| Photographs and history of the 5th Lancers, during the
reign of Queen Victoria.
The history of this regiment is intermittent, a great gap occurring
between 1798 and 1858. It originated with the forces raised by the
town of Inniskilling to resist the invading forces of King James II, and
shared in the work done by them. In the latter year, by a warrant
of William II, the Inniskilling forces were consolidated into a regiment
of Horse, two regiments of Dragoons, which became the 5th Royal Irish
and 6th Inniskilling Regiments, and three battalions of foot.
They appear to have shared in all the engagements and harassing work
that characterised the operations against the Irish rebels and their
French allies from 1689 to 1691; and certainly served with King William
in Flanders from 1694 to 1697. But it was in the great campaigns
of Marlborough that the royal Irish Dragoons most distinguished
themselves, and for their important services have transmitted to their
descendants, the 5th royal Irish Lancers, the names of "Blenheim",
"Ramillies", "Oudenarde", and "Malplaquet",
to head the regimental list of honours. At Blejnheim they shared
in the vigorous cavalry charges which so materially brought the day to a
successful issue; and by the direction of the Duke of Marlborough
himself the kettledrums taken from the French during the engagement were
ordered "to be carried at the head of the Royal Dragoons of
Ireland". resent at the forcing of the fortified lines at
Neer-hespen and Helixem, with the Royal Scots and the irish Dragoons,
and the following year at Ramillies they again charged knee to knee with
the greys, making prisoners of two Picardy regiments, and cutting a
third to pieces, for which gallant action they were permitted to wear
grenadier caps. Lieutenant-General Count de Horn was taken
prisoner during the fight by Mr Ellis of the Royal Irish dragoons.
Malplaquet saw them for a fourth time being brigaded with the Royal
North British Dragoons under General Sybourg, and, filing through a wood
in their front, after a desperate series of charges, they drove the
French Cuirassiers from the field.
The early record of the regiment is honourable and distinguished, and
continued so until 1798. The cause for its disbandment seems to be
very insufficiently understood. There is very strong evidence in
contemporaneous publications that scant justice was meted out to a brave
and distinguished regiment. A very exhaustive and apparently
truthful account of the events that led to this disbandment appears in
the second volume of the "British Military Library", dated
April 1800, of which the following is a summary. No doubt was felt
as to its loyalty when in 1798 the regiment was ordered to Ireland to
assist in putting down the Irish insurrection, which had broken out with
every incident of revengeful cruelty. "The gentlemen of
property were either massacred with savage barbarity or immured in the
gaol of Wexford, under the most dreadful suspense, and in momentary
dread of increased enormities, while the females were carried off to the
place of general rendezvous, where they experienced treatment that we
forebear to enter on, because the details would disgrace the annals of
civilisation". They met the enemy at Ross, which was
garrisoned by about 1700 men under General Johnson, against which the
"Army of Ireland", 18000 strong, advanced on the 2nd
June. The attack was delivered with the utmost fury in three
columns, one of which set fire to the suburbs; and, covered by a number
of "horned cattle", whih they drove before them "through
the smoke, they penetrated the town on one side, whil a body of pikemen
entered it from the other." The story, as told in this
record, reads like an Afghan rush or an Arab charge. "Those
who escaped the sword and bullet were fondly taught to believe that they
were shielded by some superior power, and those that fell died under the
strongest impression that they were destined to an early participation
of eternal comforts."
Into the midst of the disorder charged the only squadron of the 5th
Dragoons present, and that with such desperate gallantry, through the
narrow roads and uneven streets, against the rebel troops, "armed
with pikes ten to twelve feet long, that of the whole force - less than
a hundred strong - but the quartermaster and nine men escaped.
Even then their courage was undaunted. when the general, whose
force was diminished by one half, saw that the rebels were not pursuing
the advantage they had gained, he spoke to his men and asked such as
were willing to conquer or die with their general to follow him.
The ten survivors of the squadron avowed that "they were willing to
shed the last drop of their blood in support of their general and to
avenge their fallen comrades"; and the spirit so displayed was met
by the answering cheers of the little garrison, and, with the cry
"God save the King and success to General Johnson!" they
returned with vigour to the attack, and regained the town with the most
awful carnage. The next day, from the streets alone, some 2000
bodies were taken.
Personal reasons for desiring to injure the regiment are plainly
advanced by the writer of the article in question. "It was
the intent of some individuals to get the 5th Dragoons removed from the
next establishment for the purpose of enhancing the value of their
commissions in the event of their being sent to England". Be
this as it may, it is not denied that orders were issued to fill up the
gaps made in the above action by enlisting recruits in Ireland.
