Earl of Bath's Regiment
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The Royal Lincolnshire Regiment was a
line Line most often refers to: * Line (geometry), object with zero thickness and curvature that stretches to infinity * Telephone line, a single-user circuit on a telephone communication system Line, lines, The Line, or LINE may also refer to: Arts ...
infantry regiment of the British Army raised on 20 June 1685 as the Earl of Bath's Regiment for its first Colonel,
John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath PC, 29 August 1628 – 22 August 1701, was an English landowner who served in the Royalist army during the First English Civil War and was rewarded for his services after the 1660 Stuart Restoration with a title ...
. In 1751, it was numbered like most other Army regiments and named the 10th (North Lincoln) Regiment of Foot. After the Childers Reforms of 1881, it became the Lincolnshire Regiment after the county where it had been recruiting since 1781. After the Second World War, it became the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment, before being amalgamated in 1960 with the Northamptonshire Regiment to form the 2nd East Anglian Regiment (Duchess of Gloucester's Own Royal Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire) which was later amalgamated with the 1st East Anglian Regiment (Royal Norfolk and Suffolk), 3rd East Anglian Regiment (16th/44th Foot) and the Royal Leicestershire Regiment to form the Royal Anglian Regiment. 'A' Company of the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Anglians continues the traditions of the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment.


History


Early wars

The regiment was raised on 20 June 1685 as the Earl of Bath's Regiment for its first Colonel,
John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath PC, 29 August 1628 – 22 August 1701, was an English landowner who served in the Royalist army during the First English Civil War and was rewarded for his services after the 1660 Stuart Restoration with a title ...
. Prior to the
Glorious Revolution The Glorious Revolution; gd, Rèabhlaid Ghlòrmhor; cy, Chwyldro Gogoneddus , also known as the ''Glorieuze Overtocht'' or ''Glorious Crossing'' in the Netherlands, is the sequence of events leading to the deposition of King James II and ...
, it formed the garrison of
Plymouth Plymouth () is a port city and unitary authority in South West England. It is located on the south coast of Devon, approximately south-west of Exeter and south-west of London. It is bordered by Cornwall to the west and south-west. Plymouth ...
and defected to
William III William III or William the Third may refer to: Kings * William III of Sicily (c. 1186–c. 1198) * William III of England and Ireland or William III of Orange or William II of Scotland (1650–1702) * William III of the Netherlands and Luxembourg ...
shortly after his landing at Torbay on 5 November 1688. After the outbreak of the Nine Years War in 1689, the regiment remained in Plymouth until the end of 1691, when it embarked for Ostend and saw action at the
Battle of Steenkerque The Battle of Steenkerque, also known as ''Steenkerke'', ''Steenkirk'' or ''Steinkirk'' was fought on 3 August 1692, during the Nine Years' War, near Steenkerque, then part of the Spanish Netherlands but now in modern Belgium A French force ...
in August 1692, suffering 50 dead or wounded. During the 1693 campaign, it was detached from the main Allied force prior to the Battle of Landen in July, then served at the Siege of Namur in July 1695 before returning to England in 1696. It escaped disbandment in 1698 by being posted to Ireland. During the 1701 to 1714 War of the Spanish Succession, the regiment fought at Blenheim in August 1704, Ramillies in May 1706, and Malplaquet in September 1709. Following the 1751 reforms, when all British regiments were identified by numbers rather than their Colonel's name, it became the 10th Regiment of Foot. It then took part in the 1759-60 action to repel François Thurot#Winter 1759-60, to Carrickfergus, Thurot at Carrickfergus during the Seven Years' War.Norman Vance, ‘Vallancey, Charles (c.1726–1812)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004. The regiment would next see action in the American Revolutionary War, fighting at the Battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775, the Battle of Bunker Hill in June 1775, the New York and New Jersey campaign, New York Campaign in winter 1776, the Battle of Germantown in October 1777, the Battle of Monmouth in June 1778 and the Battle of Rhode Island in August 1778. In 1778, the 10th returned home to England after 19 years service overseas. In 1782, the regiment was linked to the county of Lincolnshire for recruiting.


