Search results
The Grenadier Guards is one of the oldest and most iconic regiments in the British Army. Whether they are fighting on the front line or guarding a Royal Palace, members of the Regiment are renowned for their determination, loyalty and grit.
The First World War The Grenadier Guards had three battalions at the outbreak of the Great War and it would add a 4th Battalion, a 5th (Reserve) Battalion (both in August 1914) and a 1st Provisional Battalion (in August 1918). All battalions followed the same numbering sequence.
- The Seven Regiments of The Household Division
- The Grenadier Guards
- The Coldstream Guards
- The Scots Guards
- The Irish Guards
- The Welsh Guards
- The Household Cavalry
- The Life Guards
- The Blues and The Royals
- The King’s Troop Royal Artillery
There are five foot guards regiments: The Grenadier Guards, The Coldstream Guards, The Scots Guards, The Irish Guards and the Welsh Guards. Collectively they are known as the Guards Division. Together with the two cavalry regiments, the Life Guards and the Blues and Royals, they form the Household Division. The Household Division along with The Kin...
The Grenadier Guards is the most senior regiment of the Guards Division and, as such, is the most senior regiment of infantry. It is not, however, the most senior regiment of the Army, this being The Life Guards. The Grenadiers were formed in 1656 by the Prince Charles (who became King Charles II at the Restoration), whilst in exile in the Spanish ...
The Coldstream Guards were founded in 1650 and are the oldest regiment in the British Army in continuous active service. Established by General Monck in Scotland during the English Civil War, they fought against Charles Iin Cromwell’s New Model Army, and helped defeat the Royalists at the Battle of Dunbar shortly after their formation. The regiment...
The Scots Guards were formed in 1642 and were the personal bodyguard of King Charles I of England and Scotland. It became part of the army in 1686. Identifying them is based on their buttons, arranged in threes; no plume on the bearskin, plus the collar badge is a thistle, and the star of the Order of Thistle on the shoulder badge. Prince Edward, T...
The Irish Guards were formed on 1 April 1900 by Queen Victoria, to commemorate the Irish men who fought in the second Boer War for the British Empire. Along with the Royal Irish Regiment, it is one of only two Irish Regiments that are still part of the British Army. They recruit mainly in Northern Ireland, and for this reason until 1992 were exempt...
The youngest of the five foot guards regiments is the Welsh Guards. George V issued a royal decree forming the regiment on 26 February 1915 during the 1st World War, so that Wales was included in the national contingent of foot guards. They mounted their first King’s Guard three days later at Buckingham Palace – on St David’s Day. Identifiable by t...
The Household Cavalry is a corps formed of two regiments – The Life Guards and The Blues and Royals. They are The King’s official bodyguard. They are divided into the armoured regiment stationed at Windsor and the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment garrisoned at Hyde Park Barracks in London. Like the five Foot Guards regiments they rotate between t...
The Life Guards originated from a group of loyalists who accompanied the future Charles II to the continent during his exile (1652-59) and formed themselves into a military bodyguard to protect the Sovereign. They escorted His Majesty back to England at the Restoration in 1660, and since then has remained the senior regiment of the British Army. Du...
It was the joining of two famous cavalry regiments, the Royal Horse Guards and The Royal Dragoons, which formed the Blues and Royals in 1969. The Royal Horse Guards (The Blues, noting their tunics) descend from a Parliamentary Regiment of Horse, which Charles II re-raised when founding the Regular British Army in 1661. George III promoted The Blues...
The King’s Troop Royal Artillery is a ceremonial unit of the Royal Artillery stationed at Woolwich in London. It is a mounted unit and all of its soldiers are trained to care for and drive teams of six horses pulling each of six First World War 13-pounder field guns, used today to fire salutes on state occasions and royal anniversaries. The salutes...
Jun 8, 2013 · On February 13, 1776, the Guards Headquarters in London received orders. A brigade of guards was to be chosen from the three regiments of Foot Guards. They were destined for service in the war upon the colonists. Fifteen privates were chosen from each of the sixty-four companies of Foot Guards.
Her Majesty The Queen's 7 Guards' Regiments in the British Army. The Household Division is a group of 7 Army Regiments who, in addition to their operational duties, provide Her Majesty The Queen s Household Troops and support military ceremonial duties and major public events in London.
During the First World War, the Grenadier Guards was expanded from three battalions to five, of which four served on the Western Front, while later during the Second World War, six battalions were raised, and several were converted to an armoured role as part of the Guards Armoured Division.
People also ask
How were Foot Guards chosen?
How many Grenadier Guards were there in WW1?
Who were the Foot Guards?
How many Foot Guards are there?
Who are the Grenadier Guards?
When did the Grenadier Guards start?
Jul 17, 2018 · Coldstream Guards in the First World War. If you’d like to learn more about the battalions of the Coldstream Guards I’d recommend combining their war diaries which are described below with the regimental history. 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards.