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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. -
Kilts & Tartan
Kilts & Tartan Made Easy An expert insider’s frank views and simple tips Dr Nicholas J. Fiddes Founder, Scotweb Governor, Why YOU should wear a kilt, & what kind of kilt to get How to source true quality & avoid the swindlers Find your own tartans & get the best materials Know the outfit for any event & understand accessories This e-book is my gift to you. Please copy & send it to friends! But it was a lot of work, so no plagiarism please. Note my copyright terms below. Version 2.1 – 7 November 2006 This document is copyright Dr Nicholas J. Fiddes (c) 2006. It may be freely copied and circulated only in its entirety and in its original digital format. Individual copies may be printed for personal use only. Internet links should reference the original hosting address, and not host it locally - see back page. It may not otherwise be shared, quoted or reproduced without written permission of the author. Use of any part in any other format without written permission will constitute acceptance of a legal contract for paid licensing of the entire document, at a charge of £20 UK per copy in resultant circulation, including all consequent third party copies. This will be governed by the laws of Scotland. Kilts & Tartan - Made Easy www.clan.com/kiltsandtartan (c) See copyright notice at front Page 1 Why Wear a Kilt? 4 Celebrating Celtic Heritage.................................................................................................. 4 Dressing for Special Occasions.......................................................................................... -
Electric Scotland's Weekly Newsletter for January 23Rd, 2015
Electric Scotland's Weekly Newsletter for January 23rd, 2015 To see what we've added to the Electric Scotland site view our What's New page at: http://www.electricscotland.com/whatsnew.htm To see what we've added to the Electric Canadian site view our What's New page at: http://www.electriccanadian.com/whatsnew.htm For the latest news from Scotland see our ScotNews feed at: http://www.electricscotland.com/ Electric Scotland News I've actually been reading rather than publishing this week. I got hooked on reading the biography of Lord Strathconna and Mount Royal which was a very enjoyable read. I'd previously put up a biography about him but that one almost ignored his early life in both Scotland and Canada. I was also taken with all the work he did for Newfoundland to promote the area economically. He also created an experimental farm which demonstrated that you could live well as long as you were well organised and so as one person put it when visiting him he enjoyed all the best in beef, pork and lamb along with fresh vegetables. I've made this book available and you'll see a link to it below. ----- And as this coming Saturday usually sees the Burns Suppers being celebrated all over the world I've made available a great book by the Rev. Paul who is credited with starting the Burns Suppers. The book is... The Poems and Songs of Robert Burns with a Life of the Author Containing a Variety of Particulars, drawn from sources inaccessible by former Biographers to which is subjoined an Appendix of a Panegyrical Ode, and a demonstration of Burns' Superiority to every other poet as a writer of Songs, by Rev. -
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 -
20150210-FOI00908 74397 Marshall SRR Cap Badge Response
Army Secretariat Army Headquarters IDL 24 Blenheim Building Marlborough Lines Andover Hampshire, SP11 8HJ United Kingdom Ref: Army Sec 74397/00908 E-mail: Army [email protected] Website: www.army.mod.uk Mr A Marshall 6 Larch Close Cambuslang Glasgow South Lanarkshire G72 7BL 10 February 2015 Dear Mr Marshall, Thank you for your letter of 22 January 2015 requesting the following information: “Whilst browsing a number of websites regarding the cap badge of the SRR, I have encountered different two answers. The first answer states that the sword represented on the cap badge is a depiction of Excalibur (the legendary sword of King Arthur), the second answer states the sword depicts the Sword of Damocles. I am curious to know which one is the correct answer, if either. Therefore, can you please provide me with a definitive answer regarding the SRR cap badge?” I am treating your correspondence as a request for information under the Freedom of