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Origin
Of The Regiment 1759
The decisive
battle in the war with the French in Canada occurred at Quebec on
the 13th of September 1759. At this battle the British forces, under
General Wolfe, successfully assaulted and took the besieged French
city of Quebec. In the final stages of the battle Wolfe was mortally
wounded. Before he died Wolfe directed Colonel Hale, of the 47th
Foot, to return to England with his final dispatches and news of
the victory at Quebec.
As was normal
in such cases, the King rewarded the harbinger of good news. Hale
was given land in Canada and a commission to raise one of five new
regiments of Light Dragoons. Thus in 1759 the 17th Light Dragoons
were born, in Hale's home county of Hertfordshire. Hale, still in
mourning for General Wolfe, chose for a badge the Death's Head with
the motto 'Or Glory'. This Motto has remained unchanged to the present
day, continuing as the Motto (cap badge) of The Queen's Royal Lancers.
Although raised
for the Seven Year's War, the 17th were not required to serve abroad
until the American War of Independence.
The American War of Independence
1775-83
Initially
seven infantry battalions were deployed to the colonies but with
the outbreak of general war the need for cavalry was realised with
the 17th being the first cavalry regiment selected. The Atlantic
crossing took the Regiment two months, arriving at Boston, a city
under siege by the American rebels. One week later they were present
at the battle of Bunkers Hill. They then re-embarked for Halifax
and thence on to the assault and capture of New York and Long Island.
In 1777 the Regiment were moved to Philadelphia where they spent
the following spring involved in offensive operations around the
city only to be evacuated later that year.
Towards the latter
part of the war the 17th also provided the only regular British
Army element in Tarleton's Legion with whom they fought until virtually
the end of the war. During this period, Private McMullins was carrying
a despatch when he was beset by four militiamen - he shot one, disabled
another with his sword, and brought the other two back as prisoners.
In total the 17th Light Dragoons spent eight years in the Americas;
eventually the war was lost as a result of political and military
incompetence. The Regiment however distinguished themselves greatly
in their first campaign.
On 17th April,
1783, it was Captain Stapleton of the 17th who handed General Washington
the final British notice of the cessation of hostilities.
Above: The Battle of Cowpens
The West Indies 1789
The French revolution
of 1789 was to mark the start of 20 years unceasing war with the
French. Initially the war was mainly directed against France's possessions
in the West Indies and was to become known as the Maroon Wars. During
this campaign the 17th Light Dragoons came under the command of
Colonel Walpole. As in the Americas the Regiment was again split
up serving as detachments throughout Walpole's command. As a result
they saw action in Jamaica, Martinique, Grenada, and in San Domingo.
The Regiment was to campaign in the West Indies for 8 years before
returning to England in 1797. Interestingly it was during this period
that the 17th gained the nickname 'Horse Marines'. During the campaign
two troops of the Regiment were embarked on HMS Success as this
ship was without its own compliment of marines. The crew therefore
described them as 'Horse Marines' and the nickname stuck. It is
also due to this service that the officers of the 17th adopted the
naval tradition of not standing for the National Anthem, a practice
that continues in The Queen's Royal Lancers.
South
America 1806
The 17th Light
Dragoons were not to remain at home for long. At this point of the
French Wars, Spain was France's ally. General Beresford believed
that he could inflict on the Spanish what Walpole had managed against
the French in the Maroon War. Thus in June 1806 General Beresford
captured Buenos Aires, capital of the Spanish colony, and sent word
back to England of his achievements and his need for reinforcement.
What Beresford however did not expect was that the local population
would remain loyal to Spain, the result was that Beresford's force
was quickly over-powered and forced to surrender. Unfortunately
the message did not reach England in time and thus in October 1806
a force was dispatched under General Auchmuty to reinforce Beresford;
the 17th were part of this force. Auchmuty did not hear of the loss
of Buenos Aires until he arrived in South America in January 1807.
On hearing the news he landed his force at Caretas Rocks attacking
and taking Monte Video, a town containing 160 guns. Unfortunately
at this point Auchmuty was replaced by General Whitelocke. Whitelocke
proved to be an inept commander and the force was resoundingly defeated
when it attempted to storm Buenos Aires. Thus the expedition ended
ignominiously with British withdrawal and the 17th Light Dragoons
returning to England by January 1808.
India 1808
Within six weeks
of their arrival in England the 17th were again warned off for foreign
service in India, where the Regiment landed for the first time in
1808. For the next eight years the 17th were employed in protecting
the ever-expanding trading interests of the East India Company against
the armies of the numerous independent Indian States and Principalities.
