Showing posts with label Horse Guards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horse Guards. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 February 2020

London - Guards Memorial


The Guards Memorial is located at the edge of St James Park and Horse Guards. It was built to commemorate those who lost their lives whilst serving with the Guards Division during the First World War.

Guards Memorial

The 12 metre high Portland stone memorial was designed by HC Bradshaw and unveiled by the Duke of Connaught on the 16th  October 1926.


The memorial features five bronze sculptured Guardsmen and carved stone badges of the Foot Guards Regiments; Grenadier, Scots, Irish, Welsh, Coldstream, Guards. 

Guards Memorial - Bronze Statues of Guardsmen
Grenadier    Scots     Welsh    Irish     Coldstream
Guards Memorial - Bronze Statues of Guardsmen
Grenadiers    Scots     Welsh    Irish     Coldstream

The inscription on the face of the memorial was written by Rudyard Kipling, who's son Jack had been killed serving with the Irish Guards in September 1915 at Loos. 

TO THE GLORY OF GOD
AND IN THE MEMORY OF THE
OFFICERS WARRANT OFFICERS
NON COMMISSIONED OFFICERS &
GUARDSMEN OF HIS MAJESTY'S
REGIMENTS OF FOOT GUARDS
WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES FOR THEIR
KING AND COUNTRY DURING THE
GREAT WAR 1914–1918 AND OF THE
OFFICERS WARRANT OFFICERS
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS AND
MEN OF THE HOUSEHOLD CAVALRY
ROYAL REGIMENT OF ARTILLERY
CORPS OF ROYAL ENGINEERS
ROYAL ARMY SERVICE CORPS ROYAL
MEDICAL CORPS AND OTHER
UNITS WHO WHILE SERVING THE
GUARDS DIVISION IN FRANCE & 
BELGIUM 1915–1918 FELL WITH THEM IN
THE FIGHT FOR THE WORLD'S FREEDOM.

Guards Memorial Inscription

The memorial also bears the name of the units of the Guards Division and their Battle Honours. A further inscription was added after World War Two which also serves as a memorial to those lost in more recent conflicts.


THIS MEMORIAL ALSO COMMEMORATES ALL THOSE MEMBERS
OF THE HOUSEHOLD DIVISION WHO DIED IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR
AND IN THE SERVICE OF THEIR COUNTRY SINCE 1918


The inscription on the memorial remembers the Officers, WO's, SNCO's and men of the supporting arms and logistics units that were part of the Guards Division, which includes the Royal Regiment of Artillery.


A panel at the rear of the memorial recognises the contribution of the Royal Artillery, portraying an 18 pounder gun in action.

Guards Divisional Artillery WW1

London MMB »219 Guards Memorial
Guards Memorial 18 pounder in action
Source:  mattbuck.

The Guards Division was formed in France in August 1915 by transferring all the Guards Battalions from the Divisions with which they were serving into the new formation.

1st Guards Brigade
2 Grenadier / 2 Coldstream / 3 Coldstream / 1 Irish

2nd Guards Brigade
3 Grenadier / 1 Coldstream / 1 Scots / 2 Irish

3rd Guards Brigade
1 Grenadier / 4 Coldstream / 2 Scots / 1 Welsh

Divisional Pioneers
4 Coldstream

When the Guards Division formed, the bulk of the divisional artillery was brought in from the 16th (Irish) Division. The 74th / 75th / 76th Brigades Royal Field Artillery were formed in September 1914 by the Irish Command as New Army (K2) units. They moved to Aldershot, then on to Salisbury Plain, equipping with 18 pounders. They transferred to the Guards Division in August 1915. 

The fourth RFA Brigade in the Division was the 61st (Howitzer) Brigade RFA,  a New Army (K1) unit which transferred in from the 11th (Northern) Division. The 61st Brigade RFA formed as three x 6 gun batteries. In February 1915 the Brigade re-organised into four x 4 gun batteries. It came under the command of the Guards Division in August 1915,  when the 11th Division was ordered to the Mediterranean. 

The Divisional Ammunition Column was originally raised by the 16th (Irish) Division, transferring to the Guards Division, September 1915. Three Medium Trench Mortar Batteries (X / Y / Z)  were formed in March 1916, and a Heavy Trench Mortar Battery (V Guards) in May. 

The 61st (Howitzer) Brigade was broken up in November 1916 and the units left the Division. D/61 Battery would transfer to 50th (Northumbrian) Division.

The 76th Brigade would leave the Guards Division in January 1917 to become an Army Field Brigade. 


520 (Household) Siege Battery


The inscription on the memorial includes the Household Cavalry who provided a cavalry squadron to the Guards Division from August 1915 to June 1916. 

Later in the war, personnel from the Household Cavalry would form a Siege Battery [520 (Household) Siege Battery RGA], which served on the Western Front. 

The 520 SB was formed in November 1917 and sailed from Southampton on the March 31st 1918, arriving in Le Havre the following day. Equipped with four x 6 inch guns, the battery joined First Army (located Armentieres to Arras) on 18th April 1918, becoming an army level resource. 

