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Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry

The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry (DCLI) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from 1881 to 1959.

Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry
Badge of the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry
Active1 July 1881 – 5 October 1959
Country United Kingdom
Branch Army
TypeLine infantry
RoleLight infantry
Size1–2 Regular battalions

1 militia and special reserve battalion
1–2 Territorial and volunteer battalions

Up to 10 hostilities-only battalions
Garrison/HQVictoria Barracks, Bodmin[1]
ColorsWhite facings
MarchQuick: One and All
First DCLI Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery, The Bluff in Belgium

The regiment was created on 1 July 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms, by the merger of the 32nd (Cornwall Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot and the 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot. The DCLI also incorporated the militia and rifle volunteers of Cornwall.

In 1959 the regiment merged with the Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's) to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry. However, this was amalgamated with the Durham Light Infantry, the King's Shropshire Light Infantry and the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry to form The Light Infantry which was also merged, in 2007, with the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment, the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment and the Royal Green Jackets to form The Rifles, which continues the lineage of the DCLI.

History

The regiment was created on 1 July 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms, by the merger of the 32nd (Cornwall Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot and the 46th (South Devonshire) Regiment of Foot, which became respectively the 1st Battalion and the 2nd Battalion of The Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry.[2] The DCLI also incorporated the militia and rifle volunteers of Cornwall.[3][4][5]

1881–1899

Under the Childers system, one regular battalion of each regiment was to be at a "home" station, while the other was abroad. Every few years, there was to be an exchange of battalions. In the period from the regiment's formation to the outbreak of the Second Boer War the two regular battalions were stationed as follows:

Location of 1st Battalion (ex 32nd Foot)[6] Years Location of 2nd Battalion (ex 46th Foot)[7] Years
England and Ireland 1881–1885 Gibraltar 1881–1882
Egypt 1882–1885
Malta 1885–1888 Sudan 1885–1886
India and Burma (fought in Tirah Campaign of 1897) 1888–1900 England and Ireland 1886–1900

1899–1914

In October 1899 war broke out between the United Kingdom and the Boer Republics. The 2nd Battalion arrived in South Africa in the following month, where it took part in minor actions on the western border of the Cape Colony. In February 1900 it became part of the 19th Brigade. It saw action against the Boers at Paardeberg, and in March 1900 entered Bloemfontein. It continued to take part in a series of skirmishes until the end of the war.[8] The 1st Battalion took no part in the war, moving from India to Ceylon in December 1900[9] where its soldiers guarded South African prisoners of war.[6]

Following the war in South Africa, the system of rotating battalions between home and foreign stations resumed as follows:

Location of 1st Battalion (ex 32nd Foot)[6] Years Location of 2nd Battalion (ex 46th Foot)[7] Years
South Africa 1902–1906 England 1902–1905
England 1906–1913 Gibraltar 1905–1907
Bermuda 1907–1910
South Africa 1910–1913
Ireland (The Curragh) 1913–1914 Hong Kong 1913–1914

Reserve battalions 1881–1914

The 1881 reorganisation also redesignated the militia and rifle volunteers of Cornwall as battalions of the regiment as follows:[10]

  • 3rd (Militia) Battalion (formerly the "Royal Cornwall Rangers, Duke of Cornwall's Own Rifles", raised 1760)
  • 1st Volunteer Battalion (formerly 1st Cornwall Rifle Volunteer Corps, raised 1860)
  • 2nd Volunteer Battalion (formerly 2nd Cornwall Rifle Volunteer Corps, raised 1860)

Neither militia nor volunteer battalions were liable for service outside the United Kingdom. However, in the Second Boer War, both volunteer battalions contributed "Active Service Companies" that reinforced the regular battalions, and were awarded the battle honour "South Africa 1900–1901".[11]

In 1908 reserve forces were reorganised by the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 (the Haldane Reforms). The militia was renamed the "Special Reserve", with the duty of providing trained recruits in time of war. The volunteer battalions became part of the new Territorial Force, which was organised into 14 infantry divisions which were called upon to serve abroad.[12] On 1 April 1908 the three reserve battalions were accordingly redesignated as the 3rd (Special Reserve) Battalion at the regimental depot, the 4th (Territorial Force) Battalion at New Bridge Street in Truro and the 5th (Territorial Force) Battalion at Honey Street in Bodmin.[13]

First World War

The war saw a large expansion of the regiment. This was done in two ways: by the formation of duplicate units to the existing territorial battalions, and by the raising of wartime "new army" or "service" battalions. The following battalions of the DCLI saw active service in the conflict:[14]

