Difference between revisions of "Mule Corps"

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Mule Corps and  other Army mules.
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'''Mules''' formed part of the supply and transport section of armies and were particularly popular with expeditionary forces which had to travel over rougher terrain. A mule driver is called a muleteer. [[Image:0031_Mountain_battery.jpg|right|thumb|250px|''Punjab Mountain Battery showing swivel gun barrel on mule'']]
 
'''Mules''' formed part of the supply and transport section of armies and were particularly popular with expeditionary forces which had to travel over rougher terrain. A mule driver is called a muleteer. [[Image:0031_Mountain_battery.jpg|right|thumb|250px|''Punjab Mountain Battery showing swivel gun barrel on mule'']]
  
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[[Image:Mule Corps.jpg‎|right|thumb|150px|''page from 1905 Indian Army List showing entries for Mule corps'']]
 
[[Image:Mule Corps.jpg‎|right|thumb|150px|''page from 1905 Indian Army List showing entries for Mule corps'']]
 
Details of where the individual sections of the Mule Corps were based each year are included in the annual Indian Army Lists under the section entitled "Supply and Transport Corps". (An example page from 1905 is shown).
 
Details of where the individual sections of the Mule Corps were based each year are included in the annual Indian Army Lists under the section entitled "Supply and Transport Corps". (An example page from 1905 is shown).
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==Gallipoli, First Word War==
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At [[Gallipoli]] during the [[First World War]] there were Four Mule Cart Corps, each comprising  650 men and 1086 mules.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20140221014448/http://www.hcindia-au.org/pdf/The%20Indian%20Army%20at%20Gallipoli%201915.pdf "The Indian Army at Gallipoli 1915"] condensed from a paper presented by Sqn Ldr Rana TS Chhina (Retd) at a conference organised by the Australian War Memorial in August 2010. Website of the High Commission of India in Australia, now an archived page.</ref>
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==Mule Corps in Macedonia, First World War==
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Mule Corps from the Indian Army served in Macedonia during the First World War, see External links.
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There was also a British Army regiment called the Macedonian Mule Corps  established in the summer of 1916 by the British Salonica Army and the Cyprus colonial government, (also known as the Cypriot Mule Corps). These men served mostly in Salonica during the war and in Istanbul after the armistice. <ref>[https://www.academia.edu/10686840/Recruitment_and_Volunteerism_for_the_Cypriot_Mule_Corps_1916-1919 "Recruitment and Volunteerism for the Cypriot Mule Corps, 1916-1919. Pushed or Pulled?"] by Andrekos Varnava, ''Itinerario'' / Volume 38 / Issue 03 / December 2014, pp 79-101 and [https://www.academia.edu/33203070/European_Subaltern_War_Asses_Service_or_Employment_in_the_Cypriot_Mule_Corps_During_the_Great_War "European Subaltern War Asses: 'Service' or 'Employment' in the Cypriot Mule Corps During the Great War"] by Andrekos Varnava, both academia.edu. Also see [https://www.europeana.eu/en/item/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_5741 