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The Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) (until 1921 known as the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment) was a line infantry
regiment A regiment is a military unit. Its role and size varies markedly, depending on the country, service and/or a specialisation. In Medieval Europe, the term "regiment" denoted any large body of front-line soldiers, recruited or conscript ...
of the
British Army The British Army is the principal land warfare force of the United Kingdom, a part of the British Armed Forces along with the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force. , the British Army comprises 79,380 regular full-time personnel, 4,090 Gurk ...
that was in existence from 1881 to 1970. In 1970, the regiment was amalgamated with the
Lancashire Regiment The Lancashire Regiment (Prince of Wales's Volunteers) was an infantry regiment of the British Army that had a very short existence. History The regiment was formed, as a consequence of defence cuts instigated by the 1957 Defence White Paper, by ...
to form the
Queen's Lancashire Regiment The Queen's Lancashire Regiment (30th, 40th, 47th, 59th, 81st and 82nd Regiments of Foot) (QLR) was an infantry regiment of the British Army, part of the King's Division. It was formed on 25 March 1970 at Connaught Barracks in Dover through ...
which was, in 2006, amalgamated with the
King's Own Royal Border Regiment The King's Own Royal Border Regiment was an infantry regiment of the British Army in existence from 1959 until 2006, and was part of the King's Division. It was formed at Barnard Castle on 1 October 1959 through the amalgamation of the King's Ow ...
and the King's Regiment (Liverpool and Manchester) to form the Duke of Lancaster Regiment (King's, Lancashire and Border).


History


Formation

The Loyal North Lancashire Regiment was formed as part of the Childers Reforms of 1881 by the amalgamation of the
47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot The 47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, raised in Scotland in 1741. It served in North America during the Seven Years' War and American Revolutionary War and also fought during the Napoleonic Wars and ...
,
81st Regiment of Foot (Loyal Lincoln Volunteers) The 81st Regiment of Foot (Loyal Lincoln Volunteers) was an infantry regiment of the British Army, raised in 1793. Under the Childers Reforms it amalgamated with the 47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot to form the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment in ...
, 3rd Royal Lancashire Militia (The Duke of Lancaster's Own) and the Preston Rifles, 11th and Bolton Rifles, 14th Lancashire Rifle Volunteer Corps. The Loyals were one of seven county regiments recruiting in Lancashire. The depot was at Preston, Lancashire, Preston, and the regimental district also included the towns of Bolton, Chorley, Farnworth, Hindley, Greater Manchester, Hindley, and the Isle of Man. As part of the Cardwell Reforms, the 47th and 81st regiments were linked. The depot for the linked regiment was Fulwood Barracks at Preston. Beginning in 1873, the regiments which would eventually be re-designated as the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment were brigaded together and began moving their depots to Fulwood. However, it would not be until 1877 that the moves were completed when the required facilities were completed. The barracks themselves had been completed in 1848 and served as the station for a number of units between 1848 and 1881. Notably, in the 1860s, it was occupied by the 11th Depot Battalion, which served as depot unit for 11th Hussars and of the 1st/10th, 2nd/10th, 1st/11th, 32nd, 41st and 55th Regiments of Foot. In 1861, Pte Patrick McCaffery, a 19-year-old private soldier with the 32nd (Cornwall) Regiment of Foot shot and killed the Depot's commander, Colonel Hugh Crofton, and Depot's adjutant, Captain John Hanham, with a single shot. The incident began over McCaffery's punishment for failing to vigorously pursue an investigation into some children who had broken some windows at the barracks. McCaffery was tried and convicted at the Liverpool Assizes (England and Wales), Assizes. He was executed on 11 January 1862. It is claimed that, since that time, his ghost haunts the officer's mess at Fulwood barracks.