Information Act 2000. A search for the information has now been completed within the Ministry of Defence, and I can confirm that information in scope of your request is held. The cap badge of the Special Reconnaissance Regiment (SRR) is described as “Argus helmet in front of the Special Forces sword with motto scroll ‘Reconnaissance’ underneath”. The Special Forces sword refers to that represented in the design of the Special Air Service Regiment badge though pointing upwards. Although the sword in the Special Air Service Regiment badge is often incorrectly referred to as the “winged dagger”, the original intent of the designer (reputedly Bob Tait) was a representation of King Arthur’s sword Excalibur. -
Request Copy of Army Dress Regulation Part 12
Army Secretariat Army Headquarters IDL 24 Blenheim Building Marlborough Lines Andover Hampshire, SP11 8HJ United Kingdom Ref: FOI2017/04841/18/02/78806 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.army.mod.uk XXXXXXXXXXX 8 May 2017 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Dear XXXXXXXXXX, Thank you for your email of 20 April in which you requested the following information: ‘I have through recent Google research acquired a pdf of Army Dress Regulations (All Ranks). I attach a summary of the contents that I have compiled through scrutiny of the acquired pdf. You will note that: The Regulations are sponsored by PS12 (A). The pdf that I have acquired is incomplete (some Parts are missing) and may not include the most recent updates (the Parts in the acquired pdf were originated 2011-13). I accordingly request a copy of Army Dress Regulations (All Ranks) that incorporates the most recent versions of all Parts that have been promulgated by PS12(A). A pdf scan of the most recent version of the Regulations sent as an attachment to a covering e-mail would be entirely acceptable. I am treating your correspondence as a request for information under the Freedom of Information Act 2000. A search for the information has now been completed within the Ministry of Defence, and I can confirm that information in scope of your request is held. Parts 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14 of the Army Dress Regulations are exempt under Section 21 (information accessible to applicant by other means) of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), because the most up to date versions are already in the public domain and can be found at the following address: https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/army_dress_regulations_2017#incoming-959300 Parts 12 and 14 of the Army Dress Regulations have recently been updated and are attached. -
The Construction of the Scottish Military Identity
RUINOUS PRIDE: THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE SCOTTISH MILITARY IDENTITY, 1745-1918 Calum Lister Matheson, B.A. Thesis Prepared for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS August 2011 APPROVED: Geoffrey Wawro, Major Professor Guy Chet, Committee Member Michael Leggiere, Committee Member Richard McCaslin, Chair of the Department of History James D. Meernik, Acting Dean of the Toulouse Graduate School Matheson, Calum Lister. Ruinous pride: The construction of the Scottish military identity, 1745-1918. Master of Arts (History), August 2011, 120 pp., bibliography, 138 titles. Following the failed Jacobite Rebellion of 1745-46 many Highlanders fought for the British Army in the Seven Years War and American Revolutionary War. Although these soldiers were primarily motivated by economic considerations, their experiences were romanticized after Waterloo and helped to create a new, unified Scottish martial identity. This militaristic narrative, reinforced throughout the nineteenth century, explains why Scots fought and died in disproportionately large numbers during the First World War. Copyright 2011 by Calum Lister Matheson ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page CHAPTER I: THE HIGHLAND WARRIOR MYTH ........................................................... 1 CHAPTER II: EIGHTEENTH CENTURY: THE BUTCHER‘S BILL ................................ 10 CHAPTER III: NINETEENTH CENTURY: THE THIN RED STREAK ............................ 44 CHAPTER IV: FIRST WORLD WAR: CULLODEN ON THE SOMME .......................... 68 CHAPTER V: THE GREAT WAR AND SCOTTISH MEMORY ................................... 102 BIBLIOGRAPHY ......................................................................................................... 112 iii CHAPTER I THE HIGHLAND WARRIOR MYTH Looking back over nearly a century, it is tempting to see the First World War as Britain‘s Armageddon. The tranquil peace of the Edwardian age was shattered as armies all over Europe marched into years of hellish destruction. -