List of muleteers who served with the Macedonian Mule Corps] europeana.eu, also to be found at moec.gov.cy </ref> A regimental history, ''The Macedonian Mule Corps 1916-1919 : some records'',  compiled by Major J.P.B. Condon (1979, Nicosia) is available at The National Archives Library, and Imperial War Museums. The following histories are available at the [[British Library]]:  ''Serving the empire in the Great War : the Cypriot Mule Corps, imperial loyalty and silenced memory'' by Andrekos Varnava UIN: BLL01018230538 ;  ''The Cypriot Mule Corps in the First World War'' by Nur Çetine UIN: BLL01018781384 .
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Also see The National Archives record entry [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/browse/r/h/C16161 WO 405] The Macedonian Mule Corps in World War I, which includes a searchable database.
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==Recommended reading==
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A chapter about mules is included in ''Tales of the Mountain Gunners'' an anthology compiled by those who served with them and edited by C. H. T. MacFetridge and J. P. Warren. Edinburgh : Blackwood, 1973.
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<br>An anthology of tales and short stories about one of the most unusual and colourful units in the history of the British Empire: the Mountain Artillery. Its reputation for action attracted a collection of adventurous, able and eccentric officers; usually with a combination of all three qualities. See [[Military reading list#Other| Military reading list - Army - Other]] - List of books recommended by Peter Moore. Another reader said "I cannot recommend too highly ''Tales of the Mountain Gunners''. It is simply enthralling, moving, funny, inspiring and wonderful. It would be in my top 10 books never to part with.<ref>Muerrisch. [http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/index.php?/topic/247013-royal-artillery-in-india-pack-battery-query/&do=findComment&comment=2488531  Royal Artillery in India, Pack Battery query] ''Great War Forum'' 28 January 2017.  Retrieved 29 January 2017.</ref>
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<br>Chapters include: in the days work, good fighting, the soldier, the mule, the gun, some characters and more.<ref> Webpage no longer available. Originally from  "Books on Artillery and Fortifications" DP&G Publications.</ref>
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.hmvf.co.uk/pdf/BRITISHARMYANIMALS.PDF British Army Transport Animals] Excellent article by Clive Elliott containing lots of background information about the roles played by army mules with accompanying photos and diagrams.
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20151120051654/http://www.hmvf.co.uk/pdf/BRITISHARMYANIMALS.PDF British Army Transport Animals], now archived.  Excellent article by Clive Elliott containing lots of background information about the roles played by army mules with accompanying photos and diagrams.
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*[http://animalhistorymuseum.org/exhibitsandevents/online-gallery/gallery-8-animals-and-empire/enter-gallery-8/i-imperial-species/mules/  Mules in the ‘English World’: Cultural Rejection versus Practical Utility] by William G. Clarence-Smith. animalhistorymuseum.org. General background information about mules.
 