Boer War, 1899–1902

In 1899, the Loyal Regiment found itself assigned to South Africa. With hostilities seeming likely in the aftermath of the Jameson Raid, the De Beers company became increasingly concerned with the security of its operations in Kimberley, Northern Cape, Kimberly. Although a town guard and other volunteer formations had been raised, the De Beers company and citizens of Kimberly petitioned for additional security measures. On 7 October 1899, an artillery battery and four companies of the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment were dispatched to secure the town under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Kekewich. Five days later, with the Second Boer War, start of hostilities, Boer forces arrived and began to beSiege of Kimberley, isolate Kimberley. For the next 126 days, the North Lancs and the local militias would be cut off and subjected to regular shelling from the Boer artillery. The siege was finally lifted when Brigadier-General John French, 1st Earl of Ypres, Sir John French's Cavalry Division was able to break through the Boer lines on 15 February 1900. With its commander and four of its companies under siege in Kimberly, the balance of the 1st Battalion served with Paul Methuen, 3rd Baron Methuen, Lord Methuen. Together with the 1st Royal Northumberland Fusiliers, Northumberland Fusiliers, 2nd Northamptonshire Regiment, Northampton Regiment, and 2nd King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry, King's Own (Yorkshire Light Infantry), they formed the 9th Brigade of the 1st Division. They served with 9th Brigade at the Battles of Battle of Belmont (1899), Belmont, Battle of Modder River, Modder River and Battle of Magersfontein, Magersfotein. Following the relief of Kimberly in February 1900, the reunited battalion would remain a part of Methuen's command until July, when it was detached to guard Oliphant's Nek. However, on 8 August, they abandoned this task at the orders of Colonel Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell, Baden-Powell and left the area unguarded. This allowed Christiaan de Wet to escape the British forces attempting to catch him. Although the Boer escaped, it was ruled that orders received by the Loyals were to blame, and the regiment escaped censure. The end of 1900 found 1st Loyals back with the 9th Brigade. As part of the brigade, they took part in actions around Klerksdorp. Remaining under Lord Methuen's command for the rest of the war, the Loyals provided men to be formed into Mounted infantry, mounted infantry companies as the war shifted from large engagements into a Second Boer War#Third phase: Guerrilla war (September 1900 – May 1902), guerrilla war. The Loyals would continue to serve throughout the guerrilla phase, engaging Boer commandos on a number of occasions until the end of the war with the signing of the Treaty of Vereeniging on 31 May 1902. Following the end of hostilities, 525 officers and men of the battalion left Cape Town in the SS ''Carisbrook Castle'' in September 1902, arriving at Southampton early the following month. The 3rd Battalion was among the first militia units to be embodied for full-time duty, on 13 December 1899, and went to Kent for pre-deployment training at Shorncliffe Army Camp, Shorncliffe and Lydd. It then embarked on 12 January 1900 and sailed to Malta to relieve a regular army battalion in the garrison there. A year later the manpower needs of the guerrilla war in South Africa led to the battalion re-embarking from Malta on 2 March 1901. It arrived in South Africa on 30 March and was employed on the Line of communications, lines of communication from Port Elizabeth to Aliwal North. The battalion embarked for home on 13 February 1902 and was disembodied on 15 March.Royal Lancashire Militia at Lancashire Infantry Museum.
/ref>


Early 20th century

The 2nd Battalion had been stationed in the United Kingdom after the amalgamation in 1881, serving in England to 1887, at Jersey 1887-1890, in Ireland 1890-1896, and again in England until 1899. From 1899 there were postings in the Mediterranean Sea, Mediterranean, at Malta until 1901, followed by a year at Crete, and from May 1902 at Gibraltar. In 1908, the Volunteers and Militia were reorganised nationally, with the former becoming the Territorial Force and the latter the Special Reserve (militia), Special Reserve; the regiment now had one Reserve and two Territorial battalions.