BL 6 inch gun

London - Royal Naval Divison Memorial


Situated to the side of the Admiralty Extension and the Admiralty Citadel, which overlook Horse Guards Parade, is the Royal Naval Divisional Memorial. 

Admiralty Extension Horse Guards
RND Memorial to the left

RND Memorial Horse Guards

The Royal Naval Division was formed in 1914 from a surplus of Naval and Royal Marine reservists and volunteers who were not needed for service at sea. They were embodied on 16th August 1914, raising two new brigades augmenting the existing Marine Brigade, to form the Royal Naval Division.

The Marine Brigade Battalions were named after naval depot ports; Chatham, Portsmouth, Plymouth and Deal. The naval brigade's battalions were named after naval commanders; 1st (Royal Navy) Brigade - Drake, Hawke, Benbow, Collingwood; 2nd (Royal Navy) Brigade - Nelson, Howe, Hood, Anson. The sailors and marines were to perform the functions of infantry, and had no integral supporting arms (no Divisional Artillery) or logistics units. 





The Divisions first action was in the Defence of Antwerp. They landed at Ostende in October 1914, and moved to Antwerp. However, they were forced to withdraw, together with the Belgian Field Army, as the Germans launched their assault on the City. The  RND units returned to England with the exception of 1,500 sailors from the  1st (Royal Navy) Brigade who crossed into neutral Netherlands and were interned for the duration of the war.

Royal Naval Division Antwerp

On the 30th April 1915 the Royal Naval Division landed in Gallipoli to reinforce the 29th Division who had made the initial assault on the peninsular a week earlier. The envisaged swift victory against Turkish forces failed, and the British and ANZAC troops became lacked in a brutal war of attrition lasting 10 months. The failure of the campaign lead to Allied forces being withdrawn, and the peninsular was evacuated in January 1916.

Royal Naval Division Gallipoli

On the 29th April 1916, the RND transferred from the authority of the Admiralty to the War Office under Army control. 

Royal Naval Division Patch

The division landed in Marseilles in May 1916 and headed to the Somme. As part of the Army structure, the Division received support and logistics units, including Divisional Artillery. The RND was designated 63rd (Royal Naval) Division, the three Brigades being numbered 188, 189 and 190 Brigades.

Royal Naval Division France and Flanders

The 63rd (Royal Naval) Division served in France and Flanders till the end of the war, being demobilised in April 1919. The Division was engaged the following Battles;

Battles of the Somme 1916 

The Operations on the Ancre (January-March 1917)
Battle of Arras 1917
Third Battles of Ypres 1917
Cambrai operations 1917
First Battles of the Somme 1918
Second Battles of the Somme 1918
Second Battles of Arras 1918
Battles of Hindenburg Line 1918
Final Advance in Picardy 1918
______________________________
63rd (Royal Naval) Division Artillery
 The original 63rd Division was the Second Line Northumbrian Division, intergral was the second line Northumbria Divisional Artillery. When the Royal Naval Division came under Army authority, the second line combat support and logistics were transferred from the Norrthumbrians when that Division was broken up in May 1916.
The Divisional Artilley joined the 63rd (RN) Division on 5th July 1916. The initial Brigades were the 315th, 316th and 317th Brigades RFA equipped with 18 pounders, and 318th Brigade RFA with 4.5 inch howitzers. There were also three Medium Trench Mortar Batteries, and at the end of July a Heavy Trench Mortar Battery. The 1/4 (Home Counties) howitzer Briage also joined the RND, and was broken up.
The 315th Brigade left the Division in February 1917 to become an Army Field Brigade.
____________________________________
Royal Naval Division Memorial
The Royal Naval Memorial was designed by Sir Edward Lutyens and unveiled on 25th April 1925. The memorial bears the cap badges of each of the RND's battalions and supporting arms. It records the battle honours of the Division.

The memorial was dismantled in 1939 when the Admiralty Citadel was built. It was re-erected in 1951 at the Royal Naval College Greenwich, where it remained until the college closed in 1998. It was moved back to it's original location at Horse Guards and unveiled in 2003.

Royal Naval Division Memorial

Royal Naval Division Memorial
Divisional Artillery




London - London Sights

Buckingham Palace
Buckingham Palace Guards
Buckingham Palace
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Buckingham Palace / Victoria Monument


Victoria Monument

Buckingham Palace and St James Park
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St James Park VM

St James Park Pelicans
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Horseguards

Horseguards Blues & Royals

Horseguards Blues and Royal

Whitehall

Cenotaph
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London Eye and County Hall
Tattershall Castle

Tattershall Castle

Tattershall Castle

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Liberty Regent Street


Liberty Regent Street

Sunday, 1 March 2015

London - Horse Guards changing the guard

Horse guard
Blues & Royals
Horse guard
Blues & Royals

Horseguards

Horseguards
Changing the guard

Horseguards
Changing the guard

Horseguards
Changing the guard
Old guard - Blues & Royals

Horseguards
Changing the guard
New guard - Lifeguards