1St Royal Dragoons, Greys, 22D & 25Th
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Number of Soldiers That Joined the Army from Registered Address in Scotland for Financial Years 2014 to 2017
Army Secretariat Army Headquarters IDL 24 Blenheim Building Marlborough Lines Andover Hampshire, SP11 8HJ United Kingdom Ref: FOI2017/10087/13/04/79464 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.army.mod.uk XXX XXXXXXXXXXX 5 December 2017 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Dear XXXXXX, Thank you for your email of 14 October in which you clarified your request of 6 October to the following : ‘In particular please clarify what you mean by ‘people from Scotland’. Are you seeking information regarding individuals who identify themselves as being Scottish regardless of where they live now, or people who currently have a Scottish address regardless of their background or country of origin? Please note that for the MOD Joint Personnel Administration, some of the nationality options an individual can record themselves as include ‘British’, ‘Scottish’ or ‘British Scottish’. I was mainly looking for those having joined the Army from a Scottish address as I’m looking at how many people located in Scotland join the Army. Further clarification is required concerning the second part of your request - please clarify if you want Corps and Infantry Regiment (In essence Cap badge) or Corps and Infantry totals. Please note that a proportion of those who joined the untrained strength in 2016 may still be in training. Yes please, looking for Cap Badge of entrants from Scotland should this information exist. Finally please confirm that you require the information for both parts of your request by Financial Years 2014, 2015 & 2016. Yes please, If the information exists for each year then I would be grateful for this. If this is significantly time consuming then 2016 would be sufficient.’ I am treating your correspondence as a request for information under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 2000. -
The Referendum on Separation for Scotland
House of Commons Scottish Affairs Committee The Referendum on Separation for Scotland Written evidence Only those submissions written specifically for the Committee and accepted by the Committee as evidence for the inquiry into the referendum on separation for Scotland are included. List of written evidence Page 1 Professor Bernard Ryan, Law School, University of Kent 1 2 Francis Tusa, Editor, Defence Analysis 8 3 Professor Jo Shaw, University of Edinburgh 14 4 Dr Phillips O’Brien, Scottish Centre for War Studies, University of Glasgow 21 5 Electoral Commission 24 6 Rt Hon Michael Moore MP, Secretary of State for Scotland 28 7 Ministry of Defence 29 8 Brian Buchan, Chief Executive, Scottish Engineering 46 9 Babcock 47 Written evidence from Professor Bernard Ryan, Law School, University of Kent Introduction If Scotland were to become independent, its relationship with the United Kingdom would have to be defined in the fields of nationality law and immigration law and policy. This note offers a summary of the relationship between the Irish state1 and the United Kingdom in those fields, and some thoughts on possible implications for Scottish independence. 1. Nationality Law 1.1 The Irish case A new nationality The nationality law of a new state must necessarily provide for two matters: an initial population of nationals on the date of independence, and the acquisition and loss of nationality on an ongoing basis. In the case of the Irish state, the initial population was defined by Article 3 of the Irish Free State Constitution of 1922. Article 3 conferred Irish Free State citizenship upon a person if they were domiciled in the “area of the jurisdiction of the Irish Free State” on the date the state was founded (6 December 1922), provided (a) they had been resident in that area for the previous seven years, or (b) they or one of their parents had been born in “Ireland”.2 A full framework of nationality law, covering all aspects of acquisition and loss of nationality, was not then adopted until the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 1935. -
72124 MOD Supp 1 02.02.21 Issue 63254.Indd
