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Somerset Light Infantry

The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's) was a light infantry regiment of the British Army, which served under various titles from 1685 to 1959. In 1959, the regiment was amalgamated with the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry which was again amalgamated, in 1968, with the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, the King's Shropshire Light Infantry and the Durham Light Infantry to form The Light Infantry. In 2007, however, The Light Infantry was amalgamated further with the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment, the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment and the Royal Green Jackets to form The Rifles.[1][3]

13th Regiment of Foot
Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's)
Regimental cap badge of the Somerset Light Infantry.
Active1685–1959
Country Kingdom of England (to 1707)

 Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1800)

 United Kingdom (1801–1959)
Branch British Army
TypeInfantry
RoleLight infantry
Size1–2 regular battalions
1–2 militia and special reserve battalions
1–3 volunteer and territorial battalions
Up to 13 hostilities-only battalions
Garrison/HQJellalabad Barracks, Taunton
ColorsYellow facings until 1842, blue thereafter[1]
MarchPrince Albert's March[2]
EngagementsNine Years War
War of the Spanish Succession
War of 1812
First Anglo-Afghan War
Second Boer War
World War I
World War II
Malayan Emergency
Suez Crisis

History

Early history

Formation

 
Original uniform of the Earl of Huntingdon's Regiment in 1685

The regiment was one of nine regiments of foot raised by James II when he expanded the size of the army in response to the Monmouth Rebellion. On 20 June 1685, Theophilus Hastings, 7th Earl of Huntingdon was issued with a warrant authorising him to raise a regiment, and accordingly the Earl of Huntingdon's Regiment of Foot was formed, mainly recruiting in the county of Buckinghamshire.[4][5][6]

Jacobite wars

The regiment remained in existence when William III came to the throne in the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Ferdinando Hastings took over the colonelcy of the regiment, which accordingly became Hastings's Regiment of Foot.[6][7][8] Hastings's Regiment first saw action at the Battle of Killiecrankie, where they failed to halt the advance of Jacobite rebels, although they were later defeated at the Battle of Dunkeld.[3][6][9] The regiment accompanied William to Ireland in the following year, fighting in the decisive Williamite victories at the Boyne and Cork.[3][7][10]

Nine Years' War

The Jacobite struggles in Scotland and Ireland were part of a wider European conflict that became known as the Nine Years' War. In 1692, Hastings' Regiment sailed to Flanders and, in 1694, took part in the disastrous amphibious assault at Camaret on the French coast. In 1695, Colonel Fernando Hastings was found guilty of extortion, and dismissed. Sir John Jacob became the colonel, and it was as Jacob's Regiment of Foot that they returned to England at the end of the war in 1697.[3][6][7][11]

War of the Spanish Succession

After a period of garrison duty in Ireland, Jacob's Regiment returned to Flanders in 1701. In the following year, the colonelcy again changed, with Sir John Jacob choosing to retire. He sold the colonelcy to his brother-in-law, Lieutenant-General James Barry, 4th Earl of Barrymore, for 1,400 guineas.[7][12] With the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession, the Earl of Barrymore's Regiment of Foot saw action at the sieges or battles of Kaiserwerth, Venlo, Roermond, Huy, Limburg and Liège.[3][7]

In 1704, Barrymore's Regiment moved to the Iberian Peninsula taking part in the defence of the recently-captured Gibraltar (1704–05) and the Siege of Barcelona (1705). In 1706, the bulk of the regiment was converted into a regiment of dragoons due to a shortage of cavalry. Barrymore returned to England with a small cadre; the regiment was re-raised and returned to Spain.[13] The unit fought at the Battle of Almanza (1707), the Battle of La Caya (1709), the Battle of Tortosa (1711) and the Battle of St Mateo (1711).[3][7] In 1711, the regiment started a long period of garrison duty at Gibraltar. In 1715, they became Cotton's Regiment of Foot when Stanhope Cotton succeeded Barrymore.[7]

Anglo-Spanish War

When war broke out with Spain in 1727, Cotton's were part of the force that resisted the Spanish Siege of Gibraltar.[3][7] The regiment returned to England in the following year. It remained there until 1742, with the name changing with the colonelcy: Kerr's Regiment of Foot (Lord Mark Kerr) in 1725, Middleton's Regiment of Foot (Brigadier-General John Middleton) in 1732 and Pulteney's Regiment of Foot (General Harry Pulteney) in 1739.[14]

War of the Austrian Succession

 
Soldier of the 13th Regiment, 1742

In 1742, Pulteney's Regiment sailed to Flanders, and in the following year was part of the joint British, Hanoverian and Austrian force that secured a victory over the French at the Battle of Dettingen in June 1743. In May 1745, the situation was reversed when they were part of the allied army decisively defeated at the Battle of Fontenoy.[3][7]

The "Forty Five"

In 1745, Pulteney's Regiment returned to Britain, moving to Scotland to suppress the Jacobite rising of 1745. They formed part of the defeated forces at the Battle of Falkirk in January 1746. Three months later, they took part in the final defeat of the Jacobites in Culloden.[3][7]

Return to Europe

Following the ending of the Jacobite rising, Pulteney's Regiment returned to Flanders, where they fought at the Battle of Rocoux (October 1746) and the Battle of Lauffeld or Val (July 1747). In both cases, the allied forces were defeated by the French.[3][7] The regiment returned to England in 1747, and the war was formally ended by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748.[15]

13th Regiment of Foot

By the late seventeenth century, each regiment of the standing army had been allotted a "rank" in the order of precedence. These numbers came to be increasingly used until a royal warrant of 1751 decreed that regiments should in future be known by their numbers only. Accordingly, Pulteney's Regiment became the 13th Regiment of Foot.[16]

The redesignated 13th Foot entered a thirty-year period of garrison service in England, Ireland, Gibraltar and Minorca.[17]

American Revolutionary War

In 1775, the American Revolutionary War broke out, widening into war with France from 1778 and Spain in 1779. The 13th Foot sailed for the West Indies, arriving in Barbados. They saw little active service, returning to England in 1782, moving on to Ireland in 1783.[18]

13th (1st Somersetshire) Regiment of Foot

It was at this time that the regiment's link to Somerset was first formed. On 21 August 1782, the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, Henry Seymour Conway, issued a regulation giving an English county designation to each regiment of foot other than those with a royal title or highland regiments. The intention was to improve recruitment during the unpopular war, and the Secretary at War, Thomas Townshend issued a circular letter to the lieutenants of each county in England in the following terms:

My Lord,
The very great deficiency of men in the regiments of infantry being so very detrimental to the public service, the king has thought proper to give the names of the different counties to the old corps, in hopes that, by the zeal and activity of the principal nobility and gentry in the several counties, some considerable assistance may be given towards recruiting these regiments".[19]

The regiment duly became the 13th (1st Somersetshire) Regiment of Foot (the 40th Foot becoming the "2nd Somersetshire").[3] The attempt to link regimental areas to specific counties was found to be impractical, with regiments preferring to recruit from major centres of population. By June 1783, each regiment was again recruiting throughout the country, although the county names were to remain.[3]

French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars

In 1790, the regiment sailed to Jamaica. In 1793, Britain was again at war with France, this time with the revolutionary régime. The 13th Foot landed in the French colony of Saint-Domingue, where the Haitian Revolution was in progress.[3][7]

Returning to Ireland in 1797 and England in 1799, the 13th were next engaged in a series of minor coastal assaults on the Spanish coast in 1800.[18]

In 1801, the regiment sailed to Egypt to help repel the French invasion force. The 13th took part in the Siege of Alexandria. In 1802, the regiment was awarded the badge of a sphinx superscribed "Egypt" for display on the regimental colours in commemoration of the campaign.[7]

A temporary end to hostilities with France came in March 1802, with the signing of the Treaty of Amiens. The 13th Foot left Egypt in that month, sailing to Malta, where they were stationed for a year, before moving to Gibraltar. In 1805, the regiment returned to England. After occupying various stations in the south of the country, the 13th sailed for Ireland in May 1807. The regiment was brought up to full strength by an intake of volunteers from the Irish militia and sailed to Bermuda, arriving in March 1808. The regiment lost large numbers of men to disease while on the island. War had again broken out with France, and the 13th Foot formed part of the force that invaded and occupied the French colony of Martinique in January and February 1809.[7][20]

War with the United States

In 1812, the war had widened to include the United States of America. In the following year, the 13th Foot left Martinique for Quebec, from whence they proceeded to protect the frontiers of Upper Canada. The regiment crossed the Saint Lawrence River and took part in minor actions around Plattsburgh and Lake Champlain. The war concluded in 1815, and the 13th Foot returned to England in July of that year.[21]

The regiment spent the next few years on garrison duty in Jersey, Guernsey, England, Scotland and Ireland.[7]

13th (1st Somersetshire) Regiment (Light Infantry)

 
Sir Robert Sale, commanding officer of the regiment during the Burmese and Afghanistan campaigns, and colonel from 1843–1846

In September 1822, the 13th Foot was moved to Chatham in Kent, where it was brought up to strength for service in India. While there, it was reconstituted as a light infantry regiment in December and was retitled as the 13th (1st Somersetshire) Regiment (Light Infantry).[22][23]

First Anglo-Burmese War

The 13th Light Infantry arrived in Kolkata in May and June 1823.[24] Soon after arrival, Burmese forces attacked Cachar, a territory under British protection. War was formally declared on 5 March 1824, and the 13th took part in the campaign that lasted until February 1826, when a treaty was signed, with the King of Ava agreeing to cede territory and pay compensation to the British East India Company.[24][25]

The 13th Light Infantry returned to garrison duty in India. From 1826 to 1838, they were stationed in Baharampur, Danapur, Agra and Karnal.[26]

First Anglo-Afghan War

In 1837, Persian troops, allied to the Russians, occupied the Herat region of Afghanistan. The British, who feared Russian intervention in the area, decided to remove the emir of Afghanistan, Dost Muhammad, and to replace him with a pro-British monarch, Shuja Shah Durrani. Accordingly, an expeditionary force, known as the "Army of the Indus", was formed. The 13th Light Infantry formed part of the invasion force, joining the other units in November 1838. The army passed into Afghanistan in March 1839, taking Kandahar in April without resistance.[27] The 13th took part in the decisive victory at Ghazni in July 1839. The British initially achieved their objective of enthroning Shuja in August 1839.[27][28] The 13th formed part of the occupation force that attempted to enforce the rule of the new monarch; but, in October 1841, a popular uprising against Shuja broke out.[27][28] The 13th found itself engaged in operations against the rebels who had overthrown Shuja and taken the capital, Kabul. In November 1841, the regiment was forced to retreat to the fortified town of Jalalabad.[27][28]

The town was soon encircled, leading to a lengthy siege. In April of the following year, the garrison, under the command of Sir Robert Sale of the 13th, broke the siege and defeated the Afghan forces under Akbar Khan.[27][28] Although the war, which ended in October 1842 with the return of the Army of the Indus to India, was essentially a reverse for the British forces, battle honours and campaign medals were awarded.[27]

13th (1st Somersetshire) (Prince Albert's Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot

 
Standard bearer and officer in uniform of 1866. The dark blue facings authorised in 1842 appear on the tunic and regimental colours. The green feather plume on the shako head dress was a distinguishing mark for a light infantry regiment.