*[http://www.limbergunners.ca/html/body_history_of_the_screw_gun.html  The History Of The Screw Gun] By Colonel J.R.M. Hubel, CD AdeC BA M Ed limbergunners.ca. Includes a section on mules (scroll down)
 
*[http://www.limbergunners.ca/html/body_history_of_the_screw_gun.html  The History Of The Screw Gun] By Colonel J.R.M. Hubel, CD AdeC BA M Ed limbergunners.ca. Includes a section on mules (scroll down)
*[http://www.kingscollections.org/_assets/archiosgallery/57/2344.jpg Photograph of Indian troops [7 Indian Mounted <nowiki>[Mountain?]</nowiki> Artillery Bde with mules, waiting to embark transport ship at Alexandria, Egypt. No 2278. 1916] from a [http://www.kingscollections.org/servingsoldier/collection/the-dardanelles-expedition#Gallery collection of official photographs of the Dardanelles Expedition, 1915-1916.] The Serving Soldier King’s College London
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*[http://www.kingscollections.org/servingsoldier/collection/the-dardanelles-expedition/hamilton-7-12-1-158-00019-62809#page-header Photograph of Indian troops [7 Indian Mounted <nowiki>[Mountain?]</nowiki> Artillery Bde with mules, waiting to embark transport ship at Alexandria, Egypt. No 2278. 1916] from a [http://www.kingscollections.org/servingsoldier/collection/the-dardanelles-expedition  collection of official photographs of the Dardanelles Expedition, 1915-1916.] The Serving Soldier King’s College London
*[http://www.newrider.com/Library/How_it_Was/mules.html    About Mules c 1937] Extracts from the ''Manual of Horsemastership, Equitation, and Animal Transport'' 1937 - Published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office: London.
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*[http://www.mapinpub.in/book_images/Sample%20pages%20from%20Indian%20Troops%20in%20Europe.pdf Photograph: Mule carts at Bombay docks, WW1] Scroll down to the image. mapinpub.in
*Listen to the [http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80011995 1991 interview with Francis William Geoffrey Turner] British officer served as brigade animal <nowiki>[mules]</nowiki> transport officer with 111 Indian Infantry Bde during First and Second Chindit Expeditions in Burma, 1943-1944. Imperial War Museums.
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*[http://www.kaiserscross.com/304501/534401.html "Macedonia 1916-1918: Indian Military Transport Units in Macedonia"] by Harry Fecitt, ''Harry’s Sideshows'' kaiserscross.com. Mule Corps in Salonika.
*[http://www.qmmuseum.lee.army.mil/WWII/mules_of_mars.htm The Mules of Mars] by 1st Lt. Don L. Thrapp, Q.M.C.''The Quartermaster Review'' May-June 1946. The Mars Task Force in Burma, 1944, USA Army
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*[https://www.henrywilliamson.co.uk/70-henry-williamson-and-the-first-world-war/257-henry-williamson-and-208-machine-gun-company "Henry Williamson and 208 Machine Gun Company 1916–1917"] includes his duties as a Transport Office on the Western Front “who by night escorted the teams of mules laden with supplies and ammunition, with their drivers, up to the front line, often in foul weather, through the mud of the crater zone and enemy bombardments”. Quotes from two training booklets ''Notes on Pack Transport'' and  ''The Mounted Officer's Book of Horses and Mules for Transport: The Care of the Horse and Mule and how the harness should fit''. The former is available at the British Library in two editions UIN: BLL01001094478 (1912) and UIN: BLL01001094482 (1916); the latter is available under the second part of the title  UIN: BLL01000884662, or online BL reading room access.
*[http://www.lrgaf.org/military/mules.htm Mules for China] by Captain John A. Rand.  Some were selected from other elements of the Mars Task Force
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*[http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/search?query=pack%20mule%20Troitsa&items_per_page=20 Photographs: Pack mules showing various loads 3. 7 inch mountain howitzer] British Army,  Sadleir-Jackson Brigade, Troitsa, (near Archangel, Russia)1919 iwm.org.uk
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*[http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/search?query=Pack%20mule%20MOD Photographs: Pack mule models]  iwm.org.uk. Click to enlarge, and  for some of the models you will see there are additional views of the same model.
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20140327163642/http://www.newrider.com/Library/How_it_Was/mules.html    About Mules c 1937], now archived. Extracts from the ''Manual of Horsemastership, Equitation, and Animal Transport'' 1937 - Published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office: London.
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110106192621/http://www.merchantnavyofficers.com/richardtrooping.html British India Steam Navigation Company Ltd.  Trooping with Richard Douglas Crow], now archived includes a short account of transporting a Mule Corps from Bombay to Marseilles in WW2
