North Irish Horse

North Irish Horse

The badge of the North Irish Horse.
Active 1902–1946
1947–Present (as a Sqdn)
Country  United Kingdom
Branch  British Army
Type Yeomanry
Role Formation Reconnaissance and Signals
Size Two Squadrons
Part of Royal Armoured Corps and Royal Signals
Garrison/HQ Belfast
Nickname(s) The Horse, The Millionaires Own
Motto(s) Quis Separabit (Who shall separate us) (Latin)
March

Garryowen

Anniversaries Hitler Line, 24 May
Engagements Somme, Ypres, Hitler Line, Iraq, Afghanistan
Commanders
Honorary Colonel Colonel Danny De B Kinahan
Insignia
Tartan Saffron (pipes)

The North Irish Horse is a yeomanry unit of the British Territorial Army raised in the northern counties of Ireland in the aftermath of the Second Boer War. Raised and patronized by the nobility from their inception to the present day, they were one of the first non-regular units to be deployed to France and the Low Counties with the British Expeditionary Force in 1914 during World War I and fought with distinction both as mounted troops and later as a Cyclist Regiment, achieving 18 battle honours. The regiment was reduced to a single man in the inter war years and re-raised for World War II where they achieved their greatest distinctions in the North African and Italian campaigns. Reduced again after the Cold War the regiment's name still exists in B (North Irish Horse) Squadron, the Queen's Own Yeomanry and 69 (North Irish Horse) Signal Squadron (V) part of 32 Signal Regiment.

Under the plans for Army 2020, B (North Irish Horse) Squadron has come under command of the newly established Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry Regiment while 69 (North Irish Horse) Signal Squadron has become 40 (NIH) Signal Squadron.

Background

The raising of Militia units in Ireland commenced with the "Militia Act 1793" which in Ireland was used in conjunction with the compulsory disbandment of Lord Charlemont's Irish Volunteers who had become a political entity and "out of the scope of official influence."[1] The scope of the Militia was broadened by an act of the Dublin Parliament in 1796 which led to the raising of 49 troops of cavalry, later renamed yeomanry. A troop normally consisted of a captain, two lieutenants (commissioned by the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland) and forty men along with a permanent sergeant and trumpeter. Troops were grouped together under the command of a regular army Brigade Major. The force was known collectively as the "Irish Yeomanry" Each man provided his own horse.[2] The falling need for this force eventually led to their disbandment in 1834.[3]

With the advent of the Boer War a parliamentary decision was taken to raise squadrons of Yeomanry Cavalry under the "Militia and Yeomanry Act 1901" for service in South Africa. Because of the pressing need to raise this force quickly normal cavalry training with swords or lances (known as the arme blanche) was dispensed with and the new yeomanry was issued only with rifles in a break with cavalry tradition. This new force was called the "Imperial Yeomanry". Six squadrons were quickly raised in Ireland including the 46th (1st Belfast), 54th (2nd Belfast), the 60th (North Irish), and 45th (Dublin) (known as the Dublin Hunt Squadron) commanded by the Captain, the Earl of Longford. The 45th, 46th, 47th and 54th formed the 13th (Irish) Battalion Imperial Yeomanry. The 47th (Duke of Cambridge's Own) were raised from rich "men-about-town" in London by the Earl of Donoughmore and paid £130 each for their horses and equipment. The officers of the battalion included: the Earl of Leitrim, Sir John Power (of the Powers whiskey family), James Craig (later Lord Craigavon) and was known as the "Millionaires Own".[4]

Formation

Following the South African war sixteen new yeomanry regiments were formed, two of these in Ireland. King Edward VII approved the formation of the North of Ireland Imperial Yeomanry and the South of Ireland Imperial Yeomanry in 1901. Their formation was sanctioned and gazetted on 7 January 1902. Recruiting for the North of Ireland Imperial Yeomanry did not begin until 1903, with four squadrons being raised:

Ths first training camp was held at Blackrock Camp Dundalk in 1903, thereafter, camps were held every third year at the Curragh and other years at Ballykinlar, Dundrum, Magilligan and Bundoran.