First World War, 1914–1918

The Regiment raised a number of extra war service battalions during World War I, The Great War. In all the Loyal North Lancs expanded to 21 battalions of infantry for service at home and abroad.James, pp. 88–9. Of these, there were the two regular battalions (the 1st and 2nd Battalions), the Special Reserve (former militia) battalion (3rd (Reserve) Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment, 3rd (Reserve) Battalion), ten Territorial Force battalions (Preston Rifles, 1/4th, Bolton Rifles, 1/5th, Preston Rifles, 2/4th, Bolton Rifles, 2/5th, Preston Rifles, 3/4th, Bolton Rifles, 3/5th, Bolton Rifles, 4/5th, 1/12th (Pioneers), 2/12th and Preston Rifles#14th Loyals, 14th Battalions), and seven service battalions of Kitchener's Army (6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th (Reserve) and 15th Battalions), as well as a home service battalion (13th (Home Service Battalions, Home Service) Battalion).


Regular Army

The 1st Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 2nd Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 2nd Brigade in the History of the British 1st Division during the World Wars, 1st Division in August 1914 for service on the Western Front (World War I), Western Front. The 2nd Battalion landed at Tanga, Tanzania, Tanga in German East Africa as part of the Bangalore Brigade, 27th Indian Brigade in November 1914 and then moved to Mombasa later in the month for service in East Africa; it was then transferred to Egypt in January 1917 for service in North Africa and to France in May 1918 for service on the Western Front.


Special Reserve

The 3rd (Reserve) Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment, 3rd (Reserve) Battalion spent the whole war at Felixstowe in the Harwich Garrison fulfilling its dual role of coast defence and preparing reinforcement drafts of regular reservists, special reservists, recruits and returning wounded for the regular battalions serving overseas. Thousands of men would have passed through its ranks during the war. It probably assisted in the formation of 11th (Reserve) Battalion at Felixstowe on 2 October 1914 from Kitchener's Army volunteers.


Territorial Force

The Preston Rifles, 1/4th Battalion landed at Boulogne-sur-Mer, Boulogne as part of the 154th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 154th Brigade in the 51st (Highland) Division in May 1915 for service on the Western Front. The 1/5th Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 16th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 16th Brigade in the 6th Infantry Division (United Kingdom), 6th Division in February 1915 also for service on the Western Front. The Preston Rifles, 2/4th Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 170th (2/1st North Lancashire) Brigade, 170th Brigade in the 57th (2nd West Lancashire) Division in February 1917 also for service on the Western Front. The 2/5th Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 154th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 154th Brigade in the 51st (Highland) Division in February 1917 also for service on the Western Front. The 4/5th Battalion landed at Le Havre as part of the 170th (2/1st North Lancashire) Brigade, 170th Brigade in the 57th (2nd West Lancashire) Division in February 1917 also for service on the Western Front. The 1/12th Battalion (Pioneers) landed at Le Havre as pioneer battalion to the 60th (2/2nd London) Division in June 1916 also for service on the Western Front.


New Army battalions

The 6th (Service) Battalion sailed as part of the 38th Brigade (United Kingdom), 38th Brigade of the 13th (Western) Division to join the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force and landed at Anzac Cove on 4 August 1915. After participating in the battles at Anzac Cove and Suvla Bay, the battalion, along with the rest of the division, was withdrawn from Gallipoli and sent to Egypt to refit in January 1916. In February 1916, the division was ordered to move to join the Tigris Corps in its operations to relieve the Anglo-Indian garrison besieged at Kut. As part of the Tigris Corps, the battalion attempted to lift the siege of Kut. Initially deployed along the left bank of the Tigris River, the battalion participated in the Battle of Fallahiya on 6 April 1916 and Battle of Sanniyat on 9 April 1916. The battalion managed to break into the Turkish positions at the Sanniyat, but because follow-on forces were unable to link up with them, they along with the rest of the 38th Brigade were eventually driven back. The battalion were next tasked with seizing the beachhead on the far side of the Diyala River. Approximately 100 men of the battalion were able to make the initial crossing on 8 March 1917. Subjected to multiple counter-attacks through the day, the battalion held on to the beachhead despite the main force being unable to land more troops. They were not relieved until the next day when the Turkish forces retreated. The 7th (Service) Battalion landed at Boulogne as part of the 56th Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 56th Brigade in the 19th (Western) Division in July 1915 for service on the Western Front. The 8th (Service) Battalion and the 9th (Service) Battalion both landed at Boulogne as part of the 74th Brigade (United Kingdom), 74th Brigade in the 25th Division (United Kingdom), 25th Division in September 1915 also for service on the Western Front. The 10th (Service) Battalion landed at Boulogne as part of the 112th Brigade (United Kingdom), 112th Brigade in the 37th Division (United Kingdom), 37th Division in August 1915 also for service on the Western Front. The 15th (Service) Battalion landed at Boulogne as pioneer battalion to the 14th (Light) Division in July 1918 also for service on the Western Front.