Battalion Service
1st Battalion Western Front 1914–1917; Italian Front 1917–1918; Western Front 1918
2nd Battalion Western Front 1914–1915; Macedonian Front 1915–1918
1/4th Battalion India 1914–1916; Aden 1916–1917; Egypt 1917–1918
2/4th Battalion (Formed September 1914) India 1914–1918
1/5th Battalion Remained in UK until 1916. Western Front 1916–1918
6th (Service) Battalion (Formed August 1914) Western Front 1915–1918 (disbanded February 1918)
7th (Service) Battalion (Formed September 1914) Western Front 1915–1918
8th (Service) Battalion (Formed September 1914) Western Front 1915; Macedonian Front 1915–1918
10th (Service) Battalion (Cornwall Pioneers) (Formed March 1915) Western Front 1916–1918

Inter-war period

Years 1st Battalion[6] Years 2nd Battalion[7]
1919–1922 Ireland 1919–1920 India
1922–1939 India
1920–1921 Iraq
1921–1922 Ireland
1922–1924 Germany (Army of occupation)
1924–1927 Guernsey
1927–1932 England
1932–1935 Gibraltar
1935–1939 England
 
Members of the 5th Battalion during the Liberation of the Netherlands, September 1944

Second World War

During the war the regiment was increased to seven battalions. However, only the 1st, 2nd, 5th and the 7th (Home Service) Battalion, later to become the 30th, served overseas.[15]

The 2nd Battalion, DCLI was serving in 10th Infantry Brigade, which also included the 2nd Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment and 1st Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment, part of the 4th Infantry Division, and was sent overseas to France shortly after the outbreak of war, where they arrived on 1 October 1939 as part of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF). The battalion remained in France for many months until May 1940 when the German Army invaded Holland, Belgium and France, where they, along with the rest of the BEF, were forced into a retreat to the Dunkirk perimeter where they were subsequently evacuated to England.[16]

In July 1944, during the Battle of Hill 112 (Operation Jupiter), during the Battle for Caen, part of the larger Battle of Normandy, the hill acquired the name "Cornwall Hill" after Cornish soldiers of 5th Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry, under Lieutenant Colonel John Pole, suffered 320 casualties there. The battalion was part of the 214th Infantry Brigade attached to the 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division.[17]

Post-war

The regiment reverted to two battalions following the war.

Between 1946 and 1954, the 1st Battalion served in Palestine, Cyprus, Somaliland, England, and the Federal Republic of Germany. The 2nd Battalion, between 1946 and 1948, served in Greece (including Eastern Macedonia). In 1948, it was reduced to a skeleton "representative cadre", before being amalgamated into the 1st Battalion in 1950.[15]

In 1954, the 1st Battalion was posted to Jamaica, the last battalion to be posted to the West Indies for a full, three-year term.[18] A Company detached on transit, posted to Prospect Camp, in the Atlantic archipelago of Bermuda. The Bermuda Garrison no longer received a full regular army infantry battalion, as the part-time Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (BVRC) (retitled Bermuda Rifles in 1949) and Bermuda Militia Artillery (BMA) had long-since taken on most of the responsibility for local defence. A Company was the last regular unit posted on garrison to Bermuda, with its departure constituting the withdrawal of the garrison from the one-time Fortress Bermuda. The officer commanding A Company, Major J. Anthony Marsh, DSO, a Second World War veteran of the Special Air Service, took permanent residence in Bermuda after leaving the regular army, retiring from military service in 1970 as a lieutenant-colonel, having commanded the Bermuda Militia Artillery and the Royal Bermuda Regiment (a 1965 amalgam of the BMA and the Bermuda Rifles).[19] E Company also detached, being posted to British Honduras.[20] In 1957, A and E companies reunited with the rest of the battalion in England, before being posted to Osnabrück in Germany, where it remained until 1959.[15]

On the 6 October 1959, the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry merged with the Somerset Light Infantry to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry.[4][15]

Cornwall Rifle Volunteers

The 1st Administrative Battalion, Cornwall Rifle Volunteers was first formed in June 1960 consisting of 21 Rifle Volunteer Corps or "Companies" the last being raised in January 1861.[21]

In 1947 after the Second World War and as part of the demobilization the 4th and 5th battalions merged to create the new 4th/5th Battalion.[21][22] The battalion had the following structure upon formation:[23]

In 1959 after the 1957 Defence White Paper the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry merged with the Somerset Light Infantry to form the new Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry.[24] In 1960 the battalion was re-named to "The Duke of Cornwwall's Light Infantry (TA)". In 1967 after the reforms to the 1966 Defence White Paper the battalion was disbanded and re-formed as a Territorial Battalion.[25][21] The unit had the following:[23]