Napoleonic Wars

The regiment embarked for Egypt in 1800 for service in the French Revolutionary Wars and took part in the Battle of Alexandria (1801), Battle of Alexandria in March 1801. The 2nd battalion then took part in the disastrous Walcheren Campaign in autumn 1809. Meanwhile, the 1st battalion embarked for Spain in 1812 for service in the Peninsular War and took part in the Battle of Castalla in April 1813 and the Siege of Tarragona (1813), Siege of Tarragona in June 1813. Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Booth, Royal Guelphic Order, KH, justice of the Peace, JP, a Peninsular War veteran and the last of his ancient family to be Family seat, seated at North Killingholme, Killingholme, served as commanding officer from 1830 until his death in 1841.


The Victorian era

In 1842, the 10th Foot was sent to India and was involved in the bloody Battle of Sobraon in February 1846 during the First Anglo-Sikh War. The 10th would also see action at the Siege of Multan, Relief of Multan in January 1849 and the Battle of Gujrat in February 1849 during the Second Anglo-Sikh War. In 1857, at the outbreak of the Indian Rebellion of 1857, Indian Rebellion, the Regiment was stationed at Danapur, Dinapore, taking part in the failed first relief of the Siege of Arrah and going on to play an important role in the Siege of Lucknow, relief of Lucknow where Private Denis Dempsey won the Victoria Cross. The 1st Battalion, 10th Foot served in Japan from 1868 through 1871. The battalion was charged with protecting the small foreign community in Yokohama. The leader of the battalion's military band, John William Fenton, is honoured in Japan as "the first bandmaster in Japan" and as "the father of band music in Japan". He is also credited for initiating the slow process in which ''Kimi ga Yo'' came to be accepted as the national anthem of Japan. The regiment was not fundamentally affected by the Cardwell Reforms of the 1870s, which gave it a depot at the "The Old Barracks, Lincoln, old barracks" in Lincoln, England, Lincoln from 1873. The regiment moved to the "Sobraon Barracks, new barracks" further north on Burton Road in 1880. Nor was the regiment affected by the Childers reforms of 1881 – as it already possessed two battalions, there was no need for it to amalgamate with another regiment. Under the reforms, the regiment became The Lincolnshire Regiment on 1 July 1881. The Royal North Lincolnshire and Royal South Lincolnshire Militia regiments became the 3rd and 4th Battalions, and the 1st and 2nd Lincolnshire Rifle Volunteer Corps became the 1st and 2nd Volunteer Battalions (a 5th Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, 3rd Volunteer Battalion was added in 1900).Westlake, pp. 156–9. The 1st Battalion Lincolnshire Regiment was posted at Malta from 1895, and took part in the Battle of Omdurman in September 1898 during the Mahdist War. It was then stationed in British Raj, British India, where it was in Bangalore until late 1902 when it transferred to Secunderabad. The 2nd Battalion embarked for South Africa in January 1900 and saw action during the Second Boer War. The 3rd (Militia (United Kingdom), Militia) battalion, formed from the Royal North Lincoln Militia in 1881, was a reserve battalion. It was embodied in May 1900, disembodied in July the following year, and later re-embodied for service in South Africa during the Second Boer War. Almost 540 officers and men returned to Southampton on the SS ''Cestrian'' in early October 1902, following the end of the war, when the battalion was disembodied at Lincoln. In 1908, the Volunteers and Militia were reorganised under the Haldane Reforms, with the former becoming the Territorial Force (TF) and the latter the Special Reserve (militia), Special Reserve; the regiment now had one Reserve and two Territorial battalions. These were the 3rd Battalion (Special Reserve) at Lincoln, with the 4th Battalion (TF) at Lincoln Drill Hall, Broadgate in Lincoln and the 5th Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, 5th Battalion (TF) at Doughty Road in Grimsby (since demolished).


First World War

The regiment started the World War I, First World War with two regular battalions, one militia battalion and two territorial battalions. The 1st Lincolns were stationed in Portsmouth, the 2nd Lincolns on Bermuda Garrison, Garrison in Bermuda, and the 3rd in Lincoln. The 4th and 5th Battalions were the Territorial Army (United Kingdom), Territorial battalions, based throughout Lincolnshire.


