64th Pioneers

64th Pioneers
Active 1758-1922
Country Indian Empire
Branch Army
Type Infantry
Part of Madras Army (to 1895)
Madras Command
Colors Red; faced orange, 1882 yellow, 1895 white
Engagements Carnatic Wars
Third Anglo-Mysore War
Boxer Rebellion
Second Anglo-Maratha War
World War I

The 64th Pioneers was an infantry regiment of the British Indian Army. They could trace their origins to 1758, when they were the 5th Battalion Coast Sepoys. Over the years the regiment was known by a number of different titles the 5th Carnatic Battalion 17691770, the 4th Carnatic Battalion 17701784, the 4th Madras Battalion 17841796, 1st Battalion, 4th Madras Native Infantry 17961824, the 4th Madras Native Infantry 18241883, the 4th Madras Native Infantry (Pioneers) 18831901, the 4th Madras Infantry (Pioneers) 19011903 and finally after the Kitchener reforms of the Indian Army when the names of the presidencies were dropped the 64th Pioneers. During World War I they were in the Mandalay Brigade in the Burma Division. After World War I the Indian Government reformed the army again moving from single battalion regiment to multi battalion regiments.[1] Following these reforms the 64th Pioneers became the 2nd Battalion, 3rd Madras Pioneers in 1922, and then in 1929, they joined the Corps of Madras Pioneers. They were finally disbanded for economic reasons in 1933.

Campaigns

References

  1. Sumner p.15


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