TWICE a CITIZEN Celebrating a Century of Service by the Territorial Army in London
TWICE A CITIZEN Celebrating a century of service by the Territorial Army in London www.TA100.co.uk The Reserve Forces’ and Cadets’ Association for Greater London Twice a Citizen “Every Territorial is twice a citizen, once when he does his ordinary job and the second time when he dons his uniform and plays his part in defence.” This booklet has been produced as a souvenir of the celebrations for the Centenary of the Territorial Field Marshal William Joseph Slim, Army in London. It should be remembered that at the time of the formation of the Rifle Volunteers 1st Viscount Slim, KG, GCB, GCMG, GCVO, GBE, DSO, MC in 1859, there was no County of London, only the City. Surrey and Kent extended to the south bank of the Thames, Middlesex lay on the north bank and Essex bordered the City on the east. Consequently, units raised in what later became the County of London bore their old county names. Readers will learn that Londoners have much to be proud of in their long history of volunteer service to the nation in its hours of need. From the Boer War in South Africa and two World Wars to the various conflicts in more recent times in The Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan, London Volunteers and Territorials have stood together and fought alongside their Regular comrades. Some have won Britain’s highest award for valour - the Victoria Cross - and countless others have won gallantry awards and many have made the ultimate sacrifice in serving their country. This booklet may be recognised as a tribute to all London Territorials who have served in the past, to those who are currently serving and to those who will no doubt serve in the years to come. -
Supplement to the London Gazette, Hth June 1997
B6 SUPPLEMENT TO THE LONDON GAZETTE, HTH JUNE 1997 Colonel Patricia Slater PURVES (489113), late 21161497 Warrant Officer Class 1 Omparkash Adjutant General's Corps (ETS). GURUNG, Queen's Gurkha Signals. Brigadier Ashley Ernest George TRULUCK 24126281 Warrant Officer Class 2 (Acting Warrant (486759), late Royal Corps of Signals. Officer Class 1) Richard HALLAM, Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. O.B.E. Major William Gerald HERLIHY (535888), Army To be Ordinary Officers of the Military Division of the Air Corps. said Most Excellent Order: Major Barry James HILL (524490), Adjutant General's Corps (ETS). Lieutenant Colonel John Harold BRUNT, T.D. 24705897 Corporal Richard Francis HIRST, Corps of (500521), Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical Royal Engineers. Engineers, Territorial Army. 23876392 Staff Sergeant Bruce Howard HOBDAY, Lieutenant Colonel Roger Ian Stuart BURGESS Corps of Royal Electrical and Mechanical (485679), 9th/12th Royal Lancers. Engineers. Lieutenant Colonel Ian Michael CAWS (501567), Major Ian Andrew HORN (527771), Army Physical Corps of Royal Engineers. Training Corps. Lieutenant Colonel Paul NORRINGTON-DAVIES 24569851 Corporal Danny HUDDART, Corps of (493557), The Royal Regiment of Wales. Royal Engineers. Lieutenant Colonel Anthony John HAYHURST 24397424 Warrant Officer Class 1 Michael Brian (486129), Army Air Corps. HUNT, The Royal Logistic Corps. Lieutenant Colonel John Michael MAY (484910), The 24354896 Warrant Officer Class 2 Robert INGHAM, Royal Logistic Corps. Royal Corps of Signals. Lieutenant Colonel (Acting Colonel) Robert Adam Major Roland John LADLEY (512632), The Royal Mungo Simpson MELVIN, M.B.E. (499747), Anglian Regiment. Corps of Royal Engineers. Major David Neal LAMBERT (526777), The Lieutenant Colonel Nicholas John NEWELL Parachute Regiment. -
Rifles Regimental Road