MINISTRY OF DEFENCE Major D. J. BELL Royal Dragoon Guards 25012748 from Intermediate Regular Commission (Late Entry) 5 November 2020 to be Major with ARMY seniority 31 July 2020 Major W. D. O’CONNOR Royal Scots Dragoon Guards 25019533 from Intermediate Regular Commission (Late Entry) 5 November 2020 to be Major with seniority 31 July 2020 COMMANDS AND STAFF Intermediate Regular Commissions REGULAR ARMY Captain A. WALSH The Royal Lancers (Queen Elizabeths’ Own) 30138791 retires 30 November 2020 Brigadier S. W. HOLFORD 535001 retires 1 February 2021 Captain S. PRYOR King’s Royal Hussars 30139641 from Short Colonel C. A. BORNEMAN 524265 retires 29 January 2021 Service Commission 5 November 2020 to be Captain with seniority 14 December 2016 HOUSEHOLD CAVALRY ROYAL REGIMENT OF ARTILLERY ROYAL HORSE GUARDS / 1ST DRAGOONS REGULAR ARMY REGULAR ARMY Regular Commissions (Late Entry) Regular Commissions Lieutenant Colonel T. P. LYNN 563311 retires 20 November 2020 Major S. A. DINGSDALE 30146489 from Intermediate Regular Short Service Commissions Commission 5 November 2020 to be Major with seniority 31 July 2020 Captain R. G. THOMAS 30184931 retires 1 December 2020 Major T. D. E. MOUNTAIN 30124666 from Intermediate Regular Commission 5 November 2020 to be Major with seniority 31 July 2020 CORPS OF ROYAL ENGINEERS Regular Commissions (Late Entry) ARMY RESERVE Captain (Acting Major) D. H. ROBSON 24900285 from Intermediate Regular Commission (Late Entry) 5 November 2020 to be Captain with Group A seniority 1 April 2014 Lieutenant (on probation) (Acting Captain) A. B. HAMMETT 24910239 is confirmed as Lieutenant 6 January 2021 retaining present seniority ROYAL ARMOURED CORPS 6 January 2020 REGULAR ARMY ROYAL CORPS OF SIGNALS Regular Commissions REGULAR ARMY Major A. -
Regimental Associations
Regimental Associations Organisation Website AGC Regimental Association www.rhqagc.com A&SH Regimental Association https://www.argylls.co.uk/regimental-family/regimental-association-3 Army Air Corps Association www.army.mod.uk/aviation/ Airborne Forces Security Fund No Website information held Army Physical Training Corps Assoc No Website information held The Black Watch Association www.theblackwatch.co.uk The Coldstream Guards Association www.rhqcoldmgds.co.uk Corps of Army Music Trust No Website information held Duke of Lancaster’ Regiment www.army.mod.uk/infantry/regiments/3477.aspx The Gordon Highlanders www.gordonhighlanders.com Grenadier Guards Association www.grengds.com Gurkha Brigade Association www.army.mod.uk/gurkhas/7544.aspx Gurkha Welfare Trust www.gwt.org.uk The Highlanders Association No Website information held Intelligence Corps Association www.army.mod.uk/intelligence/association/ Irish Guards Association No Website information held KOSB Association www.kosb.co.uk The King's Royal Hussars www.krh.org.uk The Life Guards Association No website – Contact [email protected]> The Blues And Royals Association No website. Contact through [email protected]> Home HQ the Household Cavalry No website. Contact [email protected] Household Cavalry Associations www.army.mod.uk/armoured/regiments/4622.aspx The Light Dragoons www.lightdragoons.org.uk 9th/12th Lancers www.delhispearman.org.uk The Mercian Regiment No Website information held Military Provost Staff Corps http://www.mpsca.org.uk -
254 Indian Tank Brigade (1)
7 November 2018 [254 INDIAN ARMOURED BRIGADE 1943 – 1945] th 254 Indian Tank Brigade (1) Headquarters, 254th Indian Tank Brigade 254th Indian Tank Brigade Headquarters Squadron Tank Troop rd 3 Carabiniers (Prince of Wales’s Dragoon Guards) (2) th 7 Light Cavalry (3) th 25 Dragoons (4) 3rd Bn. 4th Bombay Grenadiers 401st Field Squadron, Royal Bombay Sappers and Miners 254th Indian Tank Brigade Signal Squadron, Indian Signal Corps 609th General Purpose Transport Company, Royal Indian Army Service Corps 589th Tank Transporter Company, Royal Indian Army Service Corps 14th Indian Light Field Ambulance, Indian Army Medical Corps 254th Indian Tank Brigade Provost Unit, Corps of Military Police (India) 104th Indian Ordnance Field Park (Tank Brigade) 63rd Field Post Office, Indian General Service Corps ©www.BritishMilitaryHistory.co.uk Page 1 7 November 2018 [254 INDIAN ARMOURED BRIGADE 1943 – 1945] NOTES: 1. In early 1941, G.H.Q. India ordered the raising of a second armoured division in India, to be designated as the 2nd Indian Armoured Division. The two armoured brigades raised to become part of this new division were the 4th and 5th Indian Armoured Brigades. This brigade was raised at the cavalry depot at Risalpur in India with effect from 1 April 1941 as the 4th Indian Armoured Brigade under the command of Brigadier (Acting) William Thomas GILL, M.C.*. GILL was promoted from command of the 3rd Carabiniers then stationed in India, and was a British officer in the Regular Army. The first unit to join the brigade did not do so until August 1941, this being the 46th Cavalry; itself a newly raised regiment. -
