Description
I bet like me you thought tanks and armoured vehicles had replaced Britain’s horse mounted cavalry after WW1.
Well, we were wrong.
Imagine this: in 1939, Britain still had a number of cavalry regiments that hadn’t been mechanised. . . They still rode horses and carried sabres.
These were territorials with no real place in modern warfare, yet by 1941, they were riding into battle in Syria, leading patrols, swimming rivers under aircraft attack, and somehow rewriting the book on cavalry warfare.
They were actually incredibly important.
Today, we ate joined by the brilliant —Jonathan Washington, former Yeomanry soldier himself and author of “FIGHTING VICHY FROM HORSEBACK” - It’s a cracking book All about A Division that Wasn't Meant to Fight - Britain’s 1st Cavalry Division in World War II.
Here is the link to buy his book - https://amzn.to/4hlkBun
And here is the link to my newsletter - http://bit.ly/redcoathistory
Today on the podcast we are looking at the history of the Royal Yorkshire Regiment…a unit that can trace its roots back to 1685.
We’ll discuss the antecedent regiments that came together to form the modern regiment, look at their battle honours and important dates and then examine the role of the...
Published 11/11/24
The 23rd of May 1842…Ring a bell? Probably not…unless you are a massive military history geek like me.
Well, it was the date of the Battle of Congella - the first time that British redcoats and Boer farmers went toe to toe.
It wasn’t a big battle but it was an important one and is almost...
Published 10/28/24