Regular Army

The 1st Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 9th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 9th Brigade in the 3rd Division (United Kingdom), 3rd Division for service on the Western Front (World War I), Western Front in August 1914. Notable engagements included the First Battle of Ypres in autumn 1914 and the Second Battle of Ypres, Battle of Bellewaarde in May 1915, during which the commanding officer of the battalion, Major H E R Boxer, was killed. The Commanding Officer of 2nd Lincolns, Lieutenant-Colonel George Bunbury McAndrew, found himself acting Governor of Bermuda, Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial fortress of Bermuda in the absence of the Governor and General Officer Commanding, Lieutenant-General George Bullock (British Army officer), Sir George Bullock, and oversaw that colony's placement onto a war footing. The battalion returned to England on 3 October 1914, and was sent to the Western Front as part of the 25th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 25th Brigade in the 8th Division (United Kingdom) in the First World War, 8th Division soon after, arriving in France on 5 November 1914. McAndrew was killed on 10 March 1915. Major engagements included the Battle of Aubers Ridge in May 1915 where the battalion incurred heavy losses and the Battle of the Somme in Autumn 1916 where the second-in-command of the battalion, Major F W Greatwood, was injured. A contingent from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps composed of Captain Richard Tucker and 88 other ranks was detached in December 1914 to train for the Western Front. It was hoped this could join 2nd Lincolns, but 1 Lincolns' need for reinforcement was greater and it was attached to that battalion organised as two extra platoons of one of the battalion's companies (the 2nd Lincolns had recruited three Bermudians before it left the colony, including two Constables from the Bermuda Police Service, Bermuda Police, Corporal G. C. Wailes (who had previously served in the Royal Fusiliers), Lance-Corporal Louis William Morris, and Private Farrier. Wailes was repeatedly wounded and returned to Bermuda an invalid in April 1915. Morris was killed in action on 7 December 1914. Although commanders at the Regimental Depot had wanted to break the contingent apart, re-enlist its members as Lincolns, and distribute them throughout the Regiment as replacements, a letter from the War Office ensured that the BVRC contingent remained together as a unit, under its own badge. The contingent arrived in France with 1 Lincolns on 23 June 1915, the first colonial volunteer unit to reach the Western Front. The Contingent was withered away by casualties over the following year. 50% of its remaining strength was lost at Gueudecourt on 25 September 1916. The dozen survivors were merged with a newly arrived Second BVRC Contingent, of one officer and 36 other ranks, who had trained in Bermuda as Vickers machine gunners. Stripped of their Vickers machine guns (which had been collected, for the new Machine Gun Corps), the merged contingents were retrained as Lewis Gun, Lewis light machinegunners, and provided 12 gun teams to 1 Lincolns headquarters. By the end of the war, the two contingents had lost over 75% of their combined strength. Forty had died on active service, one received the O.B.E, and six the Military Medal. Sixteen enlisted men from the two contingents were commissioned, including the Sergeant Major of the First Contingent, Colour-Sergeant R.C. Earl, who would become Commanding Officer of the BVRC after the War (some of those commissioned moved to other units in the process, including flying ace Arthur Spurling, Arthur Rowe Spurling and Henry J. Watlington, who both went to the Royal Flying Corps). At the end of the war in 1918, the 1st Lincolns, under Frederick Spring, and the 3rd Lincolns were sent to Ireland to deal with the troubles in the Irish War of Independence, unrecognised Irish Republic.


Territorial Force

The 1/4th Battalion and 1/5th Battalion landed as landed at Le Havre as part of the 138th (Lincoln and Leicester) Brigade, 138th Brigade in the 46th (North Midland) Division in March 1915 for service on the Western Front. The 2/4th Battalion and 2/5th Battalion moved to Ireland as part of the 177th (2/1st Lincoln and Leicester) Brigade, 177th Brigade in the 59th (2nd North Midland) Division and took part in the response to the Easter Rising before landing in France in February 1917 for service on the Western Front.


New Armies

The 6th (Service) Battalion landed at Suvla, Suvla Bay in Gallipoli as part of the 33rd Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 33rd Brigade in the 11th (Northern) Division in August 1915 and, having been evacuated at the end of the year, moved to Egypt in January 1916 and then to France in July 1916 for service on the Western Front. The 7th (Service) Battalion landed at Boulogne-sur-Mer, Boulogne as part of the 51st Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 51st Brigade in the 17th (Northern) Division in July 1915 also for service on the Western Front. The 8th (Service) Battalion landed at Boulogne as part of the 63rd Brigade (United Kingdom), 63rd Brigade in the 21st Division (United Kingdom), 21st Division in September 1915 also for service on the Western Front. The 10th (Service) Battalion (Grimsby, often known as the Grimsby Chums, landed in France as part of the 101st Brigade (United Kingdom), 101st Brigade in the 34th Division (United Kingdom), 34th Division in January 1916 also for service on the Western Front and saw action at the First day on the Somme in July 1916 and the Battle of Passchendaele in Autumn 1917.


