I really love the British Army Regimental system that has cultivated a sense of family among those who have served with the various regiments over their long history and the way that long service and history is maintained through the system we have in this country of keeping the link with the local area the regiments hail from. That link is best characterised by the many regimental museums found throughout the country often situated in former Victorian barrack blocks and guard towers holding a treasure trove of items.
The regimental system has always been in a state of transformation with constant reforms ever since the first New Model Army and this has seen the British regiments move from being named after their founding colonels, to a numbering system, to an official linkage to a specific county or area with additions to the number of battalions in a regiment, particularly during the wars of mass conscription in the twentieth century, to a gradual consolidation of those regiments into a smaller professional army, but keen to carry forward the traditions and history of service and valour from their predecessors.
The York Army Museum picture from the top of the Norman Keep, Clifford Tower, part of York Castle |
As the British Army has changed, there has been a gradual appreciation of the many regimental museums dotted around the country and money has been provided to allow them to modernise and better display the treasures they are responsible for.
The York Army Museum falls into this latter category and now boasts a very fine display gallery opened in 2015 by His Royal Highness the Duke of York with some amazing exhibits in a modern well lit arrangement with lots of information panels especially useful for people like me needing to remember what I have photographed and for those who don't know the significance of what they are looking at.
Being a "soft southerner" I am very familiar with the regiments based in the south west and London, but less so with those from this part of Yorkshire and so it was a real pleasure to see the items relating to the regiments that contribute their history to the modern day Royal Dragoon Guards and the The Yorkshire Regiment representing the cavalry and armoured units and infantry in the British army.
York Army Museum
On entering the gallery you will find things laid out in a series of six zones, entitled;
Zone 1. Role call - Explaining the difference between the various arms of service and their role in battle over the centuries.
Zone 2. Lines of Fire - The histories of the regiments over three hundred years with treasures from the collection to illustrate.
Zone 3. The Sharp End - Illustrating the changing kit of the British soldier since the seventeenth century plus to interactive games for big and little kids to learn more.
Zone 4. Regimental Ties - An invitation into the Officers' Mess illustrating the Spirit, Community and Memory that unites soldiers and their families.
Zone 5. Soldiering On - The stories of battle from the words of the soldiers that served illustrating their most extreme and testing battle experiences
Zone 6. The Yorkshire Soldier - The three hundred years of evolution that has gone in to the development of the modern British soldier epitomised by The Royal Dragoon Guards and The Yorkshire Regiment today.
The pictures I have put together are a selection from the various zones that particularly appealed to me.
As an avid fan of the Napoleonic era, no better example of the attributes that characterise the gritty nature of the British infantrymen could have been chosen to represent the infantry arm in Zone 1 than that of a private of the 3rd Battalion 14th (West Yorkshire) Foot standing as he would have done on the field of Waterloo about to present his Brown Bess musket after a wet soaking night in an open field and now standing under a hot baking June sunny day with all hell going on around him.
3/14th Foot at Waterloo
The fresh quality of the colour of this display would suggest a replica uniform, but there was no sign to confirm my impression. Nevertheless I enjoyed checking out the detail on this display and have included the close up pictures which really capture the look of the 14th Foot on the 18th June 1815.
The Sherman tank has a special place in my heart as I can never forget my Dad extolling the virtues of this armoured fighting vehicle in spite of the many vices covered in historical tracts since.
Unlike the interior layout illustrated in this full size representation of a 4th/7th Royal Dragoon Guards Sherman, Dad's was an OP tank of the 55th (West Somerset Yeomanry) Field Regiment, Royal Artillery, which meant that it didn't have a main gun, but a map scroll arrangement instead, to allow the command crew to radio back artillery coordinates in support of the infantry and Sherman tanks of the Guards Armoured Division.
That said I pictured Dad smiling and saying "see I told you so" as I read the description of the Sherman as fast and manoeuvrable and he would have added "reliable to" as they just didn't break down. He remarked that they made up for their lack of protection with their speed in close country enabling them to get close up and on to the flanks of their slower German opponents.
That said the Sherman was a "needs must" tank option and, not for the first time, British soldiers had to make do with second best kit during a time of extreme requirements; and General Montgomery was forced to defend the use of the tank after questions were raised in Parliament about its unsatisfactory armour protection and its ability to brew up on request. The crews of these tanks demand the utmost respect for carrying on and taking the fight to the enemy in spite of what they would have known.
I was somewhat surprised at the choice of a First World War cavalry trooper as the display item for this arm of service.
The action style manikin and eye-catching metallic horse present a dramatic impression of how these chaps would have looked at the tilt, but I would have thought this was not the era of the cavalryman; and their ability to deliver charges as that suggested by the display were short lived and thankfully rare once the power of WWI weapons had been shown to have made the horse obsolete on the modern battlefield.
The sad thing for me about this display is it captures the idiocy and lack of imagination of British generalship in World War One epitomised by the likes of Douglas Haig and others that persisted in the idea of the cavalry breakthrough once the poor bloody infantry had created a gap in the enemy line.
