The
52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot was a
light infantry regiment of the
British Army throughout much of the
18th and 19th centuries. The regiment first saw active service
during the
American War of
Independence, and were posted to India during the
Anglo-Mysore Wars. During the
Napoleonic Wars, the 52nd were part of the
Light Division, and were present at
most of the major battles of the
Peninsula campaign, becoming one of the most
celebrated regiments, described by
Sir William Napier as "a
regiment never surpassed in arms since arms werefirst borne by
men".
They
had the largest British battalion at Waterloo
, 1815, where they formed part of the final charge
against Napoleon's Imperial Guard.
They were
also involved in various campaigns in India
.
The regiment was raised as a
line
regiment in 1755 and numbered as the "54th Foot"; they were
renumbered as the "52nd Regiment of Foot" in 1757. In 1781, the
regional designation "52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot" was
given, and in 1803 the regiment was the first regular British Army
regiment to be designated "Light Infantry". In 1881 the regiment
was merged with the
43rd Regiment of Foot
to become the regiment later known as the
Oxfordshire and
Buckinghamshire Light Infantry.
Regimental structure
Throughout the period of the 52nd's existence, the British Army
comprised both infantry and
cavalry line
regiments, as well as the
Household Divisions. The regiments of the
line were numbered and, from 1781, were given territorial
designations – "Oxfordshire" in the 52nd's case – which roughly
represented the area from which troops were drawn. This was not
rigid, and most English regiments had a significant proportion of
Irish and Scots. Regiments comprised at least one
battalion, often two – as the 52nd did
intermittently – and occasionally more. Commanded by a
lieutenant colonel, an infantry battalion
was composed of ten
companies, of which eight were
"centre" companies, and two flank companies: one a
grenadier and one (in regular line regiments) a
specialist light company. Companies were commanded by
captains, with
lieutenants and
ensigns (or
subalterns) beneath him. Ideally, a battalion
comprised 1000 men (excluding
NCO, musicians and officers); the
1st (or senior) battalion of a regiment would frequently draw fit
recruits from the 2nd battalion to maintain its strength. If also
sent on active service, the 2nd battalion would consequently be
weaker. In periods of long service, battalions were generally
operating under strength. Seriously under-strength battalions might
be dissolved, or temporarily drafted into other regiments, as
happened to the 52nd on several occasions.
The 52nd was initially a one-battalion regiment, but increased
recruiting resulted in the creation of a second battalion in 1798.
While the 1st Battalion saw some action in Spain and Portugal in
1800–1801, the 2nd remained stationed in England. In 1803 the
regiment's fittest officers and men were concentrated in the 1st
battalion, for training as light infantry, and the 2nd battalion
was transferred to the 96th Foot. A new second battalion was raised
in 1804. Both battalions saw extensive action during the Napoleonic
Wars, and they were brigaded together for a time during the
Peninsula Campaign, but heavy losses at
Badajoz in 1812 resulted in the
reduction of the 2nd battalion to a
cadre
(skeleton staff). The 2nd was eventually reformed with new recruits
and saw service in Holland in 1813–14. Following the conclusion of
the war in 1814, both battalions were billeted in England, where
the 2nd's effectives were transferred to the 1st battalion, in
preparation for further service. The 2/52nd remained in England
during the
Waterloo Campaign, and
were disbanded in 1815. Subsequently, the 52nd remained a
one-battalion regiment until their merger with the 43rd.
Light infantry
Initially raised as a regular line regiment, the 52nd fought in the
line during the American wars and the early Indian campaigns, and
did not become a light regiment until 1803. However, they were the
first regular British regiment to be so designated. Prior to this,
the British Army had relied on
irregulars and
mercenaries to provide most of its light infantry
or, when conditions demanded it, temporarily seconded regular line
companies. While regular regiments were required to include one
company of light infantry from 1758, the training of such light
troops was inconsistent, and frequently inadequate. Consequently,
when beginning a restructure of the British Army in the late 18th
century, the
Duke of York
recognised a need for dedicated light troops, especially coming
into a war against
Napoleon and his
experienced light infantry, the
chasseurs.