In 1968 after further changes after the 1966 Defence White Paper all the unit was moved under control of the new larger regiment, The Light Infantry.[21] Later on in 1971 the unit was re-formed and consisted of the following:[23]

In 1972 the Light Infantry Volunteers were re-designated as the 5th Battalion, The Light Infantry. Later in 1988 the 6th Battalion of The Light Infantry was re-designated as the 6th (Somerset and Cornwall) Battalion, The Light Infantry. Finally when the Strategic Defence Review came the D (Cornwall Light Infantry) Company was re-formed as part of the new Rifle Volunteers. The company still exists as "D Company" within the 6th Battalion of The Rifles.[21][26][27][28]

Regimental museum

 
DCLI Regimental Museum

The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry regimental collections are displayed at Cornwall's Regimental Museum at Victoria Barracks in Bodmin.[29] St Petroc's Church, Bodmin was the regimental place of worship where there are memorials to some of the servicemen and regimental colours from the past.[30]

 
The war memorial

The regimental war memorial was erected here in 1924; it was the work of Leonard Stanford Merrifield and was in the form of atatue on pedestal and steps made from bronze and granite; it has been listed Grade II*.[31]

Literature

Surfing Tommies is a 2009 play by the Cornish author Alan M. Kent which follows the lives of three members of the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry on a journey from the mines of Cornwall to the fields of Flanders, where they learned to surf with South African troops.[32]

Notable members

 
Sergeant Thomas Edward Rendle, VC

Recipients of the Victoria Cross

Eight soldiers of the DCLI were awarded the VC including:

Others

Battle honours

Battle honours of the regiment:[36]

  • From 32nd Regiment of Foot: Roliça, Vimiero, Corunna, Salamanca, Pyrenees, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, Peninsula, Waterloo, Goojerat, Mooltan, Punjaub, Lucknow
  • From 46th Regiment of Foot: Dominica, Sevastopol, Gibraltar 1704-05, Dettingen, St. Lucia 1778,
  • Early wars: Tel el Kebir, Egypt 1882, Nile 1884-85, Paardeberg, South Africa 1899-1902,
  • The Great War (15 battalions): Mons, Le Cateau, Retreat from Mons, Marne 1914, Aisne 1914, La Bassée 1914, Armenti8ères 1914, Ypres 1915 '17, Gravenstafel, St. Julien, Frezenberg, Bellewaarde, Hooge 1915, Mount Sorrel, Somme 1916 '18, Delville Wood, Guillemont, Flers-Courcelette, Morval, Le Transloy, Ancre 1916, Bapaume 1917 '18, Arras 1917, Vimy 1917, Scarpe 1917, Arleux, Langemarck 1917, Menin Road, Polygon Wood, Broodseinde, Poelcappelle, Passchendaele, Cambrai 1917 '18, St. Quentin, Rosières, Lys, Estaires, Hazebrouck, Albert 1918, Hindenburg Line, Havrincourt, Canal du Nord, Selle, Sambre, France and Flanders 1914-18, Italy 1917-18, Struma, Doiran 1917 '18, Macedonia 1915-18, Gaza, Nebi Samwil, Jerusalem, Tell 'Asur, Megiddo, Sharon, Palestine 1917-18, Aden
  • The Second World War: Defence of Escaut, Cheux, Hill 112, Mont Pincon, Noireau Crossing, Nederrijn, Opheusden, Geilenkirchen, Rhineland, Goch, Rhine, North-West Europe 1940 '44-45, Gazala, Medjez Plain, Si Abdallah, North Africa 1942-43, Cassino II, Trasimene Line, Advance to Florence, Incontro, Rimini Line, Italy 1944-45

List of Colonels of the Regiment

Colonels of the regiment were as follows:[37]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". British Light Infantry Regiments. 25 September 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2010.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "No. 24992". The London Gazette. 1 July 1881. pp. 3300–3301.
  3. ^ Farmer, John S (1901). The Regimental Records of the British Army : a historical résumé chronologically arranged of titles, campaigns, honours, uniforms, facings, badges, nicknames, etc. London: Grant Richards.[page needed]
  4. ^ a b Swinson, Arthur (1972). A Register of the Regiments and Corps of the British Army. London: The Archive Press. ISBN 0-85591-000-3.[page needed]
  5. ^ Wickes, HL (1974). Regiments of Foot: A History of the Foot Regiments of the British Army. Reading, Berks.: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-85045-220-1.[page needed]
  6. ^ a b c d Mills, T F (3 April 2005). . Land Forces of Britain, The Empire and the Commonwealth. Archived from the original on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  7. ^ a b c Mills, T F (11 September 2005). . Land Forces of Britain, The Empire and the Commonwealth. Archived from the original on 21 December 2007. Retrieved 10 April 2010.
  8. ^ Biggins, David. . Anglo Boer War. Archived from the original on 8 May 2009. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  9. ^ "Naval & Military intelligence". The Times. No. 36338. London. 29 December 1901. p. 9.
  10. ^ "The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". British Light Infantry Regiments. 2 December 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2010.[permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". British Light Infantry Regiments. 2 December 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2010.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ Dunlop, John K (1938). The development of the British Army 1899–1914. London: Methuen. pp. 280–285.
  13. ^ Order in Council dated 19 March 1908 "No. 28121". The London Gazette. 20 June 1908. pp. 2149–2162.
  14. ^ Chris Baker. "The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". The Long, Long Trail. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  15. ^ a b c d "The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". British Light Infantry Regiments. British Armed Forces.org. 2 December 2007. Archived from the original on 14 April 2013.
  16. ^ . National Army Museum. Archived from the original on 30 December 2015. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  17. ^ "The 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division's 214 Brigade crosses the Seine at Vernon". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  18. ^ "Prospect Garrison, Devonshire Bermuda: 1954 - 1957". A Company, 1st Battalion, The Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry. 21 October 2008.
  19. ^ . Warwick & Warwick. Archived from the original on 2 May 2014.
  20. ^ "E Company 1 DCLI: Belize". Light Infantry Most Wanted. WordPress. 2011.
  21. ^ a b c d e . regiments.org. 14 February 2019. Archived from the original on 7 January 2008.
  22. ^ "Duke of Cornwalls Light Infantry". www.lightinfantry.me.uk. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  23. ^ a b c "British Army units from 1945 on - Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". british-army-units1945on.co.uk. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  24. ^ "British Light Infantry Regiments". www.lightinfantry.org.uk. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  25. ^ "Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry". Royal Cornwall Museum. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  26. ^ . army.mod.uk. 14 February 2019. Archived from the original on 8 January 2007.
  27. ^ . army.mod.uk. 14 February 2019. Archived from the original on 8 January 2007.
  28. ^ "Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry - SCLI". www.dlisouthshields.org.uk. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  29. ^ . Ogilby Trust. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 26 May 2014.
  30. ^ "Regimental chapels of the DCLI". Retrieved 26 July 2009.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ "War Memorials Register: Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry – WW1 and WW2". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  32. ^ "Hanging 10 in the trenches". Local World. 29 April 2009. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
  33. ^ "Capt. QM Harold Royffe". Somerset & Cornwall Light Infantry. Retrieved 9 August 2009.[permanent dead link]
  34. ^ "Viewspaper". The Independent. 4 May 2010. p. 9.
  35. ^ "Fowey, Cornwall: The Poet Who Raised a Battalion". BBC. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
  36. ^ Chan, Christopher (2014). The Handbook of British Regiments. Routledge Revivals. p. 143. ISBN 978-0415710794.
  37. ^ Mills, T.F. . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 18 January 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  38. ^ "No. 27435". The London Gazette. 20 May 1902. p. 3324.