Of course the power of modern artillery meant that these cavalry had to be kept so far back from the lines that they were never going to be able to exploit anything.
Perhaps the metallic horse is suggestive of the cavalry giving up their mounts after World War One and taking up the tank and armoured car as their modern day steeds
For me it would have been a cavalry trooper from the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava that would have better represented the pinnacle of the development of this arm and of the regiments that contribute their history to the Royal Dragoon Guards.
The next part of the gallery or Zone 2 covers the treasures that mark significant moments in the histories of the Yorkshire regiments.
The first item that grabs immediate attention is the large portrait of Sir Robert Elchin, the first Colonel of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons, 1695 - 1715, when it was first raised in the Irish town of Enniskillen in 1689.
Sir Robert Elchin, Colonel of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons, 1695 - 1715 |
Despite being a Scottish protestant and having served King William, he became suspected of sympathy for the exiled King James and was removed from command in 1715.
Perhaps those suspicions were confirmed when he next takes up arms on behalf of the Jacobites and on the failure of the rising found himself exiled to France for the remainder of his days.
Apparently one of the issues that might have driven Sir Robert to move from sympathy to outright rebellion is emphasised by the cavalry sabre below (c 1708-16) carried by his troopers when the regiment moved from Ireland to Scotland.
The blade bears the name 'Elchin' and would have been paid for by the colonel on the promise of repayment by the state. The reluctance of the government to honour the arrangement would certainly have been a contributing factor to his change of allegiance.
The hilt is a basket type, of Scottish manufacture, and provided excellent protection to what was a very popular cavalry blade.
The Dettingen Standard
Battle of Dettingen 1743
Cornet Henry Richardson defending the Colonel's standard at Dettingen, 1743 |
Thought to be the oldest surviving British cavalry standard in existence, the Dettingen Standard is one of three that would have been carried on the 27th June, 1743 at the Battle of Dettingen by Ligonier's Horse or the 4th Horse, later to be retitled the 7th Dragoon Guards in 1788.
It bears the arms, crest and motto of General Sir John Ligonier, Colonel of the regiment and these arms were carried on both sides, here shown separated for the display.
During the battle it soon became the target of a French attack and Cornet Henry Richardson is reported to have received up to '37 cuts and shots upon his body and through his clothes, besides many on the shaft of the standard'
The standard was retired after the battle and given to Richardson.
The imposing portrait seen below is that of Colonel Francis Skelly Tidy (1775-1825), of the 14th Foot.
The 3/14 at Waterloo - A Very Pretty Little Battalion
Colonel Tidy joined the regiment in 1807 and served with it until 1823 and can be seen in the portrait below wearing his Waterloo medal and a badge of a Companion of the Order of the Bath.
Colonel Tidy was described as 'the perfect regimental officer who never passed a house numbered '14' without taking off his hat' and was greatly respected and liked by all ranks.
Two items displayed below belonged to Colonel Tidy, one, a French grenade badge and inscribed with his name, is believed to have been picked up at Waterloo and the other is his Waterloo medal seen in the portrait.
Colonel F.S. Tidy's Waterloo medal |
The jacket below is an interesting item as it displays the bullion epaulets typical of the pre 1796 Heavy Cavalry long coat, but appears to be the later short tailed coat, designed to better clear the saddle when mounting.
The 7th (Princess Royal's) Regiment of Dragoon Guards are listed in Franklin as having black facings with gold lace and buttons for the officers, with loops in pairs as seen below.
Officers jacket, 7th Dragoon Guards, based in Britain throughout the Napoleonic Wars |
The 1812 pattern dragoon helmet seen below was a vast improvement on the bicornes often worn with a steel skull cap for better protection.
However the similarity to the French model caused the infantry a few problems in identifying friend from foe at any great distance, having to look for the classic docked tail on British cavalry mounts, although even that could not be relied upon as some of the heavy regiments didn't dock.
Officers helmet (1812 pattern) 6th Inniskilling Dragoons c1816, carrying the plate 'Waterloo' commemorating their role in the battle as part of the Union Brigade |
This illustration of a 5th Dragoon Guards trooper really illustrates the similar appearance to the French look caused by the adoption of the 1812 pattern dress. |
Major General Sir William Ponsonby led the 5th Dragoon Guards at the Battle of Salamanca in 1812 and took part in General Le Marchant's famous charge, so this sword carried by General Ponsonby was a real thrill for a Peninsular War fan like me to see.
The 2/14th Foot were at Corunna in January 1809, part of 2nd Brigade under Major General Rowland Hill, part of General Hope's 2nd Division.
The shot picked up from the battlefield on the ridge on which the battalion stood is indicative of the artillery barrage they would have had to endure during the French attack.
Musket and canister balls recovered from the ridge above Elvira at the Battle of Corunna in 1809 where the 14th Foot took part. |
A small token to take when considering the booty that the British army uncovered following Napoleon's brother's defeat at Vitoria in 1813 and I don't think much of it ended up in any military museum.