These were considered a real threat not only because of their training
and equipment but also because the French had spent considerable
effort wooing them in an attempt to destabilise the British controlled
sectors of the Indian sub continent. In 1817 the threat of destabilisation
caused by the Mahrattas and the Pindari became so great as to warrant
the mobilisation of the entire Army of India against them in a general
war. The major enemy of the regiment during their time in India
however was neither the Mahrattas nor the Pindari but disease. In
their fourteen years service in India, the 17th Light Dragoons lost
26 officers and 796 other ranks to cholera and other diseases.
Home
Service 1823 - Redesignated Lancers
The Regiment
returned to England in 1823. During their passage home the 17th
touched at St Helena where they discovered, from an Army List of
1822, that they had been re-designated Lancers. As a result of the
success of the Polish Lancers at Waterloo in 1815, the Commander-in-Chief,
the Duke of York, decided that Britain too should have a corps of
Lancers; the 17th had been selected along with four other regiments
to form this corps.
On their return
home the newly named 17th Lancers were employed in a round of garrison
duties in England and Ireland, which lasted 30 years. In 1826 Lord
George Bingham (later Lord Lucan and commander of the British Cavalry
Division in the Crimea) bought the Colonelcy of the 17th. The Regiment
was mainly employed as an aid to the civil powers though they did
provide guards for both Queen Victoria in Dublin and the Czar in
Windsor. Bingham spent lavishly on the Regiment buying blood horses
for all ranks and commissioning fashionable tailors to produce uniforms
for his regiment to his own design. The effect was so drastic that
the Regiment came to be known as 'Bingham's Dandies', matched only
for splendour by Lord Cardigans 11th Hussars or 'Cherry Pickers'.
In 1842 HRH
The Duke of Cambridge became Colonel of the Regiment. This was the
first time in the Regiment's history that it had a royal patron
and it was an association which was to last until the Duke's death
in 1904.
The
Crimean War 1854: Background
It was not until 1854 that the 17th Lancers again found themselves
abroad and at war. Russia, under the pretext of a religious dispute
in Jerusalem had gone to war against the Turkish Ottoman Empire. In
the initial stages of the war the Russians had defeated the Turkish
Fleet in the Black Sea. Both Britain and France feared that this might
result in the Russian Fleet moving into the Mediterranean, which would
have drastically shifted the balance of European power. As a result
the British and French decided to mount a joint expedition in support
of the Turks. By the time the expedition arrived in theatre the Turks
had already managed to lift the siege of Silistria and push the Russians
back into their own territory. Although the initial goals of the war
had been achieved it was decided by the allies to use this opportunity
to destroy the menace of the Russian fleet once and for all by invading
the Crimea and destroying the Russian naval port at Sevastopol.
The Crimean War 1854: The Charge Of The Light Brigade
It
was during the initial stages of the siege of Sevastopol that the
17th made their most famous charge as part of the Light Brigade at
Balaklava. The allies had laid siege to Sevastopol and in an attempt
to break the siege on the 25th of October 1854, the Russians launched
an attack on the Causeway Heights to cut the British off from their
supply chain. Initially the Russians met with success taking both
the Heights and the redoubts defending them. The stubborn defence
of the 93rd Regiment of Foot and the successful Charge of the Heavy
Brigade halted their advance.
It was not however
until the later stages of the battle that the famous Charge of the
Light Brigade took place. In fact it was caused by confusion of
orders. From his position on the Sapoune Heights, Lord Raglan could
see that the Russians were about to carry away the captured guns
from the Causeway Heights. Raglan therefore ordered Lord Lucan,
the commander of the Cavalry Division, to launch the Light Brigade
to retake the guns. From his position in the valley Lucan could
not see the guns. When he asked for further clarification from Captain
Nolan, the ADC who had brought the message, Nolan pointed not to
the guns on the Causeway Heights, but to a Russian Battery at the
end of the valley. Having received the clarification he required
he directed Lord Cardigan, his brother-in-law and Commander of the
Light Brigade, to advance down the valley.
On orders Cardigan
advanced the five regiments of the Light Brigade towards the line
of Russian guns at a trot. The first salvo was fired when the brigade
had advanced only 200 yards. Each subsequent salvo took a heavy
toll on the 17th, who were positioned forward left in the Brigade,
but the advance continued unabated with the gaps in the line being
filled quickly. As they neared the guns, the Light Brigade broke
into a charge, and were met within eighty yards by a final salvo.
The 17th, led by Captain Morris, swept down on the enemy, carrying
the guns and driving the Russian cavalry, who were massed behind
the guns, back in disarray. "Half a dozen of us leaped in
among the guns, and I with one blow brained a Russian gunner."
(Private John Vahey, Regimental butcher). The force was however
too small to maintain the position unaided and were forced to withdraw
back up the valley, again under constant musket and artillery fire
from the flanking Heights, and harassed by Cossacks who rode down
among them.
Of the 147 17th
Lancers that charged, only 38 answered the roll call after the battle.