Between the wars

Even though The Great War ended with the Armistice, battalions of the Loyal Regiment remained active in the early post-war years. The 2nd Loyals were sent to Ireland for service during the Irish War of Independence. The Loyals were dispatched to serve during the Chanak Crisis. Both battalions of the Loyals served in China during the Warlord Era and the Chinese Civil War, protecting the legation in Peking and the international settlements at Tientsin, Canton, and most importantly Shanghai. The 1st Loyals also saw action in policing the Mandatory Palestine, British Mandate of Palestine during the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine.


Second World War, 1939–1945


Regular Army battalions

At the outbreak of the World War II, Second World War, the 1st Battalion, Loyal Regiment were part of the 2nd Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 2nd Infantry Brigade, which also included, in addition to 1st Loyals, the 2nd Battalion, North Staffordshire Regiment and the 1st Battalion, Gordon Highlanders (6th Gordons from early March 1940). The brigade was attached to the History of the British 1st Division during the World Wars, 1st Infantry Division. In September 1939 they were sent to France as part of the British Expeditionary Force (World War II), British Expeditionary Force (BEF) and remained there alongside the French Army until May 1940. The 1st Loyals would participate in the fighting in Battle of France, France and Battle of Belgium, Belgium in 1940, including acting as part of the rearguard for the Dunkirk evacuation during the Battle of Dunkirk. After spending two years on Operation Sea Lion, home defence, the 1st Loyals would eventually would see action again as part of the First Army (United Kingdom), British First Army, fighting in the North African Campaign, in the Tunisia Campaign in early 1943, and Italian Campaign (World War II), Italian Campaign and at the Battle of Anzio where the 1st Division saw some of the fiercest fighting of the war, and 1st Loyals lost a Company (military unit), company during a Battle of Anzio#German counterattacks, German counterattack but managed to repel them. In May the battalion fought in the breakout of the Anzio bridgehead, Operation Diadem also fought in the battles around the Gothic Line throughout the summer, now as part of the Eighth Army (United Kingdom), British Eighth Army. The battalion, along with the rest of the 1st Division, were sent to Mandatory Palestine, Palestine in January 1945. During the fighting in the Tunisian campaign, in April 1943, Lieutenant (British Army and Royal Marines), Lieutenant Willward Alexander Sandys-Clarke was posthumously awarded the regiment's only Victoria Cross of the war. Upon the commencement of hostilities in 1939, the 2nd Battalion, Loyal Regiment found themselves stationed in the Far East as part of Malaya Command, Singapore Fortress's 1st Malaya Infantry Brigade. After the Empire of Japan, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the 2nd Loyals fought in Malaya as part of the delaying action during the Malayan Campaign, Battle of Malaya. Eventually, the 2nd Battalion surrendered along with the rest of the Singapore garrison on 15 February 1942. The survivors spent the rest of the war as Prisoner of war, prisoners of the Imperial Japanese Army. Following the destruction of the 2nd Loyals with its surrender at Singapore, the battalion was reformed in Britain. The 10th Battalion, a hostilities-only battalion created in 1940, was re-designated as the new 2nd Battalion on 28 May 1942.