During the early war against the French, the
British Army was bolstered by light infantry mercenaries from
Germany
and the Low Countries,
but the British light infantry companies proved inadequate against
the experienced French during the Flanders campaign, and in
the
Netherlands in 1799, and infantry reform became
urgent.

Map of Shorncliffe Camp - 1801.
In 1801, the "Experimental Corps of Riflemen" was raised (later
designated the
95th Rifles), and a
decision was made to train some
line
regiments in light infantry techniques, so they might operate
as both light and line infantry.
Sir John Moore, a
proponent of the light infantry model, suggested that his own
regiment of line infantry, the 52nd, be first to undergo this
training, at Shorncliffe
Camp
. They were followed shortly afterwards by
the
43rd Foot,
by whose side they would fight many campaigns as part of the
Light Division. Several other line
regiments were designated "light infantry" in 1808.
Moore wrote of the 52nd in his diary that "it is evident that not
only the officers, but that each individual soldier, knows
perfectly what he has to do; the discipline is carried on without
severity, the officers are attached to the men and the men to the
officers." This had much to do with the method of training; unlike
other regiments, light infantry officers drilled with the men and
were expected to be familiar with drill routines, including weapons
training. The ranks also received additional training, and were
encouraged to develop initiative and self-direction; while
skirmishing in the field they would need to react without direct
orders. While most regiments of the time fought in tight formation,
allowing easy administration of orders, light infantry worked in
small groups, in advance of the main line, so complicated bugle
calls were developed to pass orders. Consequently, the bugle became
the emblem of the light infantry regiments.
When skirmishing, light infantry fought in pairs, so that one
soldier could cover the other while loading. Line regiments fired
in volleys, but skirmishers fired at will, taking careful aim at
targets. While some consideration was given to equipping light
infantry with
rifles, due to their
improved accuracy, the expected difficulty and expense in obtaining
sufficient
rifled weapons resulted in the
standard infantry
musket being issued to most
troops. The accuracy of the musket decreased at long range and,
since the French
chasseurs and
voltigeurs also used muskets, it is likely
that skirmishers' firefights took place at ranges of only 50 yards
(or less). 10 yards provided the accuracy of point-blank range.
Although the French infantry (and, earlier, the Americans)
frequently used multi-shot and grapeshot in their muskets, the
British light infantry used only standard ball ammunition.
Light infantry were equipped more lightly than regular line
regiments, and marched at 140 paces per minute. Tasks of the light
infantry included advance and rear guard action, flanking
protection for armies and forward skirmishing. They were also
called upon to take regular line formations during battles, or to
act as part of fortification storming parties. During the
Peninsular War, they were regarded as the army's elite corps.
Regimental history
Early history
The 52nd began as a standard infantry line regiment in 1755, when
Colonel
Hedworth Lambton received
papers to raise a new regiment, to be numbered as the
54th Foot. It was renumbered as the "52nd Regiment
of Foot" in 1757, and was stationed in England and Ireland. (At the
same time, the previous 52nd Foot was renamed the
50th Foot.) In 1765, the
Regiment was posted to Canada.
The regiment, under the command of Colonel John
Clavering, departed Cork, Ireland
aboard the transport Pitt, for Quebec
.
En route,
the ship ran aground in dense fog in the Gulf of St
Lawrence
, near the coast of Nova Scotia
; the wreck remained intact enough for all on board,
including the soldiers' wives, to disembark safely, transferring
their effects and regimental provisions to shore. General Murray, Governor
of Quebec, sent a schooner to retrieve the personnel and
belongings, and carry them to Quebec.
American War of Independence
Twenty years after its founding, the regiment saw active service in
the
American War of
Independence, from 1774 to 1778.
