23rd Regiment of Foot

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Known as The Welsh Regiment of Fusiliers or The Royal Welch Fusiliers

Chronology

  • 1689 formed as Lord Herbert's Regiment of Foot
  • 1702 known as The Welsh Regiment of Fusiliers
  • 1713 became Royal Welsh Regiment of Fusiliers
  • 1714 became the The Prince of Wales's Own Royal Regiment of Welch Fuzileers
  • 1723 became The Royal Regiment of Welch Fuzileers
  • 1747 ranked as 23rd Regiment of Foot
  • 1751 became 23rd Regiment of Foot (Royal Welsh Fuzileers)
  • 1881 became The Royal Welsh Fusiliers
  • 1920 became The Royal Welch Fusiliers (ancient spelling of "Welch" officially restored, but regiment had always unofficially retained that style)
  • 2006 amalgamated with the Royal Regiment of Wales (RRW) to become 1st Battalion The Royal Welsh

British Library holdings

  • Historical Record of the Royal Welch Fusiliers, late the Twenty-third Regiment, or, Royal Welsh Fusiliers (The Prince of Wales’s Own Royal Regiment of Welsh Fuzeliers) : Containing an account of the formation of the regiment in 1689, and of its subsequent services to 1889; in continuation of the compilation published in 1850 by Rowland Broughton Mainwaring published 1889
  • Regimental Records Of The Royal Welch Fusiliers - Volume II by A. D. L.Cary and Stouppe McCance published 1923. The history of the regiment during the near hundred years separating Waterloo from the outbreak of the Great War, 1816-1914. The regiment saw action in the Indian Mutiny, Burmese War of 1885-87; the Black Mountain Expedition, 1891.

Recommended Reading

  • Old Soldier Sahib by Frank Richards published 1936. The life of a soldier in the first decade of the twentieth century, before the Great War, mainly in India and Burma. He was in the 2nd Battalion. A review is on Military reading list. There is a further 2005 edition, annotated by Krijnen and Langley, with many footnotes and illustrations. "Each page is annotated to give information on Frank Richards’s friends, his officers, the places where he served in India and Burma, dates, events and the language, for example".[1]

External Links

Historical books online

References

  1. Old Soldier Sahib by Maurice Johnson. 26 June 2008, now an archived webpage. Western Front Association
  2. LST_164 "Royal Artillery Attestations 1883-1942" on FindMyPast Great War Forum 27 February 2016. Retrieved 27 February 2016.