- Source: Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
The Royal Northumberland Fusiliers was an infantry regiment of the British Army. Raised in 1674 as one of three 'English' units in the Dutch Anglo-Scots Brigade, it accompanied William III to England in the November 1688 Glorious Revolution and became part of the English establishment in 1689.
In 1751, it became the 5th Regiment of Foot, with the regional title 'Northumberland' added in 1782; in 1836, it was designated a Fusilier unit and became the 5th (Northumberland Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot.
After the 1881 Childers Reforms, it adopted the title Northumberland Fusiliers, then Royal Northumberland Fusiliers on 3 June 1935. In 1968, it was amalgamated with the Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment), the Royal Warwickshire Fusiliers and Lancashire Fusiliers to form the present Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.
History
= Formation to end of 17th century
=Although briefly designated as 'Irish' when raised in January 1675, the regiment was listed as one of three 'English' units in the Dutch Anglo-Scots Brigade, a mercenary formation whose origins went back to 1586. During the 1672-1678 Franco-Dutch War, it took part in the unsuccessful Siege of Maastricht and the battles of Cassel and Saint-Denis. It accompanied William III to England in the November 1688 Glorious Revolution, before transferring onto the English establishment in 1689.
Like most regiments, until 1751, when it was designated the 5th Regiment of Foot, it was named after the current colonel. Founded by Daniel O'Brien, 3rd Viscount Clare, it began life as Viscount Clare's Regiment, then Sir John Fenwick's, followed by Patrick Westley in 1676. When transferred onto the English establishment, it was commanded by Thomas Tollemache who was replaced in May 1689 by Edward Lloyd.
Posted to Ireland for the 1689-1691 Williamite War, it fought at the Battle of the Boyne, the Second Siege of Athlone and the 1691 Siege of Limerick. Following the October 1691 Treaty of Limerick, it was sent to Flanders for the duration on the Nine Years War. Lloyd died in 1694 and replaced as Colonel by Thomas Fairfax; during the 1695 Siege of Namur, it formed part of Vaudémont's screening force. When the war ended with the 1697 Treaty of Ryswick, it avoided disbandment by being made part of the Irish garrison.
= The 18th century
=The regiment remained in Ireland for the first part of the War of the Spanish Succession, before being sent to Portugal in 1707 as part of the army under the Earl of Galway. Its first serious action was the May 1709 Battle of La Gudina; a disastrous defeat, where the Allies lost over 4,000 prisoners, the regiment took part in a rearguard action that enabled the rest of the army to withdraw.
This ended offensive operations and when the war ended in 1713, the regiment was posted to Gibraltar, where it spent the next 15 years. It was part of the garrison during the 1727 Anglo-Spanish War, when the Spanish besieged Gibraltar for over four months.
On 1 July 1751, a royal warrant provided that in future regiments would not be known by their colonels' names, but by their "number or rank" and it became the 5th Regiment of Foot.
During the Seven Years' War, it was engaged in the 1758 Raid on Cherbourg, the 1760 Battle of Warburg and Kirch Denkern in 1761, where they captured an entire French regiment. It also took part in the 1762 Battle of Wilhelmsthal, before returning to Ireland after the 1763 Treaty of Paris. Due to the increasing tensions that later resulted in the American Revolutionary War, the regiment was shipped to Boston, Massachusetts in May 1774. Elements of the unit were involved in the Battle of Lexington and Concord in April 1775 and the Battle of Bunker Hill in June.
After being evacuated to Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1776 the 5th took part in the expedition to New York, including the battles of Long Island and White Plains, and capture of Fort Washington and Fort Lee, New Jersey. They subsequently joined Howe's 1777 campaign against Philadelphia; at Brandywine Creek, they broke the Continental Army's centre and captured five cannon. Despite this success, in 1778 the British army withdrew and the regiment was involved in fighting at Monmouth Court House.