The 52nd was shipped
to America from Canada, arriving in Boston
, and fought
in the battles of Lexington
and Bunker Hill
in 1775. Major-General
William Howe led the main
assault at Bunker Hill with Brigadier
Robert Pigot leading the 52nd
and 43rd Foot in support. This was the first occasion that the 52nd
fought alongside the 43rd. They suffered heavy casualties at Bunker
Hill, and in their grenadier company, only 8 men were left
unwounded. In August, 1778, the men were drafted into other
regiments and the officers returned to England. The regiment
obtained new recruits and in 1782 the introduction of county titles
for regiments resulted in the 52nd adding "Oxfordshire" to their
name.
Indian Wars
In 1783,
the 52nd arrived in Madras
, for nine
years of war spanning the Second and Third Anglo-Mysore Wars. The
Second War had begun in 1778, when the British responded to news of
war against France by moving against French-held bases in India.
Hyder Ali, then ruler of Mysore
, sided with
the French and marched against the British. Hyder died in
1782, and was succeeded by his son,
Tippu
Sultan, who continued the war through some minor campaigns
until a peace treaty was signed in 1784.
Shortly afterwards, a
detachment from the 52nd took part in the 1785 siege of Cannanore
. The 52nd stormed the breach at Cannanore,
under command of
Sir Martin
Hunter.
In 1786,
Lord Cornwallis
was appointed Governor-general, and the war against Tippu Sultan
was resumed after Tippu attacked British allies in India. (This was
known as the Third Mysore war). Initially, military actions were
fairly minor.
In 1790, the 52nd were involved at Pollighautcherry
and in a battle near Seringapatam
. In 1791, the regiment fought at Bangalore
in March, and Arikera (or Seringapatam) in
May. In December that year, the flank companies from the
52nd and
76th Foot, with
sepoy grenadiers, formed the
storming party during the assault on Savandroog; the defenders
abandoned the fortress, and it was successfully taken at the cost
of just one British soldier wounded. Throughout the assault, the
band of the 52nd played to spur on the attackers. The 52nd were
also present at the February 1792 siege of Seringapatam, where the
battalion's grenadier company received heavy casualties while
crossing the river. During that battle, the 52nd came to the aid of
Lord Cornwallis, whose companies were exposed and in danger of
capture. Tippu Sultan sued for peace during the siege, and a treaty
was signed in 1792, ending the war.
However, in August 1793 the regiment took
part in an assault on Pondicherry
.
French Revolutionary Wars
With the
outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars in 1793, the British
renewed their intermittent war against Holland; amongst the action was
an assault on the Dutch colony at Ceylon
.
In 1795,
a force commanded by Colonel James Stuart, of the 72nd Foot, and including the 52nd, left India for
Ceylon, laying siege to Trincomalee
; by February 1796 the island was in British
hands. The 52nd returned to Britain in 1798 where, bolstered
by new recruits, a second battalion was created.
In 1800 the 1/52nd
took part in the Qiberon Bay, Vigo
, Cadiz
and Ferrol
expeditions and, after short stations in Gibraltar
and Lisbon
, returned to
England in 1801. In January 1803, the regiment's 2nd
battalion was transferred into the
96th
Foot; prior to the transfer, the fittest men and officers were
seconded by the 1st battalion, which was converted into "a corps of
light infantry", and began training under Major-General Moore (who
was also Colonel of the 52nd) at Shorncliffe Camp. They formed a
brigade with the 95th Rifles, and three line
regiments. Much of the training was undertaken by
Lieutenant-Colonel
Kenneth
MacKenzie, who devised many of the tactics of light infantry
training. A new second battalion was raised in 1804.
Napoleonic Wars
Both battalions of the 52nd experienced active service throughout
the
Napoleonic Wars, their paths
occasionally overlapping. In 1806–7, the 1st battalion were
stationed in
Sicily, where they helped train
local soldiers; later, they accompanied Moore to Sweden.