External links

  • Cornwall's Regimental Museum

duke, cornwall, light, infantry, dcli, light, infantry, regiment, british, army, existence, from, 1881, 1959, badge, active1, july, 1881, october, 1959country, united, kingdombrancharmytypeline, infantryrolelight, infantrysize1, regular, battalions1, militia, . The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry DCLI was a light infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from 1881 to 1959 Duke of Cornwall s Light InfantryBadge of the Duke of Cornwall s Light InfantryActive1 July 1881 5 October 1959Country United KingdomBranchArmyTypeLine infantryRoleLight infantrySize1 2 Regular battalions1 militia and special reserve battalion 1 2 Territorial and volunteer battalions Up to 10 hostilities only battalionsGarrison HQVictoria Barracks Bodmin 1 ColorsWhite facingsMarchQuick One and All First DCLI Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery The Bluff in Belgium The regiment was created on 1 July 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms by the merger of the 32nd Cornwall Light Infantry Regiment of Foot and the 46th South Devonshire Regiment of Foot The DCLI also incorporated the militia and rifle volunteers of Cornwall In 1959 the regiment merged with the Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry However this was amalgamated with the Durham Light Infantry the King s Shropshire Light Infantry and the King s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry to form The Light Infantry which was also merged in 2007 with the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment the Royal Gloucestershire Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment and the Royal Green Jackets to form The Rifles which continues the lineage of the DCLI Contents 1 History 1 1 1881 1899 1 2 1899 1914 1 2 1 Reserve battalions 1881 1914 1 3 First World War 1 4 Inter war period 1 5 Second World War 1 6 Post war 2 Cornwall Rifle Volunteers 3 Regimental museum 4 Literature 5 Notable members 5 1 Recipients of the Victoria Cross 5 2 Others 6 Battle honours 7 List of Colonels of the Regiment 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe regiment was created on 1 July 1881 as part of the Childers Reforms by the merger of the 32nd Cornwall Light Infantry Regiment of Foot and the 46th South Devonshire Regiment of Foot which became respectively the 1st Battalion and the 2nd Battalion of The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry 2 The DCLI also incorporated the militia and rifle volunteers of Cornwall 3 4 5 1881 1899 Edit Under the Childers system one regular battalion of each regiment was to be at a home station while the other was abroad Every few years there was to be an exchange of battalions In the period from the regiment s formation to the outbreak of the Second Boer War the two regular battalions were stationed as follows Location of 1st Battalion ex 32nd Foot 6 Years Location of 2nd Battalion ex 46th Foot 7 YearsEngland and Ireland 1881 1885 Gibraltar 1881 1882Egypt 1882 1885Malta 1885 1888 Sudan 1885 1886India and Burma fought in Tirah Campaign of 1897 1888 1900 England and Ireland 1886 19001899 1914 Edit In October 1899 war broke out between the United Kingdom and the Boer Republics The 2nd Battalion arrived in South Africa in the following month where it took part in minor actions on the western border of the Cape Colony In February 1900 it became part of the 19th Brigade It saw action against the Boers at Paardeberg and in March 1900 entered Bloemfontein It continued to take part in a series of skirmishes until the end of the war 8 The 1st Battalion took no part in the war moving from India to Ceylon in December 1900 9 where its soldiers guarded South African prisoners of war 6 Following the war in South Africa the system of rotating battalions between home and foreign stations resumed as follows Location of 1st Battalion ex 32nd Foot 6 Years Location of 2nd Battalion ex 46th Foot 7 YearsSouth Africa 1902 1906 England 1902 1905England 1906 1913 Gibraltar 1905 1907Bermuda 1907 1910South Africa 1910 1913Ireland The Curragh 1913 1914 Hong Kong 1913 1914Reserve battalions 1881 1914 Edit The 1881 reorganisation also redesignated the militia and rifle volunteers of Cornwall as battalions of the regiment as follows 10 3rd Militia Battalion formerly the Royal Cornwall Rangers Duke of Cornwall s Own Rifles raised 1760 1st Volunteer Battalion formerly 1st Cornwall Rifle Volunteer Corps raised 1860 2nd Volunteer Battalion formerly 2nd Cornwall Rifle Volunteer Corps raised 1860 Neither militia nor volunteer battalions were liable for service outside the United Kingdom However in the Second Boer War both volunteer battalions contributed Active Service Companies that reinforced the regular battalions and were awarded the battle honour South Africa 1900 1901 11 In 1908 reserve forces were reorganised by the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 the Haldane Reforms The militia was renamed the Special Reserve with the duty of providing trained recruits in time of war The volunteer battalions became part of the new Territorial Force which was organised into 14 infantry divisions which were called upon to serve abroad 12 On 1 April 1908 the three reserve battalions were accordingly redesignated as the 3rd Special Reserve Battalion at the regimental depot the 4th Territorial Force