They became a special reserve regiment in 1908 and the name changed to the North Irish Horse as part of the Haldane Reforms, the formation of the Territorial Force, which created the Special Reserve of Militia and Yeomanry regiments in Ireland. The North Irish Horse, along with the other Militia battalions remained on the Special Reserve list until 1953. This arrangement gave the Irish units precedence in the line over the Territorial Army regiments just after the Cavalry of the Line but also guaranteed the use of the Militia and Yeomanry in overseas conflicts.[6]

The first commander was the Earl of Shaftesbury whose adjutant was Captain RGO Bramston-Newman, 7th (Princess Royal's) Dragoon Guards, from Cork. Senior NCOs from regular, Cavalry of the Line units became the permanent staff instructors (PSIs). On 7 December 1913 the Duke of Abercorn was appointed as the Regiment's first Honorary Colonel.[7]

The Great War

The declaration of war against Germany in August 1914 found the North Irish Horse at summer camp, as was its sister regiment the South Irish Horse. The Expeditionary Force squadron (designated A Squadron) under the command of Major Lord Cole, consisting of 6 officers and 154 other ranks, along with its counterpart in the South Irish Horse (designated B Squadron) was assigned to the British Expeditionary Force. Both squadrons sailed from Dublin on the SS Architect[8] on 17 August 1914. They were the first non-regular troops to land in France and be in action in the First World War. They were joined shortly afterwards by C Squadron of the North Irish Horse under the command of Major Lord Massereene and Ferrard DSO. Three more squadrons of the 'Horse' were to join the regiment in France landing on 2 May 1915, 17 November 1915 and 11 January 1916. A total of 70 officers and 1,931 men of the regiment went to war between 1914 and 1916.[9]

The regiment did not stay together as a unit but squadrons were attached to different formations in the BEF as and when required.

On 25 May 1916 2nd North Irish Horse was formed which included, as A Sqn, the Service Squadron 6th Inniskilling Dragoon Guards. This squadron had been formed on 2 October 1914 from volunteers of the Inniskilling Horse of the Ulster Volunteer Force.[11] This squadron did not welcome the change and maintained their Inniskilling identity; being allowed to keep their precedence in the line coming just after the Dragoons until 1919.[12]

Records indicate that a third regiment was being formed at the depot in Antrim and it has been speculated that they had unofficially adopted the title "3rd North Irish Horse" but no official records exist to support this.[13]

Cyclist Corps

As the war in France and the Low Countries stagnated into trench warfare the mobility of cavalry and other mounted troops was restricted leading to many cavalry regiments being dismounted and deployed on a range of tasks from that of infantry to menial tasks, including burying the dead. The loss of some of the squadrons' war diaries for the early part of the war means that much information is no longer available, but enough remains to know that some men were deployed on fatigues, enough to render the squadrons non-existent from a "military or fighting point."[14] The historian of the British Cavalry, the Earl of Anglesey, noted that "the cavalry were being used for every odd job where there was no-one else to carry it out".[14] This led to many officers and men transferring to other arms because they felt they were not taking an active part in the war. The vast majority of "Horse" casualties in the Great War were when serving with other units during this period.[15]

After conversion to a cyclist battalion the regiment became part of the "Great Retreat of 1918" during the Operation Michael phase of the German Kaiserschlacht (or Spring Offensive).[16] Following the Armistice, on 13 November a supply of boot blackening and button polish was made available in the Other Ranks canteen and the regiment began handing in stores in preparation for moving back to Ireland. The regiment's location was close to le Cateau, not far from where they had started the war.[17] During the Great War the "Horse" won 18 battle honours, and lost 27 officers and 123 men. One officer, Captain Richard West was awarded the Victoria Cross, Distinguished Service Order and Bar, and Military Cross.[18]