Second World War

The World War II, Second World War was declared on Sunday, 3 September 1939 and the two Army Reserve (United Kingdom), Territorial Army battalions, the 4th and the 6th (a duplicate of the 4th), were called-up immediately. The 2nd Battalion embarked for France with the 9th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 9th Infantry Brigade attached to the 3rd Division (United Kingdom), 3rd Infantry Division commanded by Major-general (United Kingdom), Major-General Bernard Montgomery in October 1939. They were followed by the 6th Battalion, part of 138th (Lincoln and Leicester) Brigade, 138th Brigade with the 46th Infantry Division (United Kingdom), 46th Infantry Division, in April 1940; both served with the British Expeditionary Force (World War II), British Expeditionary Force (BEF) and managed to return from Dunkirk evacuation, Dunkirk after the battles of Battle of France, France and Battle of Belgium, Belgium. After returning to England, both battalions spent years in the United Kingdom on home defence anticipating a possible Operation Sea Lion, German invasion of the United Kingdom. The 2nd Battalion, remaining with the same brigade and division throughout the war, then spent the next four years training in various parts of the United Kingdom before taking part in the Normandy landings, D-Day landings in June 1944. The battalion, commanded by Lieutenant colonel (United Kingdom), Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Welby-Everard was then engaged throughout the Operation Overlord, Normandy Campaign, taking part in Operation Charnwood, Operation Goodwood, and throughout the rest of the Western Front (World War II), Northwest Europe Campaign until Victory in Europe Day in May 1945. The 1st Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment was stationed in British Raj, British India and saw no active service until 1942. They remained in India and the Far East throughout the war and were assigned to the 71st Indian Infantry Brigade, part of 26th Indian Infantry Division, in 1942. fighting the Imperial Japanese Army in the Burma Campaign and during the Battle of the Admin Box, the first major victory against the Japanese in the campaign, in early 1944 where Major (United Kingdom), Major Charles Ferguson Hoey was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross, the only one to be awarded to the Lincolnshire Regiment during the Second World War. The Territorials of the 4th Battalion, part of 146th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 146th Brigade attached to 49th (West Riding) Infantry Division, were sent to Norwegian Campaign, Norway and were among the first British soldiers to come into contact against an advancing enemy in the field in the Second World War. Ill-equipped and without air support, they soon had to be evacuated. Within a few weeks, they were sent to garrison Invasion of Iceland, neutral Iceland. They trained as Alpine troops during the two years they were there. After returning to the United Kingdom in 1942, when the division gained the 70th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 70th Brigade, they were earmarked to form part of the 21st Army Group for the coming Invasion of Normandy, invasion of France and started training in preparation. After two years spent on home defence, the 6th Battalion left the United Kingdom, still as part of the 138th (Lincoln and Leicester) Brigade in the 46th Infantry Division, in January 1943 to participate in the final stages of the Tunisia Campaign. In September 1943, the battalion, commanded by Lieutenant colonel (United Kingdom), Lieutenant Colonel David Peel Yates, David Yates, took part in the Allied invasion of Italy#Salerno landings, landings at Salerno in Italy as part of Mark W. Clark, Mark Clark's United States Army North, U.S. Fifth Army, suffering heavy losses and later captured Naples, crossed the Volturno Line and fought on the Winter Line and in the Battle of Monte Cassino in January 1944. The battalion returned to Egypt to refit in March 1944, by which time it had suffered heavy casualties and lost 518 killed, wounded or missing. It returned to the Italian Campaign (World War II), Italian Front in July 1944 and, after more hard fighting throughout the summer during the Gothic Line, Battles for the Gothic Line, it sailed for Greece in December to help the civil authorities to keep order during the Greek Civil War. In April 1945, the 6th Lincolns returned to Italy for the Spring 1945 offensive in Italy, final offensive but did not participate in any fighting and then moved into Austria for occupation duties. The Lincolnshire Regiment also raised two other battalions for hostilities-only, the 7th Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, 7th and 8th, created in June and July 1940 respectively. However, both were converted into other arms of service, the 7th becoming 102nd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery on 1 December 1941 and the 8th becoming the 101st Anti-Tank Regiment, Royal Artillery. The Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps again provided two drafts; one in June 1940, and a full company in 1944. Four Bermudians who served with the Lincolns during the war (three from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps) reached the rank of Major with the regiment: Major General Glyn Gilbert (later of the Parachute Regiment (United Kingdom), Parachute Regiment), Lieutenant Colonel John Brownlow Tucker (the first Commanding Officer of the The Royal Bermuda Regiment, Bermuda Regiment, amalgamated from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps and the Bermuda Militia Artillery in 1965), Major Anthony Smith (killed-in-action at Venrai, in 1944, and subject of an award-winning film, ''In The Hour of Victory''), and Major Patrick Purcell, responsible for administering German newspapers in the British area of occupation. Among other members of the 1940 contingent from the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was Bernard John Abbott, a school teacher and pre-war Bermuda Cadet Corps officer re-commissioned into the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps’ Emergency Reserve of officers with the rank of Second-Lieutenant (Acting Major) in accordance with a War Office cable of the 4 May 1939, who joined 50th Holding Battalion, in Norfolk, which became 8th Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment. He ended the war as a staff officer in the Far East, and the London Gazette of 25 December 1945 recorded ''“War Subs. Maj. H. J. ABBOTT .(108051) relinquishes his commn., 26th Dec. 1945, and is granted the hon. rank of Lt.-Col.”''.


