Auxiliary Regiments
Auxiliary or volunteer regiments were originally local civilian volunteer corps tasked with local security. In 1917 compulsory service was introduced. When the corps became the Auxiliary Force, India in 1920 volunteer service was resumed, however there was a minimum term of service.
History
- Post-1858 - volunteer corps formed over subsequent decades
- 1917 - Formation of Indian Defence Force (IDF), disbanded at the end of the war
- 1920 - Formation of Auxiliary Force (India) (AFI)
Indian volunteer force
After the Indian Mutiny local volunteer infantry forces began to be set up. Cavalry corps started in the 1860s and the first volunteer artillery brigade was constituted in 1879. Railway companies also formed infantry corps from their staff beginning in 1869.
The volunteer corps were open to Europeans and 'Eurasians' and, with the exception of an adjutant, consisted entirely of volunteers.
However, in railway employment, it was virtually compulsory for all employees, both European and Eurasian, to enlist in the Railway Volunteer Regiments.
Indian Defence Force
During the First World War compulsory service was deemed necessary and the Indian Defence Force Act was passed in 1917. The volunteer corps became units of the IDF and were redesignated. European British men between the ages of 18 and 41 were subject to compulsory service. Some corps allowed Indians to join as volunteers.
The IDF corps performed local security duties during the war and were not sent to the front. Some officers were transferred to regular Indian Army units. After the War the IDF as an official organization was disbanded.
Auxiliary Force India
A further reorganization of the units occured in 1920 when the Auxiliary Force (India) replaced the IDF. Volunteers enrolled for an indefinite period but could be discharged after four years (or upon reaching the age of 45). The AFI was disbanded upon Partition.
Anglo-Indians and Railway Regiments
Megan Stuart Mills writes: "The rise of nationalist agitation in the 1920s brought a highly visible role to the [Anglo-Indian] community as participants in the Auxiliary Force, a reserve organization created after the Mutiny and known widely as the Volunteer Corps. A full 75% were Anglo-Indian, an unsurprising figure in view of the Anglo-Indians often having provided the backbone of the different provincial police forces. In most areas, the AFI represented only handfuls of men but in India's larger commercial and railway towns they were an obvious, relied upon presence. (Craddock:1929) By 1947, the AFI had expanded to almost 30,000 as it was deployed to contain the Gandhian movement as well as communal disturbances. It has been easy for nationalist historians to assume that its members were pro-British. However, as the Bangalore educator C.N. Weston explained, the Anglo- Indians by the 1930s, contended with a particular predicament with regard to the Force:
encouraged and in many cases, compelled to join ... On the railways they cannot get posts unless they agree beforehand to join ... where no military are stationed, the Auxiliary Force is called out and often has to fire and kill... This naturally tends to cause hatred on the part of the Indian towards the Anglo-Indian. (1938:116)" [1]
Satoshi Mizutani writes "One of the most important roles assigned to these [Railway Auxiliary Force] men was to crack down on strikes by native employees (endnote 54)...
As Henry Gidney, [a campaigner for Eurasian rights, in 1934] rightly complained:
‘for economic purposes we are called statutory natives of India, and as such we are expected to work amicably on an equality with our Indian fellow-workmen. Suddenly a railway strike develops, as has so often happened during the past decade, or a riot breaks out. Promptly, the Anglo-Indian [Eurasian] and domiciled European employee on the railways (still classed as “statutory Indian”) has to don his uniform, carry his rifle, and turn out as a member of the Auxiliary Force […] he is suddenly metamorphosed into a European British subject'. (endnote 55)" [2]
References
- ↑ "Some Comments on stereotypes of the Anglo-Indians (Part II)" by Megan Stuart Mills from the International Journal of Anglo-Indian Studies 1996, quoting
- Craddock, Sir Reginald. (1929). The Dilemma in India. London: Constable and Company.
- Weston, C.N. (1938). Anglo-Indian Revolutionaries of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Bangalore: Scripture Literature Press
- ↑ Loyalty, Parity, and Social Control-The Competing Visions on the Creation of an ‘Eurasian’ Military Regiment in late British India by Satoshi Mizutani The International Journal of Anglo-Indian Studies Volume 10, No. 1, 2010
Cavalry
This list is currently being reorganized
- 1st United Provinces Horse
- 7th (Southern Regiment) United Provinces Horse
- Allahabad Light Horse
- Allahabad Troop Light Horse
- Assam Valley Light Horse
- Assam Valley Mounted Rifles
- Bihar Light Horse
- Bihar Mounted Rifles
- Bombay Light Horse
- Bombay Light Motor Patrols
- Bombay Light Patrol
- Cachar and Sylhet Mounted Rifles
- Calcutta Light Horse
- Calcutta Mounted Volunteer Rifles
- Calcutta Mounted Rifles
- Calcutta Volunteer Lancers
- Cawnpore Light Horse
- Central Bengal Light Horse
- Chota Nagpur Light Horse
- Chota Nagpur Mounted Rifles
- Darrang Mounted Infantry
- Darrang Mounted Rifles
- Dehra Dun Mounted Rifles
- Ghazipur Light Horse
- Gorakhpur Light Horse
- Lakhimpur Mounted Rifles
- Lumsden's Horse
- Northern Bengal Mounted Rifles
- Nowgong Mounted Rifles
- Oudh Light Horse
- Punjab Light Horse
- Sibsagar Mounted Infantry
- Sibsagar Mounted Rifles
- Southern Provinces Mounted Rifles
- Surma Valley Light Horse
- United Provinces Horse (Southern Regiment)
- United Provinces Light Horse
1917 redesignations
Corps redesignated as numbered battalions on the 1st April 1917 on formation of the IDF:
1920 redesignations
Battalions and regiments redesignated on the 1st October 1920 on formation of the AFI:
Infantry
This list is currently being reorganized
- Agra Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Allahabad Rifles
- Allahabad Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Assam-Bengal Railway Volunteer Rifles