But no care was taken as to their selection. Many were rebel
partisans and in league with their friends in the mountain near
Lehaunstown Huts, about seven miles from Dublin, where there was a
detachment of the Dragoons. A plot was laid to take possession of
this station by these new recruits, and massacre all its little garrison
of seventy men; but it was discovered, and the culprits were tried by
court martial. Two brothers named Feeny, deserters from the
regiment when at Drogheda, "were caught by the yeomanry in the act
of thieving ", and to avoid immediate death offered to name other
Dragoons who were engaged in the conspiracy. Such evidence cannot
be deemed to be of great value, and the only name advanced by these
scoundrels was that of James McNassar, as being implicated. In the
court martial that ensued, which resulted in the condemnation to death
of the Feenys, and the transportation of McNassar, not one iota of
evidence was brought against a single other man of the entire
regiment,then some 600 strong. Two other men, Ryan, a reduced
sergeant, and Gallagher, a corporal, were suspected by the commanding
officer, but nothing could be proved against them and they were
released. On such weak grounds the 5th Royal Irish Dragoons were
disbanded at Chatham on the 10th April 1799. The regiment landed
in England and "marched above 200 miles on foot" to Chtaham,
"in perfectly good order", and was "publicly thanked by
General fox for its exemplary good behaviour during the march and its
unremitting regularity whilst it was under his command". Such
conduct is not that of a regiment that has either disgraced itself or
been guilty of indiscipline.
But it was not until 1858 that the erring judgment was reversed, and
the old Royal Irish Dragoons were restored to the army list, to blossom
into the 5th Royal Irish Lancers, with the harp and crown as their
badge and the old motto, with the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards of
"Quis separabit". In Stocqueler's list of British
regiments, dated 1871, the colour of the uniform is red, with blue
facings, but the present dress is like all the Lancer regiments, except
the 16th - blue with scarlet facings. They served in India from
1863 to 1874; but in their next active service added Suakim to the list
of honours by despatching two squadrons to take part in that section
section of the war in the Soudan, where they shared in the battle of
Hasheen.
The saddest loss to the regiment did not, however, occur in the
Suakim portion of the theatre of war. In the broken square at Abu
Klea, during the march of Sir Herbert Stewart's column across the Bayuda
desert, fell Major Carmichael, "accidentally shot through the head
by one of our own men, so that death must have been instantaneous".
The term "Royal Irish", which is frequently applied to the
regiment, is misleading, as there is another "Royal Irish"
Regiment, though of Dragoons. The origin of the nickname at one
time given to it, "The Daily Advertisers", is lost in
obscurity.
Extract from "The British Army and Auxiliary Forces" Colonel
C. Cooper King, R.M.A. , 1894
FREDERICK BROOKS DUGDALE
(Lieutenant) 5th
(Royal Irish) Lancers
On March 3rd 1901, when in command of an outpost near
Derby, Lieutenant Dugdale received orders to retire his men.
His party came under a very heavy fire from the Boers at a range
of about 250 yards, and three men and a horse were wounded.
Riding up to one of the injured men, Lieutenant Dugdale
dismounted and put him on to his own horse, ran and caught a riderless
horse near by, mounted it, and rode to another helpless man, took this
one up behind him and rode with both men out of action.
Lieutenant Dugdale was the son of Colonel
J. Dugdale, of Sezincot, Gloucestershire, and was born at Burnley on
October 21st 1877. Educated
at Marlborough and Christ Church, Oxford, he entered the Army in October
1899, as 2nd Lieutenant in the 5th Lancers, and at
once left England to join his regiment, which on his arrival in South
Africa was taking part in the defence of Ladysmith. He
was employed with the relieving force under Sir Redvers Buller, and was
promoted Lieutenant in May 1900. Served
under Sir John French in Cape Colony.
Received the King’s and Queen’s medal, and clasps for Tugela
Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Laing’s Nek, and
Belfast. The Cross-was
presented to this young and promising officer by H.M. the King on
October 24th 1902, but on the 13th of the
following month, he was killed in the hunting field while riding with
the North Costwold Hounds. |
Trooper - 5th Lancers
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| The 5th Lancers Re-enter Mons, November 1918 by
Richard Caton Woodville
The 5th Lancers (attached to the Canadian Corps) were the first British troops to re-enter
Mons, just
as they had been the last to leave Mons in August 1914. Very few of the
troopers who left Mons in 1914 were there to re-enter in 1918.
Print serial number DHM1082. Image size 25" x 15". Print
price £42 ($75).
Small image serial number VAR135. Image size 12" x 8". Print
price £12 ($22).
Special giclee canvas edition of only 200
canvas prints of the David Rowlands collection. Order code GDHM1082.
