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IRISH BATTALIONS - ROYAL DUBLIN FUSILIERS |
The Royal
Dublin Fusiliers actually originated in India! In the mid-1600s, the
East India Company established a garrison, Fort St. George, to
protect one of their factories. They recruited 50 men, the kernel of
the Madras European Regiment. Before 1700, 500 Irishmen were
soldiers with the Company. The regiment became the 102nd Royal
Madras Fusiliers.
Following the Indian Mutiny of 1857, the
Crown took over the East India Company's army and the Royal Madras
Fusiliers merged with the Bombay Corps (nicknamed The Old
Toughs, because of its hardened soldiers) forming the Royal
Dublin Fusiliers. The regimental depot was at Naas, Co.
Kildare.
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Inspection of
the Royal Dublin Fusiliers by H.R.M. the Duke of Connaught, 17th
August, 1907. |
The Boer War brought the 2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers' first
victory, though at a high cost. In November 1899, a party of Dubs
was taken prisoner by the Boers. A London Evening Post
journalist accompanying them, Winston Churchill, was also
imprisoned, but escaped after two months. He telegraphed their
Colonel,
"My earnest congratulations on the honour of the
Dublin Fusiliers more than any other Regiment have won for the land
of their birth. We are all wearing the Shamrock here."
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Three reserve battalions were added to the two
regular battalions of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers during the Great
War. In September 1914, the 1st RDF were in Madras. The 2nd
Battalion were part of General French's British Expeditionary Force,
(sent to France in August 1914) and fought at Le Cateau. The 1st,
6th and 7th were sent to Gallipoli, the 6th and 7th subsequently
fighting at Salonika. The 1st and 2nd were at the opening of the
Battle of the Somme. The 8th, 9th and 10th fought at the Somme later
in 1916. The 1st, 2nd, 8th, 9th and 10th were all involved in the
3rd Battle of Ypres, also known as Passchendaele. By the end of the
Great War, 4,777 Royal Dublin Fusiliers had been
killed.
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As 1918
ended, demobilization had already started. The 1st Battalion of the
Royal Dublin Fusiliers (The Blue Caps), served in Germany
before returning to England. The 2nd Battalion was re-organized: A
and D Companies were formed for non-commissioned officers and men
who had civil employment to which to return. B Company catered for
those attending the battalion school. C Company was for men without
a trade or the prospect of a civilian job. The 2nd Royal Dublin
Fusiliers served in Turkey, then India, before being recalled to
England. On June 22, 1922, the Colours (silk flags bearing the
regimental crest and battle honours) were ceremoniously handed over
to King George at Windsor Castle and the Royal Dublin Fusiliers was
disbanded.
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