The conduct of the 13th at Jalalabad was officially rewarded on 26 August 1842, when Prince Albert offered his patronage to the regiment and permitted his name to be used in its title, becoming the 13th (1st Somersetshire) (Prince Albert's Light Infantry) Regiment of Foot.[29] At the same time, the regimental facings were changed from yellow to (royal) blue, and the badge of a mural crown with a scroll inscribed "Jellalabad" was granted for display on the colours and uniform of the regiment.[27] The unit was also honoured with the firing of a twenty-one gun salute at each army station it passed on its return to India.[27][30]

The 13th Light Infantry returned to England in 1845 after 23 years of foreign service. Presented with new colours at Portsmouth in 1846, the regiment moved to Ireland in the following year, remaining there until 1850, before spending a year in Scotland. From 1851–1854, they were stationed in Gibraltar.[7][31]

Crimean War

In 1854, the regiment was brought up to full strength and, in June of the following year, landed in the Crimea as part of the Anglo-French forces conducting a campaign against the Russians. They took part in the Siege of Sevastopol, and remained in the area after the ending of hostilities in February 1856, subsequently sailing to South Africa.[7][32]

Return to India

In May 1857, the Indian Mutiny broke out. Reinforcements were requested, and the 13th arrived at Kolkata in October 1857. They took part in some minor actions.[6]

Formation of second battalion

The British Army had been shown to be overstretched by the Crimean War, while the mutiny in India had led to the responsibility for providing a garrison in the subcontinent from the Honourable East India Company to the Crown forces. Accordingly, there was a need for an expansion and reorganisation of the existing regiments. Rather than raising new infantry regiments, the senior regiments of foot were each ordered to raise a second battalion, with the existing regiment being redesignated as the 1st Battalion.[33] The 2nd Battalion of the 13th Light Infantry was raised at Winchester in January 1858.[7][34] The two battalions, while sharing a depot, operated as separate units.

Locations of the battalions 1858–1881[7]
1st Battalion 2nd Battalion
India 1858–1864 England 1858–1859, South Africa 1859–1863
England 1864–1866 Mauritius 1863–1867
Ireland 1866–1867
Gibraltar 1867–1872 England 1867–1871
Malta 1872–1874 Ireland 1871–1875
South Africa 1874–1879 Scotland 1875–1876, England 1876–1877
England 1879–1881 Malta 1877–1877, South Africa 1878–1881

The 1st Battalion saw active service in South Africa, fighting in the Ninth Xhosa War of 1878 and Anglo-Zulu War of 1879.[6]

Prince Albert's (Somerset Light Infantry)

Childers reforms

The regiment was not fundamentally affected by the Cardwell Reforms of the 1870s, which gave it a depot at Jellalabad Barracks in Taunton from 1873, or by the Childers reforms of 1881 – as it already possessed two battalions, there was no need for it to amalgamate with another regiment.[35] Under the reforms the regiment became the Prince Albert's Light Infantry (Somersetshire Regiment) on 1 July 1881.[36] As the county regiment of Somersetshire, it also gained the county's militia and rifle volunteer battalions, which were integrated into the regiment as numbered battalions. Within months the regiment had been retitled to Prince Albert's (Somersetshire Light Infantry).[37]

On formation, the regiment had the following battalions:[7]

The two regular battalions continued the system of alternating between home and foreign stations:

Locations of the regular battalions 1881–1914[7]
1st Battalion 2nd Battalion
Ireland 1881–1886 India 1881–1884
Burma 1884–1887
England 1886–1891 India 1887–1894
Gibraltar 1891–1893
India 1893–1908 England 1894–1895,
Guernsey 1895–1897,
England 1897–1899
South Africa 1899–1903
England 1903–1908
England 1908–1914 Malta 1908–1911
China 1911–1913
India 1913–1914

Actions in India and Burma

The 2nd Battalion took part in the Third Anglo-Burmese War of 1885 to 1887. Following an initial invasion, the battalion spent two years broken up into small groups pacifying the inhabitants of the country. While the unit lost only 17 men in combat, 150 were to die from disease.[38] During its period in India, the 1st Battalion was mainly stationed in the North West Frontier Province, and took part in First Mohmand Campaign of 1897.[7] The battalion was posted at Rawalpindi until late 1902 when it moved to Peshawar near the historic Khyber Pass on the border to Afghanistan.[39]

Second Boer War

In October 1899, war broke out between British Empire and the Boer Republics of South Africa. The 2nd Battalion landed in the Cape in December 1899, and was part of the British forces defeated at the Battle of Spion Kop in January 1900. In February of the same year, the battalion helped to relieve the siege of Ladysmith. They spent the remainder of the conflict taking part in a number of minor actions.[40][41]

The 4th (2nd Somerset Militia) Battalion was embodied in December 1899, and 415 officers and men embarked in the SS Kildonan Castle in early March 1900 for service in South Africa.[42] A large contingent of the men returned home in May 1902 on the SS Sicilia.[43]

Haldane reforms

The Boer War had severely stretched the resources of the British Army and had exposed the weakness of the militia and volunteers as an effective reserve force. In 1907–1908, Richard Haldane, Secretary of State for War reorganised these second-line units of the army as part of a larger series of reforms. The existing militia was reduced in size and redesignated as the "Special Reserve", while the Volunteer Force was merged with the Yeomanry to form a new Territorial Force, organised into 14 infantry divisions, liable for service in wartime.[44]

In 1908, the Volunteers and Militia were reorganised nationally, with the former merging with the Yeomanry to become the Territorial Force and the latter the Special Reserve;[45] the regiment now had one Reserve and two Territorial battalions.[46][7]

First World War

The regiment's name was again changed to the Prince Albert's (Somerset Light Infantry) in 1912.[47]

The Regiment saw active service in the First World War, with battalions involved on the Western Front, Mesopotamia (now Iraq) and Palestine. Altogether, 18 battalions existed during the war. One of the new battalions was formed by the conversion of the West Somerset Yeomanry, a Territorial Force Cavalry Regiment; the rest were formed by the duplication of the existing Territorial Force units or by the formation of new "service" battalions.[7][48]

Battalions of the Somerset Light Infantry in the First World War[7][48]
Battalion Notes
1st Battalion In England on outbreak of war, on Western Front from August 1914 (part of 4th Division)
2nd Battalion In India on outbreak of war, and remained in the country (part of the 4th (Quetta) Division 1914–1917, 1st (Peshawar) Division 1917–1918).
3rd (Reserve) Battalion (SR) Training unit through which recruits passed. Originally in Taunton, moved to Devonport in August 1914, to Derry in 1917 and Belfast in 1918.
1/4th Battalion (TF) The original 4th Battalion, redesignated on the formation of duplicate 2/4th in September 1914. To India in November 1914 and Mesopotamia from 1916 (part of 3rd (Lahore) Division until September 1918, then 14th Indian Division)
2/4th Battalion (TF)
2/4th (Pioneer) Battalion
Duplicate of 4th Battalion, formed September 1914 as part of the 45th (2nd Wessex) Division. In India and the Andaman Islands from December 1914 – September 1917. To Egypt as part of the 75th Division September 1917, to France in January 1918. Converted to pioneer battalion, 34th Division June 1918.
3/4th Battalion (TF)
4th (Reserve) Battalion
Third-line duplicate of 4th Battalion, formed March 1915. Converted to reserve battalion in April 1916, remained in United Kingdom.
1/5th Battalion (TF) The original 5th Battalion, redesignated on the formation of duplicate 2/5th in September 1914. To India in November 1914 and then Egypt as part of the 75th Division from May 1917.
2/5th Battalion (TF)
2/5th (Pioneer) Battalion
Duplicate of 5th Battalion, formed September 1914 as part of the 45th (2nd Wessex) Division. In India from December 1914 where they were attached to Burma Division.[49]
3/5th Battalion (TF)
5th (Reserve) Battalion
Third-line duplicate of 5th Battalion, formed March 1915. Converted to reserve battalion in April 1916, remained in United Kingdom.
6th (Service) Battalion Formed August 1914. To Western Front as part of 14th (Light) Division. Following heavy casualties they formed a composite unit with the 5th Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry April 1918, returned to England for reconstruction and absorbed 13th Battalion Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry, returned to France August 1918.
7th (Service) Battalion Formed September 1914. To Western Front as part of 20th (Light) Division July 1915.
8th (Service) Battalion Formed October 1914. To Western Front as part of 21st Division September 1915. Transferred to 37th Division July 1916.
9th (Service) Battalion
9th (Reserve) Battalion
Formed October 1914 as part of 33rd Division. Converted to Reserve battalion April 1915, converted to 45th Training Reserve Battalion 1916. Remained in United Kingdom.
10th (Home Service) Battalion Formed November 1916, disbanded November 1917
11th Battalion Formed January 1917 by redesignation of 86th Provisional Battalion, TF. To France May 1918 as part of 59th (2nd North Midland) Division
12th (West Somerset Yeomanry) Battalion. Formed January 1917 in Egypt by conversion of West Somerset Yeomanry. Part of 74th (Yeomanry) Division. To France May 1918.
13th (Home Service) Battalion Formed April 1918 to replace 11th Battalion.
1st Garrison Battalion Formed 1917. To India.

Inter-war period

Following the armistice ending the First World War, the war-raised battalions were rapidly disbanded.[7] The regular battalions returned to the pre-war system of alternating home and foreign stations. The 1st Battalion was stationed in Northern Ireland and England, before being stationed in Egypt (1926–1928), Hong Kong (1928–1930) and India from 1930.[7]

The 2nd Battalion, which had spent the entire war in India, fought in the brief Third Anglo-Afghan War in 1919, seeing active service in Afghanistan and on the North-West Frontier.[7][50] Returning to India in 1920, the battalion moved to the Sudan in 1926 and England in 1927.[7]

The Territorial Force was reorganised to become the Territorial Army in 1920, and the 4th and 5th Battalions were reconstituted. At the same time, the 3rd (Special Reserve) Battalion was placed in "suspended animation", and was never again embodied.[7]

On 1 January 1921, the regimental title was changed a final time, becoming The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's).[51]

Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's)

Second World War

 
Men from the Somerset Light Infantry man an armoured train on the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch miniature railway in Kent, 14 October 1940.