In November 1778, they left New York for last time and were transported to the French West Indies, where on 13 December 1778, they landed on Saint Lucia. The 5th was engaged with a small force of French and captured a four-cannon battery. On 18 December 1778, a force of 9,000 French troops landed on St. Lucia. The small British force of 1,400 men occupied a hill located on the neck of a peninsula. The French were fairly raw soldiers trained to fight in the classic European style of linear battles. The French advanced on the British force several times. The British, veterans of colonial fighting, inflicted a stinging defeat on the French. The French lost 400 killed and 1100 wounded to the British losses of ten killed and 130 wounded, which included two officers from the 5th Foot.
After two years in the West Indies, the 5th Foot was sent to Ireland in December 1780. They were still in Ireland when hostilities between Great Britain, France, Spain, the Netherlands, and the former Colonies officially ended in 1783.
On 1 August 1782, all those regiments of the line that did not have a special title were given a county designation. The primary purpose was to improve recruiting, but no links were actually formed with the counties after which the regiments were named. The 5th became the "5th (Northumberland) Regiment of Foot": the county being chosen as a compliment to the colonel, Hugh Percy, 2nd Duke of Northumberland.
= 19th century
=The regiment embarked for Portugal in July 1808 for service in the Peninsular War. The regiment fought in the Battle of Roliça and the Battle of Vimeiro in August 1808, the Battle of Corunna in January 1809 and the Battle of Bussaco in September 1810. It earned the nicknames the "Old and Bold", "The Fighting Fifth" and also "Lord Wellington's Bodyguard". It formed part of a small force which beat off an overwhelming body of the enemy at El Boden in 1811, a performance which Wellington notified to the Army as a memorable example of what can be done by steadiness, discipline, and confidence.
The regiment was in the 3rd Division, 2nd Brigade under command of Major General Charles Colville, consisting of the 1st/5th Regiment of Foot, 2nd/83rd Regiment of Foot, 2nd/87th Regiment of Foot and the 94th Regiment of Foot.
The regiment went on to fight at the Siege of Ciudad Rodrigo in January 1812, the Battle of Badajoz in April 1812 and the Battle of Salamanca in July 1812 as well as the Battle of Vitoria in June 1813. It then pursued the French Army into France and saw action at the Battle of Nivelle in November 1813, the Battle of Orthez in February 1814 and the Battle of Toulouse in April 1814.
The 1st Battalion served on the Canadian frontier in 1814, during the War of 1812. It then returned to Europe but arrived too late to take part in the battle of Waterloo, though it did serve in the army of occupation in France. The 2nd Battalion was disbanded on 24 June 1816.
On 4 May 1836, the 5th became a fusilier regiment and was redesignated as the 5th (Northumberland Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot:
The King has been pleased to command, that the 5th, or Northumberland, Regiment of Foot shall in future be equipped as a Fusilier Regiment, and be styled the 5th Regiment of Foot, or Northumberland Fusiliers.
The regiment, which was increased to two battalions in 1857, saw active service in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 and the Second Anglo-Afghan War in 1880.
The regiment was not fundamentally affected by the Cardwell Reforms of the 1870s, which gave it a depot at Fenham Barracks in Newcastle upon Tyne from 1873, or by the Childers reforms of 1881 – as it already possessed two battalions, there was no need for it to amalgamate with another regiment. At the same time the existing militia and rifle volunteer units of the district became battalions of the regiment. Accordingly, on 1 July 1881 the Northumberland Fusiliers was formed as the county regiment of Northumberland, (including the Counties of the towns of Newcastle upon Tyne and Berwick-upon-Tweed) with the following battalions:
Regular battalions
1st Battalion (formerly 1st Battalion, 5th Foot)
2nd Battalion (formerly 2nd Battalion, 5th Foot)
Militia battalion
3rd (Militia) Battalion (formerly Northumberland Light Infantry Militia)
Volunteer battalions
1st Northumberland (Northumberland and Berwick-on-Tweed) Rifle Volunteer Corps: renamed as 1st Volunteer Battalion in 1883
2nd Northumberland Rifle Volunteer Corps: renamed as 2nd Volunteer Battalion in 1883
1st Newcastle upon Tyne Rifle Volunteer Corps: renamed as 3rd Volunteer Battalion in 1883
= The Second Boer War
=The 1st Battalion formed part of the 9th Brigade together with the 2nd Northamptonshire Regiment, 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry, and part of the 1st Loyal North Lancashire Regiment. While the 2nd Battalion sailed as corps troops, and was then brigaded with the 1st Royal Scots, and 1st Sherwood Foresters, under General Sir William Gatacre. The battalions fought in the following battles: Battle of Belmont, Battle of Graspan, Battle of Modder River, Battle of Magersfontein, Battle of Stormberg, Battle of Reddersberg, Battle of Sanna's Post and the Battle of Nooitgedacht.