In August
1806, the 2nd battalion accompanied the expedition to Copenhagen
, taking part in the 1807 assault against Copenhagen,
which was led by General
Wellesley. The 2/52nd landed in Portugal
in August 1808 and, with the 2/43rd, were
positioned in the village of Vimeiro
to provide cover for the army landings at the
nearby Maceira Bay. Three companies of the 2/52nd were
posted with the
advance guard, and were the first to encounter the enemy during
the
Battle of Vimeiro. Following
the battle, the British commander Wellesley was superseded in turn
by two superiors,
Sir Harry Burrard
and
Sir Hew
Dalrymple respectively, who signed the
Convention of Sintra. The three
commanders were recalled to England to explain their actions, and
the command of the British troops devolved on
Sir John Moore, the 52nd's
colonel.
In
October, Sir John Moore led the army into Spain, reaching as far as
Salamanca
. In December, they were reinforced by 10,000
troops from England, including the '1st Flank Brigade', which was
consisted of 1/52nd, 1/43rd and 1/95th and led by
Robert Craufurd.
Moore's army now
totalled 25,000, but his advance was cut short by the news that
Napoleon had defeated the Spanish, held
Madrid
, and was
approaching with an army of 200,000. Moore turned his men,
and retreated to Corunna
, over mountain roads and through bitter winter
weather. French cavalry pursued the British Army the length
of the journey, and a Reserve Division was set up to provide
rearguard protection for the British troops. The core of this
Reserve, commanded by
Edward Paget,
consisted of the 1/52nd and 1/95th battalions, who displayed none
of the ill-discipline which plagued other regiments during the
retreat, but "made a stand at every defile and riverline, buying
time for the rest of the army to get away." Following the
secondment of the 1/52nd and 1/95th to the Reserve, Craufurd's 1st
Flank Brigade was reformed, and comprised the 1/43rd, 2/52nd and
2/95th.
The 1st Flank Brigade deployed with the
Reserve for a time, protecting the crossing of the river Esla near
Benavente
, before it separated from the Reserve and the main
army and marched to Vigo
, with over
4,000 other troops, for eventual transportation to England.
The 1/52nd remained with the main army, which was caught by the
French at Corunna.
During the ensuing battle
, in January 1809, Moore was killed; the army,
including the 1/52nd, were evacuated to England.

Major battles of the Peninsular
War
The 1/52nd, along with 1/43rd and 1/95th, returned to the Peninsula
in June 1809, where they were designated the "Light Brigade", under
the command of General Craufurd.
Alighting in Lisbon and hearing of the
army's engagement with the French, they undertook a forced march to
Talavera
, arriving mere hours after the battle. The
march was an extraordinary achievement, covering 42 miles in 26
hours, at a time when an infantry march of 15 miles a day was
standard. Henceforth, the 1/52nd generally remained in advance of
the army, as a forward party, a role which was to be theirs
throughout much of the war. In February 1810, Portuguese Cazadores
were added to Craufurd's brigade, creating the
Light Division, the 1/52nd forming a brigade
with 1st Cazadores and four companies from the 95th, under Lt-Col
Barclay.
While holding a forward outpost, the Light
Division was involved in the Battle of the Côa, in July 1810, and
took part in the Battle of Bussaco
, where the Light Division held the left against the
main French charge, which they successfully repulsed, inflicting
high casualties; 1200 Frenchmen were killed, wounded or captured,
while the Light Division suffered only 120 casualties. When
Wellington's army retreated back to the
Lines of Torres Vedras, late 1810,
the Light Division acted as rearguard. The French were unable to
broach the Torres Vedras defences, but engaged the British army in
a number of small skirmishes, such as those fought by the Light
Division, under the temporary command of
Sir William Erskine, at
Casal Novo – where they unwittingly came
upon 11 French divisions in the fog – and
Sabugal (April 1811), an engagement of
which
Wellington later
wrote: "I consider that the action that was fought by the Light
Division [...] with the whole of the [French] 2nd Corps, to be the
most glorious that British troops were ever engaged in."