Post-war years

After the war, the 4th and 6th battalions were placed in 'suspended animation' in 1946 but were both reformed on 1 January 1947. However, on 1 July 1950, the 6th was merged with the 4th to create the 4th/6th Battalion. On 28 October 1948, the 2nd Battalion was amalgamated with the 1st Battalion. The Royal Lincolnshire Regiment and its successors maintained its relationship with the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps (renamed the ''Bermuda Rifles'' in 1949) after the Second World War. When the Bermuda Militia Artillery (a reserve sub-unit of the Royal Artillery) had been re-tasked as a company of infantry on the closure of St. David's Battery, Bermuda, St. David's Battery in 1953, it had been grouped with the Bermuda Rifles under a battalion-level headquarters company titled ''Headquarters Bermuda Local Forces'' (not to be confused with the ''Command Headquarters'' of the Bermuda Garrison, to which it was subsidiary, with Governor of Bermuda Lieutenant-General Sir Alexander Hood serving as Commander-in-Chief and Brigadier J.C. Smith, Royal Artillery, as Officer Commanding Troops) with a lieutenant-colonel in command. From this point, the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment had also provided an officer as Adjutant to the Bermuda Local Forces and Secretary to the Local Forces Board, beginning with Captain (later Major) Darby Robert Follett Houlton-Hart (according to the 13 January, 1954, issue of ''The Bermuda Recorder'' newspaper, the reorganisation of the two units under a new common headquarters had begun ''operating unofficially since the arrival in the colony on November 17, of the command's new Adjutant, Captain D. R. F. Houlton-Hart, M.C., of the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment. The make-up of the new command is as follows:- Col. Astwood, Commanding Officer; Captain D. R. F. Houlton-Hart, Adjutant, one Regimental Sergeant-Major, one Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant, a Sergeant instructor for each unit and two medical officers''. The same article also recorded that the ''new system'' had been ''tried during the Winston Churchill#Foreign affairs, Big Three Conference last month when all troops were under the command of Lt.-Col. J. R. Johnson of the Royal Welch Fusiliers'') posted to Bermuda from 1953 to 1957. In addition to serving as the Bermuda Command Adjutant and the Bermuda Local Forces Adjutant, Captain Houlton-Hart was also the adjutant of the Bermuda Cadet Corps. In 1960, the regiment amalgamated with the Northamptonshire Regiment to form the 2nd East Anglian Regiment (Duchess of Gloucester's Own Royal Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire) which was later amalgamated with the 1st East Anglian Regiment (Royal Norfolk and Suffolk), 3rd East Anglian Regiment (16th/44th Foot) and the Royal Leicestershire Regiment in September 1964 to form the Royal Anglian Regiment. The Royal Lincolnshire Regiment's paternal relationship to the Bermuda Rifles and the Bermuda Local Forces was continued by the 2nd East Anglian Regiment (Duchess of Gloucester's Own Royal Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire) and the Royal Anglian Regiment until the three Bermudian company-sized units amalgamated in 1965 to form the Bermuda Regiment (from 2015 the Royal Bermuda Regiment), with the relationship maintained since then between the Royal Anglian Regiment and the Royal Bermuda Regiment. Currently, 674 Squadron Army Air Corps uses the sphinx as an emblem within its crest in honour of its local connections with the Royal Lincolnshire Regiment.