Canvas size 30" x 20" price £350. or 36" x24" price
£500 To know more about Giclee
prints and our range click
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The Lancers by Angelo Hayes.
Combining all the regiments of Lancers in this superb print.
Print
serial number UN240.
Image size 8" x 12" price £12 ($22)
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How
Lance Corporal Colgreve Won The D.C.M. Near Hollebeke For Rallying
Indian Troops
In
no respect has the Great War changed established ideas more than in the
uses of cavalry. In the
opening rounds of the great contest, the retreat from Mons, the advance
from the Marne, and the battle on the Aisne, both the British and German
cavalry played their time-honoured role of reconnoitring, skirmishing,
preceding an advance or covering a retirement.
But when the great German “hack
through” to Calais began with the onslaught on the British Army in
front of Ypres. Imperious
necessity dictated a new employment for the British cavalry.
The comparatively small infantry force was insufficient to hold
the great length of line and cavalry had to be used to fill up the gaps.
By the last week of October cavalry held a critical part of the
British position southeast of Ypres.
But if it was an innovation for a
cavalryman to discard his mount and man a trench like a “foot slogger,”
what is to be said of a cavalryman who in an emergency turned himself
into the leader of an Indian infantry regiment and extricated his
charges from a highly critical situation?
It was Lance Corporal Colgrave, of the 5th Lancers,
who performed this feat, and in case the authorities answered the
question with the award of the Distinguished Conduct Medal.
On October 30th 1914, the
Germans were preparing their terrific onslaught of the next day by a
heavy attack on the trenches held by the cavalry near Hollebeke.
According to the reports of prisoners, at least forty thousand
men were massed on a narrow front, and the artillery concentration was
such as no troops had yet faced in warfare.
An incessant rain of high explosive shells deluged the British
trenches, which were not the elaborate and intricate under ground
warrens they became at a later stage.
They were little more than rough ditches, which were quickly
blotted out, burying their defenders in their debris.
The 5th Lancers suffered peculiarly heavily.
Without being able to reply in kind they had to hold on while
suffering continual casualties, and wondering (at least the survivors)
whether they would be able to back the inevitable attack when it came.
At length the grey line surged from the
edge of a wood where the enemy had been massing.
In close formation, and advancing with the most unflinching
determination and contempt for the gaps torn in their lines, the Germans
pressed forward and reached the first line held by the 5th
Lancers. The remnant of the
defenders was unable to withstand the shock of the assault, being at
once overwhelmed by mere numbers, but the second line, some distance
behind, held firm, awaiting their turn.
At this critical juncture a battalion of
Indian infantry was sent up in support.
These gallant troops had only been in France a few weeks; they
were strange to the land, the trying climate, and the novel conditions
of warfare. Now, in their
first taste of an actual battle, they were subjected to a fire so
galling, that the most seasoned troops would have experienced the
greatest difficulty in maintaining their cohesion.
As it was, the terrible casualties among
the officers of the Indian battalion led to instant confusion.
The men were willing to go anywhere, but did not know where to
go. As they met the Lancers
retiring to trenches further back, they were smitten with uncertainty,
and for a moment panic threatened and they broke.
Colgreve, retiring with his regiment, which
had scattered into groups, saw the Indians passing him in utter
disorder. Without a
moment’s hesitation he ran in among them, striving by word and action
to calm them, restore confidence, and give them their directions.
Finding themselves under a leader, the Indians recovered their
nerve, formed up and followed him.
Despite a withering fire the band maintained their order and
discipline and reached the appointed place.
Colgrave then went back and rallied other
bodies with similar success. The
Indians responded immediately to his orders, the German attack was
eventually beaten off, and a critical situation was restored by his
prompt action. Only once
was his good work interrupted-when he saw an Indian officer, severely
wounded, lying helpless o the ground.
Despite the infernal hail of bullets and high explosives, he
carried the wounded man to the shelter of a trench.
This fine feat inspired the Indians as much as Colgrave’s
personal example. No
man ever deserved his honour more than that which Lance Corporal
Colgrave brought to the 5th Lancers that day. Extracted from 'Deeds That Thrill The
Empire' |
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Scimitars of the 16th / 5th the Queens Royal lancers in Action by David
Rowlands.
The 16th / 5th shown during the operation Objective Lead, The Gulf war
26th February 1991.
Print available unsigned, signed and some artist proofs available . Print serial number
DHM608. Image size 17" x 12". Print price for
unsigned print £24 ($45). Print signed £34 ($60).
50 artist proofs available Price £50 ($90)
Special giclee canvas edition of only 200
canvas prints of the David Rowlands collection. Order
code GDHM608. Canvas size 30" x 20" price £350. or 36"
x24" price 3500 To know more about Giclee prints and our range click
here.
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