Altogether, the Somerset Light Infantry raised 11 battalions for service during the Second World War, six of which saw service overseas. In addition to the Regular Army 1st and 2nd battalions, the existing 4th and 5th Territorial Army battalions both formed 2nd Line duplicate units in 1939 prior to war being declared: the 6th and 7th battalions, both part of 45th (Wessex) Division on the outbreak of war. The 8th (Home Defence) Battalion, which was also formed in 1939, was renumbered as the 30th Battalion in 1941. The 9th, 10th, 11th (Holding) and 50th (Holding) Battalions were all formed in 1940, although the latter two had ceased to exist by the end of the year.[7][52]

Regular Army

The 1st Battalion, Somerset Light Infantry, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel John Harding, was stationed in British India at the outbreak of war and would remain in the Far East throughout the conflict. The battalion fought in the Burma Campaign with the 114th Indian Infantry Brigade which was part of the 7th Indian Infantry Division, itself part of the British Fourteenth Army, led by Bill Slim.[53] John Waddy served with the battalion in the early stages of the war.[54]

The 2nd Battalion was serving with the 2nd Gibraltar Brigade as part of the garrison there, upon the outbreak of war in 1939. On 1 December 1943, the brigade was redesignated the 28th Infantry Brigade, which also included the 2nd King's Regiment (Liverpool) and 1st Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders (later 2/4th Royal Hampshire Regiment). On 24 December, the brigade became attached to the British 4th Infantry Division.[55] The 2nd Somersets, with the rest of the division, arrived in Italy in March 1944 and served in the Italian Campaign as part of the British Eighth Army in many battles such as that of Monte Cassino, one of the worst battles of the Italian Campaign, in 1944, where they played an important role alongside 2nd King's and fought in Operation Diadem and on the Gothic Line from August–September 1944. In November, the 4th Division, with the rest of III Corps, was sent to Greece to help calm the Greek Civil War, which was caused after the German Army withdrew from the country.[56]

Territorial Army

The regiment also had four Territorial battalions, although only two would serve overseas. Throughout the war, the 4th Battalion, Somerset Light Infantry served with the 129th Brigade, alongside the 4th and 5th Wiltshire Regiment, part of the 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division, and spent most of its existence in the United Kingdom in Kent under XII Corps of Southern Command.[57]

 
Men of the 7th Battalion, Somerset Light Infantry resting during the assault on Geilenkirchen in Germany, 18 November 1944.

The 7th Battalion, which had been created on 24 August 1939[58] as a 2nd Line duplicate of the 5th, was originally serving alongside both the 5th and 6th battalions in 135th Brigade, of the 45th Division. On 11 September 1942, the battalion was transferred to the 214th Infantry Brigade, which included the 5th Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry and the 9th Somersets (later replaced by the 1st Worcestershire Regiment).[59]

Both the 4th and 7th battalions served in the North West Europe Campaign after the Normandy landings on 6 June 1944, D-Day. The division fought very well in the Battle of Normandy, particularly so during the Battle for Caen in Operation Epsom in late June, at the Battle for Hill 112 (Operation Jupiter). During the battle, "the 4th Somersets suffered 556 casualties out of a strength of 845. Between 26 June and 14 July, 4th SLI received 19 reinforcement officers and 479 ORs as replacements."[60] The battalion became involved in trench warfare similar to that of the Great War. They later played a large part in the disastrous Operation Market Garden, a small role in the Battle of the Bulge and finally took part in Operation Plunder, the crossing of the River Rhine by the Allies.[55]

Hostilities-only

The other battalion to see active service was the 10th Battalion, raised in 1940, which was converted in 1942 into the 7th Parachute Battalion, and was now part of the Parachute Regiment, itself part of the British Army's airborne forces. They were assigned to the 3rd Parachute Brigade, which was originally part of the 1st Airborne Division, but were later assigned to the newly-raised 5th Parachute Brigade, part of the 6th Airborne Division, which had also just been raised. The 7th Parachute Battalion would see its first combat during Operation Tonga, the British airborne landings in Normandy, the night before 6 June 1944, D-Day. They would then go on to serve throughout the Battle of Normandy as normal infantrymen, The battalion then played a part in the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944 and then again in Operation Varsity in March 1945, the largest airborne drop of the war, including both the 6th Airborne and the US 17th Airborne Division, with well over 16,000 airborne troops being involved.[7][61]

The SLI also had responsibility for defending local airfields, including RNAS Charlton Horethorne, where they prepared trenches, hardpoints and machine gun positions.[62]

The 30th Battalion, of 43rd Infantry Brigade, formed part of the British First Army, and served in Tunisia and Italy.[55]

Post war to amalgamation

 
Allan Francis John Harding, 1st Baron Harding of Petherton. Colonel of the Somerset Light Infantry 1953–1959.
 
Lieutenant David McMurtrie's jungle service dress of the 1st Battalion Somerset Light Infantry used in the Malayan Emergency.

The 1st Battalion was the last British infantry battalion to leave India after its independence, departing on 28 February 1948. During the final ceremony, the battalion marched through Bombay (now Mumbai) and received a guard of honour from the newly formed Indian Army at the Gateway of India.[6][63] The 2nd Battalion ended the war in Greece, subsequently forming part of the Allied occupation force of Austria.[7] The two regular battalions returned to the United Kingdom where they were amalgamated into a single 1st Battalion on 28 June 1948 - this was part of a general reduction in the size of the infantry following Indian independence.[6]

The reconstituted 1st Battalion was stationed in Germany as part of the British Army of the Rhine from 1951–1953. From 1952–1955, it formed part of the British forces fighting in the Malayan Emergency, where it took part in jungle warfare.[6][64] In its final years, the battalion was involved in a number of conflicts: the anti-tank platoon formed part of the Anglo-French force that intervened in the Suez Crisis of 1956. The majority of the battalion was in Cyprus, where a nationalist uprising against British rule had broken out. In 1957, they returned to Germany.[6]

In 1947, the Territorial Army was reconstituted and the 4th and 6th Battalion were reformed as infantry battalions; the 5th Battalion was reformed as a unit of the Royal Artillery. Three years later, the 4th Battalion absorbed the two other units.[7][65]

Amalgamation

The regiment amalgamated with the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry in 1959 to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry. This, in turn, amalgamated with the three other regiments of the Light Infantry Brigade to form The Light Infantry in 1968.[66]

Regimental museum

The Somerset Military Museum is based at Taunton Castle.[67]

Battle honours

The regiment was awarded the following battle honours for display on the colours:[7][68][69]

Displayed on the regimental colours

  • Gibraltar 1704–5
  • Dettingen
  • Martinique 1809
  • Ava
  • Ghuznee 1839
  • Affghanistan 1839 (sic)
  • Cabool 1842
  • Sevastopol
  • South Africa 1878–9
  • Burma 1885–87
  • Relief of Ladysmith
  • South Africa 1899–1902
  • Afghanistan 1919
  • The sphinx superscribed "Egypt"
  • A mural crown superscribed "Jellalabad"

First World War
Battle honours in bold were selected for display on the King's/Queen's Colours.

Second World War
Battle honours in bold were selected for display on the King's/Queen's Colours.

  • Odon
  • Caen
  • Hill 112
  • Mont Pincon
  • Noireau Crossing
  • Seine 1944
  • Nederrijn
  • Geilenkirchen
  • Roer
  • Rhineland
  • Cleve
  • Goch
  • Hochwald
  • Xanten
  • Rhine
  • Bremen
  • North-West Europe 1944–45
  • Cassino II
  • Trasimene Line
  • Arezzo
  • Advance to Florence
  • Capture of Forli
  • Cosina Canal Crossing
  • Italy 1944–45
  • Athens
  • Greece 1944–45
  • North Arakan
  • Buthidaung
  • Ngakyedauk Pass
  • Burma 1943–44

Colonels

The colonels of the regiment were as follows:[70]

Earl of Huntingdon's Regiment of Foot

13th Regiment of Foot

The 13th (1st Somersetshire) Regiment of Foot

The 13th (1st Somersetshire) Prince Albert's Light Infantry

The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's)

Victoria Cross recipients

Dress and insignia

 
Sergeant of the regiment in 1898. Distinctive items of dress include the dark green helmet and sash tied over the left shoulder

Facings

From its establishment in 1685, the regiment had a red coat with yellow facings. This was originally the colour of the cloth lining of the coat, which appeared in the turned back cuffs, skirts and lapels. Later, as uniform styles changed, it became the colour of the collar and cuffs of the jacket or tunic. A royal warrant of 1751 first regulated the facing colours of the "Marching Regiments of Foot". Those of the 13th Foot, or Lieutenant-General Pulteney's Regiment, was given as "philemot" yellow, a description repeated in the next clothing regulation of 1768.[71][72] "Philemot" was a corruption of the French feuille morte or "dead leaf", a shade of yellow approximating to that of a faded (Autumn) leaf.[73][74] When the 13th Foot was given the title "Prince Albert's" in 1842, it became a "royal" regiment, and the facings were changed to dark blue.[6] The braid and lace worn on officers' coats was silver until 1830 and thereafter gold. It had a black line threaded through it.[75]

Sergeants' sash

A distinction unique to the regiment was that the warrant officers and sergeants wore their sashes over the left shoulder and tied on the right side, in the same manner as officers. This commemorated the regiment's stand at Culloden, where the large number of officer casualties led to the sergeants taking command.[2][6] This was authorised in 1865, although appears to have been worn earlier without authority; the origin is disputed, since the regiment did not report any casualties as a result of Culloden.[76] In 1898, officers of all regiments were ordered to wear the sash knotted on the left side, with the exception of the Somerset Light Infantry who were permitted to continue with the knot on the right.[77]

Light infantry distinctions

In 1822, the regiment was granted light infantry distinctions, which survived in the full dress of 1914 as a dark green home service helmet (instead of the dark blue of line infantry) and a bugle-horn incorporated in its badge. The forage cap and postwar No.1 dress uniform worn by the regiment was also dark green.[78]

Badges

The first distinctive badge awarded to the regiment was the sphinx for service in Egypt, authorised in 1802.[7] From 1814, a stringed bugle-horn had been the approved badge of light infantry and rifle regiments.[77] When the 13th Foot were converted to light infantry in 1822, the badge adopted for the shako head-dress was a "bugle-horn with strings with the numerals 13 in the centre and surmounted by the Sphinx".[79] When a new model of shako was adopted in 1844, a mural crown and scroll inscribed "Jellalabad" were added. Similar devices were used on the plate of the home service helmet adopted in 1878.[79] In 1898, when khaki service dress was introduced, a metal badge was designed for the new slouch hat. This consisted of a bugle surmounted by a mural crown above which was a scroll inscribed "Jellalabad". The cypher "PA" for Prince Albert was placed within the strings of the bugle horn. This remained the regiment's cap badge on various forms of head-dress until amalgamation.[79]