Battalion at New Bridge Street in Truro and the 5th Territorial Force Battalion at Honey Street in Bodmin 13 First World War Edit The war saw a large expansion of the regiment This was done in two ways by the formation of duplicate units to the existing territorial battalions and by the raising of wartime new army or service battalions The following battalions of the DCLI saw active service in the conflict 14 Battalion Service1st Battalion Western Front 1914 1917 Italian Front 1917 1918 Western Front 19182nd Battalion Western Front 1914 1915 Macedonian Front 1915 19181 4th Battalion India 1914 1916 Aden 1916 1917 Egypt 1917 19182 4th Battalion Formed September 1914 India 1914 19181 5th Battalion Remained in UK until 1916 Western Front 1916 19186th Service Battalion Formed August 1914 Western Front 1915 1918 disbanded February 1918 7th Service Battalion Formed September 1914 Western Front 1915 19188th Service Battalion Formed September 1914 Western Front 1915 Macedonian Front 1915 191810th Service Battalion Cornwall Pioneers Formed March 1915 Western Front 1916 1918Inter war period Edit Years 1st Battalion 6 Years 2nd Battalion 7 1919 1922 Ireland 1919 1920 India1922 1939 India1920 1921 Iraq1921 1922 Ireland1922 1924 Germany Army of occupation 1924 1927 Guernsey1927 1932 England1932 1935 Gibraltar1935 1939 England Members of the 5th Battalion during the Liberation of the Netherlands September 1944 Second World War Edit During the war the regiment was increased to seven battalions However only the 1st 2nd 5th and the 7th Home Service Battalion later to become the 30th served overseas 15 The 2nd Battalion DCLI was serving in 10th Infantry Brigade which also included the 2nd Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment and 1st Queen s Own Royal West Kent Regiment part of the 4th Infantry Division and was sent overseas to France shortly after the outbreak of war where they arrived on 1 October 1939 as part of the British Expeditionary Force BEF The battalion remained in France for many months until May 1940 when the German Army invaded Holland Belgium and France where they along with the rest of the BEF were forced into a retreat to the Dunkirk perimeter where they were subsequently evacuated to England 16 In July 1944 during the Battle of Hill 112 Operation Jupiter during the Battle for Caen part of the larger Battle of Normandy the hill acquired the name Cornwall Hill after Cornish soldiers of 5th Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry under Lieutenant Colonel John Pole suffered 320 casualties there The battalion was part of the 214th Infantry Brigade attached to the 43rd Wessex Infantry Division 17 Post war Edit The regiment reverted to two battalions following the war Between 1946 and 1954 the 1st Battalion served in Palestine Cyprus Somaliland England and the Federal Republic of Germany The 2nd Battalion between 1946 and 1948 served in Greece including Eastern Macedonia In 1948 it was reduced to a skeleton representative cadre before being amalgamated into the 1st Battalion in 1950 15 In 1954 the 1st Battalion was posted to Jamaica the last battalion to be posted to the West Indies for a full three year term 18 A Company detached on transit posted to Prospect Camp in the Atlantic archipelago of Bermuda The Bermuda Garrison no longer received a full regular army infantry battalion as the part time Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps BVRC retitled Bermuda Rifles in 1949 and Bermuda Militia Artillery BMA had long since taken on most of the responsibility for local defence A Company was the last regular unit posted on garrison to Bermuda with its departure constituting the withdrawal of the garrison from the one time Fortress Bermuda The officer commanding A Company Major J Anthony Marsh DSO a Second World War veteran of the Special Air Service took permanent residence in Bermuda after leaving the regular army retiring from military service in 1970 as a lieutenant colonel having commanded the Bermuda Militia Artillery and the Royal Bermuda Regiment a 1965 amalgam of the BMA and the Bermuda Rifles 19 E Company also detached being posted to British Honduras 20 In 1957 A and E companies reunited with the rest of the battalion in England before being posted to Osnabruck in Germany where it remained until 1959 15 On the 6 October 1959 the Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry merged with the Somerset Light Infantry to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry 4 15 Cornwall Rifle Volunteers EditThe 1st Administrative Battalion Cornwall Rifle Volunteers was first formed in June 1960 consisting of 21 Rifle Volunteer Corps or Companies the last being raised in January 1861 21 In 1947 after the Second World War and as part of the demobilization the 4th and 5th battalions merged to create the new 4th 5th Battalion 21 22 The battalion had the following structure upon formation 23 Headquarters Truro A Company Penzance B Company Truro C Company Liskeard D Company BodminIn 1959 after the 1957 Defence White Paper the Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry merged with the Somerset Light Infantry to form the new Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry 24 In 1960 the battalion was re named to The Duke of Cornwwall s Light Infantry TA In 1967 after the reforms to the 1966 Defence White Paper the battalion was