Territorial Army battalions

In addition to the two Regular Army battalions, the Loyal Regiment also had two Army Reserve (United Kingdom), Territorial Army battalions (the 5th and 6th) at the start of the war. The 4th Battalion had been converted to the Preston Rifles, 62nd Searchlight Regiment, Royal Engineers before the war. In 1940, it was transferred to the Royal Artillery. In 1943, it became Preston Rifles, 150th (Loyals) Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery and, in March 1944, joined the 9th Armoured Division (United Kingdom), 9th Armoured Division until it was disbanded and the regiment later served with the 55th (West Lancashire) Infantry Division from August 1944 until March 1945 when it was sent to Western Front (World War II), North-west Europe to join the Second Army (United Kingdom), British Second Army. The 5th Battalion was trained as a motorcycle battalion in the 55th (West Lancashire) Division. The 5th Battalion later was transferred and converted, in 1941, into a Reconnaissance Corps unit for the 18th Infantry Division (United Kingdom), 18th (East Anglian) Division and re-designated as the Bolton Rifles, 18th Battalion, Reconnaissance Corps. The 18th Recce was transferred with the rest of the 18th Division as reinforcements for the Battle of Singapore. They arrived at Singapore late in the campaign without much of their equipment and were used as regular infantrymen until the surrender on 15 February 1942. Like the men of the Regular 2nd Battalion captured in Singapore, the men of 18th Recce spent the rest of the war as prisoners of the Imperial Japanese Army. The 6th Battalion was raised in 1939 as a 2nd Line duplicate of the 5th Battalion and served with its parent unit in the 55th (West Lancashire) Division until being transferred to the 59th (Staffordshire) Infantry Division, 59th (Staffordshire) Division soon after the outbreak of war. The battalion, like its parent unit, was also trained as a motorcycle battalion in the 59th Division. Like the 5th Battalion, the 6th Battalion Loyals were also converted in 1941 from their infantry role. The battalion was transferred to the Reconnaissance Corps and converted and re-designated as Bolton Rifles, 2nd Reconnaissance Regiment and joined the 2nd Infantry Division (United Kingdom), 2nd Infantry Division, a Regular army, Regular Army formation, on 30 April 1941. With the rest of the division, it was transferred in April 1942 to British Raj, British India, where it would be engaged against the Imperial Japanese Army, notably in India during the Battle of Kohima in 1944 and then as part of William Slim, 1st Viscount Slim, William Slim's, commander of the Fourteenth Army (United Kingdom), British Fourteenth Army, offensive to Burma Campaign, re-capture Burma.