= Reorganisations 1900–1908
=With the continuation of the war in South Africa, a number of regiments containing large centres of population formed additional regular battalions. The Northumberland Fusiliers formed 3rd and 4th regular Battalions in February 1900, when the militia battalion was relabeled as the 5th battalion. The 3rd was stationed in South Africa, and in 1902 some of the men were in Antigua to guard the Boer prisoners of war placed there. The 4th formed part of the garrison in Ireland. Both were disbanded in 1907.
The 5th (militia) battalion (known as the 3rd battalion until February 1900) was embodied in December 1899, and from February 1900 to July 1901 was stationed at Malta.
In 1908 a reorganisation of reserve forces was carried out under the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907. The militia were transferred to a new "Special Reserve" while the Volunteer Force was reorganised to become the Territorial Force. The "Volunteer Battalion" designation was discarded, and territorial battalions were numbered on after those of the regular army and special reserve. The new organisation was thus:
1st Battalion
2nd Battalion
3rd Battalion (Special Reserve)
4th Battalion (T.F.) (HQ at Hencotes in Hexham, from bulk of 1st Volunteer Battalion)
5th Battalion (T.F.) (HQ at Church Street in Walker (since demolished), redesignation of 2nd Volunteer Battalion)
6th (City) Battalion (T.F.) (HQ at Northumberland Road in Newcastle, redesignation of 3rd Volunteer Battalion)
7th Battalion (T.F.) (HQ at Fenkle Street in Alnwick, from part of 1st Volunteer Battalion)
8th (Cyclist) Battalion (HQ at Hutton Terrace in Newcastle, formed 1908, redesignated Northern Cyclist Battalion in 1910 and transferred to the Army Cyclist Corps in 1915)
= First World War
=During the First World War, the Northumberland Fusiliers expanded to 52 battalions and 29 of them served overseas. It was the second largest infantry regiment of the British Army during the war, surpassed only by the 88 battalions of the London Regiment.
The increase in strength was done partly by forming duplicates of existing T.F. battalions, and partly by the creation of new "Service" battalions. An example of the first instance was the 4th Battalion which was renumbered as the 1/4th in August 1914 on forming a duplicate 2/4th Battalion. A 3/4th Battalion followed in June 1915.
Among the Service Battalions were the Tyneside Scottish (20th - 23rd Battalions) and the Tyneside Irish (24th - 27th Battalions), while the 17th (Service) Battalion was formed by staff of the North Eastern Railway, and was involved in railway construction.
They earned 67 battle honours and won five Victoria Crosses, but at the cost of over 16,000 dead. The battalions mostly saw action on the Western Front, but also in Macedonia, Gallipoli, Egypt and Italy.
In June 1935 George V celebrated his silver jubilee. This opportunity was taken of granting royal status to four regiments, principally in recognition of their service in the previous war.
On the occasion of His Majesty's Birthday and in commemoration of the completion of the twenty-fifth year of his reign, the King has been graciously pleased... to approve that the following regiments shall in future enjoy the distinction "Royal" and shall henceforth be designated:—
5th Royal Inniskilling Dragoon Guards
The Buffs (Royal East Kent Regiment)
The Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
The Royal Norfolk Regiment
In 1936, the Royal Northumberland Fusiliers was one of four line infantry regiments selected for conversion to specialised Divisional (Machine Gun) or Divisional (Support) Battalions. The other regiments selected were the Cheshire Regiment, the Manchester Regiment and the Middlesex Regiment.