THE RIFLES CHRONOLOGY 1685-2012 20140117_Rifles_Chronology_1685-2012_Edn2.Docx Copyright 2014 The Rifles Trustees http://riflesmuseum.co.uk/ No reproduction without permission - 2 - CONTENTS 5 Foreword 7 Design 9 The Rifles Representative Battle Honours 13 1685-1756: The Raising of the first Regiments in 1685 to the Reorganisation of the Army 1751-1756 21 1757-1791: The Seven Years War, the American War of Independence and the Affiliation of Regiments to Counties in 1782 31 1792-1815: The French Revolutionary Wars, the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812 51 1816-1881: Imperial Expansion, the First Afghan War, the Crimean War, the Indian Mutiny, the Formation of the Volunteer Force and Childers’ Reforms of 1881 81 1882-1913: Imperial Consolidation, the Second Boer War and Haldane’s Reforms 1906-1912 93 1914-1918: The First World War 129 1919-1938: The Inter-War Years and Mechanisation 133 1939-1945: The Second World War 153 1946-1988: The End of Empire and the Cold War 165 1989-2007: Post Cold War Conflict 171 2007 to Date: The Rifles First Years Annex A: The Rifles Family Tree Annex B: The Timeline Map 20140117_Rifles_Chronology_1685-2012_Edn2.Docx Copyright 2014 The Rifles Trustees http://riflesmuseum.co.uk/ No reproduction without permission - 3 - 20140117_Rifles_Chronology_1685-2012_Edn2.Docx Copyright 2014 The Rifles Trustees http://riflesmuseum.co.uk/ No reproduction without permission - 4 - FOREWORD by The Colonel Commandant Lieutenant General Sir Nick Carter KCB CBE DSO The formation of The Rifles in 2007 brought together the histories of the thirty-five antecedent regiments, the four forming regiments, with those of our territorials. -
The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers
The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers (5th, 6th, 7th, 20th) The Regimental Handbook Customs and Practices of The Regiment 8th Edition 2019 REGIMENTAL HANDBOOK CONTENTS Foreword 8 Preface to the Eighth Edition 9 CHAPTER 1 Historical Background 10 CHAPTER 2 Titles 14 Para 2.1 The Title of the Regiment 2.2 The Short Title of the Regiment 2.3-2.4 The Battalion Titles 2.5 The Company Titles 2.6 Regimental Regular Bands 2.7-2.8 The Reserves Band Titles 2.9 HQ The Queen’s Division Annex A Formation of the Regiment CHAPTER 3 The Structure of the Regiment 18 Para 3.1 The Colonel-in-Chief 3.2 The Colonel of the Regiment 3.3 The Area Colonels 3.4 The Honorary Colonels 3.5 The Regimental Council 3.6 The Regimental Council Meeting 3.7 The Regimental Sub Committees 3.8-3.9 Control and Management 3.10 Honorary Appointments 3.11 Responsibilities of Regimental Headquarters 3.12 Responsibilities of Area Headquarters North and South 3.13 Precedence of Areas CHAPTER 4 The Colours 22 Para 4.1- 4.2 Background 4.3 The Queen’s Colour 4.4 The Regimental Colour 4.5 The Presentation of Colours 4.6 The Wilhelmstahl or Drummers’ Colour Annex A Description of the Colours Appendix 1 The ‘Drummer’s or Wilhelmstahl Colour’ Historical Note Annex B Details of the Presentation of Colours 3 REGIMENTAL HANDBOOK CHAPTER 5 Battle Honours 28 Para 5.1 Background 5.2 Regimental Battle Honours 5.3 Battle Honours Borne on the Colours of the Regiment 5.4 Battle Honours Borne on Regimental Accoutrements Annex A A Brief History B Battle Honours Borne on the -
Register of Board Members' Interests
REGISTER OF BOARD MEMBERS’ INTERESTS Frank Dufficy Current work Owner: Dufficy & Co Ltd Current unpaid work None Recent former paid work None Current trusteeships None Former trusteeships None Other (current) Member of the Law Society for England and Wales Major General Angus Fay Current work Major General, British Army Current unpaid work None Recent former paid work None Current trusteeships • Chairman: Queen’s Own Gurkha Logistic Regimental Trust • Chairman: Queen’s Own Gurkha Logistic Regimental Association Trust Former trusteeships None Other (current) • Colonel of Regiment; Queen’s Own Gurkha Logistic Regiment • Chartered Fellow of the Institute of Logistics and Transport Krishna Gurung Current work None Current unpaid work None Recent former paid work None Current trusteeships None Former trusteeships None Other (current) None David Hayes Current work Consultant: IDG Security Middle East FZC Current unpaid work • Chairman: The Gurkha Brigade Association • Chairman: Friends of Yeatman Hospital, Sherborne Recent former paid work Aug 12 - Jul 17 – Country Manager IDG Security (UK) Ltd Current trusteeships • Trustee: GBA Trust • Trustee: Friends of Yeatman Hospital Charity Former trusteeships None Other (current) None Registered Charity No. 1103669 www.gwt.org.uk REGISTER OF BOARD MEMBERS’ INTERESTS David Hitchcock Current work Chairman: Cyrus Investment Management Current unpaid work None Recent former paid work None Current trusteeships Trustee: Royal Welch Regimental Trust Former trusteeships None Other (current) None Dr John Keeling