War Service battalions

The 7th Battalion was a wartime infantry unit raised at the regimental headquarters, Fulwood Barracks, Preston, on 4 July 1940. The bulk of the battalion's recruits were men from Merseyside, Cheshire and Lancashire, who had been Conscription in the United Kingdom, called up for military service. Along with the 8th and 9th battalions it assembled in camp at Caernarfon where, together with 12th Battalion Royal Welch Fusiliers, they constituted No 15 Infantry Training Group, later 215th Brigade (United Kingdom), 215th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home), a home defence formation.Loyals at Regiments.org
/ref>8 Loyals War Diary, 1940–41, The National Archives (United Kingdom), The National Archives (TNA), Kew file WO 166/4446.Joslen, p. 378. Training was hampered by the shortage of rifles and equipment, the tented camp became uninhabitable during winter gales, and the battalions went into billets. The 7th battalion went on anti-invasion duties in Liverpool. In February 1941, the brigade transferred to the Durham and North Riding County Division in North East England, guarding the Scarborough, North Yorkshire, Scarborough coast, Darlington and Redcar against Operation Sea Lion, the German invasion of England, which never arrived. On 13 November 1941, the 7th Battalion was transferred to the Royal Artillery and converted into the 92nd (Loyals) Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery and joined the 3rd Division (United Kingdom), British 3rd Infantry Division, a Standing army, Regular Army formation. The regiment Invasion of Normandy, landed in Normandy with the rest of 3rd Division on Normandy landings, D-Day, 6 June 1944, and performed notable service during Operation Tonga in defence of Pegasus Bridge and Horsa Bridge and later fought in the entire North West Europe Campaign.Farndale, Annex M.Routledge, pp. 310–9. The 8th Battalion was formed on 4 July 1940 at Ashton-under-Lyne, with the majority of the recruits coming from Liverpool and the Cadre (military), cadre of experienced non-commissioned officers and men from the Manchester Regiment's Machine Gun Training Centre at Ladysmith Barracks, Ashton-under-Lyne. It also served in 215th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home), and went into billets in disused mills at Biddulph and Huyton during the winter of 1940–41. Like the 7th Loyals, the 8th Battalion was also transferred to the Royal Artillery, becoming the 93rd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery, on 15 November 1941. In January 1942, it joined the 42nd Support Group (United Kingdom), 42nd Support Group in 42nd Armoured Division (United Kingdom), 42nd Armoured Division (converted from the 42nd (East Lancashire) Infantry Division). When the 42nd Armoured was broken up in October 1943, the regiment served in Home Forces, joining 80th Anti-Aircraft Brigade (United Kingdom), 80th AA Brigade to train for an assault role on D-Day. Like the 92nd LAA Regiment, the 93rd LAA Regiment served with the Second Army (United Kingdom), British Second Army in the North West Europe Campaign from 1944 to 1945. The 9th Battalion was also raised in 1940, serving alongside the 7th and 8th battalions in 215th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home). In 1941, the battalion was transferred to the Royal Armoured Corps and converted into the 148th Regiment Royal Armoured Corps. However, they continued to wear their Loyal Regiment cap badge on the black beret of the Royal Armoured Corps, as did all infantry units converted in such a way. The regiment joined 33rd Armoured Brigade (United Kingdom), 33rd Armoured Brigade (previously 33rd Tank Brigade) and landed on the beaches of Invasion of Normandy, Normandy on 13 June 1944. The regiment fought throughout the Battle for Caen until it was disbanded, due to an acute shortage of manpower, on 16 August 1944, and replaced in the brigade by the East Riding of Yorkshire Yeomanry, 1st East Riding Yeomanry. The 50th (Holding) Battalion was raised in June 1940. The battalion's purpose was to temporarily 'hold' men who were medically unfit or homeless, awaiting orders, on courses or returning from abroad. In October, it was redesignated as the 10th Battalion and joined the 210th Independent Infantry Brigade (Home) and then the 203rd Infantry Brigade (United Kingdom), 203rd Independent Infantry Brigade (Home). The battalion was again re-designated as the 2nd Battalion on 28 May 1942 after the original 2nd Battalion was Battle of Singapore, lost at Singapore in February. The new 2nd Battalion served mainly in the United Kingdom with the 199th (Manchester) Brigade, 199th Brigade (later 166th Bde) in 55th (West Lancashire) Infantry Division. However, in October 1944, the battalion was sent to Italy to fight in the Italian Campaign (World War II), Italian Campaign with the 20th Indian Infantry Brigade, 10th Indian Infantry Division, and saw action in Spring 1945 offensive in Italy, Operation Grapeshot, the final offensive in Italy.


Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire), 1946–1970

The Loyal Regiment continued to serve during the sunset of the British Empire. Battalions of the regiment served in the Mandatory Palestine, Palestine Mandate. The 1st Battalion served in the Malayan Emergency from 1957 to 1959. B Company was dispatched to Aden during the Emergency in 1966. A Company was also dispatched followed by C Company prior to the withdrawal of British troops that year. The Regiment was amalgamated with Lancashire Regiment, The Lancashire Regiment (Prince of Wales's Volunteers) to form Queen's Lancashire Regiment, The Queen's Lancashire Regiment at Connaught Barracks, Dover, Connaught Barracks in Dover in March 1970.


Regimental museum

The Lancashire Infantry Museum is based at Fulwood Barracks in Preston, Lancashire, Preston.