disbanded and re formed as a Territorial Battalion 25 21 The unit had the following 23 A Cornwall Company Light Infantry Volunteers as part of TAVR II Truro The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Territorials as part of TAVR III Truro A Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Company Bodmin B Cornwall Fortress Engineers Company FalmouthIn 1968 after further changes after the 1966 Defence White Paper all the unit was moved under control of the new larger regiment The Light Infantry 21 Later on in 1971 the unit was re formed and consisted of the following 23 A Cornwall Company Light Infantry Volunteers Truro C Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Company 6th Battalion The Light Infantry Camborne D Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Company 6th Battalion The Light Infantry PenzanceIn 1972 the Light Infantry Volunteers were re designated as the 5th Battalion The Light Infantry Later in 1988 the 6th Battalion of The Light Infantry was re designated as the 6th Somerset and Cornwall Battalion The Light Infantry Finally when the Strategic Defence Review came the D Cornwall Light Infantry Company was re formed as part of the new Rifle Volunteers The company still exists as D Company within the 6th Battalion of The Rifles 21 26 27 28 Regimental museum Edit DCLI Regimental Museum The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry regimental collections are displayed at Cornwall s Regimental Museum at Victoria Barracks in Bodmin 29 St Petroc s Church Bodmin was the regimental place of worship where there are memorials to some of the servicemen and regimental colours from the past 30 The war memorial The regimental war memorial was erected here in 1924 it was the work of Leonard Stanford Merrifield and was in the form of atatue on pedestal and steps made from bronze and granite it has been listed Grade II 31 Literature EditSurfing Tommies is a 2009 play by the Cornish author Alan M Kent which follows the lives of three members of the Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry on a journey from the mines of Cornwall to the fields of Flanders where they learned to surf with South African troops 32 Notable members Edit Sergeant Thomas Edward Rendle VC Recipients of the Victoria Cross Edit Eight soldiers of the DCLI were awarded the VC including Lieutenant Herbert Augustine Carter Lieutenant Philip Curtis medal displayed in the Museum Thomas Edward Rendle medal displayed in the Museum Clement Leslie Smith medal displayed in the Museum Others Edit Captain Piers Edgcumbe 5th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe served in the South African War Lieutenant General Arthur Nugent Floyer Acland CB DSO MC DL 7 September 1885 18 February 1980 John Moore a Major of the 32nd regiment who died at the Siege of Lucknow Harry Patch a supercentenarian the last Tommy served on the Western Front of the Great War d July 2009 Patch was the last male First World War veteran living in Europe and the last British male known to have been born in the 1890s Harold Royffe 33 Major General David Tyacke born 1915 at Breage Cornwall d 2010 Colonel 1957 59 afterwards deputy colonel of the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry 34 Sir David Willcocks CBE MC choral conductor organist and composer was formerly an officer in the regiment Sir Arthur Quiller Couch the Cornish writer 35 Battle honours EditBattle honours of the regiment 36 From 32nd Regiment of Foot Rolica Vimiero Corunna Salamanca Pyrenees Nivelle Nive Orthes Peninsula Waterloo Goojerat Mooltan Punjaub Lucknow From 46th Regiment of Foot Dominica Sevastopol Gibraltar 1704 05 Dettingen St Lucia 1778 Early wars Tel el Kebir Egypt 1882 Nile 1884 85 Paardeberg South Africa 1899 1902 The Great War 15 battalions Mons Le Cateau Retreat from Mons Marne 1914 Aisne 1914 La Bassee 1914 Armenti8eres 1914 Ypres 1915 17 Gravenstafel St Julien Frezenberg Bellewaarde Hooge 1915 Mount Sorrel Somme 1916 18 Delville Wood Guillemont Flers Courcelette Morval Le Transloy Ancre 1916 Bapaume 1917 18 Arras 1917 Vimy 1917 Scarpe 1917 Arleux Langemarck 1917 Menin Road Polygon Wood Broodseinde Poelcappelle Passchendaele Cambrai 1917 18 St Quentin Rosieres Lys Estaires Hazebrouck Albert 1918 Hindenburg Line Havrincourt Canal du Nord Selle Sambre France and Flanders 1914 18 Italy 1917 18 Struma Doiran 1917 18 Macedonia 1915 18 Gaza Nebi Samwil Jerusalem Tell Asur Megiddo Sharon Palestine 1917 18 Aden The Second World War Defence of Escaut Cheux Hill 112 Mont Pincon Noireau Crossing Nederrijn Opheusden Geilenkirchen Rhineland Goch Rhine North West Europe 1940 44 45 Gazala Medjez Plain Si Abdallah North Africa 1942 43 Cassino II Trasimene Line Advance to Florence Incontro Rimini Line Italy 1944 45List of Colonels of the Regiment EditColonels of the regiment were as follows 37 1881 1890 1st Battalion General Sir William Jones ex 32nd Foot 1881 1892 2nd Battalion General Charles Stuart ex 46th Foot 3 April 1890 1st Battalion only to 1892 General John Thomas Hill 16 April 1902 Lieutenant General Granville George Chetwynd Stapylton 38 28 April 1915 Lieutenant General Reginald Pole Carew 12 May 1923 Lieutenant General Harold Bridgwood Walker 26 April 1932 Brigadier General Martin Newman Turner 29 June 1935 General Walter Venning retired 1942 17 January 1947 General Sir Daril Watson 18 October 1953 Major General