The Royal Newfoundland Regiment
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The Royal Newfoundland Regiment | |
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Cap badge of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment |
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Active | 1795-Present |
Country | Great Britain (1795-1800) United Kingdom (1800-1907) Newfoundland (1907-1949) Canada (1949-present) |
Branch | Militia |
Type | Line Infantry |
Role | Light Infantry |
Size | Two battalions |
Part of | Canadian Forces Land Force Command |
Garrison/HQ | 1st Battalion - St. John's 2nd Battalion - Grand Falls-Windsor |
Nickname | The Blue Puttees |
Motto | Better than the Best |
March | Quick - The Banks of Newfoundland |
Battles/wars | War of 1812 Battle of Gallipoli, 1915-16 Battle of the Somme, 1916 Battle of Beaumont Hamel, 1916 Battle of Cambrai, 1917 Third Battle of Ypres, 1917 Le Transloy Arras, 1917 Scarpe,1917, Langmarck, 1917 Poelcappelle, 1917 Lys, Bailleul, Kemmel, Kortrijk France and Flanders, 1916-18 Egypt, 1915-16 |
Anniversaries | ANZAC Day - 25 Apr Memorial Day - 1 Jul |
Commanders | |
Colonel in Chief | HRH The Princess Royal |
The Royal Newfoundland Regiment - (RNFLDR) traces its origins to 1795, and since 1949 it has been a militia or reserve unit of the Canadian Forces. During World War I the battalion-sized regiment was the only North American unit to fight in the Gallipoli campaign of 1915. Later in the war the regiment was virtually wiped out at Beaumont Hamel on July 1, 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme. Since then July 1 has been marked as Memorial Day in Newfoundland and Labrador.
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[edit] Early history
A Newfoundland regiment was first founded, to serve in the British Army, in 1780. It was disbanded and refounded several times under different names, including His Majesty's Royal Newfoundland Regiment of Foot, The Royal Newfoundland Veterans Companies and, The Royal Newfoundland Companies. The Regiment dates its origin to 1795, when Major Skinner of the Royal Engineers stationed in St. John's at Fort Townshend, was ordered to raise a Regiment.
The Regiment was significantly involved in the War of 1812. Soldiers of the Regiment fought aboard ships as marines in battles of the Great Lakes, as infantry in Michigan, and in the battle to defend York (Toronto). It was largely distributed throughout the zone as attached sub-units and not as a formed battalion. It was disbanded in 1816.
Newfoundland became a self-governing Dominion of the British Empire on 26 September 1907.
[edit] World War I
Like all other members of the empire at the time, Newfoundland was bound by British foreign policy and entered the First World War on August 4, 1914. From a very small population base, it raised the 1st Newfoundland Regiment, to fight alongside the British Army.
[edit] Gallipoli
On September 20, 1915 the regiment landed at Suvla Bay on the Gallipoli peninsula, where the British VIII Corps, IX Corps and the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps had been attempting to seize control of the Dardanelles Strait from Turkey since the first landings on April 25. At Gallipoli the 1st Newfoundland Regiment faced snipers, artillery fire and severe cold, as well as the trench warfare hazards of cholera, dysentery, typhus, gangrene and trench foot. Over the next three months thirty soldiers of the regiment were killed or mortally wounded in action and ten died of disease; 150 were treated for frostbite and exposure.
Despite the terrible conditions, the Newfoundlanders stood up well. When the decision was made to evacuate all British Empire forces from the area, the regiment was chosen to be a part of the rear guard, finally withdrawing from Gallipoli with the last of the British Dardanelles Army troops on January 9, 1916.
[edit] The Somme
On July 1, 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme in World War I, 800 soldiers of the 1st Newfoundland Regiment rose from the British trenches and went into battle at Beaumont-Hamel, nine kilometres north of Albert in France. The next day, only 68 men answered the regimental roll call: 255 were dead, 386 were wounded, and 91 were listed as missing. Every officer who had gone over the top was either wounded or dead.