Battle honours

The following are the battle honours earned by the Loyal Regiment. This includes those awarded to the 47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot, 81st (Loyal Lincoln Volunteers) Regiment of Foot, the predecessors of the Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire). *Peninsula Campaign: ''Maida, Corunna, Tarifa, Vittoria, San Sebastian, Nive, Peninsula.'' *First Anglo-Burmese War, 1824–1826: ''Ava'' *Crimean War, 1854–1856: ''Alma; Inkermann, Sevastopol.'' *Second Afghan War, 1878–1880: ''Ali Masjid, Afghanistan 1878-9'' *Anglo-Boer War, 1899–1902: ''Defence of Kimberley, South Africa 1899–1902; Mediterranean 1900–01'' *First World War, 1914–1918: ''Mons; Aisne 1914, 1918; Ypres 1914, 1917, 1918; Somme 1916, 1918; Lys; Hindenburg Line; Suvla; Gaza; Baghdad; Kilimanjaro. Retreat from Mons; Marne 1914, 1918; Langemarck 1914; Gheluvelt; Nonne Bosschen; Givenchy 1914; Aubers; Festubert 1915; Loos; Albert 1916; Bazentin; Pozières; Guillemont; Ginchy; Flers–Courcelette; Morval; Ancre Heights; Ancre 1916; Arras 1917, 1918; Scarpe 1917; Arleux; Messines 1917; Pilckem; Menin Road; Polygon Wood; Poelcapelle; Passchendaele; Cambrai 1917, 1918; St Quentin; Bapaume 1918; Estaires; Bailleul; Kemmel; Béthune; Scherpenberg; Soissonnais-Ourcq; Drocourt-Quéant; Epéhy; Canal du Nord; St Quentin Canal; Courtrai; Selle; Sambre; France and Flanders 1914–18; Doiran 1917; Macedonia 1917; Sari Bair; Gallipoli 1915; Egypt 1916; Nebi Samwil; Jerusalem; Jaffa; Tell'Asur; Palestine 1917–18; Tigris 1916; Kut al Amara 1917; Mesopotamia 1916–18; East Africa 1914–16.'' *Second World War, 1939–1945: ''Dunkirk 1940; Djebel Kess Kiss; Gueriat el Atach Ridge; North Africa 1943; Anzio; Fiesole; Monte Grande; Italy 1944-5; Johore; Singapore Island. North-West Europe 1940; Banana Ridge; Medjez Plain; Djebel Bou Aoukaz 1943 I; Gab Gab Gap; Rome; Gothic Line; Monte Gamberaldi; Monte Ceco; Batu Pahar; Malaya 1941-2''


Regimental traditions


Anniversaries

As with many British Army regiments, the Loyals accumulated a number of traditional observances during their existence. The first to happen each year was the celebration of the regiment's Siege of Kimberley, defence of Kimberley during the Second Boer War, Boer War. Annually, the regiment would celebrate this battle honour on 15 February. The next anniversary on the calendar commemorated the victory at the Battle of Maida, where the 1st Battalion of the 81st Regiment of Foot (Loyal Lincoln Volunteers), 81st Regiment, won the battle honour carried by the Loyals. Annually, the regiment commemorated the battle with a parade and dinner in the mess.Griffin, p. 92. Annually on 13 September, the Loyals commemorated Quebec Day. This celebrated the 47th Regiment's participation in the capture of Quebec under General Wolfe. Men of the 1st Battalion of the Loyals, successors to the
47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot The 47th (Lancashire) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of the British Army, raised in Scotland in 1741. It served in North America during the Seven Years' War and American Revolutionary War and also fought during the Napoleonic Wars and ...
, were eligible to become members of the Wolfe Society. The anniversary was marked by a trooping of the colours while the regimental band played the 47th Regiment's slow march followed by ''Quebec''. On New Year's Eve, the Sergeants' Mess of the Loyals would hold a ball in celebration of Tarifa Day. The ball commemorated the defense of Tarifa by the 47th Regiment in 1811 against a determined assault by the French army.


Nicknames

The Loyal Regiment inherited its nicknames from its predecessor formations. The regiment's uniform, which was initially scarlet with white facings and the Lancashire rose on their cap badges earned them the name "Cauliflowers" because of the similar looks. For their service under Wolfe during the Seven Years' War, as well as his earlier service in the regiment, they were known as "Wolfe's Own". As they recruited and were affiliated within Lancashire, they were also known as the "Lancashire Lads".