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*[https://www.hindustantimes.com/chandigarh/force-k6-indian-troops-in-france/story-Sqq8GVn7QELe6YFORD4tiL.html "Force K6: Indian troops in France"] by Mandeep Singh Bajwa, ''Hindustan Times''  May 19, 2013.  Consisted of  22, 25, 29 and 32 Mule Companies and a supply depot, a reinforcement unit, part of an Indian General Hospital, and a remount section sent to France,  reaching there in December 1939. The men were subsequently evacuated from Dunkirk and then spent time in Britain.
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**[https://web.archive.org/web/20151007003206/http://www.cwgc.org/foreverindia/stories/men-of-royal-indian-army.php The men of the Royal Indian Army Service Corps (RIASC) Mule Companies - the retreat to Dunkirk] cwgc.org, now an archived webpage.
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**In Wales: [http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/wales/archive/bbc-north-west-wales-history-ww2-royal-indian-army-visit.pdf BBC North West Wales] The 22nd company got captured by the Germans just before Dunkirk
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**In Scotland
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***From the Historylinks Museum, Dornoch in the Highlands of Scotland
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****[http://www.historylinksarchive.org.uk/picture/number865.asp Article] from the ''Northern Times'' 15/11/2002, concerning Muslim Indian Army WW2 soldiers buried at Proncynain Cemetery, Dornoch. Click on the “Open Document” at the bottom for a larger version.
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****[http://www.historylinksarchive.org.uk/picture/number11122.asp Information about the Regiments in Scotland] by Hamish Johnston. Click on the "Open Document” at the bottom for page 2.
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****[http://www.historylinksarchive.org.uk/picture/number11123.asp Image] of the first page of an 28 page article “A Corner of Pakistan in Scotland” by Hamish Johnston, told in two articles in the ''Highland Family History Society Journal 2012''. It may be possible to apply to the museum (<nowiki>enquiries@historylinks.org.uk</nowiki>) for a copy in terms of the following: "pdf files of larger size may be made available, copyright permitting, for a reasonable donation to cover administrative costs”.
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***: This article is also available [http://70brigade.newmp.org.uk/w/images/e/ed/A_corner_of_Pakistan_in_Scotland.pdf 70brigade.newmp.org.uk]
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***The Indian Army at Loch Ewe, Scottish Highlands: [https://web.archive.org/web/20150919150520/http://www.russianarcticconvoymuseum.co.uk/wp/lochewe/indian-army-at-loch-ewe/ russianarcticconvoymuseum.co.uk], now an archived webpage and [https://web.archive.org/web/20140331070806/http://www.scotsman.com/lifestyle/heritage/sacrifice-remembering-the-scots-in-the-russian-arctic-convoys-1-2278975 scotsman.com], now archived.
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*Listen to the [http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80011995 1991 interview with Francis William Geoffrey Turner] British officer served as brigade animal <nowiki>[mule]</nowiki> transport officer with 111 Indian Infantry Bde during First and Second Chindit Expeditions in Burma, 1943-1944. Imperial War Museums.
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*[http://14usaaf27tcs.4mg.com/Mules.html  The Stubborn but Courageous Mule]  in Burma WW2. 14usaaf27tcs.4mg.com.  
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*[http://www.qmmuseum.lee.army.mil/WWII/mules_of_mars.htm The Mules of Mars] by 1st Lt. Don L. Thrapp, Q.M.C.''The Quartermaster Review'' May-June 1946. The Mars Task Force in Burma, 1944, USA Army.
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*[http://www.lrgaf.org/military/mules.htm Mules for China] by Captain John A. Rand.  Some were selected from other elements of the Mars Task Force.                           
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20191026192922/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/military-obituaries/army-obituaries/5845146/Major-Victor-Warren.html Obituary of Major Victor Warren] 16 Jul 2009 ''The Telegraph'', archived. In 1943 he commanded an Indian mule company which journeyed by train from the foot of the Khyber Pass to Karachi, sailed to Iraq and then made a 600-mile march through northern Syria to Tripoli in Lebanon; finally, it landed in Italy in 1944 to play a vital role in supplying forward infantry units with ammunition and blankets at the battle of Monte Cassino.
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20170402073345/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1500292/Brigadier-Hector-Wilkins.html  Obituary of Brigadier Hector Wilkins 1916-2005] 10 Oct 2005 ''The Telegraph'', archived.  In 1944 He was a supervising veterinary officer of "A" Group Indian Pack Transport consisting of nearly 1,000 animals in Italy.
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*Video catalogue description: [http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1060030433 Evacuation of "special force" mules and men by waterborne craft made especially for the occasion] Burma WW2 contains some images of mules. Imperial War Museums
  