The Inter-war years

By 31 January 1919, the regiment was preparing to reduce to a cadre of three officers, five senior ranks and twenty-seven other ranks who would oversee the rundown of the regiment and its departure from France. On 13 May 1919 the rear party left Vignacourt en route for Pembroke Dock while in Antrim the regimental depot closed and the remaining men there were transferred to the Curragh Camp prior to being demobbed.[19] The regiment's horses were transferred to the 8th King's Royal Irish Hussars and the regiment was classed as "disembodied" which in British Army parlance meant that it no longer existed except as a name on the Army List with a complement (in this case) of an Honorary Colonel, Honorary Chaplain, a Brevet Colonel (EA Maude), six majors, six subalterns and the quartermaster although these officers had no peacetime training commitments.[19]

The naming conventions changed as the commitment of the Territorial Force in Great Britain was rewarded by its renaming as the Territorial Army. The Special Reserve in Ireland was renamed "the Militia" on 1 October 1921. The Army List contained a section headed, "Cavalry Special Reserve – Irish Horse, North Irish, South Irish." In 1922 this changed to "Cavalry Militia" with precedence following the 17th/21st Lancers. By this time however the South Irish Horse had been disbanded on 31 July 1922, as a result of the partition of Ireland. Following the disbandment of King Edward's Horse in 1924 the North Irish Horse became the sole cavalry militia regiment on the army list and also the only militia regiment which had not been placed in suspended animation.[20]

Also in 1924 the regiment held its first reunion in Thompson's Restaurant in Belfast on 28 February where it was agreed that a memorial to the dead of the Great War should be commissioned. The sum of £500 was allocated and a memorial window was unveiled by the Earl of Shaftesbury and dedicated by the Right Reverend RW Hamilton MA, the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church on the 25 April 1925 on the occasion of the 2nd Regimental Reunion.[21]

The "One Man Regiment"

Retirement and death eventually reduced the regimental strength in 1934 to just one combatant officer, Major Sir Ronald D Ross Bt, MC. This became a source of amusement in society and the North Irish Horse was given the sobriquet of the "One Man Regiment". This state of affairs continued until 1938 when the British Government decided to increase the number of available regiments to meet the possible threat of war from the emergent Nazi regime in Germany.[22]

World War II

Prelude to war

Vehicle markings 1944
Rolls-Royce Armoured Car

On 31 August 1939 the War Office ordered the reconstitution of the regiment as a wheeled armoured car unit under the command of Sir Basil Brooke (formerly 10th Hussars) with Lord Erne as his second in command, although Brooke was shortly to leave the position as his political commitments took precedence. Ultimately to be replaced, after several temporary officers, by Lt Col David Dawnay, grandson of the 8th Viscount Downe. Recruiting commenced and instructors were brought in from other RAC and Yeomanry units to raise the Horse from its "One Man Regiment" status from scratch. On 11 September a Special Army Order transferred the regiment from the Cavalry of the Line to the Royal Armoured Corps (RAC). By November 50 recruits had been trained and a further 30–40 were due to start training immediately. The regiment also moved its base to Enniskillen Castle in the same month.[23] By January 1940 the regiment had received its vintage Rolls-Royce armoured cars fitted with Vickers machine guns and No 11 radio sets[24] and was able to form 3 sabre squadrons plus HQ Sqn. The officer cadre was again heavily filled by members of the nobility with the squadrons being commanded by:

Valentine MkII tank

Training was interrupted on 24 May 1940 when an Irish Republican Army (IRA) bomb exploded close to the officers' mess which was in the Main Street in Enniskillen but before any further incidents occurred the regiment was moved to Portrush.

Training exercises continued along the north coast, which caused a certain amount of boredom amongst the officers and men who by now had expected to be fighting. The regiment was then moved on 19 April 1941 to Ballykinlar training camp and re-equipped as an armoured regiment with Mk I Valentine tanks. The Horse was designated to be a "Cruiser" regiment but not enough stocks of this type of tank were available following the evacuation of the BEF from France and the consequent loss of their armour and equipment.

