Corps of Guides (British India)

Corps of Guides (British India)
Corps of Guides
Corps of Guides (Infantry & Cavalry)
Active 1846-1922
Country Indian Empire
Branch Army
Type Joint Infantry-Cavalry
Part of Bengal Army (to 1895)
Punjab Command
Uniform Drab; faced, 1859 drab, 1870 piped red, 1882 faced red, 1905 red velvet (officers) red cloth (soldiers), 1908 scarlet
Engagements Punjab
Mooltan
Goojerat
Delhi
ALI MASJID
1879 KABUL
1878-80 AFGHANISTAN
CHITRAL
PUNJAB FRONTIER
MALAKAND

The Corps of Guides was a regiment of the British Indian Army which served in the North West Frontier and had a unique composition of being part infantry and part cavalry.

Contents

History

Corps of Guides Infantry, 1887.

The brainchild of Sir Henry Lawrence, the Corps had modest beginnings. When it was raised at Kalu Khan, on the Yusufzai Plain, in the Peshawar Valley region by Lt. Harry Lumsden in December 1846, it comprised just one troop of cavalry and two companies of infantry. The first action was at Mughdara, in the Panitar Hills. Within two years, the small force of Guides had established a name for itself, under Lumsden, its founder and sole British officer. When the Second Sikh War broke out in 1848, the unit was given authorisation for a three-fold increase in size, to six companies of infantry and three troops of cavalry. The Guides maintained the quirky 'cavalry and infantry combined in the same regiment' format for many years, and even when split into two separate components, the name lingered in both elements. The Corps of Guides became the garrison unit of a key post on the frontier, the new fort of (Hoti ~) Mardan. In 1857 the unit was called urgently to help relieve the Siege of Delhi. In just over three weeks the Guides marched nearly six hundred miles during the hottest month of the year, crossing five great rivers and fighting four small actions. The march coincided with the month of Ramadan meaning that the muslim soldiers in the force could neither eat nor drink during the hours of daylight. On arrival at Delhi, the force of 600 Guides were almost immediately called upon to join the defence of the city. Men who had just completed a march of some 580 miles were thrown into a battle of such intensity that no fewer than 350 of the 600 became casualties within an hour of their arrival in Delhi.

The Corps of Guides was part of the Frontier Force brigade and developed a reputation of being an elite unit. They were the first unit in the Indian or British Armies to dress in "khaki".[1]:537-539 Typically, the Guides were often used in small detachments, usually supported by other Frontier Force troops.

The designations of the Corps of Guides changed over time as follows:

  • The Corps of Guides (1846)
  • The Corps of Guides, Punjab Irregular Force (1857)
  • Corps of Guides, Punjab Frontier Force (1865)
  • Queen's Own Corps of Guides, Punjab Frontier Force (1876)
  • Queen's Own Corps of Guides (1901)
  • Queen's Own Corps of Guides (Lumsden's) (1904)
  • Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides (Frontier Force) (Lumsden's) (1911).[2]

In 1911 the cavalry and infantry components were designated as such. The cavalry then became, successively:-

  • Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides (Frontier Force) (Lumsden's) Cavalry (1911)
  • 10th Queen Victoria's Own Corps Of Guides Cavalry (Frontier Force) (1922)
  • The Guides Cavalry (10th Queen Victoria's Own Frontier Force) (1927)[3]

and the infantry:-

Post-World War II

Cap badge of the Guides Cavalry (FF) with red facing.

In 1945, the 12th Frontier Force Regiment was renamed the Frontier Force Regiment and on independence and the partition of India it was allocated to Pakistan. The cavalry regiment was also allocated to Pakistan and was renamed the Guides Cavalry (Frontier Force). In 1957, the Frontier Force Rifles and The Pathan Regiment were amalgamated with the Frontier Force Regiment to form a new Frontier Force Regiment. The Guides battalion became the 2nd battalion of the new regiment.

The Guides, along with the 2nd Gurkha Rifles(Sirmoor Rifles) and the 60th Rifles won with their blood the unique honour and the right to wear red piping on the collars of their Uniforms. As such both The 10th Guides Cavalry (FF) and the 2nd Battalion (The Guides) of the Frontier Force Regiment of the Pakistan Army wear red piping on the collars of their uniforms.

Literature

  • The Guides are the subject of George John Younghusband's book, The Story of the Guides, first published in March 1908.
  • Rudyard Kipling's "The Ballad of East and West" is about the Guides.
  • M.M. Kaye's novel The Far Pavilions is about an officer in the Guides.
  • Sir Peter Stark Lumsden & George Robert Elsmie, Lumsden of the Guides: A Sketch of the Life of Lieut.-Gen. Sir Harry Burnett Lumsden, KCSI, CB., with Selections from His Correspondence and Occasional Papers (London: J. Murray, 1900; facsimile edition by BiblioLife, 2010)[5]
  • Memoirs of General Sir Henry Dermot Daly, G.C.B., C.I.E. (1905) by Maj. H. Daly.

Founding figures

Queen’s Own Corps of Guides Memorial, Cavagnari’s Arch in Mardan
  • Sir Harry Lumsden
  • W.S.R. Hodson (the Hodson of Hodson's Horse)
  • G.N. Hardinge
  • Dr. R. Lyell (MO)
  • Frederick Battye
  • Wigram Battye
  • Sir Henry Daly, GCB, CIE
  • Walter Hamilton, VC
  • Surgeon A.H. Kelly (MO)
  • Arthur Hammond, VC
  • Daffadar Fateh Khan
  • Rissaldar Fateh Khan
  • Subedar Rasul Khan
  • Subedar Dilwar Khan

See also

  • Guides Cavalry
  • Guides Infantry

Footnotes

  1. ^ Jackson, Major Donovan (1940). India's Army. London: Low, Marston. 
  2. ^ Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 964
  3. ^ Gaylor, p.81
  4. ^ Gaylor, p. 171-2
  5. ^ Lumsden of the Guides, brief details online at books.google.com

References

External links


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