Regimental museum

The Royal Lincolnshire Regiment and Lincolnshire Yeomanry collections are displayed in Lincoln's Museum of Lincolnshire Life. Artefacts concerning the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps contingents that served with the Lincolnshires during the two world wars are displayed in the Bermuda Maritime Museum (part of the National Museum of Bermuda) in the Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda.


Battle honours

The regiment's battle honours are as follows: *''Earlier Wars'' **Battle of Steenkerque, Steenkirk, 8 July 1692; War of the Spanish Succession, War of the Spanish Succession, 1702–1713; Battle of Blenheim, Blenheim, 13 August 1704; Battle of Ramillies, Ramillies, 23 May 1706; Battle of Oudenarde, Oudenarde, 11 July 1708; Battle of Malplaquet, Malplaquet, 11 September 1709; Siege of Bouchain (1711), Bouchain, 13 September 1711; Peninsular War, Peninsula, 1812–14; Battle of Sobraon, Sobraon, 10 February 1846; Siege of Multan, Mooltan, 1848; Battle of Gujrat, Goojuarat, 21 February 1849; Second Anglo-Sikh War, Punjab, 1848-49; Lucknow 1858; Battle of Atbara, Atbara, 1898; Battle of Omdurman, Khartoum, 1898; Battle of Paardeberg, Paardeberg, February 1900; South Africa 1900–02 *''Great War:'' **'' Mons, Le Cateau, Retreat from Mons, Marne 1914, Aisne 1914, '18, La Bassée 1914, Messines 1914, 1917, 1918, Armentières 1914, Ypres 1914, '15, '17, Nonne Bosschen, Neuve Chapelle, Gravenstafel, St. Julien, Frezenberg, Bellewaarde, Aubers, Loos, Somme 1916, '18, Albert 1916, '18,Bazentin, Delville Wood, Pozières, Flers-Courcelette, Morval, Thiepval, Ancre 1916, '18, Arras 1917, '18,Scarpe 1917, Scarpe 1918, '18, Arleux, Pilckem, Langemarck 1917, Menin Road, Polygon Wood, Broodseinde, Poelcappelle, Passchendaele, Cambrai 1917, '18, St. Quentin, Bapaume 1918, Lys, Estaires, Bailleul, Kemmel, Amiens, Drocourt Quéant, Hindenburg Line, Épéhy, Canal du Nord, St. Quentin Canal, Beaurevoir, Selle, Sambre, France and Flanders 1914–18, Suvla, Landing at Suvla, Scimitar Hill, Gallipoli 1915, Egypt 1916 *''Second World War:'' **Vist, Norway 1940, Dunkirk 1940, Normandy Landing, Cambes, Fontenay le Pesnil, Defence of Rauray, Caen, Orne, Bourguébus Ridge, Troarn, Nederrijn, Le Havre, Antwerp-Turnhout Canal, Venraij, Venlo Pocket, Rhineland, Hochwald, Lingen, Bremen, Arnhem 1945, North-West Europe 1940, '44–45, Sedjenane I, Mine de Sedjenane, Argoub Selah, North Africa 1943, Salerno, Vietri Pass, Capture of Naples, Cava di Terreni, Volturno Crossing, Garigliano Crossing, Monte Tuga, Gothic Line, Monte Gridolfo, Gemmano Ridge, Lamone Crossing, Battle of San Marino, San Marino, Italy 1943–45, Donbaik, Point 201 (Arakan), North Arakan, Buthidaung, Ngakyedauk Pass, Ramree, Burma 1943–45