References

  1. ^ a b 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. pp. 102–103.
  2. ^ a b Wickes, H. L. (1974). Regiments of Foot: A History of the Foot Regiments of the British Army. Reading, Berkshire: Osprey Publishing. pp. 20–21. ISBN 0-85045-220-1.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Swinson, Arthur (1972). A Register of the Regiments and Corps of the British Army. London: The Archive Press. pp. 97–98. ISBN 0-85591-000-3.
  4. ^ Walton, Clifford (1894). History of the British Standing Army 1660–1700. London: Harison & Sons. pp. 44–45.
  5. ^ Carter (1867), p. 2.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "The Somerset Light Infantry: A History". Somerset Heritage Centre. Somerset County Council. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 28 December 2007. Retrieved 13 December 2010.
  8. ^ Carter (1867), p. 5.
  9. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 7–11.
  10. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 12–15.
  11. ^ Carter (1867), p. 16.
  12. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 17–18.
  13. ^ Chant, Christopher (1988). The handbook of British regiments. Routledge. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-415-00241-7.
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  15. ^ Rickard, J. "Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, 18 October 1748". Military History Encyclopedia on the Web. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
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  19. ^ Examples of the circular issued to the Lieutenants for the Counties of Oxford and Warwick Kippis, Andrew (1783). The New Annual register or General Repository of History, Politics and Literature for the Year 1782. London: G Robinson. pp. 166–168.
  20. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 59–64.
  21. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 54–70.
  22. ^ "From the LONDON GAZETTE, Tuesday, Dec. 24". The Times. 25 December 1822. p. 2. His majesty has been pleased to approve of the 13th regiment of foot being formed into a corps of light infantry.
  23. ^ Carter (1867), p. 75.
  24. ^ a b Carter (1867), pp. 75–86.
  25. ^ . Somerset Light Infantry Archive. Somerset County Council. Archived from the original on 17 February 2016. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  26. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 86–89.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h "The First Afghan War, 1839–1842". Somerset Light Infantry Archive. Somerset County Council. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  28. ^ a b c d Carter (1867), pp. 91–106.
  29. ^ "No. 20134". The London Gazette. 30 August 1842. p. 2331.
  30. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 117–118.
  31. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 130–133.
  32. ^ Carter (1867), pp. 134–139.
  33. ^ "Military And Naval Intelligence". The Times. 20 November 1857. p. 10. Second battalions are to be added to all the infantry regiments from the 1st to 20th inclusive.
  34. ^ Carter (1867), p. 165.
  35. ^ . Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 10 February 2006. Retrieved 16 October 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) The depot was the 36th Brigade Depot from 1873 to 1881, and the 13th Regimental District depot thereafter.
  36. ^ "No. 24992". The London Gazette. 1 July 1881. pp. 3300–3301.
  37. ^ "THE Queen has been pleased to approve of the undermentioned... now styled Prince Albert's Light Infantry (Somersetshire Regiment)... being in future styled... Prince Albert's (Somersetshire Light Infantry)..."No. 25048". The London Gazette. 13 December 1881. p. 6662.
  38. ^ "The Third Burmese War, 1885–1887". Somerset Light Infantry Archives. Somerset County Council.
  39. ^ "Naval & Military intelligence - The Army in India". The Times. No. 36896. London. 11 October 1902. p. 12.
  40. ^ John Stirling. "The Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's)". Our Regiments in South Africa. boer-war.com.
  41. ^ "The Boer War 1899–1902". Somerset Light Infantry Archives. Somerset County Council. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
  42. ^ "The War - Embarcation of Troops". The Times. No. 36084. London. 8 March 1900. p. 7.
  43. ^ "The War - Troops returning home". The Times. No. 36753. London. 28 April 1902. p. 8.
  44. ^ Dunlop, John K. (1938). The Development of the British Army 1899–1914. London: Methuen. p. 23.
  45. ^ "Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907". Hansard. 31 March 1908. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  46. ^ These were the 3rd Battalion (Special Reserve), with the 4th Battalion at Lower Bristol Road in Bath (since demolished) and the 5th Battalion at Upper High Street in Taunton (since demolished) (both Territorial Force).
  47. ^ CHANGE IN DESIGNATION. His Majesty the King has been graciously pleased to approve of the "Prince Albert's (Somersetshire Light Infantry)" being in future designated "Prince Albert's (Somerset Light Infantry)". "No. 28585". The London Gazette. 27 February 1912. p. 1451.
  48. ^ a b Chris Baker. "The Somerset Light Infantry in 1914–1918". The Long, Long Trail. The British Army of 1914–1918 for family historians. Retrieved 21 December 2011.
  49. ^ Mills, C. P. A Strange War. Burma, India & Afghanistan 1914-19. pp. 6–7. ISBN 0-86299-377-6.
  50. ^ Barthorp, Michael (2002). Afghan Wars and the North-West Frontier 1839–1947. London: Cassell. p. 152. ISBN 0-304-36294-8.
  51. ^ "Regimental Titles Changed". The Times. 9 December 1920. p. 7.
  52. ^ T. F. Mills. . Archived from the original on 28 December 2007. Retrieved 13 February 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  53. ^ "Forgotten warriors who fought in the jungles of the East". Bath Chronicle. 5 April 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  54. ^ "No. 34642". The London Gazette. 4 July 1939. pp. 4569–4570.
  55. ^ a b c "The Second World War, 1939-1945". Somerset County Council. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  56. ^ Burdon, Douglas. "Fire Orders' Chapter 19a". WW2 Peoples War. BBC. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
  57. ^ Joslen (1960), p. 314.
  58. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 January 2006. Retrieved 14 February 2016.
  59. ^ Joslen, p. 377.
  60. ^ Delaforce, p. 51.
  61. ^ "The Second World War". Somerset Light Infantry Archives. Somerset County Council. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
  62. ^ Berryman, David (2006). Somerset airfields in the Second World War. Newbury: Countryside Books. pp. 26–33. ISBN 1-85306-864-0.
  63. ^ . Ministry of Defence. Archived from the original on 9 February 2008.
  64. ^ "The Malayan Emergency, 1952–1955". Somerset Light Infantry Archives. Somerset County Council.
  65. ^ T. F. Mills. . Archived from the original on 7 January 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  66. ^ "The Light Infantry". British Army units 1945 on. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
  67. ^ "Somerset Military Museum". Archon Directory. British National Archives. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
  68. ^ Sumner, Ian (2001). British Colours & Standards 1747–1881 (2) Infantry. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 5, 26–28. ISBN 978-1-84176-201-2.
  69. ^ Norman, C. B. (1911). Battle Honours of the British Army. London: John Murray.
  70. ^ "13th Regiment of Foot: Colonels". The British Empire. Retrieved 3 July 2016.
  71. ^ Royal Warrant of 1 July 1751 (PRO/WO/26/21), reproduced in Edwards, T. J. (1953). Standards, Guidons and Colours of the Commonwealth Forces. Aldershot: Gale & Polden. pp. 194–200.
  72. ^ General View of the facings etc, of the several Marching Regiments of Foot (W.O. 30/13B), reproduced in Strachan, Hew (1975). British Military Uniforms 1768–1796. London: Arms & Armour Press. pp. 178–181. ISBN 0-85368-349-2.
  73. ^ Johnson, Samuel (1812). A dictionary of the English language. p. 248.
  74. ^ Franklin, C. E. (2008). British Napoleonic Uniforms. The History Press. pp. 166, 169–170. ISBN 9781862274846.
  75. ^ Carman, W. Y.; Simkin, Richard; Douglas-Morris, K. J. (1985). Uniforms of the British Army: The Infantry Regiments. Webb & Bower. ISBN 0-86350-031-5.
  76. ^ "Battle of Culloden". British Battles. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
  77. ^ a b "LI Dress Regulations". The English Light Infantry. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  78. ^ Taylor, Arthur (1972). Discovering Military Traditions. Aylesbury: Shire Publications Ltd. pp. 59–61. ISBN 0852631715.
  79. ^ a b c Kipling, Arthur L.; King, Hugh L. (2006). Head-Dress Badges of the British Army. Vol. I: Up to the End of the Great War. Naval & Military Press. ISBN 1-84342-512-2.

Bibliography

  • Cannon, Richard (1848). Historical record of the Thirteenth, First Somerset or The Prince Albert's Regiment of Light Infantry; Containing an account of the formation of the regiment in 1685 and of its subsequent services to 1848. Parker, Furnivall and Park.
  • Carter, Thomas (1867). Historical Record of the Thirteenth, First Somersetshire, or Prince Albert's Regiment of Light Infantry. London: W. O. Mitchell.
  • Delaforce, Patrick (2012). The Fighting Wessex Wyverns: From Normandy to Bremerhaven with the 43rd Wessex Division. Fonthill Media. ISBN 978-1781550717.
  • Joslen, Lt-Col H. F. (1960). Orders of Battle, United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War, 1939–1945. London: HM Stationery Office. ISBN 1843424746.
  • Mackie, John H. F. (2002). Answering the Call: Letters from the Somerset Light Infantry 1914-1919. Raby. ISBN 1-84410-005-7.
  • Popham, Hugh (1968). The Somerset Light Infantry. London: Hamish Hamilton. as part of the Famous Regiments series.