THE GEORGE BYGONE – November2018: Another George Cavalryman (1914-18)
THE GEORGE BYGONE – November2018: Another George Cavalryman (1914-18) This month’s Bygone, unsurprisingly, looks at The George’s connection to the First World War, on the hundredth anniversary of its end. Albert James Hall, born at Easton on 19th Mar 1893, was the second son of Charles Hall, landlord of The George from about 1908 until 1924. Albert, who would already have been a member of the volunteer cavalry regiment, was called up to the 1/1st Battalion of the Essex Yeomanry on the12th of November 1914. He was sent to France as a member of C Squadron, the regiment travelling from Melton, where they had been encamped, via Woodbridge and Southampton to Le Havre arriving on the 1st December. The Yeomanry took a major part in what became known as the Battle for Frezenberg Ridge, part of the 2nd battle of Ypres, on May 13th 1915.The following, subsequently, appeared in the Essex Newsman on the 29th of May: “ ESSEX YEOMANRY ... STORIES OF SPLENDID GALLANTRY. In the last " Essex Newsman” we reported the heroic charge upon and capture of German trenches near Ypres by the Essex Yeomanry, in conjunction with the Horse Guards Blue, the Life Guards, and the 10th Hussars, on May 13. Unfortunately the casualty list was exceedingly heavy —the enemy shelling the Yeomanry in the captured trenches with great accuracy—but the deed was a noble one, will live in history, and is described by Brigadier-General B. Johnson as “the finest thing he has ever seen." The casualties the Essex Yeomanry numbered 163, out of 307 engaged.” The article also included a number of participants’ accounts including: Of the engagement itself, following three weeks of heavy fighting the Essex Yeomanry was moved into a support position at the strategically important Frezenberg Ridge. -
XXX Corps Operation MARKET-GARDEN 17 September 1944
British XXX Corps Operation MARKET-GARDEN 17 September 1944 XXX Corps DUTCH-BELGIUM BORDER 17 September 1944 ANNEX A: Task Organization to Operation GARDEN XXX Corps LtGen Brian G. HORROCKS Guards Armoured Division Brig Allan H. S. ADAIR 43rd Wessex Division MajGen G. I. THOMAS 50th Northumberland Division MajGen D. A. H. GRAHAM 8th Armoured Brigade Brig Erroll G. PRIOR-PALMER Princess Irene (Royal Netherlands) BrigadeCol Albert “Steve” de Ruyter von STEVENICK Royal Artillery 64th Medium Regiment R.A. 73rd AT Regiment R.A. 27th LAA Regiment R.A. 11th Hussars Sherman tanks of British XXX Corps advance across the bridge at Nijmegen during MARKET-GARDEN. 1 Guards Armoured Division Operation MARKET-GARDEN 17 September 1944 Guards Armoured Division DUTCH-BELGIUM BORDER 17 September 1944 ANNEX A: Task Organization to Operation GARDEN Guards Armoured Division Brig Allan H. S. ADAIR Promoted MajGen ADAIR on 21 Sep 1944 5th Guards Armoured Brigade 2nd Bn, Grenadier Guards (Armor) 1st Bn, Grenadier Guards (Mot) LtCol Edward H. GOULBURN 2nd Bn, Irish Guards (Armor) LtCol Giles VANDELEUR + 3rd Bn, Irish Guards, 32nd Guards Brigade (Mot) LtCol J. O. E. “Joe” VANDELEUR 32nd Guards Infantry Brigade Brig G. F. JOHNSON + 1st Bn, Coldstream Guards, 5th Guards Brigade (Armor) 5th Bn, Coldstream Guards (Mot) 2nd Bn, Welsh Guards (Armor) 1st Bn, Welsh Guards (Mot) Royal Artillery 55th Field Regiment RA 153rd Field Regiment RA 21st AT Regiment RA 94th LAA Regiment + 1st Independent MG Company Royal Engineers 14th Field Squadron 615th Field Squadron 148th Field Park Squadron + 2nd Household Cavalry Regiment RAC XXX Corps Commander, LtGen Horrocks, ordered the Guards Armoured Division to form tank-infantry Battle Groups by pairing each Tank Battalion with an Infantry Battalion. -