==Historic books online==
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===Historical books online===
*[http://www.archive.org/stream/ontwofrontsbeing00alexrich#page/n7/mode/2up ''On Two Fronts - Being the adventures of an Indian Mule Corps in France and Gallipoli'']by Major H M Alexander DCO 1917 archive.org
 
 
*[http://www.archive.org/stream/unitedservicema01pollgoog#page/n431/mode/1up "Mule Transport in Persia"] by C E Biddulph page 407 ''The United Service Magazine Volume 8 New Series October 1893 to April 1894'' Archive.org.  Mules were purchased in Persia by the Indian Transport Department.
 
*[http://www.archive.org/stream/unitedservicema01pollgoog#page/n431/mode/1up "Mule Transport in Persia"] by C E Biddulph page 407 ''The United Service Magazine Volume 8 New Series October 1893 to April 1894'' Archive.org.  Mules were purchased in Persia by the Indian Transport Department.
 
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*[https://archive.org/stream/animalmanagement00grea#page/270/mode/2up "Chapter X: The Mule"] page  270 ''Animal Management 1908''. Prepared in the Veterinary Department for General Staff, War Office. HMSO. Reprinted 1914 Archive.org.
 
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:[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/njp.32101049976515?urlappend=%3Bseq=293 "Chapter X: The Mule"] page  275 ''Animal Management 1923'' HathiTrust Digital Library
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:There is a 1933 edition, previously, but no longer, available online.
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*[http://www.archive.org/stream/ontwofrontsbeing00alexrich#page/n7/mode/2up ''On Two Fronts - Being the adventures of an Indian Mule Corps in France and Gallipoli''] by Major H M Alexander DCO, S & T Corps, Indian Army 1917 Archive.org. The Mule Corps were part of the Supply and Transport Corps.
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*[https://archive.org/stream/onroadtokutsoldi00blacrich#page/n7/mode/2up ''On the road to Kut: a soldier's story of the Mesopotamian campaign'']  with 56 illustrations and a map. 1917 Archive.org. The author appears to be an officer from India in a Mule Corps.
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*[https://archive.org/stream/horsewarillustra00galt#page/42/mode/2up  "Chapter V. The Gallant Mule"]  page 43 ''The Horse and the War'' by Captain Sydney Galtrey, Remount Department. Illustrated with drawings by Captain Lionel Edwards 1918 Archive.org
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*[https://archive.org/stream/sepoysep00candrich#page/208/mode/2up "The Drabi"] [Mule Driver] page 208 ''The Sepoy'' by Edmund Candler 1919 Archive.org
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*[http://search.slv.vic.gov.au/MAIN:Everything:SLV_VOYAGER224009 ''Provisional handbook for the 2. 95-in 2. F. mountain gun, mark 1, mule equipment, 1901''] Published London. With plates, including Mule plates. State Library of Victoria.
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:[http://search.slv.vic.gov.au/MAIN:Everything:SLV_VOYAGER220629 ''Handbook for the 2.95 inch q.f. mountain gun, mark I mule equipment. 1906'']. Published London. With plates, including Mule plates. State Library of Victoria.
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:[http://search.slv.vic.gov.au/MAIN:SLV_VOYAGER210104  ''Handbook of the q.f, 3.7-inch mountain howitzer, mark I, 1921''] State Library of Victoria. The handbook contains text relating to the loading of mules, but not the illustrative plates which were issued separately.  (The digital file may be slow to  download)
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*[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1864482/?page=1 "A Short History of the Royal Army Veterinary Corps"] by Brigadier J. Clabby ''Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine'' 1976 Feb; 69(2): 93–96. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Contains references to mules.
  
 
[[Category:Indian Army]]
 
[[Category:Indian Army]]

Revision as of 00:38, 12 October 2020

Mule Corps and other Army mules.

Mules formed part of the supply and transport section of armies and were particularly popular with expeditionary forces which had to travel over rougher terrain. A mule driver is called a muleteer.

Punjab Mountain Battery showing swivel gun barrel on mule

Mule Corps of the Indian Army

Prior to 1884 no permanent transport department was established in the Indian Army and animals, carts and drivers were hired locally when required. Between 1884 and 1887 a separate transport corps existed. This became known as the Commissariat Transport Department and was under the control of the Military Department.

However by 1905 a further reorganisation had witnessed the emergence of a regular corps and cadres of mules, camels and cart transport. "This now consists of 21 mule corps, 9 silladar camel cadres and 2 pony cart train cadres. A mule corps is commanded by a British officer and is divided into two subdivisions, each in charge of a warrant officer. Those for cavalry brigades are divided into six draught and four pack troops , each under a daffadar and have a total strength of 552 all ranks, with 936 mules. Those for use wih other arms are divided into nine pack troops, each under a daffadar, and have a total strength of 388 of all ranks with 840 mules. Cadres of mule corps are commanded by a British Officer and maintain practically the full number of supervising and artificer establishments. They have, however, a much smaller number of mules." [1]

Fibiwiki article on Mountain Guns describes the artillery that could be carried by mules

The mule corps played an integral part in the various theatres of war during the First World War such as France, Gallipoli, Egypt and Basra.

