 90 91 In 1939 the Hertfordshire Territorial Association proposed that the two field regiments should drop the East Anglian subtitle and became 86th South Hertfordshire Yeomanry and 135th North Hertfordshire Yeomanry reflecting the pre 1870 regiments but the War Office rejected this 99 Notes edit Rogers p 145 a b c d e Sainsbury 1969 Appendix I Sainsbury 1994 p 1 a b c d e f Busby a b c d e f g h i Frederick pp 30 1 a b c d e f g h i Mileham pp 88 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hertfordshire Yeomanry at regiments org by T F Mills Archived from the original on 15 July 2007 Retrieved 2 May 2015 a b c Sainsbury 1969 pp 16 9 Sainsbury 1994 pp 23 5 Sainsbury 1994 pp 27 8 Sainsbury 1994 p 25 a b c Sainsbury 1994 pp 32 5 a b c WO List 1805 Sainsbury 1969 pp 19 47 Herts local military forces Sainsbury 1994 pp 36 8 Spiers p 79 a b c Sainsbury 1969 pp 20 1 a b Sainsbury 1994 pp 39 65 a b c Sleigh a b c d e Burke s Essex a b c Ryan Sainsbury 1994 pp 56 66 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Army List various dates Sainsbury 1994 pp 73 8 Sainsbury 1994 p 80 Rogers p 228 Spiers p 239 Dunlop pp 104 18 a b IY at Anglo Boer War Frederick p 370 IY Companies at Roll of Honour Imperial Yeomanry at Regiments org Sainsbury 1969 p 22 Sainsbury 1994 pp 88 92 Amery Vol IV Appendix to Chapters I XIV pp 503 14 Sainsbury 1994 pp 92 101 Leslie Sainsbury 1994 p 102 Sainsbury 1994 p 100 Sainsbury 1969 pp 22 3 Sainsbury 1994 pp 103 16 Sainsbury 1994 p 85 London Gazette 20 March 1908 Dunlop Chapter 14 Spiers Chapter 10 a b c d e f g h i Hertfordshire Yeomanry at Long Long Trail Sainsbury 1969 pp 23 4 Sainsbury 1994 pp 116 29 a b Sainsbury 1994 pp 125 7 Hertfordshire at Great War Drill Halls Watford at Drill Hall Project a b c Hertfordshire Drill Stations at Drill Hall Project a b Hertford at Drill Hall Project St Albans at Drill Hall Project Middlesex at Great War Drill Halls Barnet at Stepping Out High Barnet at Drill Hall Project Conrad British Army 1914 a b c d e f g h i j James p 20 James pp 35 6 Mounted Brigades at Long Long Trail Conrad Mark 1996 The British Army 1914 Sainsbury 1994 pp 127 32 Frederick pp viii ix Rinaldi 2008 p 35 a b Sainsbury 1994 pp 132 3 Sainsbury 1994 pp 201 214 Sainsbury 1994 pp 134 57 Sainsbury 1994 pp 157 8 a b Becke Pt 2a pp 125 31 a b 54th EA Division at Long Long Trail Sainsbury 1994 pp 159 64 Becke Pt 3a pp 19 25 11th N Division at Long Long Trail Sainsbury 1994 pp 179 80 Becke Pt 3a pp 35 44 13th W Division at Long Long Trail Sainsbury 1994 pp 181 99 Sainsbury 1994 pp 164 79 Sainsbury 1994 p 180 a b c d Sainsbury 1994 pp 200 9 Becke Pt 2b pp 91 8 a b Becke Pt 2a pp 27 30 a b James Appendix III to Part I Becke Pt 2a pp 19 26 Becke Pt 2b pp 75 82 101 5 a b Sainsbury 1994 pp 210 13 Sainsbury 1994 p 214 Sainsbury 1994 pp 21 75 History of the Royal Berkshire Yeomanry Archived from the original on 9 January 2007 a b Frederick pp 491 5 522 a b c d Sainsbury 1994 pp 218 20 Sainsbury 1999 pp 31 4 a b c d e f g h Litchfield pp 101 4 Litchfield p 293 Appendix VII Titles amp Designations 1927 Sainsbury 1994 p 46 Sainsbury 1994 p 65 a b Frederick pp 491 3 522 a b c d e 86 Fd Rgt at RA 39 45 a b Frederick pp 491 3 531 a b c Sainsbury 1999 pp 153 214 a b 135 Fd Rgt at RA 39 45 Frederick pp 756 9 775 a b 79 HAA at RA 39 45 Frederick pp 487 541 a b 191 Fd Rgt at RA 39 45 Joslen pp 29 89 Order of Battle of the Forces in the United Kingdom Part 2 21 Army Group 24 July 1943 with amendments The National Archives TNA Kew file WO 212 238 Sainsbury 1999 pp 84 100 Joslen p 581 Sainsbury 1999 pp 100 52 Farndale Far East Annex A Farndale Far East Annex D Sainsbury 1999 pp 215 48 Sainsbury 2003 pp 27 114 Sainsbury 2003 pp 193 238 Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire Yeomanry Regiments org Archived from the original on 18 October 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2017 Summary of Reserve Structure and Basing Changes Archived 2013 08 10 at the Wayback Machine Sainsbury 1994 pp 30 5 Plates I 16 20 22 Sainsbury 1994 pp 29 39 Plates 19 24 32 Sainsbury 1994 Plates 23 73 Sainsbury 1994 pp 40 3 59 Plates 29 33 Sainsbury 1994 p 65 Plates II 36 39 53 Hertfordshire Yeomanry 1895 1900 Uniformology Sainsbury 1994 p 109 Plates 65 6 70 9 85 Smith p 12 Sainsbury 1999 pp 47 84 5 Sainsbury 1994 pp 25 44 6 51 Plate 26 Sainsbury 1994 pp 122 220 Plates III 80 Burke s Clarendon Sainsbury 1994 p 127 Burke s Salisbury London Gazette 23 December 1904 London Gazette 14 July 1915 Royal College of Surgeons of England Plarr s Lives of the Fellows Sir Francis Edward Fremantle IWM WMR Ref 14681 IWM WMR Ref 14685 Sainsbury 2003 pp 204 5 IWM WMR Ref 49184 References editL S Amery ed The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899 1902 London Sampson Low Marston 6 Vols 1900 09 Anon History of the 359 4th