|
5th
Royal Irish Lancers

Raising
of the Regiment 1689
In
1689 The Royal Dragoons of Ireland were raised in Enniskillen
by the Governor. Captain James Wynne was given the responsibility
of forming the Regiment and as was the custom at the time
they were known as Wynne's Enniskillen Dragoons. The Regiment
was raised to support the Protestant King William III against
the supporters of the recently ousted the Catholic King James
II; this campaign included the Battle of the Boyne in which
the Regiment fought with distinction.

Marlborough's
Campaigns 1702-13
The Regiment
left Ireland in 1694 to join the allied armies, fighting in
the Flanders campaign until 1697. During this campaign Wynne
died and Charles Ross assumed command of the Regiment and
took it back to Connaught in Ireland. 1702 saw the Regiment
return to the Low Countries to join Marlborough's Army, again
engaged against the French. The Regiment fought in all four
of the major battles of the campaign: Blenheim, Ramillies,
Oudenarde and Malplaquet. At Blenheim they captured three
French cavalry kettledrums (which are now held in the Royal
Armouries in the Tower of London). At Ramillies on 23rd May
1706 they, with the Scots Dragoons (Scots Greys), captured
both the Regiment du Roi (Kings Regiment) and the Regiment
de Picardie gaining the distinction of wearing grenadier caps
and being re-titled The Royal Dragoons of Ireland. In 1713
the Regiment again returned to Ireland to conduct garrison
duties.
Ireland
1713-99
For the
next 85 years the Regiment served continually in Ireland,
occupied with internal security duties ranging from the apprehension
of smugglers and highwayman to the control of the impoverished
Irish peasantry. When tasked with such duties the Regiment
was split up and billeted in lodging houses and inns throughout
the country, with the Regiment only coming together once or
twice a year for Annual Review. This gave rise to great difficulties
in maintaining discipline and operational effectiveness. By
1798 the Regiment was in a very poor state and this was clearly
demonstrated when a rebellion broke out that year and the
Regiment was found to be unable to respond to the crisis in
the appropriate manner. The inefficiency demonstrated was
not only restricted to that Regiment, but was endemic throughout
Ireland. It was however the Royal Dragoons of Ireland, one
of the oldest and most senior of regiments, which was made
the scapegoat for the disaster. They were duly embarked for
England, marched to Chatham and on the 10th of April 1799
disbanded.
From
Light Dragoons to Lancers 1857
In 1857
it was decided that there was a requirement for the cavalry
establishment of the British Army to be augmented by a further
two regiments. Thus on the 9th of January 1858 two regiments
were raised. The 18th Light Dragoons and the 5th Royal Irish
Dragoons later restyled the 5th Royal Irish Lancers. The reconstituted
Regiment received its first overseas posting to Cawnpore in
India where they remained for 10 years. The Regiment also
provided two squadrons for the Gordon Relief Force under General
Graham. The force landed at Suakin on the Red Sea where they
faced Osman Digna one of the Mahdi's more capable followers.
The Regiment was involved in actions at Hasheen and Tamai
and after their success was awarded the Battle Honour Suakin
176 years after their last Battle Honour at Malplaquet.

The
Boer War 1899
The first major war
the 5th Royal Irish fought as Lancers was the Boer War. By
the time they embarked from India for Africa they had acquired
a fine reputation; GOC Bengal described them as: "A first
rate Regiment in first rate order; I never saw a better."
But the Boer War demonstrated that the new century required
new tactics. The invention of smokeless gunpowder and rapid
firing rifles meant that the role of the cavalry had to change,
although the 5th Lancers did make a traditional cavalry charge
at Elandslaagte on the 21st October 1899.
Subsequently
the Regiment had the dubious honour of being besieged in the
town of Ladysmith in General Sir George White's garrison;
the Boers besieged the garrison for four months before the
it was eventually relieved. So short were the rations that
one officer wrote: "Emaciated troop horse was issued
to the troops in a disguised and more palatable form - as
paste, sausage meat and even calves-foot jelly."

Ireland
1902
After
the Boer War, the 5th Lancers returned to Ireland where they
came under the command of Brigadier Gough in the 3rd Cavalry
Brigade at the Curragh. At the time of their posting Ireland
was in a state of political turmoil, the government having
decided to introduce Home Rule. This was not a popular policy
amongst the Ulstermen in the north who began to arm and conduct
drill under the auspices of the Ulster Volunteer Force. Furthermore
it appeared that the Army was about to be mobilised in order
to impose Home Rule on Ulster. Many army officers found themselves
in an intolerable position as they themselves came from Ulster.
On the 20th of March 1914 General Paget, GOC Irish Command,
mistakenly informed his brigade commanders that their officers
had the option of action against Ulster or resignation. In
Gough's brigade, which included 5th and 16th Lancers, initially
59 out of the 71 opted for resignation or dismissal, with
only very few recanting when interviewed by the GOC. As a
result Gough and the Commanding Officers of both the 5th and
16th Lancers were summoned to the War Office to explain themselves.
A memorandum was given to Gough by the Secretary of State
for War, informing officers of the 3rd Cavalry Brigade that
the Army Council was satisfied that the incident that had
arisen in regard to their resignations had been due to a misunderstanding.
The incident became known as the Curragh Mutiny and led to
the resignation of both the Secretary of State for War and
the Chief of the Imperial General Staff. It did not however
overly affect Gough's career, as within five months he was
leading his Brigade, still including the 5th, to war against
Germany as part of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF).
The
Great War 1914
The 5
Lancers, as part of the 3rd Cavalry Brigade, were heavily
involved and played a major role in the initial mobile actions
fought by the BEF. They gained the distinction of being the
last cavalry regiment to withdraw from Mons during the retreat;
they also had the privilege to be the first British regiment
to re-enter Mons after the pursuit in November 1918. Generally
the First World War is described as a war of trench deadlock
primarily fought by the infantry, gunners and engineers, this
assessment is correct. It must however be remembered that
cavalry regiments were expected to take their place in the
line from time to time and did share the privations of trench
warfare suffered by the infantry. On a number of occasions
5 L particularly distinguished themselves: in the defence
of Guillemont Farm, June 1917, 3 MCs, and 4 MMs were won and
during the defence of Bourlon Wood in 1918 Private George
Clare won a posthumous VC. While the main focus of the First
World War remained with the armies fighting on the western
front it was by no means the only theatre of war. In 1918
Allenby, a 5th Lancer and later a Field Marshal, reorganised
British forces in the Middle East pushing his lines forward
into northern Palestine. Allenby's Army broke through at Megiddo
resulting in the collapse of Turkish resistance.

Above: The Return to Mons.
Amalgamation
With the
end of the war came the inevitable reductions in the strength
of the army. The effectiveness of the machine gun and artillery
had rendered the mass use of cavalry redundant. As a result
it was the cavalry who were to take the brunt of the cuts.
By 1921 it had been decided which regiments were to be disbanded
and the 5th Lancers were earmarked for removal from the Army
List. In 1922 a change of policy proposed amalgamations rather
than disbandments. As a result the 16th/5th Lancers were born.
The 5th Lancers provided the establishment for D Squadron,
and today within The Queen's Royal Lancers D Squadron is still
the 5th Lancers squadron.
|