Possessions

Over the years, the Loyals, as well as their predecessors acquired a number of possessions which were prized by the regiment. Important to every regiment of the British Army was its silver. In 1958, in honour of Queen Elizabeth II, the regiment's officers purchased an equestrian statue which was placed in front of the commanding officer's place setting. Before the junior lieutenant's place setting, there was placed a silver fox statue, acquired by the regiment in 1928. Finally, there was the Subaltern's Cup. This was a silver goblet that was part of the place setting of the senior lieutenant of the regiment and used as part of a drinking ritual when the senior lieutenant was finally promoted to captain.Griffin, p. 93. Perhaps the oldest of the regiment's treasures was a Decorative boxes#Snuff box, snuff box made from a tortoise shell. After the Battle of Maida, the commander of the 1/81st Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel Kempt, had a dinner made from a tortoise found near the battle. He turned the shell of the tortoise into a snuff box and presented it to the officer's mess.


Victoria Cross recipients

* Private (rank), Private John McDermond (47th Regiment of Foot, later 1st Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment) 5 November 1854, Inkerman, Crimea. * Private Henry Edward Kenny (1st Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment) 25 September 1915, Loos, France. * (Temporary) Lieutenant (British Army and Royal Marines), Lieutenant Thomas Orde Lawder Wilkinson (7th (Service) Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment) 5 July 1916, posthumously. * Lieutenant Richard Basil Brandram Jones (8th (Service) Battalion, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment), 21 May 1916, Vimy, France, posthumously. * Lieutenant Willward Alexander Sandys-Clarke (1st Battalion, Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire)), 23 April 1943, Guiriat El Atach, Tunisia, posthumously.


Regimental Colonels

Colonels of the regiment were: *1881–1885 (1st Battalion) Gen. Sir William Norcott, William Sherbrooke Ramsay Norcott, KCB *1881–?1900 (2nd Battalion) Gen. Henry Renny, CSI *1885–1909 (1st Battalion only, 1885–?1900) Gen. Sir Richard Thomas Farren, GCB *1909–1916 Maj-Gen. Hugh Thomas Jones-Vaughan *1916–1926 Gen. Sir James Willcocks, GCB, GCMG, KCSI, DSO *1926–1931 Lt-Gen. Sir Gerald Francis Ellison, KCB, KCMG *1931–1945 Brig-Gen. John Bayford Wells, CMG, CBE, DSO *1945–1949 Brig. John Percy Delabene Underwood, DSO *1949–1959 Brig. George Giffard Rawson Williams, MBE *1959–1970 Brig. Geoffrey Rimbault, Geoffrey Ackworth Rimbault, CBE, DSO, MC *In ''1970, the Regiment was amalgamated with Lancashire Regiment, The Lancashire Regiment (Prince of Wales's Volunteers) to form the
Queen's Lancashire Regiment The Queen's Lancashire Regiment (30th, 40th, 47th, 59th, 81st and 82nd Regiments of Foot) (QLR) was an infantry regiment of the British Army, part of the King's Division. It was formed on 25 March 1970 at Connaught Barracks in Dover through ...
''


Notes


Sources

* *
Col George Jackson Hay, ''An Epitomized History of the Militia (The Constitutional Force)'', London:United Service Gazette, 1905/Ray Westlake Military Books, 1987
ISBN 0-9508530-7-0. * Brig E.A. James, ''British Regiments 1914–18'', London: Samson Books, 1978/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2001, . * *


External links

* Includes chronological index of titles. *
Duke of Lancaster's Regiment, Lancashire Infantry MuseumThe Loyal North Lancashire Regiment at The Long, Long Trail.Loyal North Lancashire Regiment 1914–18
Biographies of soldiers who served during the First World War.

{{British Infantry Regiments World War I Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire), Infantry regiments of the British Army Military units and formations established in 1881 Regiments of the British Army in World War I Regiments of the British Army in World War II Military units and formations disestablished in 1970 Military units and formations in Lancashire Military units and formations in Preston, Lancashire 1881 establishments in the United Kingdom Military units and formations in British Malaya in World War II, R