The regiment was in one of the follow up waves of what was referred to as "The July Drive" and were scheduled to reinforce what was expected to be sweeping victories across the front. When the time came to move to the jumping-off point, the Newfoundlanders found that the lead trenches were so tightly packed with dead and dying soldiers of the lead waves, who had been stopped by formidable barbed wire obstacles and automatic weapons fire, that they had to attack from secondary trenches. The increased amount of ground they had to cover, in the open, contributed to the disaster that befell them. The Newfoundland Regiment never made it past their own concentrations of barbed wire.
On the bloodiest day in the history of the British Army (57,470 casualties, 19,240 dead) at the opening of the largest battle (over one million casualties) of the war, Newfoundland had also suffered its gravest military loss. To this day, Beaumont-Hamel remains the most significant single military action fought by Newfoundlanders, and it marked a turning point in the history and culture of the island. Some historians have suggested that tiny Newfoundland never fully recovered from the loss of so many of its male population; similar hardships were faced by the regiment at Gallipoli as well.
Newfoundlanders today mark the date of July 1 not just as Canada Day but also as Memorial Day.
[edit] After Beaumont-Hamel
In the weeks and months following the attack, as the surviving officers wrote letters of condolence to families and relatives in Newfoundland, the Battalion was steadily brought back to full strength. Six weeks later they were beating off a German gas attack in Flanders. Subsequently they distinguished themselves in a number of battles; back on the Somme at Gueudecourt in October 1916; in April 1917, at Monchy le Preux during the Battle of Arras, where they lost 485 men in a day but checked a German attack despite overwhelming odds; then in November 1917 at Masnières-Marcoing during the battle of Cambrai where they heroically stood their ground although outflanked; then at Bailleul stemming the German advance in April 1918. Following a period out of the line providing the guard force for General Headquarters at Montreuil, they joined the 28th Brigade of the 9th (Scottish) Division and were in action again at Ledeghem and beyond in the advances of the 'Last Hundred Days'. It was in these last days of the war that Pte. Thomas Ricketts of the Regiment became the youngest soldier of the war to win the Victoria Cross.
The Newfoundlanders acquired a reputation second to none as a Battalion that could be entirely depended upon whatever the cost. They did not complain, they had faith in what they were doing and they did it with courage, skill and resolution.
[edit] First World War honours
In late 1917, following the Battle of Cambrai, the regiment was granted the "Royal" prefix by King George V, making it the only regiment of the British Empire to receive that honour during the war itself and only the third time in the history of the British Army that it has been given during a state of war.
[edit] Later history
When World War II began, Newfoundland declared war a day after the United Kingdom, on September 4, 1939. However no Newfoundland infantry units were sent overseas. Instead, it raised two artillery regiments; the 59 Heavy (Newfoundland) Regiment and the 57 (later 166 - [1]) (Newfoundland) Field Artillery Regiment. These units saw service in Africa, Italy, and Europe.
In 1949, after a pair of referenda, Newfoundland joined Canada as the latter's 10th province. The Royal Newfoundland Regiment became the primary militia unit for the province. The Regiment is ranked last in the order of precedence of Canadian infantry regiments due to Newfoundland's entry into Canada in 1949, long after other Canadian regiments were recognised in the order of precedence.
Since 1992, soldiers and sub-units of the Regiment have served to augment Force Mobile Command units in Cyprus and Bosnia on peacekeeping missions.
[edit] Quotes
"It was a magnificent display of trained and disciplined valour, and its assault only failed of success because dead men can advance no further." Major-General Sir Beauvoir de Lisle (commander, British 29th Division) regarding the Newfoundland Regiment at Beaumont-Hamel.
"Thank God, my left flank is safe! Now for my right." Brigadier General Bernard Freyberg, VC (commander British 88th Brigade), at the Battle of Ledeghem, September, 1918, upon learning that the Newfoundland Regiment held his left flank.
[edit] Alliances
[edit] Order of precedence
Preceded by: The Toronto Scottish Regiment |
The Royal Newfoundland Regiment | Succeeded by: Last in order of precedence of Infantry regiments |