= Second World War
=The regiment expanded to ten battalions during the Second World War. Although most of them served as divisional machine gun or support battalions, some of them formed motorcycle, searchlight, tank, reconnaissance, ordinary infantry and even deception units. They saw action with the BEF in North-West Europe in 1940 and the 21st Army Group in 1944–45, North Africa 1940–43, Italy 1943–45, the fall of Singapore and the defence of the United Kingdom.
= Korean War
=The 1st Battalion was attached to the 29th Independent Infantry Brigade, which had been sent to Korea to reinforce the Allied effort there. When it arrived in Korea in December 1950, the Brigade comprised:
1st Battalion, the Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
1st Battalion, the Gloucestershire Regiment
1st Battalion, the Royal Ulster Rifles
8th King's Royal Irish Hussars
C Squadron, 7th Royal Tank Regiment, with specialised armour
45 Field Regiment RA
11 LAA Battery RA
170 Mortar Battery RA
plus supporting units.
In April 1951 the battalion was involved in the Battle of the Imjin River, as the brigade stood in the path of the Chinese Spring Offensive. In July 1951, it was re-organized as 29th British Infantry Brigade and absorbed into the 1st Commonwealth Division.
Regimental museum
The Fusiliers Museum of Northumberland is based in Alnwick Castle.
Badges and dress distinctions
The 5th Regiment of Foot was one of the 'Six Old Corps' entitled to use their 'ancient badge' (St George killing the Dragon) on Regimental Colours, drums and other devices rather than the typical GR cipher as used by normal Regiments of the Line, a distinction first officially recorded in 1747.
In the centre of their colours was an image of St. George killing the dragon, this being their ancient badge, and in the three corners of their second colour, the rose and crown.
The regiment wore a distinctively-coloured hackle or plume on the fusilier cap and later on the beret. The hackle was red over white, and was authorised in June 1829. This replaced the white feather plume the regiment had adopted following the Battle of St Lucia in 1778, supposedly taken from the headgear of fallen French troops. The 5th Foot was the only line regiment, since the introduction of the shako in 1800, to wear the white plume (other regiments having white over red) although the right to wear it was only officially granted in 1824. In 1829 a new model of shako was introduced and all infantry regiments were to wear a white plume, with the 5th Foot given a unique plume of red over white. This became a red over white 'ball tuft' in 1835 and later became a hackle in the same colours.
Victoria Cross
The following members of the regiment were recipients of the Victoria Cross.
James Bulmer Johnson
Patrick McHale
Peter McManus
Ernest Sykes
Thomas Bryan
Robert Henry Cain (Attached Staffordshire Regiment)
James Joseph Bernard Jackman
Wilfred Wood
John Scott Youll
George Cross
Only one member of the regiment was the recipient of the George Cross:
Derek Godfrey Kinne
Amalgamation
On 23 April 1968, following the publication of the following notice in the London Gazette:
By virtue of the provisions of the Royal Warrant dated 5th April, 1968 (published in Army Order 18 of 1968) all officers of the Land Forces belonging to The Royal Northumberland Fusiliers (5th), The Royal Warwickshire Fusiliers (6th), The Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment) (7th), and The Lancashire Fusiliers (20th) are transferred to the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers with effect from 23rd April, 1968.
The regiment was amalgamated into the new Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.
Battle honours
Early wars
By 1881 the 5th foot had been awarded the following battle honours:
Second Boer War
The regiment received two battle honours for the conflict: "Modder River" and "South Africa, 1899–1902".
First World War
The regiment was awarded the following 67 battle honours:
Those shown in bold print were selected to be borne on the king's colours.
Second World War
They were awarded twenty-nine battle honours:
Those shown in bold print were selected to be borne on the king's colours.
Korean War
In August 1958, the Regiment was awarded the following battle honours:
Imjin
Seoul
Kowang-San
Korea 1950-51.
Those shown in bold print were selected to be borne on the regimental colours.