External links

somerset, light, infantry, prince, albert, light, infantry, regiment, british, army, which, served, under, various, titles, from, 1685, 1959, 1959, regiment, amalgamated, with, duke, cornwall, light, infantry, form, somerset, cornwall, light, infantry, which, . The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s was a light infantry regiment of the British Army which served under various titles from 1685 to 1959 In 1959 the regiment was amalgamated with the Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry which was again amalgamated in 1968 with the King s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry the King s Shropshire Light Infantry and the Durham Light Infantry to form The Light Infantry In 2007 however The Light Infantry was amalgamated further with the Devonshire and Dorset Regiment the Royal Gloucestershire Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment and the Royal Green Jackets to form The Rifles 1 3 13th Regiment of FootSomerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s Regimental cap badge of the Somerset Light Infantry Active1685 1959Country Kingdom of England to 1707 Kingdom of Great Britain 1707 1800 United Kingdom 1801 1959 Branch British ArmyTypeInfantryRoleLight infantrySize1 2 regular battalions1 2 militia and special reserve battalions1 3 volunteer and territorial battalionsUp to 13 hostilities only battalionsGarrison HQJellalabad Barracks TauntonColorsYellow facings until 1842 blue thereafter 1 MarchPrince Albert s March 2 EngagementsNine Years WarWar of the Spanish SuccessionWar of 1812First Anglo Afghan WarSecond Boer WarWorld War IWorld War IIMalayan EmergencySuez Crisis Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 1 1 Formation 1 1 2 Jacobite wars 1 1 3 Nine Years War 1 1 4 War of the Spanish Succession 1 1 5 Anglo Spanish War 1 1 6 War of the Austrian Succession 1 1 7 The Forty Five 1 1 8 Return to Europe 1 2 13th Regiment of Foot 1 2 1 American Revolutionary War 1 3 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment of Foot 1 3 1 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 1 3 2 War with the United States 1 4 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment Light Infantry 1 4 1 First Anglo Burmese War 1 4 2 First Anglo Afghan War 1 5 13th 1st Somersetshire Prince Albert s Light Infantry Regiment of Foot 1 5 1 Crimean War 1 5 2 Return to India 1 5 3 Formation of second battalion 1 6 Prince Albert s Somerset Light Infantry 1 6 1 Childers reforms 1 6 2 Actions in India and Burma 1 6 3 Second Boer War 1 6 4 Haldane reforms 1 6 5 First World War 1 6 6 Inter war period 1 7 Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s 1 7 1 Second World War 1 7 1 1 Regular Army 1 7 1 2 Territorial Army 1 7 1 3 Hostilities only 1 7 2 Post war to amalgamation 1 8 Amalgamation 2 Regimental museum 3 Battle honours 4 Colonels 4 1 Earl of Huntingdon s Regiment of Foot 4 2 13th Regiment of Foot 4 3 The 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment of Foot 4 4 The 13th 1st Somersetshire Prince Albert s Light Infantry 4 5 The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s 5 Victoria Cross recipients 6 Dress and insignia 6 1 Facings 6 2 Sergeants sash 6 3 Light infantry distinctions 6 4 Badges 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit Formation Edit Theophilus Hastings 7th Earl of Huntingdon founder of the regiment Original uniform of the Earl of Huntingdon s Regiment in 1685 The regiment was one of nine regiments of foot raised by James II when he expanded the size of the army in response to the Monmouth Rebellion On 20 June 1685 Theophilus Hastings 7th Earl of Huntingdon was issued with a warrant authorising him to raise a regiment and accordingly the Earl of Huntingdon s Regiment of Foot was formed mainly recruiting in the county of Buckinghamshire 4 5 6 Jacobite wars Edit The regiment remained in existence when William III came to the throne in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 Ferdinando Hastings took over the colonelcy of the regiment which accordingly became Hastings s Regiment of Foot 6 7 8 Hastings s Regiment first saw action at the Battle of Killiecrankie where they failed to halt the advance of Jacobite rebels although they were later defeated at the Battle of Dunkeld 3 6 9 The regiment accompanied William to Ireland in the following year fighting in the decisive Williamite victories at the Boyne and Cork 3 7 10 Nine Years War Edit The Jacobite struggles in Scotland and Ireland were part of a wider European conflict that became known as the Nine Years War In 1692 Hastings Regiment sailed to Flanders and in 1694 took part in the disastrous amphibious assault at Camaret on the French coast In 1695 Colonel Fernando Hastings was found guilty of extortion and dismissed Sir John Jacob became the colonel and it was as Jacob s Regiment of Foot that they returned to England at the end of the war in 1697 3 6 7 11 War of the Spanish Succession Edit After a period of garrison duty in Ireland Jacob s Regiment returned to Flanders in 1701 In the following year the colonelcy again changed with Sir John Jacob choosing to retire He sold the colonelcy to his brother in law Lieutenant General James Barry 4th Earl of Barrymore for 1 400 guineas 7 12 With the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession the Earl of Barrymore s Regiment of Foot saw action at the sieges or battles of Kaiserwerth Venlo Roermond Huy Limburg and Liege 3 7 In 1704 Barrymore s Regiment moved to the Iberian Peninsula taking part in the defence of the recently captured Gibraltar 1704 05 and the Siege of Barcelona 1705 In 1706 the bulk of the regiment was converted into a regiment of dragoons due to a shortage of cavalry Barrymore returned to England with a small cadre the regiment was re raised and returned to Spain 13 The unit fought at the Battle of Almanza 1707 the Battle of La Caya 1709 the Battle of Tortosa 1711 and the Battle of St Mateo 1711 3 7 In 1711 the regiment started a long period of garrison duty at Gibraltar In 1715 they became Cotton s Regiment of Foot when Stanhope Cotton succeeded Barrymore 7 Anglo Spanish War Edit When war broke out with Spain in 1727 Cotton s were part of the force that resisted the Spanish Siege of Gibraltar 3 7 The regiment returned to England in the following year It remained there until 1742 with the name changing with the colonelcy Kerr s Regiment of Foot Lord Mark Kerr in 1725 Middleton s Regiment of Foot Brigadier General John Middleton in 1732 and Pulteney s Regiment of Foot General Harry Pulteney in 1739 14 War of the Austrian Succession Edit Soldier of the 13th Regiment 1742 In 1742 Pulteney s Regiment sailed to Flanders and in the following year was part of the joint British Hanoverian and Austrian force that secured a victory over the French at the Battle of Dettingen in June 1743 In May 1745 the situation was reversed when they were part of the allied army decisively defeated at the Battle of Fontenoy 3 7 The Forty Five Edit In 1745 Pulteney s Regiment returned to Britain moving to Scotland to suppress the Jacobite rising of 1745 They formed part of the defeated forces at the Battle of Falkirk in January 1746 Three months later they took part in the final defeat of the Jacobites in Culloden 3 7 Return to Europe Edit Following the ending of the Jacobite rising Pulteney s Regiment returned to Flanders where they fought at the Battle of Rocoux October 1746 and the Battle of Lauffeld or Val July 1747 In both cases the allied forces were defeated by the French 3 7 The regiment returned to England in 1747 and the war was formally ended by the Treaty of Aix la Chapelle in 1748 15 13th Regiment of Foot Edit By the late seventeenth century each regiment of the standing army had been allotted a rank in the order of precedence These numbers came to be increasingly used until a royal warrant of 1751 decreed that regiments should in future be known by their numbers only Accordingly Pulteney s Regiment became the 13th Regiment of Foot 16 The redesignated 13th Foot entered a thirty year period of garrison service in England Ireland Gibraltar and Minorca 17 American Revolutionary War Edit In 1775 the American Revolutionary War broke out widening into war with France from 1778 and Spain in 1779 The 13th Foot sailed for the West Indies arriving in Barbados They saw little active service returning to England in 1782 moving on to Ireland in 1783 18 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment of Foot Edit It was at this time that the regiment s link to Somerset was first formed On 21 August 1782 the Commander in Chief of the Forces Henry Seymour Conway issued a regulation giving an English county designation to each regiment of foot other than those with a royal title or highland regiments The intention was to improve recruitment during the unpopular war and the Secretary at War Thomas Townshend issued a circular letter to the lieutenants of each county in England in the following terms My Lord The very great deficiency of men in the regiments of infantry being so very detrimental to the public service the king has thought proper to give the names of the different counties to the old corps in hopes that by the zeal and activity of the principal nobility and gentry in the several counties some considerable assistance may be given towards recruiting these regiments 19 The regiment duly became the 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment of Foot the 40th Foot becoming the 2nd Somersetshire 3 The attempt to link regimental areas to specific counties was found to be impractical with regiments preferring to recruit from major centres of population By June 1783 each regiment was again recruiting throughout the country although the county names were to remain 3 French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars Edit In 1790 the regiment sailed to Jamaica In 1793 Britain was again at war with France this time with the revolutionary regime The 13th Foot landed in the French colony of Saint Domingue where the Haitian Revolution was in progress 3 7 Returning to Ireland in 1797 and England in 1799 the 13th were next engaged in a series of minor coastal assaults on the Spanish coast in 1800 18 In 1801 the regiment sailed to Egypt to help repel the French invasion force The 13th took part in the Siege of Alexandria In 1802 the regiment was awarded the badge of a sphinx superscribed Egypt for display on the regimental colours in commemoration of the campaign 7 A temporary end to hostilities with France came in March 1802 with the signing of the Treaty of Amiens The 13th Foot left Egypt in that month sailing to Malta where they were stationed for a year before moving to Gibraltar In 1805 the regiment returned to England After occupying various stations in the south of the country the 13th sailed for Ireland in May 1807 The regiment was brought up to full strength by an intake of volunteers from the Irish militia and sailed to Bermuda arriving in March 1808 The regiment lost large numbers of men to disease while on the island War had again broken out with France and the 13th Foot formed part of the force that invaded and occupied the French colony of Martinique in January and February 1809 7 20 War with the United States Edit In 1812 the war had widened to include the United States of America In the following year the 13th Foot left Martinique for Quebec from whence they proceeded to protect the frontiers of Upper Canada The regiment crossed the Saint Lawrence River and took part in minor actions around Plattsburgh and Lake Champlain The war concluded in 1815 and the 13th Foot returned to England in July of that year 21 The regiment spent the next few years on garrison duty in Jersey Guernsey England Scotland and Ireland 7 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment Light Infantry Edit Sir Robert Sale commanding officer of the regiment during the Burmese and Afghanistan campaigns and colonel from 1843 1846In September 1822 the 13th Foot was moved to Chatham in Kent where it was brought up to strength for service in India While there it was reconstituted