The
2nd King Edward VII's Own Gurkha Rifles (The Sirmoor
Rifles) was an
infantry regiment of the
British Indian Army before being
transferred to the
British Army on
India's independence in 1947. The 4th Battalion joined the Indian
Army as the 5th Battalion, 8th Gurkha Rifles (Sirmoor Rifles),
where it exists to this day. As part of the British Army, the
regiment served in Malaya, Hong Kong and Brunei until 1994 when the
regiment was amalgamated with the other three British Army Gurkha
regiments to form the
Royal Gurkha
Rifles.
The beginning
The regiment was first raised in 1815 as
The Sirmoor
Battalion. This was the first
Gurkha
unit in the service of the East India Company to see action, during
the
3rd Mahratta War in 1817.
The
regiment, by now named the 8th (Sirmoor) Local
Battalion, gained its first battle honour at Bhurtpore
in 1825. During the
First Sikh War, the regiment fought at
Bhudaiwal and Sobraon, as well as the
Battle of Aliwal. They carried
colours at the time, and the flagpole
was broken by cannon fire. The colour itself was seized by the
Sikhs but reclaimed by a small party of
Gurkhas led by a
Havildar who chopped their
way into the densely packed enemy lines.
During the
Indian Mutiny, the Sirmoor
Battalion was one of the Indian regiments that remained loyal to
Britain.
It was during this that the regiment took
part in the defence of Hindu Rao's House,
near Delhi
. For
their part in the action, the Sirmoor Battalion was presented with
the
Queen's Truncheon, which
became a replacement for the colours that they relinquished when
the regiment became a rifle regiment in 1858. With the decision to
number the Gurkha regiments in 1861, the Sirmoor Rifles became the
2nd Gúrkha Regiment. In 1876, the regiment
acquired a royal patron in the then
Prince of Wales, becoming
the
2nd (Prince of Wales's Own) Gúrkha Regiment (the
Sirmoor Rifles)..
First World War
During the
First World War, the 2nd
Gurkhas (by now named the
2nd King Edward's Own Gurkha
Rifles), along with the other regiments of the Gurkha
Brigade, served initially in
Flanders.
In 1915,
the 2nd Battalion moved to Egypt
, before
returning to India in 1916. The 1st Battalion went to Persia
and Mesopotamia in 1916, assisting in the
fall of Baghdad.
Second World War
The
Second World War saw the 2nd
Gurkhas serving in many different theatres; the 1st Battalion was
initially in Cyprus
before
moving to North Africa as part of 7th Brigade, where it fought
at El
Alamein
. Following this it took part in the invasion of Italy, taking part in
the battle for Monte
Cassino
. The 2nd Battalion meanwhile spent much of the
war as prisoners of the Japanese
after being
captured in Malaya. The 3rd
Battalion (raised during the war) took part in the
Chindit operations in
Burma in 1943.
Indian Independence
In 1947, as part of India's independence, it was agreed that the
Gurkha regiments would be split between the British and Indian
armies—the British Army would take on four regiments (the 2nd, 6th,
7th and 10th), while the Indian Army would retain the rest.
While the 2nd Gurkhas became one of the four Gurkha regiments to
transfer to the British Army, the regiment's 4th Battalion was
transferred to the Indian Army as 5th Battalion,
8th Gurkha Rifles (Sirmoor Rifles) where
it exists to this day. This battalion saw action in the
1965 Indo-Pakistan War (as part
of the 3rd (Independent) Armoured Brigade, 28 and 191 Infantry
Brigades) where it stopped the advance of the Pakistani armour to
Akhnur in the Battle of the Fatwal Ridge. In the
1971 war against Pakistan the
battalion now as part of the 68th Mountain Brigade, the corps
reserves, once again saw fierce action in the defence of
Chamb-Akhnur. It launched five successful counter attacks and
recaptured Chamb village and the bridge over the Tawi river. A
replica of the bridge exists as a trophy in the officers
mess.
It also fought in the Indian North east against the Naga insurgents
and in the Doda district of Jammu and Kashmir. Here it
distinguished itself by killing the Supreme Commander of the Hizbul
Mujahideen, the leading Kashmiri insurgent group. It was awarded
the Northern Army Commanders Citation in 1998. It was deployed in
Sierra Leone as part of UNAMSIL and distinguished itself in
Operation Khukri in which the Revolutionary United Front rebels
were decisively defeated.
Post Indian Independence
Following this, the 2nd Gurkhas spent several years in the Far
East, initially during the
Malayan
Emergency from 1948–1960.
Following this, the regiment's two battalions
alternated between Malaya
, Borneo
, Brunei
and Hong Kong
, before receiving a regimental depot at Church
Crookham
in Hampshire. In 1992, while serving in Hong
Kong, the 1st and 2nd Battalions amalgamated to form a single 1st
Battalion. This was followed in 1994 by the regiment being
amalgamated with the
6th Queen Elizabeth's
Own Gurkha Rifles to form the 1st Battalion,
Royal Gurkha Rifles.
Battle honours
The regiment was awarded the following
battle honours:
- Bhurtpore,
Aliwal, Sobraon, Delhi
1857, Kabul
1879
, Kandahar 1880,
Afghanistan 1878–80,
Tirah, Punjab Frontier
- First World War: La
Bassée 1914, Festubert 1914 '15, Givenchy
1914, Neuve Chapelle,
Aubers, Loos, France and Flanders 1914–15,
Egypt 1915, Tigris 1916, Kut al Amara 1917, Baghdad, Mesopotamia 1916–18, Persia 1918, Baluchistan 1918
- Afghanistan 1919
- The Second World War:
El
Alamein
, Mareth, Akarit, Djebel
el Meida, Enfidaville, Tunis,
North Africa 1942–43,
Cassino
I
, Monastery Hill
, Pian di Maggio, Gothic Line, Coriano, Poggio San
Giovanni, Monte Reggiano, Italy 1944–45, Greece
1944–45, North Malaya, Jitra, Central
Malaya, Kampar, Slim River, Johore, Singapore Island
, Malaya 1941–42,
North Arakan, Irrawaddy, Magwe, Sittang 1945, Point 1433, Arakan
Beaches, Myebon, Tanbingon,Tamandu, Chindits
1943, Burma 1943–45.
Victoria Crosses
Notes
Footnotes
Citations
- Parker 2005, p. 46.
- Chappell 1993, p. 13.
- Rifle regiments by tradition did not possess Colours.
- Chappell 1993, p. 14.
- Chappell 1993, pp. 14–15.
- Parker 2005, p. 224.
- Parker 2005, p. 302.
- Chappell 1993, p. 15.
- Parker 2005, pp. 385–386.
- Parker 2005, pp. 391–393.
See also
References
External links