Records

page from 1905 Indian Army List showing entries for Mule corps

Details of where the individual sections of the Mule Corps were based each year are included in the annual Indian Army Lists under the section entitled "Supply and Transport Corps". (An example page from 1905 is shown).

Gallipoli, First Word War

At Gallipoli during the First World War there were Four Mule Cart Corps, each comprising 650 men and 1086 mules.[2]

Mule Corps in Macedonia, First World War

Mule Corps from the Indian Army served in Macedonia during the First World War, see External links.

There was also a British Army regiment called the Macedonian Mule Corps established in the summer of 1916 by the British Salonica Army and the Cyprus colonial government, (also known as the Cypriot Mule Corps). These men served mostly in Salonica during the war and in Istanbul after the armistice. [3] A regimental history, The Macedonian Mule Corps 1916-1919 : some records, compiled by Major J.P.B. Condon (1979, Nicosia) is available at The National Archives Library, and Imperial War Museums. The following histories are available at the British Library: Serving the empire in the Great War : the Cypriot Mule Corps, imperial loyalty and silenced memory by Andrekos Varnava UIN: BLL01018230538 ; The Cypriot Mule Corps in the First World War by Nur Çetine UIN: BLL01018781384 .

Also see The National Archives record entry WO 405 The Macedonian Mule Corps in World War I, which includes a searchable database.

Recommended reading

A chapter about mules is included in Tales of the Mountain Gunners an anthology compiled by those who served with them and edited by C. H. T. MacFetridge and J. P. Warren. Edinburgh : Blackwood, 1973.
An anthology of tales and short stories about one of the most unusual and colourful units in the history of the British Empire: the Mountain Artillery. Its reputation for action attracted a collection of adventurous, able and eccentric officers; usually with a combination of all three qualities. See Military reading list - Army - Other - List of books recommended by Peter Moore. Another reader said "I cannot recommend too highly Tales of the Mountain Gunners. It is simply enthralling, moving, funny, inspiring and wonderful. It would be in my top 10 books never to part with.[4]
Chapters include: in the days work, good fighting, the soldier, the mule, the gun, some characters and more.[5]

External links

Historical books online

  • "Mule Transport in Persia" by C E Biddulph page 407 The United Service Magazine Volume 8 New Series October 1893 to April 1894 Archive.org. Mules were purchased in Persia by the Indian Transport Department.
  • "Chapter X: The Mule" page 270 Animal Management 1908. Prepared in the Veterinary Department for General Staff, War Office. HMSO. Reprinted 1914 Archive.org.
"Chapter X: The Mule" page 275 Animal Management 1923 HathiTrust Digital Library
There is a 1933 edition, previously, but no longer, available online.
Handbook for the 2.95 inch q.f. mountain gun, mark I mule equipment. 1906. Published London. With plates, including Mule plates. State Library of Victoria.
Handbook of the q.f, 3.7-inch mountain howitzer, mark I, 1921 State Library of Victoria. The handbook contains text relating to the loading of mules, but not the illustrative plates which were issued separately. (The digital file may be slow to download)

References

  1. Imperial Gazetteer of India Volume 3
  2. "The Indian Army at Gallipoli 1915" condensed from a paper presented by Sqn Ldr Rana TS Chhina (Retd) at a conference organised by the Australian War Memorial in August 2010. Website of the High Commission of India in Australia, now an archived page.
  3. "Recruitment and Volunteerism for the Cypriot Mule Corps, 1916-1919. Pushed or Pulled?" by Andrekos Varnava, Itinerario / Volume 38 / Issue 03 / December 2014, pp 79-101 and "European Subaltern War Asses: 'Service' or 'Employment' in the Cypriot Mule Corps During the Great War" by Andrekos Varnava, both academia.edu. Also see List of muleteers who served with the Macedonian Mule Corps europeana.eu, also to be found at moec.gov.cy
  4. Muerrisch. Royal Artillery in India, Pack Battery query Great War Forum 28 January 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  5. Webpage no longer available. Originally from "Books on Artillery and Fortifications" DP&G Publications.