On 18 October 1941 the Horse left Northern Ireland and took up new accommodation at Westbury, Wiltshire with the squadrons billeted in the surrounding villages.[25] The role was changed again at this point and the regiment handed in its Valentines to receive Churchill I – Mk IV's brigaded with 34th Army Tank Brigade under the command of JN Tetley, son of the English brewing magnate. At this point the tanks were given markings which corresponded to the formation, regiment and squadrons they belonged to and in a practice which was to become customary with all Irish units of the RAC each tank was named after an Irish town or place beginning with the letter of the squadron designation.

Tank names

HQ Squadron

Donegal, Downpatrick Dromore Drogheda Dundalk Dungannon

A Squadron

Ardara Aghadowey Aghalee Ahoghill Aldergrove Antrim Ardara Ardreagh Ardstraw Armoy Ardress Arklow Artigavan Augher Aughnacloy Annalong Ardmore Ards, Armagh Ashbourne

B Squadron

Ballina Ballyclare Ballykinlar Ballyrashane Belfast Blackrock Ballybay Ballygawley Ballymena Banbridge Benburb Boyne Ballycastle Ballyjamesduff Ballymoney Bangor Bessbrook Bushmills

C Squadron

Carnlough Castlederg Cavan Clonmel Cobh Cookstown Carrickfergus Castlerobin Claudy Coagh Coleraine Cork Carryduff Castlerock Clogher Coalisland Comber Crossgar

Recce Squadron

Edenderry Enniscorthy Enniskillen Edgeworthstown Enniscrone Ennistymon Ennis Enniskerry Eyrecourt

HMT Duchess of York

The regiment continued to be moved around the Home Counties and also spent time in Wales, exercising and becoming familiar with their Churchill tanks. On 6 September 1942 they transferred from 34th Tank Brigade to 25th Army Tank Brigade attached to the 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division joining the 51st (Leeds Rifles) Royal Tank Regiment (formerly the 7th 7th (Leeds Rifles) Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment)[26] and the 142nd Regiment RAC (formerly the 7th Battalion, Suffolk Regiment). News of the British Eighth Army's victory at El Alamein was a good morale booster.

As Christmas leave was drawing to a close those still away from the unit were recalled by telegram and ordered to get ready to deploy for overseas service, although oddly, they were then given six days "embarkation leave" (with an extra day to allow the Irishmen to travel home).[27] On their return the regiment's tanks were sheeted down so that all markings were hidden and all ranks had to divest themselves of identifying badges to prevent knowledge of their deployment becoming known. All were then entrained for Liverpool where they embarked up the troopship Duchess of York.

Tunisia

Churchill tank

On 2 February 1943 the North Irish Horse landed in Algiers and marched seventeen miles on foot to their new camp.[28]

Their first job was to create a defensive force around Le Kef. The regiment was not up to strength at this time as many of its tanks and equipment had been delayed by logistical difficulties. They were ordered to leave Le Kef at speed to counter the Axis Offensive – Operation Ochsenkopf in late February 1943. They made best speed with all twenty-seven available tanks towards Béja, some ninety miles away – one of the longest "on track" journeys ever made by Churchill tanks. In the ensuing sixty-hour action mostly against elements of the German 10th Panzer Division the Horse took their first casualties of the war and lost a number of tanks to enemy artillery and direct tank-on-tank actions. They also received their first decoration with Captain Griffith being awarded the Military Cross.[29]

The regiment continued to support other elements of the invasion force in troop or squadron formations, taking heavy casualties and losing tanks but continuing to press forward all the time until, in early April moving to Oued Zarga where the entire regiment came together for the first time since landing at Algiers.[30] In the further advance north while attached to 38th (Irish) Brigade under the command of Brigadier Nelson Russell the Horse showed the agility of the often underestimated Churchills by climbing heights regarded as safe from tanks and surprising the Germans occupying them, a fact noted by Spike Milligan in his account of the Tunisian Campaign in his book "Rommel?" "Gunner Who?"[31] The most notable of these feats of tank hill climbing was the attack on Djebel Rhar (also known as Longstop Hill) in support of the 5th Buffs. The German infantry did not expect tanks to be able to make the crest of the Djebel and as a result were thrown into panic when the Churchills of B Sqn appeared in their midst. On 16 June the Belfast Telegraph carried a report of the action:

It was very slow and therefore a most impressive assault with steel. At times the tanks almost 'stood on their heads', twisting to avoid mounds of rock and to get at right angles to the huge cracks and shell holes, but always getting nearer and nearer. Like beetles trying to climb an inverted ice-cream cone, they slipped a little, hung suspended and then went onwards towards the top. The behaviour of these tanks upset the Germans. Such tactics were untanklike, and no answer was contained in their military textbooks. Too late now to shift the anti-tank guns from their positions, too late to make alternative arrangements to deal with the new menace. There was only one answer – retreat, and that's what the Germans did – leaving the British tanks and infantry in possession of the first slope up the heights of Longstop. So ended 23 April.[32]

One German prisoner was heard to remark that the tanks were "Iron Mules".[33]

On 6 May the final attack was launched against Tunis and after severe street fighting and the capture of six 88 mm guns by C Sqn (in support of the Indian Brigade) the town was finally occupied. This effectively ended the campaign in Tunisia.[34]

The Italian Campaign

Mount Vesuvius erupting in 1944

The Horse were allowed to rest and receive replacement vehicles and men for several months after the Tunisian actions. It has been surmised that this is because General Montgomery did not believe the Churchill tank to be a practical vehicle for the Italian campaign.[35] Nevertheless, the regiment embarked on 16 April for Naples, coming under air attack as they entered the harbour two days later. Vesuvius could be seen just a few miles away with fire and smoke pouring from its brim, having erupted just several weeks earlier on 19 March.[36]

the Sherman tank

The Hitler Line

At Afragola[37] the regiment received eighteen Sherman tanks and then loaded all tanks onto trains to be taken across country to Foggia and from there moved into a brigade harbour area near the village of Lucera. By now Lord O'Neill had been given command of the regiment, with Colonel Dawnay moving on to brigade staff. After a week in harbour, the regiment was sent on tank transporters to Mignano near Monte Cassino, which had fallen some days earlier along with the rest of the Gustav Line. The fighting was not over, however, as the Adolf Hitler Line, now renamed the Senger Line, lay just six miles north, and it would be the next objective.[38] The Horse were briefed for Operation Chesterfield, which was an assault by the 1st Canadian Division supported by tanks of the North Irish Horse and the 51st Royal Tanks. H Hour was to be at 6 am on 23 May. The plan required 2nd and 3rd Canadian Infantry Brigades supported by the two tank regiments to break through the Hitler Line on a 3,000-yard front. The assaulting troops came under a withering hail of fire on the well-prepared killing grounds of the heavily defended German positions. The Horse took heavy casualties and had to regroup by merging depleted squadrons together. One tank slipped off a track and fell fifty feet into a ravine, rolling over on its turret and then back onto its tracks. The crew were shaken but unhurt, and the incident gave them another chance to display the marvelous climbing skills of the Churchill as they crawled slowly up the almost sheer walls of the ravine to re-enter the battle. During this battle Major Griffiths again displayed great heroism and was later awarded the only bar to the MC which an officer of the regiment received. The total cost the Horse in the engagement was thirty-six killed in action, thirty-six and thirty-two tanks lost. This represented 60% of regimental strength.[39] The date of 23 May was later chosen as a "Regimental Day" to commemorate the bloodiest day in the history of the North Irish Horse, which lost more men than on any other day in two world wars. The breakthrough happened, however, and the German defenders began evacuating the position on the night of 23 May. Meanwhile, the allied advance continued.[40]

On 4 May the regiment, along with the rest of 25th Tank Brigade, was transferred to 4th Division in support of 28th Brigade but remained in reserve. After news of the D Day Landings was heard, the regiment was again transferred and came under command of 17th Indian Infantry Brigade. This brief period of respite allowed a number of the men to visit Rome. Many visited the Basilica San Pietro and marveled at the undamaged splendour of such an edifice.[42]