West Lancs Medium Regiment R A T A 1859 1959 Liverpool 359 Medium Regiment 1959 Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2a The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st Line Territorial Force Divisions 42 56 London HM Stationery Office 1935 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 39 8 Maj A F Becke History of the Great War Order of Battle of Divisions Part 2b The 2nd Line Territorial Force Divisions 57th 69th with the Home Service Divisions 71st 73rd and 74th and 75th Divisions London HM Stationery Office 1937 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2007 ISBN 1 847347 39 8 Burke s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage 100th Edn London 1953 Maj J H Busby Local Military Forces in Hertfordshire 1793 1814 Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research Vol 31 No 125 Spring 1953 pp 15 24 Col John K Dunlop The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen 1938 Gen Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery The Far East Theatre 1939 1946 London Brasseys 2002 ISBN 1 85753 302 X J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol I Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 007 3 J B M Frederick Lineage Book of British Land Forces 1660 1978 Vol II Wakefield Microform Academic 1984 ISBN 1 85117 009 X Brig E A James British Regiments 1914 18 London Samson Books 1978 Uckfield Naval amp Military Press 2001 ISBN 978 1 84342 197 9 Joslen H F 2003 1960 Orders of Battle Second World War 1939 1945 Uckfield East Sussex Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 84342 474 1 N B Leslie Battle Honours of the British and Indian Armies 1695 1914 London Leo Cooper 1970 ISBN 0 85052 004 5 Norman E H Litchfield The Territorial Artillery 1908 1988 Their Lineage Uniforms and Badges Nottingham Sherwood Press 1992 ISBN 0 9508205 2 0 Mileham Patrick 1994 The Yeomanry Regiments 200 Years of Tradition Edinburgh Canongate Academic ISBN 1 898410 36 4 Rinaldi Richard A 2008 Order of Battle of the British Army 1914 Ravi Rikhye ISBN 978 0 97760728 0 Col H C B Rogers The Mounted Troops of the British Army 1066 1945 London Seeley Service 1959 Lt Col Ernest Ryan Arms Uniforms and Equipment of the Yeomanry Cavalry Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research September 1957 Vol 35 pp 124 33 J D Sainsbury 1969 Hertfordshire s Soldiers A Survey of the Auxiliary Military Forces Raised in Hertfordshire from 1757 to the Present Day Hitchin Hertfordshire Local History Council 1969 Maj J D Sainsbury 1980 Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Uniforms Arms and Equipment Vol 1 Yeomanry and Light Horse Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Historical Trust 1980 ISBN 0 903823 02 0 Lt Col J D Sainsbury 1994 The Hertfordshire Yeomanry An Illustrated History 1794 1920 Welwyn Hart Books Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Historical Trust 1994 ISBN 0 948527 03 X Lt Col J D Sainsbury 1999 The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments Royal Artillery Part 1 The Field Regiments 1920 1946 Welwyn Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust Hart Books 1999 ISBN 0 948527 05 6 Col J D Sainsbury 2003 The Hertfordshire Yeomanry Regiments Royal Artillery Part 2 The Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment 1938 1945 and the Searchlight Battery 1937 1945 Part 3 The Post war Units 1947 2002 Welwyn Hertfordshire Yeomanry and Artillery Trust Hart Books 2003 ISBN 0 948527 06 4 Arthur Sleigh The Royal Militia and Yeomanry Cavalry Army List April 1850 London British Army Despatch Press 1850 Uckfield Naval and Military Press 1991 ISBN 978 1 84342 410 9 R J Smith The Yeomanry Force at the 1911 Coronation 1987 ISBN 0 948251 26 3 Edward M Spiers The Army and Society 1815 1914 London Longmans 1980 ISBN 0 582 48565 7 War Office A List of the Officers of the Militia the Gentlemen amp Yeomanry Cavalry and Volunteer Infantry of the United Kingdom 11th Edn London War Office 14 October 1805 Uckfield Naval and Military Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 84574 207 2 War Office Titles and Designations of Formations and Units of the Territorial Army London War Office 7 November 1927 RA sections also summarised in Litchfield Appendix IV External links edit Anglo Boer War Chris Baker The Long Long Trail Bruce Bassett Powell s Uniformology Mark Conrad The British Army 1914 archive site The Drill Hall Project Great War Centenary Drill Halls Imperial War Museum War Memorials Register Land Forces of Britain the Empire and Commonwealth Regiments org archive site Roll of Honour Royal Artillery 1939 45 Stepping Forward A Tribute to the Volunteer Military Reservists and Supporting Auxiliaries of Greater London nbsp Wikimedia Commons has 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