A fragment of silk cut from Napoleon's camp-bed abandoned after Waterloo and taken by Lt. John Manly Wood of the 14th Foot |
In a world before modern map drawing and production techniques allowed for proper scaling and reliability about there accuracy, these documents are intriguing to see what the soldiers of the time had to work with and the utter lack of detailed information they could use.
A certain Sir Arthur Wellesley served as an infantry colonel in the Flanders campaign, and as well as learning how not to run a campaign he also learnt the lesson of supplementing his maps with deep reconnaissance by observing officers who would go into the countryside to discover information about the enemy but also the features of the landscape such as fording points on rivers or good forage areas for horses that could help support the army as it moved through it.
Map of Holland used by Capt. Meard of the 14th Foot, during the Flanders Campaign 1793-95 |
A few years ago I had the pleasure of commanding the Heavy Brigade in a table-top refight of Balaclava that friends from the DWG staged in one of our summer gatherings in north Devon.
I love the look of the Crimean period and just about falls into the pre-modern horse and musket period for me with some splendid uniforms on display.
Needless to say I took a bit of time admiring the very special heavy cavalry helmets on display.
The 5th Dragoon Guards helmet worn by General Scarlett at Balaclava showing the marks of Russian sabre cuts across the top of the badge |
The charge of the Heavy Brigade was barely a charge at all, as the British cavalry were led forward uphill from a standing start, with such a short distance between them and the Russians that the regiments barely reached a trot before contact was made.
Map of the battle illustrating the charge of the Heavy Brigade against Ryzhov's Russian cavalry |
The Heavy Brigade numbered ten squadrons of about 140 men in each and with two each from the Scots Greys, 6th Dragoons, 4th Dragoon Guards, 5th Dragoon Guards and the 1st Royal Dragoons. The latter regiment was detached from the brigade at the time of the charge just west of No. 6 Redoubt.
General Sir James Yorke Scarlett GCB commander of the Heavy Brigade in the Crimea |
With the Russian cavalry having the advantage of numbers, nearly three to one, an uphill position and on the left flank of the British brigade, Scarlet gave the order for his two leading regiments to wheel left into line with the other two wheeling in behind them to form a second line.
When the two lines met, Scarlet and his staff were the first to contact closely followed by two squadrons of the Greys and a squadron of the 6th Inniskillings. They were soon followed into the mass by the other regiments with the 4th Dragoons giving the cry of "Faugh a Ballagh" (Clear the Way) as they charged home against the right rear of the Russian horse. Even the 1st Royal Dragoons ignored their orders to remain behind and charged home on their own initiative.
Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava 25th October 1854 - National Army Museum , Godfrey Douglas Giles |
Heaving and hacking at their opponents from all sides the Russians broke and were pursued by the British cavalrymen for three hundred yards, eventually rallying to their officers, as the horse gunners peppered the enemy in their retreat and convinced them against having another go.
The action barely lasted ten minutes but Ryzhov's cavalry had suffered 40-50 killed with over 200 wounded for the loss to the Heavy Brigade of 10 killed and 98 wounded.
6th Inniskilling Dragoons Helmet worn during the charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava by Lt. Col. H. Dalrymple White, also showing the results of enemy sword cuts |
The First World War figures large in most regimental museums as indeed it does across the country with war memorials recording the huge loss of life incurred and now being commemorated at the moment with the centenaries of the battles that occurred during that war.
The First World War was dominated by the machine gun and this German model was captured by the 11th (2nd Hull Tradesmen) Battalion, one of the 'Pals' Battalions so named because friends and colleagues from the same town or possibly club, joined up together and often fought and died together, causing mass grief in the towns affected and leading to the practice being dropped in future call ups.
The gun was taken in the spring of 1917 during the Second Battle of the Aisne, where the British were fighting in and around Arras.
Second Battle of the Aisne
I always take the time to look closely whenever I see a Victoria Cross on display, as you know there will always be an incredible story of valour attached to the award of this medal, the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that the British state can award to a serviceman or woman.
The Yorkshire museum has several on display and I am always pleased to see them cared for and rightly treasured in these public museums rather than held in a private collections.
Private George William Chafer VC, of the 1st Battalion, The East Yorkshire Regiment won his during an attack on British trenches near Albert on the 3rd/4th June 1916, when a vital messenger was wounded by an enemy shell.
His Citation read;
"Private Chafer, at once grasping the situation, on his own initiative, took the message from the man's pocket and, although severely wounded, choking and blinded by gas, ran along the ruined parapet under heavy shell and machine-gun fire. He just succeeded in delivering the message before he collapsed from the effects of his wounds."
Private George William Chafer VC, 1st Battalion, East Yorkshire Regiment |
The 1908/1912 pattern sabre was all about the point, in that age old debate about the point versus the edge.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_1908_and_1912_cavalry_swords
The problem with 'point' school of cavalry sabre design is that yes the point will usually kill whereas the edge is more often likely to wound, but a cavalryman striking the enemy with the point is very likely to see his blade penetrate too far causing problems withdrawing it or even striking bone, potentially braking the wrist of the holder.