Camouflaged Churchill tanks of the North Irish Horse in Italy, 19 July 1944

The regiment was then tasked to put together a composite unit of Shermans to relieve the 142nd RAC Regt's composite group with the 8th Indian Infantry Division, and the advance began westwards to Perugia, which fell on 20 June. On 16 June the Horse again relieved the 142nd, this time at Bastia Umbra. In the days and actions that followed, new upgunned Churchill tanks arrived, with their Besa machine guns replaced with Brownings and the main armament upped from a 6-pdr to the newer 75 mm (14.9pdr). The regiment again advanced, this time into the Tuscan countryside. The Germans were still fighting tenaciously, and barely a day went by without stiff resistance from them.

The Gothic Line

The death of Lord O'Neill reported in the War Diary

Advancing again though mountainous countryside another tank slid off the track and rolled six times down a 200-foot slope. The crew were not so lucky this time as one was killed and the rest injured. The tank was a write-off.[43] The race was on, however, to drive the Germans back, and the North Irish Horse was rushed in again to relieve the hard-pressed 142nd RAC Regt at Maria del Monte. On 3 September they crossed the Conca river, followed by an attack on Coriana to secure the bridges crossing the Marano river. On 8 September the regiment was withdrawn to a safer area in the knowledge that the Gothic Line had been broken.

On 29 November the regiment was advancing north to Monte Cavallo supporting the Mahratta infantry. Lt Col Lord O'Neill arrived and took up a position of observation at a small stone barn. A heavy shell impacted nearby and he was killed.[44]

By this time the autumn rains had arrived, which slowed the Allied advance but did not stop it. On 2 October the regiment was ordered to move to Poggio Berni to relieve the 6th Royal Tank Regiment. Action continued until 3 November, when the Horse were pulled out of the line and local leave granted after a memorial service for those killed in action.[45]

The end of the Italian Campaign

On 7 November Lt Col Llewellen-Parker took command, and the advance northwards quickly continued. The Churchills once again proved their worth in their ability to cross natural obstacles such as rivers, mountains and the thick glutinous mud which formed on the arable farmland during the rains and after it had been churned up by thousands of men and machines. Eventually the regiment was granted an extended period of maintenance and rest at Riccione. On 4 December it was again transferred, this time to the 21st Tank Brigade under the command of Brigadier David Dawnay, the former regimental commander. On 12 January they moved into Ravenna in support of the Italian Gruppo Cremona[46] who were now fighting on the side of the allies.[47]

A Churchill tank of the North Irish Horse crossing the River Senio in Italy over two Churchill Ark bridging tanks, 10 April 1945

In late March the regiment was involved in the action south of the Senio river and by 2 April were facing the enemy's defences along the flood-banks and engaging them at close range. The last of the German resistance crumbled as more tanks made it into position to engage them, and they surrendered, with the Horse taking forty prisoners.[48]

Following Operation Buckland [49] and the crossing of the River Po the regiment was ordered to stand down on 30 April 1945 for the last time in the Second World War. Two days later all German forces in Italy surrendered.[50]

The North Irish Horse lost seventy-three men killed in action during the Second World War, including a commanding officer, two squadron leaders and several troop leaders.[51]

Post war

Spartan CVR(T)

In the immediate aftermath of the German surrender, the regiment fell into a routine of guard duties and time off. Eventually most of the tanks were handed in except for three per squadron, and a move was made into Austria, where the Horse took on the role of armoured reconnaissance regiment for the 78th Division. In January 1946 another move was effected into Germany, where the Horsemen carried out internal security duties in the Wuppertal area until 7 June, when these duties were handed over to the 14th/20th Hussars and the North Irish Horse was disbanded.[52]

In 1947, however, it was reformed as part of the extension of the Territorial Army Yeomanry into Northern Ireland. In 1956 the TA lost its tanks, and the Horse became an armored reconnaissance regiment, again in armoured cars. It avoided disbandment at this point and did so again in 1961.