Independent Armoured Brigades (1944-45)]
31 March 2017 [INDEPENDENT ARMOURED BRIGADES (1944-45)] th 4 Armoured Brigade (1) Headquarters, 4th Armoured Brigade & Headquarters Squadron nd The Royal Scots Greys (2 Dragoons) (2) rd 3 County of London Yeomanry (Sharpshooters) (3) th 44 Royal Tank Regiment (4) nd 2 Bn. The King’s Royal Rifle Corps (5) th 4 Regiment, Royal Horse Artillery (6) No. 271 Forward Delivery Squadron, Royal Armoured Corps 4th Armoured Brigade Signals, Royal Corps of Signals 5th Company, Royal Army Service Corps th 14 Light Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps (7) 4th Armoured Brigade Ordnance Field Park, Royal Army Ordnance Corps 4th Armoured Brigade Workshops, Royal Electrical & Mechanical Engineers © www.BritishMilitaryH istory.co.uk Page 1 31 March 2017 [INDEPENDENT ARMOURED BRIGADES (1944-45)] NOTES: 1. At the outbreak of war, this formation was known as the Heavy Armoured Brigade, and was stationed in Egypt. It commenced under command of the Armoured Division (Egypt), which became the 7th Armoured Division, with the brigade adopting a black Jerboa as its formation sign, hence becoming known as the ‘Black Rats’. As an independent brigade, it served in Tunisia, Sicily and in Italy, before returning to the United Kingdom in January 1944. Brigadier (Temporary) John Cecil CURRIE, D.S.O.**, M.C., a highly decorated Regular Army officer in the Royal Horse Artillery, had assumed command of the brigade on 16 March 1944 (having commanded it on a previous occasion) and took it to France. The brigade landed in Normandy on 7 June 1944, under the command of I Corps. It came under the command of VIII Corps for the battle of The Oden between 25 June and 2 July and the battle for Caen between 4 and 18 July 1944. -
South Scotland Group Practice September 2018
South (Scotland) Group Practice Quality report Date of inspection visits: MRS Edinburgh 7 June 2018 and 2 August 2018 Redford Barracks Edinburgh Date of publication: EH13 0PP 24 September 2018 This report describes our judgement of the quality of care at this hub and spoke Group Practice. It is based on a combination of what we found when we inspected both locations and information given to us by the services, patients and other organisations. Ratings Overall rating for this service Good Are services safe? Good Are services effective? Good Are services caring? Good Are services responsive to people’s needs? Good Are services well-led? Good 1 MRS Edinburgh and MOD Caledonia Medical Centre Group Practice Quality Report 2 August 2018 Chief Inspector’s Summary South (Scotland) Group Practice is rated as Good overall The key questions are rated as: Are services safe? – Good Are services effective? – Good Are services caring? – Good Are services responsive? – Good Are services well-led? - Good We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection of South (Scotland) Group Practice with MOD Caledonia Medical Centre inspected on 21 June 2018 and MRS Edinburgh inspected on 2 August 2018. Defence Medical Services (DMS) are not registered with the CQC under the Health and Social Care Act (2008) (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 and are not required to be. Consequently, DMS services are not subject to inspection by the CQC and the CQC has no powers of enforcement. This inspection is one of a programme of inspections that the CQC will complete at the invitation of the Surgeon General in his role as the Defence Authority for healthcare and medical operational capability. -
Rollofhonour WWII
TRINITY COLLEGE MCMXXXIX-MCMXLV PRO MURO ERANT NOBIS TAM IN NOCTE QUAM IN DIE They were a wall unto us both by night and day. (1 Samuel 25: 16) Any further details of those commemorated would be gratefully received: please contact [email protected]. Details of those who did not lose their lives in the Second World War, e.g. Simon Birch, are given in italics. Abel-Smith, Robert Eustace Anderson, Ian Francis Armitage, George Edward Born March 24, 1909 at Cadogan Square, Born Feb. 25, 1917, in Wokingham, Berks. Born Nov. 20, 1919, in Lincoln. Son of London SW1, son of Eustace Abel Smith, JP. Son of Lt-Col. Francis Anderson, DSO, MC. George William Armitage. City School, School, Eton. Admitted