Corporal Logan, 13th Light Dragoons, kills Colonel Chamourin of the 26th Dragoons, Campo Mayor 1811 |
The British 1796 heavy cavalry sabre in the Napoleonic period was not a Le Marchant design and was based on an earlier Austrian model with a 35-inch long straight hatchet pointed style blade which was neither an efficient cutting weapon or a pointed one, so much so that many heavy cavalrymen such as Sergeant Ewart at Waterloo had the farrier sharpen the blade into a two edged point to at least perform one of the functions.
The WWI issue model seems not to have learnt much from previous designs apart from having an easy to produce functional guard, the blade carries all the faults of the Napoleonic model without the functionality of a heavy cutting blade.
Captain C. B. Hornby DSO, 4th Dragoon Guards |
The 4th Dragoon Guards, using sabres like the one seen above, were the first unit to go into action against the German army on the 22nd August 1914 at the Belgian village of Casteau when a reconnaissance patrol encountered and attacked a German cavalry patrol.
Captain Hornby and C Squadron, 4th Dragoon Guards in action at Casteau, 22nd August 1914 |
Captain Hornby led two troops of C Squadron and pursued the enemy for a few miles until they joined up with their supports and turned to give fire at which the British cavalry dismounted to return the fire.
Several of the enemy were killed and five prisoners taken.
Casteau 1914
4th Dragoon Guards in the Great War
Before the age of mass photography the main source of primary uniform references comes from the brush of artists, and I try and collect images of miniatures of officers often produced for family and sweethearts while they were away.
These miniatures really capture the look and style of the regimental dress of officers, and it was officers only that could afford such an item, and help clarify the colours of facings, lace and scarlet tunics from the period, and underpin our more modern references that we wargamers rely on.
Miniature portrait of an officer of the 5th Dragoon Guards c1811 |
In August 1811 the 5th Dragoon Guards left Portsmouth for Portugal and service in the Peninsular War and this young man may well have seen action at the Battle of Salamanca, where the British cavalry under General Le Marchant contributed to the destruction of Marshal Marmont's army with a very effective charge acknowledged and seen by the Duke of Wellington.
One of the classic tank encounters in Normandy, and one that many wargame scenarios have been created around, was perhaps the battle for Lingevres on the 14th June 1944.
The battle was one of those bitter little actions fought between the British 50th Division and Panzer Lehr desperately trying to contain the British bridgehead before more German divisions could arrive to launch the German counter-attack following D-Day.
Pennant from one of the five German Panther tanks destroyed in Lingevres 14th June 1944 |
The 9th Battalion Durham Light Infantry supported by the 4th/7th Dragoon Guards and their Sherman tanks attacked into the French village at about 10.00 and after bitter fighting with the Lehr Panzergrenadiers had secured the village by about 14.00.
Then Panzer Lehr counter-attacked at about 16.00 with tanks and infantry that saw the village still in British control but with the Durhams having lost all but one of their 6lbr anti-tank guns and 22 officers and 226 other ranks killed or wounded and the 4/7th DG having lost four of their tanks.
II/902nd Panzergrenadier Regiment lost 257 men killed, wounded or taken prisoner together with ten Panther tanks, five of them to Sergeant W. Harris' together with his gunner Trooper McKillop in their Sherman Firefly.
One of the knocked out Lehr Panthers in Lingevre after the battle. |
Battle of Lingevres 1944
Fire and Fury- Scenarios/Lingevres.pdf
The treasures held in the York Army Museum were a real thrill for me, finding so much stuff that I had either only seen in reference books or not seen before at all .
These Napoleonic era cavalry helmets mark the transition for the British cavalry from a very 18th century look with long tails and bicornes to the 19th century and the appearance of horse tail and wool crested leather helmets that were much more practical in terms of hard wearing and the protection to the head from sword cuts.
1812 pattern Dragoon Helmet - 4th Queen's Own Dragoons |
My 4th Queen's Own Dragoons for Talavera |
As illustrated in the Historex plate below, the 'Grecian' style helmet (Plate 1c) was short lived and the regiment adopted the French style helmet (Plate 1d) the following year.
For completion, I commented above about the unusual officers jacket for the 7th Dragoon Guards displayed with other Napoleonic items above, suggesting the lack of tails didn't match the regulations for that earlier style uniform; then I came across the portrait below by Robert Dighton Jnr. illustrating the earlier pattern.
Robert Dighton Junior was one of the Dighton dynasty of Regency period artists and he and his brother Denis produced some of the most memorable pictures of British Napoleonic period soldiers.
The Dighton Family
Denis Dighton
Denis Dighton is particularly notable for his depictions of not only British, but Spanish and Portuguese soldiers in the Peninsular War.
The 3rd 'Fighting' Division was established under the Duke of Wellington as part of his famous Peninsular Army and it was their famous divisional badge on the shoulders of this officer's WWII battledress with the triangle motif capturing the three in the divisions title that caught my attention.
The 3rd Division was commanded by Major General Bernard Montgomery in 1940 and were later designated by him as an assault division for D Day, landing on Sword Beach.