Further cuts to the TA in 1967 saw the Horse disbanded and re-established as D Sqn The Royal Yeomanry. In 1969 'B' Squadron in Londonderry was re-badged as 69 (NIH) Signal Squadron and became part of 32nd (Scottish) Signal Regiment.

As the Cold War reached its intense culmination in the 1980s, D (NIH)Squadron's frequently visited area of deployment was the 1 (BR) Corps rear area of the British NATO zone of West Germany. The 32mm Rarden cannon of the Squadron's Fox armoured cars were expected to deal with any Soviet airborne forces threatening the rear of the British armoured brigades. Annual tests of D Squadron and their parent Royal Yeomanry assessed the unit's fighting capability in this period as on a par with many regular regiments, but fortunately the collapse of the Soviet Union avoided the need to demonstrate this skill on a conventional battlefield.

During Options for Change in 1992 the Horse was re-established as an independent Reconnaissance Squadron, equipped with Land Rovers and working under the command of the Royal Irish Rangers. The signal squadron survived and became part of 40th (Ulster) Signal Regiment. In 1999 the no-longer independent North Irish Horse joined an expanded Queen's Own Yeomanry as B Squadron. The Land Rovers were replaced by Spartan armoured personnel carriers as B Sqn took on the role of providing support troopers. During the post-1956 period the regiment was equipped with a variety of wheeled armoured vehicles such as Daimler armoured cars, Alvis Saladins, Saracens, Ferrets and, later, Fox armoured cars, Spartan APCs and Sultan Command Vehicles.

The unit's name survives in the modern Army Reserve as B (North Irish Horse) Squadron, Queen's Own Yeomanry – a Squadron equipped with CVR(T) Scimitar and Spartan based at Dunmore Park Camp, Antrim Road, Belfast, with RHQ in Newcastle upon Tyne.[53] Personnel have been deployed to Kosovo, Bosnia, Iraq and Afghanistan.[53]

Present day

Under the Army 2020 plans B (North Irish Horse) Squadron has come under command of the newly established Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry Regiment, while 69 (North Irish Horse) Signal Squadron is now 40 (NIH) Signal Squadron.

Sponsorship

Every yeomanry regiment has a regular regiment to sponsor it and supply it with a series of permanent staff instructors (PSIs). In the case of the North Irish Horse it had been the 1st King's Dragoon Guards from the outset but these ties were broken in 1958 when the KDG amalgamated with the 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays) to form the 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards. From that point onwards sponsorship was given by two of the remaining cavalry regiments of the time which were the 5th Royal Inniskilling Dragoon Guards and the Queen's Royal Irish Hussars both of whom had also had to endure amalgamation in past reforms.[54][55] Today the Royal Dragoon Guards along with the Queen's Royal Hussars supply the Squadron with PSIs. The Queen's Royal Lancers may also supply PSIs due to being a part of the Queen's Own Yeomanry.

Guidon & Memorial

On 15 May 1960 the regiment was presented its guidon by Princess Alexandra of Kent at a parade held on the Balmoral Showgrounds in Belfast. On 28 October 1962 a second memorial window was unveiled in Belfast City Hall to commemorate the fallen of the 2nd World War. This was placed beside the World War I window. It was unveiled by General Dawnay and dedicated by the Archdeacon of Raphoe, the Reverend Louis Crooks (Regimental Chaplain) who himself was a veteran of World War II with the 9th (Londonderry) HAA Regiment.[56]

Uniform

The unusual review order uniform worn by the regiment prior to the First World War included a wide brimmed black felt hat with a long flowing black plume of cocks feathers. This headdress was modeled on that of the Italian Bersaglieri and was unique in the British Empire. A dark green "lancer" style tunic was worn with white facings and chain mail epaulettes, together with dark blue "overalls" (tight fitting cavalry breeches) with white stripes.[57] Subsequent to 1914 the standard khaki service dress or battle dress of the army became the normal wear.