as a light infantry regiment in December and was retitled as the 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment Light Infantry 22 23 First Anglo Burmese War Edit The 13th Light Infantry arrived in Kolkata in May and June 1823 24 Soon after arrival Burmese forces attacked Cachar a territory under British protection War was formally declared on 5 March 1824 and the 13th took part in the campaign that lasted until February 1826 when a treaty was signed with the King of Ava agreeing to cede territory and pay compensation to the British East India Company 24 25 The 13th Light Infantry returned to garrison duty in India From 1826 to 1838 they were stationed in Baharampur Danapur Agra and Karnal 26 First Anglo Afghan War Edit In 1837 Persian troops allied to the Russians occupied the Herat region of Afghanistan The British who feared Russian intervention in the area decided to remove the emir of Afghanistan Dost Muhammad and to replace him with a pro British monarch Shuja Shah Durrani Accordingly an expeditionary force known as the Army of the Indus was formed The 13th Light Infantry formed part of the invasion force joining the other units in November 1838 The army passed into Afghanistan in March 1839 taking Kandahar in April without resistance 27 The 13th took part in the decisive victory at Ghazni in July 1839 The British initially achieved their objective of enthroning Shuja in August 1839 27 28 The 13th formed part of the occupation force that attempted to enforce the rule of the new monarch but in October 1841 a popular uprising against Shuja broke out 27 28 The 13th found itself engaged in operations against the rebels who had overthrown Shuja and taken the capital Kabul In November 1841 the regiment was forced to retreat to the fortified town of Jalalabad 27 28 The town was soon encircled leading to a lengthy siege In April of the following year the garrison under the command of Sir Robert Sale of the 13th broke the siege and defeated the Afghan forces under Akbar Khan 27 28 Although the war which ended in October 1842 with the return of the Army of the Indus to India was essentially a reverse for the British forces battle honours and campaign medals were awarded 27 13th 1st Somersetshire Prince Albert s Light Infantry Regiment of Foot Edit Standard bearer and officer in uniform of 1866 The dark blue facings authorised in 1842 appear on the tunic and regimental colours The green feather plume on the shako head dress was a distinguishing mark for a light infantry regiment The conduct of the 13th at Jalalabad was officially rewarded on 26 August 1842 when Prince Albert offered his patronage to the regiment and permitted his name to be used in its title becoming the 13th 1st Somersetshire Prince Albert s Light Infantry Regiment of Foot 29 At the same time the regimental facings were changed from yellow to royal blue and the badge of a mural crown with a scroll inscribed Jellalabad was granted for display on the colours and uniform of the regiment 27 The unit was also honoured with the firing of a twenty one gun salute at each army station it passed on its return to India 27 30 The 13th Light Infantry returned to England in 1845 after 23 years of foreign service Presented with new colours at Portsmouth in 1846 the regiment moved to Ireland in the following year remaining there until 1850 before spending a year in Scotland From 1851 1854 they were stationed in Gibraltar 7 31 Crimean War Edit In 1854 the regiment was brought up to full strength and in June of the following year landed in the Crimea as part of the Anglo French forces conducting a campaign against the Russians They took part in the Siege of Sevastopol and remained in the area after the ending of hostilities in February 1856 subsequently sailing to South Africa 7 32 Return to India Edit In May 1857 the Indian Mutiny broke out Reinforcements were requested and the 13th arrived at Kolkata in October 1857 They took part in some minor actions 6 Formation of second battalion Edit The British Army had been shown to be overstretched by the Crimean War while the mutiny in India had led to the responsibility for providing a garrison in the subcontinent from the Honourable East India Company to the Crown forces Accordingly there was a need for an expansion and reorganisation of the existing regiments Rather than raising new infantry regiments the senior regiments of foot were each ordered to raise a second battalion with the existing regiment being redesignated as the 1st Battalion 33 The 2nd Battalion of the 13th Light Infantry was raised at Winchester in January 1858 7 34 The two battalions while sharing a depot operated as separate units Locations of the battalions 1858 1881 7 1st Battalion 2nd BattalionIndia 1858 1864 England 1858 1859 South Africa 1859 1863England 1864 1866 Mauritius 1863 1867Ireland 1866 1867Gibraltar 1867 1872 England 1867 1871Malta 1872 1874 Ireland 1871 1875South Africa 1874 1879 Scotland 1875 1876 England 1876 1877England 1879 1881 Malta 1877 1877 South Africa 1878 1881The 1st Battalion saw active service in South Africa fighting in the Ninth Xhosa War of 1878 and Anglo Zulu War of 1879 6 Prince Albert s Somerset Light Infantry Edit Childers reforms Edit The regiment was not fundamentally affected by the Cardwell Reforms of the 1870s which gave it a depot at Jellalabad Barracks in Taunton from 1873 or by the Childers reforms of 1881 as it already possessed two battalions there was no need for it to amalgamate with another regiment 35 Under the reforms the regiment became the Prince Albert s Light Infantry Somersetshire Regiment on 1 July 1881 36 As the county regiment of Somersetshire it also gained the county s militia and rifle volunteer battalions which were integrated into the regiment as numbered battalions Within months the regiment had been retitled to Prince Albert s Somersetshire Light Infantry 37 On formation the regiment had the following battalions 7 1st Battalion formerly 1st Battalion 13th Foot 2nd Battalion formerly 2nd Battalion 13th Foot 3rd Battalion formerly 1st Somerset Light Infantry Militia 4th Battalion formerly 2nd Somerset Light Infantry Militia 1st Volunteer Battalion formerly 1st Somersetshire Rifle Volunteer Corps 2nd Volunteer Battalion formerly 2nd Somersetshire Rifle Volunteer Corps 3rd Volunteer Battalion formerly 3rd Somersetshire Rifle Volunteer Corps The two regular battalions continued the system of alternating between home and foreign stations Locations of the regular battalions 1881 1914 7 1st Battalion 2nd BattalionIreland 1881 1886 India 1881 1884Burma 1884 1887England 1886 1891 India 1887 1894Gibraltar 1891 1893India 1893 1908 England 1894 1895 Guernsey 1895 1897 England 1897 1899South Africa 1899 1903England 1903 1908England 1908 1914 Malta 1908 1911China 1911 1913India 1913 1914Actions in India and Burma Edit The 2nd Battalion took part in the Third Anglo Burmese War of 1885 to 1887 Following an initial invasion the battalion spent two years broken up into small groups pacifying the inhabitants of the country While the unit lost only 17 men in combat 150 were to die from disease 38 During its period in India the 1st Battalion was mainly stationed in the North West Frontier Province and took part in First Mohmand Campaign of 1897 7 The battalion was posted at Rawalpindi until late 1902 when it moved to Peshawar near the historic Khyber Pass on the border to Afghanistan 39 Second Boer War Edit In October 1899 war broke out between British Empire and the Boer Republics of South Africa The 2nd Battalion landed in the Cape in December 1899 and was part of the British forces defeated at the Battle of Spion Kop in January 1900 In February of the same year the battalion helped to relieve the siege of Ladysmith They spent the remainder of the conflict taking part in a number of minor actions 40 41 The 4th 2nd Somerset Militia Battalion was embodied in December 1899 and 415 officers and men embarked in the SS Kildonan Castle in early March 1900 for service in South Africa 42 A large contingent of the men returned home in May 1902 on the SS Sicilia 43 Haldane reforms Edit The Boer War had severely stretched the resources of the British Army and had exposed the weakness of the militia and volunteers as an effective reserve force In 1907 1908 Richard Haldane Secretary of State for War reorganised these second line units of the army as part of a larger series of reforms The existing militia was reduced in size and redesignated as the Special Reserve while the Volunteer Force was merged with the Yeomanry to form a new Territorial Force organised into 14 infantry divisions liable for service in wartime 44 In 1908 the Volunteers and Militia were reorganised nationally with the former merging with the Yeomanry to become the Territorial Force and the latter the Special Reserve 45 the regiment now had one Reserve and two Territorial battalions 46 7 First World War Edit The regiment s name was again changed to the Prince Albert s Somerset Light Infantry in 1912 47 The Regiment saw active service in the First World War with battalions involved on the Western Front Mesopotamia now Iraq and Palestine Altogether 18 battalions existed during the war One of the new battalions was formed by the conversion of the West Somerset Yeomanry a Territorial Force Cavalry Regiment the rest were formed by the duplication of the existing Territorial Force units or by the formation of new service battalions 7 48 Battalions of the Somerset Light Infantry in the First World War 7 48 Battalion Notes1st Battalion In England on outbreak of war on Western Front from August 1914 part of 4th Division 2nd Battalion In India on outbreak of war and remained in the country part of the 4th Quetta Division 1914 1917 1st Peshawar Division 1917 1918 3rd Reserve Battalion SR Training unit through which recruits passed Originally in Taunton moved to Devonport in August 1914 to Derry in 1917 and Belfast in 1918 1 4th Battalion TF The original 4th Battalion redesignated on the formation of duplicate 2 4th in September 1914 To India in November 1914 and Mesopotamia from 1916 part of 3rd Lahore Division until September 1918 then 14th Indian Division 2 4th Battalion TF 2 4th Pioneer Battalion Duplicate of 4th Battalion formed September 1914 as part of the 45th 2nd Wessex Division In India and the Andaman Islands from December 1914 September 1917 To Egypt as part of the 75th Division September 1917 to France in January 1918 Converted to pioneer battalion 34th Division June 1918 3 4th Battalion TF 4th Reserve Battalion Third line duplicate of 4th Battalion formed March 1915 Converted to reserve battalion in April 1916 remained in United Kingdom 1 5th Battalion TF The original 5th Battalion redesignated on the formation of duplicate 2 5th in September 1914 To India in November 1914 and then Egypt as part of the 75th Division from May 1917 2 5th Battalion TF 2 5th Pioneer Battalion Duplicate of 5th Battalion formed September 1914 as part of the 45th 2nd Wessex Division In India from December 1914 where they were attached to Burma Division 49 3 5th Battalion TF 5th Reserve Battalion Third line duplicate of 5th Battalion formed March 1915 Converted to reserve battalion in April 1916 remained in United Kingdom 6th Service Battalion Formed August 1914 To Western Front as part of 14th Light Division Following heavy casualties they formed a composite unit with the 5th Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry April 1918 returned to England for reconstruction and absorbed 13th Battalion Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry returned to France August 1918 7th Service Battalion Formed September 1914 To Western Front as part of 20th Light Division July 1915 8th Service Battalion Formed October 1914 To Western Front as part of 21st Division September 1915 Transferred to 37th Division July 1916 9th Service Battalion9th Reserve Battalion Formed October 1914 as part of 33rd Division Converted to Reserve battalion April 1915 converted to 45th Training Reserve Battalion 1916 Remained in United Kingdom 10th Home Service Battalion Formed November 1916 disbanded