The 3rd Division maintained the reputation of its hard fighting title throughout and still appears on the modern British order of battle.
3rd Division (United_Kingdom)
East Yorkshire Regiment
The 8th Brigade (1st Suffolk, 2nd East Yorkshire and 1st South Lancashire Regiments) of 3rd Division was the first to land on Sword Beach and the East Yorkshire shoulder flashes with the white rose badge can be seen on this officer's battledress as well as on the corporal seen above, with his men under shell fire in Normandy.
Another Napoleonic treasure trove hove into view starting with this Officer's silver belt plate (1801-16), 15th (East Yorkshire) Foot.
The 15th Foot were nicknamed "The Snappers" during the Napoleonic Wars in commemoration of their action at the Battle of Brandywine in 1777 when the regiment ran short of ball and was forced to distribute the remaining cartridges to the best shots whilst the rest of the man "snapped" away with powder charges only.
The fine portrait below is of an officer of the 3/14th Foot and was painted after the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 whilst the battalion was on Occupation Duties.
Major J Keightley was second in command of the 3/14th Foot at Waterloo and his gorget is pictured below and would have been worn at the throat as seen in the portrait above.
The gilt metal gorget is thought to commemorate the armour worn at the throats by knights and was worn by the officer when on duty.
The classic headdress of the British infantryman post 1812 and evocative of the Waterloo campaign has to be the 'Belgic' Shako seen below.
These shakos were not known for being particularly hard wearing and to see one in such good condition was a treat.
This is an officers pattern for the 14th Foot and carries the faded silver chords of the regiment.
The treasures kept on coming with this French general officers sword, seen below, taken at Waterloo by Lieutenant Edward Trevor, Royal Artillery and passed to his son who served as an officer in the 14th Foot.
The sword dates to before 1804 and is a design reserved for presentation to distinguished senior officers. It was made in the workshops of Nicholas Noel Boutet, personal gun-maker to Napoleon.
Whilst enjoying the Napoleonic display items I noticed this rather interesting Sabretache taken from a Russian hussar by Lieutenant Colonel E. C. Hodge, Commanding Officer of the 4th Dragoon Guards at the Battle of Balaclava.
The sabretache seemed vaguely familiar and then I spotted why, when thumbing through the old Osprey reference library and found this illustration by Richard Scollins.
The picture shows a Lance Corporal of the 12th Ingermanland Laandski Hussars who were at Balaclava and part of General Ryzhov's brigade that came to grips with the Heavy Brigade and what I originally took to be a '1' was in fact an 'I' for Ingermanland.
Interesting to note that the 'H' is slightly different than that portrayed and that's the beauty of visiting museums like this.
After a slight diversion to the Crimea it was back to the Napoleonic era with this interesting French eagle badge taken by a soldier of the 3/14th Foot at Waterloo, and looks like an example of the kind of badge that would be seen on a soldiers cartridge pouch, particularly in the French Guard.
The first campaign service medal to be issued by the British government to its armed forces was the Waterloo Medal.
Issued to all ranks, the first example pictured was awarded to Lieutenant B. Christie of the 5th Dragoon Guards who served as an Aide-de-Camp to Major General Ponsonby, commander of the 'Union' Heavy Cavalry Brigade and killed at Waterloo.
The second example was issued to Quartermaster Sergeant T Goddard of the 3/14th Foot who had previously served with the 4th Dragoon Guards.
In 1847 it was decided to recognise the service of the campaigns prior to Waterloo with the issuing of the Military General Service Medal to veterans of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 1793-1814.
Each recipient received the medal with specific clasps recording the battles in which they had fought.
Below is another fascinating item held by the museum which is the jacket worn by Captain W.F. Browne of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons at the Battle of Waterloo.
Captain Browne commanded the centre squadron of the regiment when it charged with the Union Brigade, which saw a very successful attack against D'Erlon's Infantry Corps followed by an equally effective French counter-attack by French lancers, causing heavy losses to the British cavalrymen including its commander Maj. Gen. Ponsonby.
Browne was wounded several times in the action and his jacket was cut open at the sleeve by the surgeon who treated him.
If the story behind the jacket was not fascinating alone, I was immediately drawn to the style of the lacing on the front which seems to be that of the old 1807 pattern heavy cavalry short jacket, worn in the first half of the Peninsular War, not the 1812 pattern I had expected to see as in the illustration below
The letter below is from a relative of Captain Browne describing his injuries received in the battle:
"My Brother in Law's Regiment, the Inniskillings were in the very thick of it. Man was fighting against man. He had got a wound, with a ball which was in his foot and three wounds from Lancers in other parts when his horse going at a quick pace was shot. This of course brought Browne to the ground where he staggered on on foot and defended himself the best way he could. In this state he received three wounds anew....."
Finally I thought I would end this long post with a look at another three Victoria Cross awards, one from the Second World War in 1943 and the other two from the First World War, one in 1916 and the other in 1918, but all having in common extraordinary courage shown in the face of the enemy and a determination to overcome no matter what the personal risk entailed.