Battle honours

Further battle honours were awarded to the Horse for their distinguished service in a number of actions from 1943–1945. Those in bold type are emblazoned on the regimental guidon.

1914–1918 1939–1945
RETREAT FROM MONS, MARNE 1914, AISNE 1914, ARMENTIERS 1914, Somme 1916/18, ALBERT 1916, MESSINES 1917, Ypres 1917, Pilckem, St Quentin, BAPAUME 1918, Hindenburg Line, Epehy, St Quentin Canal, CAMBRAI 1918, SELLE, Sambre, FRANCE AND FLANDERS HUNT'S GAP, Sedjenne, Tamera, Mergueb Chaouach, DJEBEL RMEL, LONGSTOP HILL, 1943, TUNIS, North Africa 1943, Liri Valley, HITLER LINE, ADVANCE TO FLORENCE, GOTHIC LINE, Monte Farneto, Monte Cavallo, CASA FORTIS, Casa Bettini, Lamone Crossing, Valli di Comacchio, SENIO, ITALY 1944–45

Attack on Dunmore Park Camp

On Thursday 22 October 2009 between the time of 01.30–02.00 a device was thrown over the front gate of the compound in Ashfield Crescent. It is suspected that dissident republicans carried out the attack.[58]

Attached to

Notable personalities

The Earl of Longford who raised the North Irish Horse

References

  1. Doherty p1
  2. Doherty p2
  3. http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1843/jun/20/irish-yeomanry-coups#S3V0070P0-00211
  4. Doherty p4
  5. Doherty p10
  6. Doherty p11
  7. Doherty p9
  8. http://www.clydesite.co.uk/clydebuilt/viewship.asp?id=4983
  9. Doherty p16
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Chris Baker (1996–2008). "The North Irish Horse—Regiments of the Special Reserve—North Irish Horse". The long, long trail. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  11. Philip Tardif (2008). "North Irish Horse in the Great War—A brief history". Notorious strumpets. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  12. Doherty p35
  13. Doherty p23
  14. 1 2 Doherty p22
  15. Doherty p25
  16. Doherty p26
  17. Doherty p34
  18. "Casualty details—West, Richard Annesley". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 10 November 2008.
  19. 1 2 Doherty p38
  20. Doherty p38-39
  21. Doherty p39
  22. Doherty p40
  23. Doherty p45
  24. http://www2.army.mod.uk/royalsignalsmuseum/wirelesssetno11.htm
  25. Doherty p50
  26. http://www.yorkshirevolunteers.org.uk/leedsrifles.htm
  27. Doherty p57
  28. Doherty p60
  29. Doherty p80
  30. Doherty p80-96
  31. "Rommel?": "Gunner Who?" Spike Milligan ISBN 978-0-14-004107-1
  32. Doherty p105-106
  33. Doherty P108
  34. http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Bard-c15-8.html
  35. Doherty p125
  36. http://www.vesuvioinrete.it/e_storia.htm
  37. http://www.warlinks.com/armour/north_irish_horse/nirish_44.html
  38. Doherty p 130
  39. Doherty p142
  40. Doherty p147
  41. http://www.celtic-connection.com/features/feat2008_10_14.html
  42. Doherty p 148
  43. Doherty p173
  44. Doherty p205
  45. Doherty p207
  46. O'Reilly p159
  47. http://www.worldwar2history.info/Italy/
  48. Doherty 227
  49. http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/WH2-2Ita-fig-WH2-2ItaP034a.html
  50. Blaxland, p277
  51. Doherty p232
  52. Doherty p236
  53. 1 2 http://www2.army.mod.uk/qoy/b_nih_sqn/index.htm
  54. http://www.rdgmuseum.org.uk/history.htm
  55. http://www.qrh.org.uk/history.htm
  56. Doherty p239
  57. Smith, R.J. The Uniforms of the British Yeomanry Force 1794–1914 10: The Yeomanry Force at the 1911 Coronation. p. 29. ISBN 0-948251-26-3.
  58. "TA explosion 'could have killed'". BBC News. 22 October 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2010.

Bibliography

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