Victoria Crosses

Victoria Crosses awarded to men of the Regiment were: * Private Denis Dempsey, Indian Mutiny (12 August 1857/14 March 1858) * Lieutenant Henry Marshman Havelock-Allan, Indian Mutiny (16 July 1857) * Private John Kirk (VC), John Kirk, Indian Mutiny (4 June 1857) * Lance-Sergeant Arthur Evans (VC), Arthur Evans First World War (2 September 1918) * Captain Percy Hansen, First World War (9 August 1915) * Temp Major Charles Ferguson Hoey, Second World War (16 February 1944) * Acting Corporal Charles Richard Sharpe, First World War (9 May 1915) * Captain John Brunt, Second World War (9 December 1944)


Colonel-in-Chief

1888–1902: F.M. Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar, Prince William Augustus Edward of Saxe-Weimar, KP, GCB, GCVO


Colonels of the Regiment

Colonels of the regiment were: * 1685–1688: Col.
John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath PC, 29 August 1628 – 22 August 1701, was an English landowner who served in the Royalist army during the First English Civil War and was rewarded for his services after the 1660 Stuart Restoration with a title ...
* 1688: Col. Sir Charles Carney (Jacobite), Charles Carney * 1688–1693: Col.
John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath PC, 29 August 1628 – 22 August 1701, was an English landowner who served in the Royalist army during the First English Civil War and was rewarded for his services after the 1660 Stuart Restoration with a title ...
[reappointed] * 1693–1703: Lt-Gen. Sir Bevil Granville * 1703–1715: Lt-Gen. William North, 6th Baron North, William North, 6th Baron North & Grey * 1715–1737: Lt-Gen. Henry Grove * 1737–1746: Lt-Gen. Francis Columbine * 1746–1749: F.M. James O'Hara, 2nd Baron Tyrawley (Lord Kilmaine) * 1749-1763: Lt-Gen. Edward Pole (British Army officer), Edward Pole


10th Regiment of Foot

* 1763–1781: Lt-Gen. Edward Sandford * 1781–1795: Lt-Gen. Robert Murray Keith (the younger), Sir Robert Murray Keith KB


10th (North Lincolnshire) Regiment of Foot

* 1795–1811: Henry Edward Fox * 1811–1824: Thomas Maitland (British Army officer), Thomas Maitland * 1824–1847: Sir John Lambert (British Army officer), John Lambert KCB * 1847–1860: Sir Thomas McMahon, 2nd Baronet * 1860–1863: Lt-Gen. Thomas Burke * 1863–1874: Lt-Gen. Sir Sidney John Cotton, GCB * 1874–1878: Lt-Gen. Sir John Garvock, GCB * 1878–1888: F.M. Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar, Prince William Augustus Edward of Saxe-Weimar, KP, GCB, GCVO


The Lincolnshire Regiment

* 1888–1890: Gen. Sir Henry Errington Longden, KCB, CSI * 1890: Gen. Reginald Yonge Shipley, CB * 1890–1903: Gen. Sir Julius Richard Glyn, KCB * 1903–1908: Lt-Gen. George Hyde Page * 1908–1914: Lt-Gen. Henry Fanshawe Davies * 1914–1938: Maj-Gen. Charles Rudyerd Simpson, CB * 1938–1948: Maj-Gen. John Priestman (army officer), John Hedley Thornton Priestman, CB, CBE, DSO, MC


The Royal Lincolnshire Regiment

* 1948–1958: Maj-Gen. John Arnold Atkinson Griffin, DSO * 1958: Brig. Ralph Henry Lefroy Oulton, CBE


See also

*John Brunt who won the VC in Italy while attached to the regiment *Charles Ferguson Hoey who won the VC in Burma while attached to the regiment *The Lincoln and Welland Regiment


References


Sources

* * * * * * * Ray Westlake, ''Tracing the Rifle Volunteers'', Barnsley: Pen and Sword, 2010, .


External links


Royal Lincolnshire Regiment (10th Foot)Official Webpage of 2 Royal Anglian RegimentGrimsby Branch, The Royal Lincolnshire & Royal Anglian Regimental AssociationLincoln Branch, The Royal Lincolnshire & Royal Anglian Regimental Association
in the Museum of Lincolnshire Life
Tenth Foot. American War of Independence period re-enactors
{{British Infantry Regiments World War I Royal Lincolnshire Regiment, Infantry regiments of the British Army, Royal Lincolnshire 1685 establishments in England Regiments of the British Army in World War II Regiments of the British Army in World War I Military units and formations in Lincolnshire Military units and formations in Lincoln Military units and formations established in 1685 Military units and formations disestablished in 1960 Military units and formations in Burma in World War II, R