Colonels —with early names for the regiment
Colonels have included:
= Named after Colonel
=English regiment of the Dutch Anglo-Scots Brigade
1674 Colonel Daniel, Viscount Clare
1675 Major-General Sir John Fenwick; resigned after quarrelling with William
1676 Colonel Henry Wisely; drowned at sea
1680 Colonel Thomas Monck; died 1687
1687 Lieutenant-General Thomas Tollemache
English establishment
1688 Lieutenant-General Thomas Tollemache; transferred to Coldstream Guards, May 1689
1689 Colonel Edward Lloyd
1690 Major-General Thomas Fairfax
1704 Lieutenant-General Thomas Pearce
1732 Lieutenant-General Sir John Cope KB
1737 Lieutenant-General Alexander Irwine —Irvine's or Irwin's or Irwine's Foot
= 5th Regiment of Foot
=1752 Colonel Charles Whitefoord
1754 Major-General Lord George Bentinck
1759 Field Marshal Studholme Hodgson
1768 General Hugh, Earl Percy KG
= 5th (Northumberland) Regiment of Foot
=1784 Lieutenant-General Hon. Edward Stopford —Stopford's Foot
1794 Field Marshal Sir Alured Clarke GCB —Clarke's Foot
1801 Lieutenant-General Richard England —England's Foot
1812 Lieutenant-General William Wynyard —Wynyard's Foot
1819 General Sir Henry Johnson GCB —Johnson's Foot
= 5th (Northumberland Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot
=1835 General Sir Charles Colville GCB GCH
1843 Lieutenant-General Sir Jasper Nicolls KCB
1849 General Sir John Grey KCB
1856 Lieutenant-General William Lovelace Walton
1865 Major-General William Longworth Dames
1868 Major-General Edward Rowley Hill
= Northumberland Fusiliers
=1878 General William Lygon Pakenham, 4th Earl of Longford
1887 General Joseph Henry Laye
1895 Lieutenant-General Frederick Arthur Willis
1899 Lieutenant-General Sir George Bryan Milman
1915 Major-General Sir Percival Spearman Wilkinson
= Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
=1935 Major-General William Norman Herbert
1947 Major-General Harold de Riemer Morgan
1953 Field Marshal Sir Francis Wogan Festing
1965 Major-General Roger Ellis Tudor St John
In popular culture
In the beginning of the Sherlock Holmes story A Study in Scarlet, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle states that Dr. John Watson served with the 5th Northumberland Fusiliers as an assistant surgeon.
See also
Fusiliers Museum of Northumberland
Northumbrian tartan
Tyneside Irish Brigade
Tyneside Scottish Brigade
Notes
References
Sources
Boose, Donald (2014). The Ashgate Research Companion to the Korean War. Routledge. ISBN 978-1409439288.
Bowling, A H (1971). British Infantry Regiments 1660-1914. London: Almark. ISBN 978-0855240004.
Cannon, Richard (1838). Historical Record of the Fifth Regiment of Foot or Northumberland Fusiliers. London. ISBN 9780665484940.
Forty, George (1998). British Army Handbook 1939–1945. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-0-7509-1403-1.
Field-Marshal His Majesty the King (1916). Regimental Nicknames and Traditions of the British Army. London: Gale & Polden Ltd.
Haythornthwaite, Philip J. (1996). The World War One Source Book. London: Arms and Armour Press. ISBN 978-1-85409-351-6.
James, Brigadier E.A. (1978). British Regiments 1914–18. London: Samson Books Limited. ISBN 978-0-906304-03-7.
Wood, Denis (1988). The Fifth Fusiliers and Its Badges. London: D. R. Wood. ISBN 978-0-9513285-0-7.
External links
The Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
WW1 Photos.com: Northumberland Fusiliers
The Royal Northumberland Fusiliers at regiments.org by T.F.Mills at the Wayback Machine (archived 15 July 2007)
Royal Northumberland Fusiliers North East Medals
50th Division
Northumberland Fusiliers Anglo-Boer War
Aden Britain's Small Wars
Fifth Foot reenactment group
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Perintah perang pada Pertempuran Somme
- Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
- Royal Regiment of Fusiliers
- Royal Fusiliers
- Fusilier
- Lancashire Fusiliers
- Fusiliers Museum of Northumberland
- List of Royal Northumberland Fusiliers battalions in World War II
- Royal Warwickshire Regiment
- 5th Battalion, Royal Northumberland Fusiliers
- Fusilier Brigade