On the 6th April 1943, A Company, 5th East Yorks put in an attack at Wadi Akarit, Tunisia during which they came under heavy fire whilst moving down a forward slope. Several men were wounded and had to be left as the company retired behind the ridge line. Private Anderson, age 27, and the company stretcher bearer immediately ran forward under heavy fire and carried back a wounded soldier. He did this three times and was administering first aid to a fourth when he was mortally wounded.
Sergeant Albert Mountain of the 15th/17th Leeds Battalion, The West Yorkshire Regiment was, with his unit, caught up in the heavy fighting that characterised the final German offensive in March 1918.
On the 26th March the Leeds battalion was being forced back. His citation reads:
"On 21 March 1918 at Hamelincourt, France, when the situation was critical, Sergeant Mountain with a party of 10 men attacked an advance enemy patrol of about 200 strong with a Lewis gun, killing half of them. The sergeant then rallied his men in the face of overwhelming numbers of the main body of the enemy, to cover the retirement of the rest of the company – this party of one NCO and four men held at bay 600 of the enemy for half an hour. Sergeant Mountain later took command of the flank post of the battalion, holding on for 27 hours until finally surrounded by the enemy. Sergeant Mountain was one of the few to fight their way back. His supreme fearlessness and initiative undoubtedly saved the whole situation."
Private John Cunningham was just 19 years old and serving with the 12th (Hull's Sportsman's) Battalion, The East Yorkshire Regiment, another 'Pals' battalion described in this post.
The 13th November 1916 saw the last offensive as part of the Battle of the Somme, started in the summer of that year, with the Batttle of the Ancre.
Battle of the Ancre 1916
The 31st British Division, of which the East Yorks were a part, was tasked with seizing German trenches close to Hebuterne in order to secure the flank north of Serre.
The citation reads;
"After the enemy's front line had been captured, Private Cunningham went with a bombing section up a communication trench where much opposition was met and all the rest of the section were either killed or wounded. Collecting all the bombs from the casualties Private Cunningham went on alone and when he had used up all the bombs he had he returned for a fresh supply and again went up the communication trench where he met a party of 10 Germans. He killed all 10 and cleared the trench up to the new line."
So ends my selection of some of the amazing items in the collection of the Yorkshire Army Museum. When I visited, I had the place to myself for practically the whole time I was there, which was great for me, but I hope this encourages others to visit great museums like this and help support their work in preserving the history and heritage of the British Army.
References used in this post;
The Russian Army of the Crimean War 1854-56, Osprey Men at Arms
British Napoleonic Uniforms - C E Franklin
Next up more stuff from York with two more battlefields to look at plus some Roman stuff and more about Towton and the Wars of the Roses and hopefully another Wargames show to write about.
The Grecian model would however soldier on with the Household cavalry regiments as seen worn by the Lifeguards and Blues & Royals at Waterloo in 1815.
The 4th Dragoons Grecian style helmet less its black and red stripe woollen comb |
For completion, I commented above about the unusual officers jacket for the 7th Dragoon Guards displayed with other Napoleonic items above, suggesting the lack of tails didn't match the regulations for that earlier style uniform; then I came across the portrait below by Robert Dighton Jnr. illustrating the earlier pattern.
An officer of the 7th Dragoon Guards 1801 painted by Robert Dighton Jnr. |
Robert Dighton Junior was one of the Dighton dynasty of Regency period artists and he and his brother Denis produced some of the most memorable pictures of British Napoleonic period soldiers.
The Dighton Family
Denis Dighton
Denis Dighton is particularly notable for his depictions of not only British, but Spanish and Portuguese soldiers in the Peninsular War.
The 3rd 'Fighting' Division was established under the Duke of Wellington as part of his famous Peninsular Army and it was their famous divisional badge on the shoulders of this officer's WWII battledress with the triangle motif capturing the three in the divisions title that caught my attention.
The 3rd Division was commanded by Major General Bernard Montgomery in 1940 and were later designated by him as an assault division for D Day, landing on Sword Beach.
The 3rd Division maintained the reputation of its hard fighting title throughout and still appears on the modern British order of battle.
3rd Division (United_Kingdom)
East Yorkshire Regiment
Men of the 2nd battalion East Yorkshire Regiment under shell fire in Normandy - 19th July 1944 Note the white rose motif above the corporal's tapes as seen on the battledress below |
The 8th Brigade (1st Suffolk, 2nd East Yorkshire and 1st South Lancashire Regiments) of 3rd Division was the first to land on Sword Beach and the East Yorkshire shoulder flashes with the white rose badge can be seen on this officer's battledress as well as on the corporal seen above, with his men under shell fire in Normandy.
Another Napoleonic treasure trove hove into view starting with this Officer's silver belt plate (1801-16), 15th (East Yorkshire) Foot.
The 15th Foot were nicknamed "The Snappers" during the Napoleonic Wars in commemoration of their action at the Battle of Brandywine in 1777 when the regiment ran short of ball and was forced to distribute the remaining cartridges to the best shots whilst the rest of the man "snapped" away with powder charges only.