Vyvyan Evelegh 27 August 1958 Major General Robert Burrell Frederick Kinglake Goldsmith 1959 regiment amalgamated with The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s to form The Somerset and Cornwall Light InfantrySee also Edit Cornwall portalDuke of Cornwall s Light Infantry officers Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry soldiers First DCLI Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery The BluffReferences Edit The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry British Light Infantry Regiments 25 September 2008 Retrieved 4 April 2010 permanent dead link No 24992 The London Gazette 1 July 1881 pp 3300 3301 Farmer John S 1901 The Regimental Records of the British Army a historical resume chronologically arranged of titles campaigns honours uniforms facings badges nicknames etc London Grant Richards page needed a b Swinson Arthur 1972 A Register of the Regiments and Corps of the British Army London The Archive Press ISBN 0 85591 000 3 page needed Wickes HL 1974 Regiments of Foot A History of the Foot Regiments of the British Army Reading Berks Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 220 1 page needed a b c d Mills T F 3 April 2005 1st Bn The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Land Forces of Britain The Empire and the Commonwealth Archived from the original on 21 December 2007 Retrieved 9 April 2010 a b c Mills T F 11 September 2005 2nd Bn The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Land Forces of Britain The Empire and the Commonwealth Archived from the original on 21 December 2007 Retrieved 10 April 2010 Biggins David Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Anglo Boer War Archived from the original on 8 May 2009 Retrieved 9 April 2010 Naval amp Military intelligence The Times No 36338 London 29 December 1901 p 9 The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry British Light Infantry Regiments 2 December 2007 Retrieved 9 April 2010 permanent dead link The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry British Light Infantry Regiments 2 December 2007 Retrieved 9 April 2010 permanent dead link Dunlop John K 1938 The development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen pp 280 285 Order in Council dated 19 March 1908 No 28121 The London Gazette 20 June 1908 pp 2149 2162 Chris Baker The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry The Long Long Trail Retrieved 9 April 2010 a b c d The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry British Light Infantry Regiments British Armed Forces org 2 December 2007 Archived from the original on 14 April 2013 Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry National Army Museum Archived from the original on 30 December 2015 Retrieved 27 December 2015 The 43rd Wessex Infantry Division s 214 Brigade crosses the Seine at Vernon Imperial War Museum Retrieved 27 December 2015 Prospect Garrison Devonshire Bermuda 1954 1957 A Company 1st Battalion The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry 21 October 2008 Outstanding Special Air Service WWII Distinguished Service Order group to Lieutenant Colonel John Anthony Marsh Warwick amp Warwick Archived from the original on 2 May 2014 E Company 1 DCLI Belize Light Infantry Most Wanted WordPress 2011 a b c d e 4th Battalion The Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry regiments org 14 February 2019 Archived from the original on 7 January 2008 Duke of Cornwalls Light Infantry www lightinfantry me uk Retrieved 15 February 2019 a b c British Army units from 1945 on Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry british army units1945on co uk Retrieved 15 February 2019 British Light Infantry Regiments www lightinfantry org uk Retrieved 15 February 2019 Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Royal Cornwall Museum Retrieved 15 February 2019 D Company army mod uk 14 February 2019 Archived from the original on 8 January 2007 About us army mod uk 14 February 2019 Archived from the original on 8 January 2007 Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry SCLI www dlisouthshields org uk Retrieved 15 February 2019 Cornwall s Regimental Museum Ogilby Trust Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 26 May 2014 Regimental chapels of the DCLI Retrieved 26 July 2009 permanent dead link War Memorials Register Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry WW1 and WW2 Imperial War Museum Retrieved 28 January 2021 Hanging 10 in the trenches Local World 29 April 2009 Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 20 May 2011 Capt QM Harold Royffe Somerset amp Cornwall Light Infantry Retrieved 9 August 2009 permanent dead link Viewspaper The Independent 4 May 2010 p 9 Fowey Cornwall The Poet Who Raised a Battalion BBC Retrieved 3 May 2016 Chan Christopher 2014 The Handbook of British Regiments Routledge Revivals p 143 ISBN 978 0415710794 Mills T F Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Regiments org Archived from the original on 18 January 2008 Retrieved 29 May 2018 No 27435 The London Gazette 20 May 1902 p 3324 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry Cornwall s Regimental Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duke of Cornwall 27s Light Infantry amp oldid 1083734095, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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