as Pensioner at School, Eton. Admitted as Pensioner at Lincoln. Admitted as State Scholar at Trinity, Trinity, Oct. 1, 1927. BA 1930. Captain, 3rd Trinity, Oct. 1, 1935. BA 1938. Pilot Officer, Oct. 1, 1938. BA 1941. Lieutenant, Royal Grenadier Guards. Died May 21, 1940. RAF, 53 Squadron. Died April 9, 1941. Armoured Corps, 17th/21st Lancers. Died Buried in Esquelmes War Cemetery, Buried in Wokingham (All Saints) June 10, 1944. Buried in Rome War Hainaut, Belgium. (FWR, CWGC ) Churchyard. (FWR, CWGC ) Cemetery, Italy. (FWR, CWGC ) Ades, Edmund Henry [Edmond] Anderson, John Thomson McKellar Armitage, Stanley Rhodes Born July 24, 1918 in Alexandria, Egypt. ‘Jock’ Anderson was born Jan. 12, 1918, in Born Dec. 16, 1902, in London. Son of Fred- Son of Elie Ades and the Hon. Mrs Rose Hampstead, London; son of John McNicol erick Rhodes Armitage. -
The London Gazette, June 3, 1910
3884 THE LONDON GAZETTE, JUNE 3, 1910. CAVALRY. IQth (Queen Alexandra's Own Royal) Hussars, Lieutenant Guy Bonham-Carter is seconded for 2nd Life Guards, The undermentioned Lieutenants service under the Colonial Office. Dated llth to be Captains. Dated 2nd May, 1910 :— May, 1910. Charles N. Newton, vice S. B. B. Dyer, D.S.O., retired. 20th Hussars, Lieutenant Robert G. Berwick is seconded for service with the Northern Cavalry The Honourable Algernon H. Strutt, vice Depot. Dated 21st April, 1910. C. Champion de Crespigny, D.8.O., retired. Second Lieutenant Wilfrid H. M. Micholls 1st (King's) Dragoon Guards, Lieutenant Samuel to be Lieuteuant, vice R. G. Berwick. Dated E. Harvey is placed temporarily on the Half- 21st April, 1910. pay List on account of ill-health. Dated 13th May, 1910. ROYAL REGIMENT OF ARTILLERY. 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays}, Lieutenant Royal Horse and Royal Field Artillery, Lieutenant- David H. Evaus resigns his Commission. Dated Colonel Walter E. Kerrich, Indian Ordnance 4th June, 1910. Department, retires on an Indian pension. 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards, Second Lieu- Dated 2nd June, 1910. tenant Oswald Beddall Sanderson, from East The undermentioned Captains to be Majors. Riding- of Yorkshire Yeomanry, to be Second Dated 28th May, 1910 :— Lieutenant (on probation), in succession to George T. Mair, D.S.O., vice L. H. D. Lieutenant R. W. Oppenheim, placed tem- Broughton, retired. porarily on the Half-pay List on account of ill-health. Dated 4th June, 1910. Arthur C. Edwards, vice G. T. Mair, D.S.O., seconded. 2nd Dragoons (Royal Scots Greys), Second Lieu- Supernumerary Captain Charles A. -
Allied Armor in Normandy Allied Armor in Normandy
ALLIED ARMOR IN NORMANDY ALLIED ARMOR IN NORMANDY YVES BUFFETAUT An unusually idyllic view of the landings: the LCTS have come close to shore on calm seas with no German opposition. This photograph was not taken on the Normandy coasts on June 6, in NNW force 6 winds, but in England, during a large-scale rehearsal. Contents page image: British Sherman crews waiting to embark. Shoreham and Portsmouth were the main embarkation ports for the British, while the Americans could be found farther west, notably at Portland, which served the 1st U.S. Infantry Division, and Torquay and Dartmouth, which served the 4th U.S. Infantry Division. (IWM H 38986) Contents page map: August 6, 1944, HQ Twelfth Army Group situation map. (Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division) CIS0004 Print Edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-6079 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-6086 Kindle Edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-6086 This book is published in cooperation with and under license from Sophia Histoire & Collections. Originally published in French as Militaria Hors-Serie No 52, © Histoire & Collections 2004 Typeset, design and additional material © Casemate Publishers 2018 Translation by Hannah McAdams Design by Paul Hewitt, Battlefield Design Color illustrations by Jean Restayn © Histoire & Collections Infographics by Jean-Marie Mongin © Histoire & Collections Photo retouching and separations by Remy Spezzano Additional text by Chris Cocks CASEMATE PUBLISHERS (US) Telephone (610) 853-9131 Fax (610) 853-9146 Email: [email protected] www.casematepublishers.com CASEMATE