The fine portrait below is of an officer of the 3/14th Foot and was painted after the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 whilst the battalion was on Occupation Duties.
Major J Keightley was second in command of the 3/14th Foot at Waterloo and his gorget is pictured below and would have been worn at the throat as seen in the portrait above.
The gilt metal gorget is thought to commemorate the armour worn at the throats by knights and was worn by the officer when on duty.
Gorget worn by Major J. Keightley 3/14th Foot - 1815 |
The classic headdress of the British infantryman post 1812 and evocative of the Waterloo campaign has to be the 'Belgic' Shako seen below.
Officers Belgic Shako 14th Foot |
These shakos were not known for being particularly hard wearing and to see one in such good condition was a treat.
This is an officers pattern for the 14th Foot and carries the faded silver chords of the regiment.
The treasures kept on coming with this French general officers sword, seen below, taken at Waterloo by Lieutenant Edward Trevor, Royal Artillery and passed to his son who served as an officer in the 14th Foot.
The sword dates to before 1804 and is a design reserved for presentation to distinguished senior officers. It was made in the workshops of Nicholas Noel Boutet, personal gun-maker to Napoleon.
French General Officers sword taken at Waterloo |
Whilst enjoying the Napoleonic display items I noticed this rather interesting Sabretache taken from a Russian hussar by Lieutenant Colonel E. C. Hodge, Commanding Officer of the 4th Dragoon Guards at the Battle of Balaclava.
The sabretache seemed vaguely familiar and then I spotted why, when thumbing through the old Osprey reference library and found this illustration by Richard Scollins.
The picture shows a Lance Corporal of the 12th Ingermanland Laandski Hussars who were at Balaclava and part of General Ryzhov's brigade that came to grips with the Heavy Brigade and what I originally took to be a '1' was in fact an 'I' for Ingermanland.
Interesting to note that the 'H' is slightly different than that portrayed and that's the beauty of visiting museums like this.
After a slight diversion to the Crimea it was back to the Napoleonic era with this interesting French eagle badge taken by a soldier of the 3/14th Foot at Waterloo, and looks like an example of the kind of badge that would be seen on a soldiers cartridge pouch, particularly in the French Guard.
French eagle badge similar to the one seen below on the cartridge pouch, picked up at Waterloo - Possibly French Guard? |
Fusilier of the Garde |
Issued to all ranks, the first example pictured was awarded to Lieutenant B. Christie of the 5th Dragoon Guards who served as an Aide-de-Camp to Major General Ponsonby, commander of the 'Union' Heavy Cavalry Brigade and killed at Waterloo.
Waterloo Medal issued to Lt. Christe, ADC to Maj.Gen.Ponsonby |
The second example was issued to Quartermaster Sergeant T Goddard of the 3/14th Foot who had previously served with the 4th Dragoon Guards.
Waterloo Medal issued to Quartermaster Sgt. Goddard 3/14th Foot |
In 1847 it was decided to recognise the service of the campaigns prior to Waterloo with the issuing of the Military General Service Medal to veterans of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 1793-1814.
Each recipient received the medal with specific clasps recording the battles in which they had fought.
Below is another fascinating item held by the museum which is the jacket worn by Captain W.F. Browne of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons at the Battle of Waterloo.
Captain Browne commanded the centre squadron of the regiment when it charged with the Union Brigade, which saw a very successful attack against D'Erlon's Infantry Corps followed by an equally effective French counter-attack by French lancers, causing heavy losses to the British cavalrymen including its commander Maj. Gen. Ponsonby.
Map illustrating the charge of the Union and Household Brigades at Waterloo 18th June 1815 |
Browne was wounded several times in the action and his jacket was cut open at the sleeve by the surgeon who treated him.
If the story behind the jacket was not fascinating alone, I was immediately drawn to the style of the lacing on the front which seems to be that of the old 1807 pattern heavy cavalry short jacket, worn in the first half of the Peninsular War, not the 1812 pattern I had expected to see as in the illustration below
Historex Illustration of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons as they would have looked at Waterloo, or would they? |
The letter below is from a relative of Captain Browne describing his injuries received in the battle:
"My Brother in Law's Regiment, the Inniskillings were in the very thick of it. Man was fighting against man. He had got a wound, with a ball which was in his foot and three wounds from Lancers in other parts when his horse going at a quick pace was shot. This of course brought Browne to the ground where he staggered on on foot and defended himself the best way he could. In this state he received three wounds anew....."
Letter describing the wounds to Capt, Browne, 6th Inniskilling Dragoons at Waterloo |
Finally I thought I would end this long post with a look at another three Victoria Cross awards, one from the Second World War in 1943 and the other two from the First World War, one in 1916 and the other in 1918, but all having in common extraordinary courage shown in the face of the enemy and a determination to overcome no matter what the personal risk entailed.