November 191711th Battalion Formed January 1917 by redesignation of 86th Provisional Battalion TF To France May 1918 as part of 59th 2nd North Midland Division12th West Somerset Yeomanry Battalion Formed January 1917 in Egypt by conversion of West Somerset Yeomanry Part of 74th Yeomanry Division To France May 1918 13th Home Service Battalion Formed April 1918 to replace 11th Battalion 1st Garrison Battalion Formed 1917 To India Inter war period Edit Following the armistice ending the First World War the war raised battalions were rapidly disbanded 7 The regular battalions returned to the pre war system of alternating home and foreign stations The 1st Battalion was stationed in Northern Ireland and England before being stationed in Egypt 1926 1928 Hong Kong 1928 1930 and India from 1930 7 The 2nd Battalion which had spent the entire war in India fought in the brief Third Anglo Afghan War in 1919 seeing active service in Afghanistan and on the North West Frontier 7 50 Returning to India in 1920 the battalion moved to the Sudan in 1926 and England in 1927 7 The Territorial Force was reorganised to become the Territorial Army in 1920 and the 4th and 5th Battalions were reconstituted At the same time the 3rd Special Reserve Battalion was placed in suspended animation and was never again embodied 7 On 1 January 1921 the regimental title was changed a final time becoming The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s 51 Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s Edit Second World War Edit Men from the Somerset Light Infantry man an armoured train on the Romney Hythe and Dymchurch miniature railway in Kent 14 October 1940 Altogether the Somerset Light Infantry raised 11 battalions for service during the Second World War six of which saw service overseas In addition to the Regular Army 1st and 2nd battalions the existing 4th and 5th Territorial Army battalions both formed 2nd Line duplicate units in 1939 prior to war being declared the 6th and 7th battalions both part of 45th Wessex Division on the outbreak of war The 8th Home Defence Battalion which was also formed in 1939 was renumbered as the 30th Battalion in 1941 The 9th 10th 11th Holding and 50th Holding Battalions were all formed in 1940 although the latter two had ceased to exist by the end of the year 7 52 Regular Army Edit The 1st Battalion Somerset Light Infantry commanded by Lieutenant Colonel John Harding was stationed in British India at the outbreak of war and would remain in the Far East throughout the conflict The battalion fought in the Burma Campaign with the 114th Indian Infantry Brigade which was part of the 7th Indian Infantry Division itself part of the British Fourteenth Army led by Bill Slim 53 John Waddy served with the battalion in the early stages of the war 54 The 2nd Battalion was serving with the 2nd Gibraltar Brigade as part of the garrison there upon the outbreak of war in 1939 On 1 December 1943 the brigade was redesignated the 28th Infantry Brigade which also included the 2nd King s Regiment Liverpool and 1st Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders later 2 4th Royal Hampshire Regiment On 24 December the brigade became attached to the British 4th Infantry Division 55 The 2nd Somersets with the rest of the division arrived in Italy in March 1944 and served in the Italian Campaign as part of the British Eighth Army in many battles such as that of Monte Cassino one of the worst battles of the Italian Campaign in 1944 where they played an important role alongside 2nd King s and fought in Operation Diadem and on the Gothic Line from August September 1944 In November the 4th Division with the rest of III Corps was sent to Greece to help calm the Greek Civil War which was caused after the German Army withdrew from the country 56 Territorial Army Edit The regiment also had four Territorial battalions although only two would serve overseas Throughout the war the 4th Battalion Somerset Light Infantry served with the 129th Brigade alongside the 4th and 5th Wiltshire Regiment part of the 43rd Wessex Infantry Division and spent most of its existence in the United Kingdom in Kent under XII Corps of Southern Command 57 Men of the 7th Battalion Somerset Light Infantry resting during the assault on Geilenkirchen in Germany 18 November 1944 The 7th Battalion which had been created on 24 August 1939 58 as a 2nd Line duplicate of the 5th was originally serving alongside both the 5th and 6th battalions in 135th Brigade of the 45th Division On 11 September 1942 the battalion was transferred to the 214th Infantry Brigade which included the 5th Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry and the 9th Somersets later replaced by the 1st Worcestershire Regiment 59 Both the 4th and 7th battalions served in the North West Europe Campaign after the Normandy landings on 6 June 1944 D Day The division fought very well in the Battle of Normandy particularly so during the Battle for Caen in Operation Epsom in late June at the Battle for Hill 112 Operation Jupiter During the battle the 4th Somersets suffered 556 casualties out of a strength of 845 Between 26 June and 14 July 4th SLI received 19 reinforcement officers and 479 ORs as replacements 60 The battalion became involved in trench warfare similar to that of the Great War They later played a large part in the disastrous Operation Market Garden a small role in the Battle of the Bulge and finally took part in Operation Plunder the crossing of the River Rhine by the Allies 55 Hostilities only Edit The other battalion to see active service was the 10th Battalion raised in 1940 which was converted in 1942 into the 7th Parachute Battalion and was now part of the Parachute Regiment itself part of the British Army s airborne forces They were assigned to the 3rd Parachute Brigade which was originally part of the 1st Airborne Division but were later assigned to the newly raised 5th Parachute Brigade part of the 6th Airborne Division which had also just been raised The 7th Parachute Battalion would see its first combat during Operation Tonga the British airborne landings in Normandy the night before 6 June 1944 D Day They would then go on to serve throughout the Battle of Normandy as normal infantrymen The battalion then played a part in the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944 and then again in Operation Varsity in March 1945 the largest airborne drop of the war including both the 6th Airborne and the US 17th Airborne Division with well over 16 000 airborne troops being involved 7 61 The SLI also had responsibility for defending local airfields including RNAS Charlton Horethorne where they prepared trenches hardpoints and machine gun positions 62 The 30th Battalion of 43rd Infantry Brigade formed part of the British First Army and served in Tunisia and Italy 55 Post war to amalgamation Edit Allan Francis John Harding 1st Baron Harding of Petherton Colonel of the Somerset Light Infantry 1953 1959 Lieutenant David McMurtrie s jungle service dress of the 1st Battalion Somerset Light Infantry used in the Malayan Emergency The 1st Battalion was the last British infantry battalion to leave India after its independence departing on 28 February 1948 During the final ceremony the battalion marched through Bombay now Mumbai and received a guard of honour from the newly formed Indian Army at the Gateway of India 6 63 The 2nd Battalion ended the war in Greece subsequently forming part of the Allied occupation force of Austria 7 The two regular battalions returned to the United Kingdom where they were amalgamated into a single 1st Battalion on 28 June 1948 this was part of a general reduction in the size of the infantry following Indian independence 6 The reconstituted 1st Battalion was stationed in Germany as part of the British Army of the Rhine from 1951 1953 From 1952 1955 it formed part of the British forces fighting in the Malayan Emergency where it took part in jungle warfare 6 64 In its final years the battalion was involved in a number of conflicts the anti tank platoon formed part of the Anglo French force that intervened in the Suez Crisis of 1956 The majority of the battalion was in Cyprus where a nationalist uprising against British rule had broken out In 1957 they returned to Germany 6 In 1947 the Territorial Army was reconstituted and the 4th and 6th Battalion were reformed as infantry battalions the 5th Battalion was reformed as a unit of the Royal Artillery Three years later the 4th Battalion absorbed the two other units 7 65 Amalgamation Edit The regiment amalgamated with the Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry in 1959 to form the Somerset and Cornwall Light Infantry This in turn amalgamated with the three other regiments of the Light Infantry Brigade to form The Light Infantry in 1968 66 Regimental museum EditThe Somerset Military Museum is based at Taunton Castle 67 Battle honours EditThe regiment was awarded the following battle honours for display on the colours 7 68 69 Displayed on the regimental colours Gibraltar 1704 5 Dettingen Martinique 1809 Ava Ghuznee 1839 Affghanistan 1839 sic Cabool 1842 Sevastopol South Africa 1878 9 Burma 1885 87 Relief of Ladysmith South Africa 1899 1902 Afghanistan 1919 The sphinx superscribed Egypt A mural crown superscribed Jellalabad First World War Battle honours in bold were selected for display on the King s Queen s Colours Le Cateau Retreat from Mons Marne 1914 18 Aisne 1914 Armentieres 1914 Ypres 1915 17 18 St Julien Frezenberg Bellewaarde Hooge 1915 Loos Mount Sorrel Somme 1916 18 Albert 1916 18 Delville Wood Guillemont Flers Courcelette Morval Le Transloy Ancre 1916 18 Arras 1917 18 Vimy 1917 Scarpe 1917 18 Arleux Langemarck 1917 Menin Road Polygon Wood Broodseinde Poelcappelle Passchendaele Cambrai 1917 18 St Quentin Bapaume 1918 Rosieres Avre Lys Hazebrouck Bethune Soissonais Ourq Drocourt Queant Hindenburg Line Havrincourt Epehy Canal du Nord Courtrai Selle Valenciennes Sambre France and Flanders 1914 18 Gaza El Mughar Nebi Samwil Jerusalem Megiddo Sharon Palestine 1917 18 Tigris 1916 Sharqat Mesopotamia 1916 18 N W Frontier India 1915 Second World War Battle honours in bold were selected for display on the King s Queen s Colours Odon Caen Hill 112 Mont Pincon Noireau Crossing Seine 1944 Nederrijn Geilenkirchen Roer Rhineland Cleve Goch Hochwald Xanten Rhine Bremen North West Europe 1944 45 Cassino II Trasimene Line Arezzo Advance to Florence Capture of Forli Cosina Canal Crossing Italy 1944 45 Athens Greece 1944 45 North Arakan Buthidaung Ngakyedauk Pass Burma 1943 44Colonels EditThe colonels of the regiment were as follows 70 Earl of Huntingdon s Regiment of Foot Edit 1685 1688 Col Theophilus Hastings 7th Earl of Huntingdon 1688 1695 Col Ferdinando Hastings 1695 1702 Col Sir John Jacob 1702 1715 Lt Gen James Barry 4th Earl of Barrymore 1715 1725 Col Stanhope Cotton 1725 1732 Gen Lord Mark Kerr 1732 1739 Brig Gen John Middleton 1739 1766 Gen Hon Harry Pulteney13th Regiment of Foot Edit 1766 1767 F M HRH William Henry 1st Duke of Gloucester 1767 1789 Gen Hon James MurrayThe 13th 1st Somersetshire Regiment of Foot Edit 1789 1804 Gen George Ainslie 1804 1813 Gen Alexander Campbell 1813 1843 Gen Edward MorrisonThe 13th 1st Somersetshire Prince Albert s Light Infantry Edit 1843 1846 Major Gen Sir Robert Henry Sale GCB 1846 1863 F M Sir William Maynard Gomm GCB 1863 1864 Major Gen Philip McPherson 1864 1880 Gen Philip Spencer StanhopeThe Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s Edit 1880 1900 Gen Lord Mark Ralph George Kerr GCB 1900 1901 Lt Gen Sir John William Cox KCB 1901 1910 Major Gen Edward Lutwyche England CB 1910 1914 Major Gen Sir Henry Hallam Parr KCB CMG 1914 1919 Major Gen Richard Lloyd Payne CB DSO 1919 1929 Lt Gen Sir Thomas D Oyly Snow KCB KCMG 1929 1938 Gen Sir Walter Pipon Braithwaite GCB 1938 1947 Major Gen Vivian Henry Bruce Majendie CB DSO 1947 1953 Lt Gen Sir John George des Reaux Swayne KCB CBE 1953 1959 F M John Harding 1st Baron Harding of Petherton GCB CBE DSO MCVictoria Cross recipients EditLieutenant George Albert Cairns Private Patrick Carlin Major William Knox Leet Sergeant