- Bangalore Rifle Volunteers
- Bareilly Contingent
- Bellary Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Bengal and North-Western Railway Volunteer Corps
- Bengal Nagpur Railway Battalion
- Bengal Nagpur Railway Regiment
- 36th Bengal Nagpur Railway Regiment
- Bengal Nagpur Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Berar Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Bhusawal Company
- Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway Volunteer Corps
- Bombay Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Burma Railways Volunteer Corps
- Calcutta Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Calcutta Scottish
- Calicut and Tellicherry Volunteer Corps
- Cawnpore Rifles
- Cawnpore Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Chittagong Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Coimbatore Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Coorg and Mysore Rifle Corps
- Dacca Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Darjeeling Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Dehra Dun Contingent
- Delhi Contingent
- East Coast Rifle Volunteer Corps
- Eastern Bengal Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Eastern Bengal State Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Eastern Bengal Volunteer Rifle Corps
- East Indian Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Gauhati Rifles
- Ghadeshi Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Ghazipur Volunteer Rifle Battalion
- Ghazipur Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Godavari Rifle Volunteer Corps
- Great Indian Peninsula Railway Volunteer Corps
- Hyderabad Rifles
- Kolar Gold Fields Rifle Volunteers
- Lakhimpur Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Lucknow Rifles
- Lucknow Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway Rifles
- Madras Guards
- Madras Railway Volunteers
- Malabar Volunteer Rifles
- Midland Railway Volunteer Corps
- Nagpur Volunteer Rifles
- Nilgiri Volunteer Rifles
- Northern Bengal Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Northern Bengal State Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- North-Western Railway Battalion
- 24th North-Western Railway Battalion
- North-Western Railway Regiment
- North-Western Railway Volunteer Rifles
- Orissa Volunteer Rifles
- Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Oudh Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Poona Rifles
- Punjab Light Horse (Volunteers)
- Punjab Rifles
- 3rd Punjab Rifles
- 1st Punjab Volunteer Rifle Corps
- 2nd Punjab Volunteer Rifle Corps
- 3rd Punjab (North-Western Railway) Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Rajputana-Malwa Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Rohilkhand Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Shillong Volunteer Rifles
- Sibpore College Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Simla Rifles
- 4th Simla Rifles
- Simla Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Sind, Punjab and Indus Valley Railways Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Sind Rifles
- South Andaman Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Southern Mahratta Railway Rifle Corps
- South Indian Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- St Michael's School Cadet Corps
- Sylhet Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Tirhoot State Railway Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Upper Burma Volunteer Rifle Corps
- Vizagapatam Rifle Volunteer Corps
- Yarcaud Company
1917 redesignations
Corps redesignated as numbered battalions on the 1st April 1917 on formation of the IDF:
- 2nd Nagpur Rifles
- 5th Calcutta Battalion
- 6th Bangalore, Coorg and Mysore Battalion
- 7th East Indian Railway Battalion
- 12th Eastern Bengal Railway Battalion
- 13th Great Indian Peninsula Railway Battalion
- 16th Bombay Battalion
- 17th Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway Battalion
- 20th Nilgiri Malabar Battalion
- 22nd Bengal and North Western Railway Battalion
- 25th Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway Battalion
- 29th South Indian Railway Battalion
- 32nd Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway Rifles
- 37th Calcutta Presidency Battalion
- 41st Eastern Bengal Company
- 42nd Assam Bengal Railway Battalion
- 43rd Kolar Gold Fields Battalion
1918:
1920 redesignations
Battalions and regiments redesignated on the 1st October 1920 on formation of the AFI:
- Assam Bengal Railway Battalion
- Bangalore Battalion
- Bengal and North Western Railway Battalion
- Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway Regiment
- Bombay Battalion
- Calcutta Battalion
- Calcutta Presidency Battalion
- Eastern Bengal Company
- Eastern Bengal Railway Battalion
- East Indian Railway Regiment
- Great Indian Peninsula Railway Regiment
- Kolar Gold Fields Battalion
- Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway Rifles
- Nilgiri Malabar Battalion
- Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway Battalion
- South Indian Railway Battalion
1926
Artillery
This list is currently being reorganized
Volunteer units of the Royal Artillery in India.
1917 redesignations
Batteries and brigades redesignated on the 1st April 1917 on formation of the IDF:
1920 redesignations
Batteries and brigades redesignated on the 1st October 1920 on formation of the AFI:
1925
1933 redesignations
Batteries and brigades redesignated in 1933:
Engineers
- No. 1 (Calcutta) Field Company
- No. 3 (Bombay) Field Company
- No. 4 (Karachi) Field Company
- No. 1 (Calcutta) Fortress Company
- No. 3 (Bombay) Fortress Company
- No. 4 (Karachi) Fortress Company
- No. 1 Electrical Engineer Company
- No. 3 Electrical Engineer Company
- No. 4 (Karachi) Electrical and Mechanical Company
- No. 4 (Searchlight) Company
- Calcutta Port Defence Volunteers
Corps Of Signals
Machine Gun Corps
- 2nd (Karachi) Brigade Mobile Artillery
- No. 2 (Karachi) Company
- No. 5 (Agra) Company
- No. 5 (Agra) Company, Machine Gun Corps
- No. 14 (Bangalore) Field Battery, Royal Artillery
- Karachi Artillery Volunteers
- The Bangalore Armoured Car Company
External links
- The Auxiliary Force, India (AFI) on 3 September 1939 from Patriotfiles.com