Private Eric Anderson VC, 5th East Yorkshire Regiment |
On the 6th April 1943, A Company, 5th East Yorks put in an attack at Wadi Akarit, Tunisia during which they came under heavy fire whilst moving down a forward slope. Several men were wounded and had to be left as the company retired behind the ridge line. Private Anderson, age 27, and the company stretcher bearer immediately ran forward under heavy fire and carried back a wounded soldier. He did this three times and was administering first aid to a fourth when he was mortally wounded.
Sergeant Albert Mountain of the 15th/17th Leeds Battalion, The West Yorkshire Regiment was, with his unit, caught up in the heavy fighting that characterised the final German offensive in March 1918.
On the 26th March the Leeds battalion was being forced back. His citation reads:
"On 21 March 1918 at Hamelincourt, France, when the situation was critical, Sergeant Mountain with a party of 10 men attacked an advance enemy patrol of about 200 strong with a Lewis gun, killing half of them. The sergeant then rallied his men in the face of overwhelming numbers of the main body of the enemy, to cover the retirement of the rest of the company – this party of one NCO and four men held at bay 600 of the enemy for half an hour. Sergeant Mountain later took command of the flank post of the battalion, holding on for 27 hours until finally surrounded by the enemy. Sergeant Mountain was one of the few to fight their way back. His supreme fearlessness and initiative undoubtedly saved the whole situation."
Sergeant Albert Mountain VC, 15th/17th Leeds Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment |
Private John Cunningham was just 19 years old and serving with the 12th (Hull's Sportsman's) Battalion, The East Yorkshire Regiment, another 'Pals' battalion described in this post.
The 13th November 1916 saw the last offensive as part of the Battle of the Somme, started in the summer of that year, with the Batttle of the Ancre.
Battle of the Ancre 1916
The 31st British Division, of which the East Yorks were a part, was tasked with seizing German trenches close to Hebuterne in order to secure the flank north of Serre.
Private John Cunningham VC, 12th (Hull's Sportsman's) Battalion, The East Yorkshire Regiment |
The citation reads;
"After the enemy's front line had been captured, Private Cunningham went with a bombing section up a communication trench where much opposition was met and all the rest of the section were either killed or wounded. Collecting all the bombs from the casualties Private Cunningham went on alone and when he had used up all the bombs he had he returned for a fresh supply and again went up the communication trench where he met a party of 10 Germans. He killed all 10 and cleared the trench up to the new line."
Tools of the trade in trench warfare, wire cutters, trench cosh and British No.1 Type grenade, here cut away for training purposes |
References used in this post;
The Russian Army of the Crimean War 1854-56, Osprey Men at Arms
British Napoleonic Uniforms - C E Franklin
Next up more stuff from York with two more battlefields to look at plus some Roman stuff and more about Towton and the Wars of the Roses and hopefully another Wargames show to write about.
Looks like a really nicely done museum, I'll have to add it onto the list if I make it to York. Slightly nicer display cabinets compared to REME before it was moved
ReplyDeleteAn excellent post. I visited the museum a couple of years ago and there have clearly been a few additions since then. My interest is also primarily Napoleonic and I thought there were some superb artefacts.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Thank you very much for share with us this wonderful visit to the museum. Very, Very interesting. all the best, ciao. carlo
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments chaps. The York Army Museum was a real highlight of our holiday to York for me. I knew immediately once I started walking around that they had some really interesting items, but discovered even more once I had the time to sit down and research them a bit further.
ReplyDeleteThe new look modern display cabinets and explanatory signs are great, although as someone who likes to take pictures for my own reference, I could do with a little less glass and even more lighting, but I guess you can't have everything.
If you are in York and interested in this kind of thing I would reccomended a visit.
Cheers
JJ
Fantastic museum tour, Jonathan! If I ever make it to York, this museum will be high on my "To Do" list. Thank you very much for the thorough and thoroughly enjoyable museum walk-through.
ReplyDeleteHi Jonathan, thank you, glad you enjoyed the read and I hope you get to visit.
DeleteWhat a great post! That's one impressive museum. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks Adam, it was a real highlight of our trip to York to wonder around this museum, I would highly reccomended it.
DeleteJJ
I came across this by accident. My Great Great Great Grandfather was the trumpeter who for in the Peninsula War. It’s so incredible to see his medals - who can I get in touch with at the museum to see if there is anything else on him and his life?
ReplyDeleteHi and welcome to the blog.
DeleteHow wonderful, you are not the first living relative from this period to contact me on the blog about items referenced to their ancestor, but it is always a pleasure to hear from folks like yourself, and I'm always pleased if the blog brings these items to theirs and your attention.
I'm sure the museum would love to hear from you and might have more information to share , and perhaps if you contact them you might mention the blog helping to highlight the museum and their fantastic collection, one of the best I have visited.
In addition you might be interested in my posts covering my visits and exploration of two of the battles your Great Great Great Grandfather participated in namely Salamanca and Vitoria in my Peninsular War Battlefield Tour from 2019, links below.
https://jjwargames.blogspot.com/2019/07/battle-of-salamanca-peninsular-war-tour.html
https://jjwargames.blogspot.com/2019/12/the-battle-of-vittoria-peninsular-war.html
I wish you well in your investigations.
Cheers
JJ