William Napier Private Thomas Henry SageDress and insignia Edit Sergeant of the regiment in 1898 Distinctive items of dress include the dark green helmet and sash tied over the left shoulder Facings Edit From its establishment in 1685 the regiment had a red coat with yellow facings This was originally the colour of the cloth lining of the coat which appeared in the turned back cuffs skirts and lapels Later as uniform styles changed it became the colour of the collar and cuffs of the jacket or tunic A royal warrant of 1751 first regulated the facing colours of the Marching Regiments of Foot Those of the 13th Foot or Lieutenant General Pulteney s Regiment was given as philemot yellow a description repeated in the next clothing regulation of 1768 71 72 Philemot was a corruption of the French feuille morte or dead leaf a shade of yellow approximating to that of a faded Autumn leaf 73 74 When the 13th Foot was given the title Prince Albert s in 1842 it became a royal regiment and the facings were changed to dark blue 6 The braid and lace worn on officers coats was silver until 1830 and thereafter gold It had a black line threaded through it 75 Sergeants sash Edit A distinction unique to the regiment was that the warrant officers and sergeants wore their sashes over the left shoulder and tied on the right side in the same manner as officers This commemorated the regiment s stand at Culloden where the large number of officer casualties led to the sergeants taking command 2 6 This was authorised in 1865 although appears to have been worn earlier without authority the origin is disputed since the regiment did not report any casualties as a result of Culloden 76 In 1898 officers of all regiments were ordered to wear the sash knotted on the left side with the exception of the Somerset Light Infantry who were permitted to continue with the knot on the right 77 Light infantry distinctions Edit In 1822 the regiment was granted light infantry distinctions which survived in the full dress of 1914 as a dark green home service helmet instead of the dark blue of line infantry and a bugle horn incorporated in its badge The forage cap and postwar No 1 dress uniform worn by the regiment was also dark green 78 Badges Edit The first distinctive badge awarded to the regiment was the sphinx for service in Egypt authorised in 1802 7 From 1814 a stringed bugle horn had been the approved badge of light infantry and rifle regiments 77 When the 13th Foot were converted to light infantry in 1822 the badge adopted for the shako head dress was a bugle horn with strings with the numerals 13 in the centre and surmounted by the Sphinx 79 When a new model of shako was adopted in 1844 a mural crown and scroll inscribed Jellalabad were added Similar devices were used on the plate of the home service helmet adopted in 1878 79 In 1898 when khaki service dress was introduced a metal badge was designed for the new slouch hat This consisted of a bugle surmounted by a mural crown above which was a scroll inscribed Jellalabad The cypher PA for Prince Albert was placed within the strings of the bugle horn This remained the regiment s cap badge on various forms of head dress until amalgamation 79 References Edit a b 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 pp 102 103 a b Wickes H L 1974 Regiments of Foot A History of the Foot Regiments of the British Army Reading Berkshire Osprey Publishing pp 20 21 ISBN 0 85045 220 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Swinson Arthur 1972 A Register of the Regiments and Corps of the British Army London The Archive Press pp 97 98 ISBN 0 85591 000 3 Walton Clifford 1894 History of the British Standing Army 1660 1700 London Harison amp Sons pp 44 45 Carter 1867 p 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l The Somerset Light Infantry A History Somerset Heritage Centre Somerset County Council Retrieved 20 December 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s Regiments org Archived from the original on 28 December 2007 Retrieved 13 December 2010 Carter 1867 p 5 Carter 1867 pp 7 11 Carter 1867 pp 12 15 Carter 1867 p 16 Carter 1867 pp 17 18 Chant Christopher 1988 The handbook of British regiments Routledge p 142 ISBN 978 0 415 00241 7 The Somerset Light Infantry Succession of Colonels 1685 1953 British Armed Forces org Retrieved 5 February 2011 Rickard J Treaty of Aix la Chapelle 18 October 1748 Military History Encyclopedia on the Web Retrieved 5 February 2011 Royal Warrant 1 July 1751 PRO WO 26 21 reprinted Edwards T J 1953 Standards Guidons and Colours of the Commonwealth Forces Aldershot Gale amp Polden pp 194 200 Personal timeline Archived from the original on 5 September 2008 Retrieved 14 February 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s National Army Museum Archived from the original on 7 February 2016 Retrieved 14 February 2016 Examples of the circular issued to the Lieutenants for the Counties of Oxford and Warwick Kippis Andrew 1783 The New Annual register or General Repository of History Politics and Literature for the Year 1782 London G Robinson pp 166 168 Carter 1867 pp 59 64 Carter 1867 pp 54 70 From the LONDON GAZETTE Tuesday Dec 24 The Times 25 December 1822 p 2 His majesty has been pleased to approve of the 13th regiment of foot being formed into a corps of light infantry Carter 1867 p 75 a b Carter 1867 pp 75 86 The First Burmese War Somerset Light Infantry Archive Somerset County Council Archived from the original on 17 February 2016 Retrieved 17 January 2011 Carter 1867 pp 86 89 a b c d e f g h The First Afghan War 1839 1842 Somerset Light Infantry Archive Somerset County Council Retrieved 17 January 2011 a b c d Carter 1867 pp 91 106 No 20134 The London Gazette 30 August 1842 p 2331 Carter 1867 pp 117 118 Carter 1867 pp 130 133 Carter 1867 pp 134 139 Military And Naval Intelligence The Times 20 November 1857 p 10 Second battalions are to be added to all the infantry regiments from the 1st to 20th inclusive Carter 1867 p 165 Training Depots 1873 1881 Regiments org Archived from the original on 10 February 2006 Retrieved 16 October 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The depot was the 36th Brigade Depot from 1873 to 1881 and the 13th Regimental District depot thereafter No 24992 The London Gazette 1 July 1881 pp 3300 3301 THE Queen has been pleased to approve of the undermentioned now styled Prince Albert s Light Infantry Somersetshire Regiment being in future styled Prince Albert s Somersetshire Light Infantry No 25048 The London Gazette 13 December 1881 p 6662 The Third Burmese War 1885 1887 Somerset Light Infantry Archives Somerset County Council Naval amp Military intelligence The Army in India The Times No 36896 London 11 October 1902 p 12 John Stirling The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s Our Regiments in South Africa boer war com The Boer War 1899 1902 Somerset Light Infantry Archives Somerset County Council Retrieved 18 January 2011 The War Embarcation of Troops The Times No 36084 London 8 March 1900 p 7 The War Troops returning home The Times No 36753 London 28 April 1902 p 8 Dunlop John K 1938 The Development of the British Army 1899 1914 London Methuen p 23 Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 Hansard 31 March 1908 Retrieved 20 June 2017 These were the 3rd Battalion Special Reserve with the 4th Battalion at Lower Bristol Road in Bath since demolished and the 5th Battalion at Upper High Street in Taunton since demolished both Territorial Force CHANGE IN DESIGNATION His Majesty the King has been graciously pleased to approve of the Prince Albert s Somersetshire Light Infantry being in future designated Prince Albert s Somerset Light Infantry No 28585 The London Gazette 27 February 1912 p 1451 a b Chris Baker The Somerset Light Infantry in 1914 1918 The Long Long Trail The British Army of 1914 1918 for family historians Retrieved 21 December 2011 Mills C P A Strange War Burma India amp Afghanistan 1914 19 pp 6 7 ISBN 0 86299 377 6 Barthorp Michael 2002 Afghan Wars and the North West Frontier 1839 1947 London Cassell p 152 ISBN 0 304 36294 8 Regimental Titles Changed The Times 9 December 1920 p 7 T F Mills The Somerset Light Infantry Prince Albert s Archived from the original on 28 December 2007 Retrieved 13 February 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Forgotten warriors who fought in the jungles of the East Bath Chronicle 5 April 2011 Retrieved 30 December 2014 No 34642 The London Gazette 4 July 1939 pp 4569 4570 a b c The Second World War 1939 1945 Somerset County Council Retrieved 30 December 2014 Burdon Douglas Fire Orders Chapter 19a WW2 Peoples War BBC Retrieved 30 December 2014 Joslen 1960 p 314 5th Battalion The Somerset Light Infantry UK Archived from the original on 5 January 2006 Retrieved 14 February 2016 Joslen p 377 Delaforce p 51 The Second World War Somerset Light Infantry Archives Somerset County Council Retrieved 22 January 2011 Berryman David 2006 Somerset airfields in the Second World War Newbury Countryside Books pp 26 33 ISBN 1 85306 864 0 Somerset Light Infantry Ministry of Defence Archived from the original on 9 February 2008 The Malayan Emergency 1952 1955 Somerset Light Infantry Archives Somerset County Council T F Mills 4th Battalion The Somerset Light Infantry Archived from the original on 7 January 2008 Retrieved 13 February 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link The Light Infantry British Army units 1945 on Retrieved 24 May 2014 Somerset Military Museum Archon Directory British National Archives Retrieved 18 January 2011 Sumner Ian 2001 British Colours amp Standards 1747 1881 2 Infantry Oxford Osprey Publishing pp 5 26 28 ISBN 978 1 84176 201 2 Norman C B 1911 Battle Honours of the British Army London John Murray 13th Regiment of Foot Colonels The British Empire Retrieved 3 July 2016 Royal Warrant of 1 July 1751 PRO WO 26 21 reproduced in Edwards T J 1953 Standards Guidons and Colours of the Commonwealth Forces Aldershot Gale amp Polden pp 194 200 General View of the facings etc of the several Marching Regiments of Foot W O 30 13B reproduced in Strachan Hew 1975 British Military Uniforms 1768 1796 London Arms amp Armour Press pp 178 181 ISBN 0 85368 349 2 Johnson Samuel 1812 A dictionary of the English language p 248 Franklin C E 2008 British Napoleonic Uniforms The History Press pp 166 169 170 ISBN 9781862274846 Carman W Y Simkin Richard Douglas Morris K J 1985 Uniforms of the British Army The Infantry Regiments Webb amp Bower ISBN 0 86350 031 5 Battle of Culloden British Battles Retrieved 15 November 2018 a b LI Dress Regulations The English Light Infantry Retrieved 23 January 2011 Taylor Arthur 1972 Discovering Military Traditions Aylesbury Shire Publications Ltd pp 59 61 ISBN 0852631715 a b c Kipling Arthur L King Hugh L 2006 Head Dress Badges of the British Army Vol I Up to the End of the Great War Naval amp Military Press ISBN 1 84342 512 2 Bibliography EditCannon Richard 1848 Historical record of the Thirteenth First Somerset or The Prince Albert s Regiment of Light Infantry Containing an account of the formation of the regiment in 1685 and of its subsequent services to 1848 Parker Furnivall and Park Carter Thomas 1867 Historical Record of the Thirteenth First Somersetshire or Prince Albert s Regiment of Light Infantry London W O Mitchell Delaforce Patrick 2012 The Fighting Wessex Wyverns From Normandy to Bremerhaven with the 43rd Wessex Division Fonthill Media ISBN 978 1781550717 Joslen Lt Col H F 1960 Orders of Battle United Kingdom and Colonial Formations and Units in the Second World War 1939 1945 London HM Stationery Office ISBN 1843424746 Mackie John H F 2002 Answering the Call Letters from the Somerset Light Infantry 1914 1919 Raby ISBN 1 84410 005 7 Popham Hugh 1968 The Somerset Light Infantry London Hamish Hamilton as part of the Famous Regiments series External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Somerset Light Infantry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Somerset Light Infantry amp oldid 1132762532, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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