For their gallant actions that day, three Victoria Crosses were
awarded to members of the Regiment. Although the 17th remained in
the Crimea for the rest of the campaign they did not play a major
role in any of the remaining battles, which were predominantly infantry
affairs.
Above: The Charge at Balaklava
The Indian Mutiny 1857
In May 1857 the Indian Mutiny broke out in Meerut with devastating
effect. As a result reinforcements were sent from Britain and the
17th Lancers embarked for this task in October. The Regiment did
not land in India until December and were not fit for service until
May 1858. By this stage the mutiny was all but over, save for one
of the mutineer leaders, Tantia Topi, who was still at large. In
order to apprehend Tantia Topi and his followers General Michel
was given a force of 1000 infantry, four guns and a squadron of
17th Lancers under Sir William Gordon. The pursuit of Tantia Topi
lasted nine months and covered a distance in excess of 1000 miles,
500 of which were covered in a single month. It was during this
pursuit that Lieutenant Evelyn Wood (who had transferred from the
Navy to the 17th Lancers and was eventually to rise to the rank
of Field Marshal) was awarded a Victoria Cross for single handedly
attacking a squadron of mutineers from the Bengal Light Infantry.
Tantia Topi's force was eventually defeated; he was captured and
court-marshalled in April 1859. The regimental farrier-sergeant
assisted in the hanging. The rope with which Tantia Topi was hanged
is displayed in the Regimental Museum of The Queen's Royal Lancers.
The 17th remained in India for a further five years before returning
to England.
The Zulu War 1879
The
next theatre of war for the 17th Lancers was Zululand. In 1879 Sir
Bartle Frere Governor of Transvaal was in dispute with Cetewayo,
King of the Zulus. Even though the Boundary Commission had found
in favour of the Zulus, Frere demanded compensation. Cetewayo refused
to concede and Frere ordered an invasion under the command of Lord
Chelmsford with a force of 5000 British and 8000 native troops against
40,000 Zulus. Initially the campaign went disastrously with one
of Chelmsford's three columns being routed at Isandlwhana. Immediate
reinforcements were called for from Britain and thus the 17th embarked
for active service. The Regiment landed in time for the new British
offensive starting in July 1879. The objective was Cetewayo's royal
kraal at Ulundi, which the force reached on 4th July 1879. Initially
the British infantry squares (containing the 17th) had to withstand
a concerted effort by the attacking Zulus. As the ferocity of their
attacks slackened, the regiment were ordered to form line and charge.
This they did breaking the Zulu infantry and pursuing the enemy
for two miles. The effect was so devastating that the Zulu Army
never again took to the field.
Above: The Charge at Ulundi
The Boer War 1900
February
1900 saw the 17th Lancers return to South Africa but this time for
war against the Boers. The war had broken out in October 1899 and
by the time the Regiment joined the 3rd Cavalry Division all the
large set piece battles had been concluded. The Division was employed
in the pursuit of de Wet's Commando in a triangle between Pretoria,
Mafeking and Bloemfontein. The most serious action involving the
17th was at Modderfontein where Smuts' Commando ambushed C Squadron.
Although surrounded and out-numbered the squadron refused to surrender.
Out of a total strength of 144, 3 officers and 32 soldiers were
killed with 4 officers and 33 men being injured. For the remainder
of the Boer War the Regiment were engaged in clearing up operations
using the newly introduced 'blockhouse' system. In 1902 the 17th
returned to Britain, posted initially to Edinburgh and subsequently
to Glasgow before deploying back to India in 1905 for a further
nine years.
Above: All that was left of them - the last stand of C Sqn the 17th
Lancers at Modderfontain Farm.
The Great War 1914-18
The outbreak of the First World War found the 17th Lancers in Sialkot
in India. In October, 1914, the Regiment was deployed to the western
front as part of the 1st Indian Cavalry Division, arriving in mid-November.
By this time the initial mobile phase of the war had become one
of static attritional warfare. As a result the 17th spent the following
three years taking their turn in the trenches and training for the
possibility of an infantry breakthrough which the cavalry could
exploit. In early 1918 the Regiment was moved to the 7th Cavalry
Brigade. It was not until the German Spring Offensive of that year
that the Regiment were allowed the opportunity to demonstrate their
mobility and versatility, being occupied in a series of squadron
and troop actions, fighting mounted and dismounted and conducting
reconnaissance. In the first fifteen intensive day's fighting the
Regiment won one DSO, 6 MCs and 6 MMs. At the end of the war the
17th were posted to Liege in Belgium and from there to Cologne in
Germany as part of the occupying army, before returning to England
in the autumn of 1919.
Home Service
The Regiment
then spent two years in Ireland with the unenviable task of aiding
the Civil Power. In the spring of 1922 the 17th returned to Tidworth,
where in August they amalgamated with the 21st Lancers to form the
17th/21st Lancers.
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