After returning to England in 1809, the 52nd's 2nd battalion had
joined the unsuccessful
Walcheren
Campaign in the Netherlands. Walcheren was surrounded by
marshes, and many of the officers and men came down with "Walcheren
Fever" (
malaria), which was to recur for
years afterwards, and deplete the strength of the battalion. They
eventually returned to the Peninsula in 1811 and were brigaded with
their first battalion, who were manning outposts near
Almeida. In early May, battle was engaged
at
Fuentes d'Onoro;
initially set in the reserve, the Light Division came to the aid of
the struggling British 7th Division, and provided a fighting
retreat, as Wellington retired his army. For the rest of the year,
both battalions of the 52nd, with the Light Division, manned
outposts, which were constantly moved to mark the changing French
positions.
January 1812 saw the
Siege of
Ciudad Rodrigo. Companies from the Light Division, under the
52nd's
Colonel
Colborne, captured the Francisco redoubt on 9 January, and
thereafter built trenches for the main assault, under enemy fire.
Once the army's artillery had breached the walls, a 4-column
assault was planned for 19 January, the Light Division forming the
column which assaulted the breach near the Convent of San
Francisco.
Lt John Gurwood of the 52nd
led the
Forlorn Hope, followed by 300
"stormers" under the command of the 52nd's
Major George Napier. The breach was
carried and the fortress was taken within half an hour, at high
cost. Amongst the 1300 British and Portuguese casualties was
Craufurd, who died several days later. The army turned its
attention to
Badajoz,
another strong fortress, which the British had failed to carry on
an earlier occasion. The Light Division dug trenches near Fort
Picurina, which was stormed, and established batteries. On 6 April,
the breaches were deemed practicable, and the Light Division were
ordered to storm the breach at Santa Maria. As the Light Division's
Forlorn Hope reached the ditch, the French exploded a mine. Various
other barricades and gunpowder defences were in place, and the toll
at the breaches was heavy. Wellington ordered a withdrawal.
Elsewhere, the fortress walls were achieved by
escalade, encouraging an attack on the breaches
again. The fortress was taken, at great cost (over 5000 British
casualties), and for three days the army sacked and pillaged the
town in undisciplined revenge. The 52nd and the 43rd together lost
39 officers and 700 men, resulting in a reduction of the 2/52nd,
who saw no more action in the Peninsula.
Soon after the assault on Badajoz, Wellington marched his men to
confront the French near Salamanca.
For a month the armies marched and
counter-marched against each other, seeking advantage, and on 22
July Wellington attacked in the Battle of Salamanca
, achieving a comprehensive victory. The
Light Division were in the reserve during the battle, and
afterwards pursued and harried the retreating French.
August saw the army
in Madrid
, where the
1/52nd remained while Wellington led a force on to Burgos, which he attempted to take.
The siege was unsuccessful, and it was lifted by Wellington in
October; the 1/52nd, with the Light Division, covered the army's
retreat back into Portugal. This "Winter Retreat" bore similarities
with the earlier retreat to Corunna, as it suffered from poor
supplies, bitter weather and rearguard action, including one
skirmish near the River Huebra, where the 43rd and 1/52nd lost 95
men.
Ciudad Rodrigo
was reached on 19 November, where the 1/52nd were
billeted and resupplied with both men and clothing.
Diversions were set up, including the "Light Division Theatre", in
which the 52nd were described as "highly gentlemanly men, of steady
aspect; they mixed little with other corps, but attended the
theatricals of the 43rd with circumspect good humour, and now and
then relaxed."
In
spring, 1813, the army returned to the offensive, leaving Portugal
and marching northwards through Spain to Vitoria
where the French stood in preparation for battle,
which took place on 21
June. The Light Division held the centre of the Allied line,
and took the bridges of Villodas and Tres Puentes. The battle
proved an overwhelming victory for the British, and the following
day the 1/52nd, with the Light Division, were sent in pursuit of
the retreating French, skirmishing with the enemy rearguard. In
August, volunteers from the 1/52nd were involved in the storming of
San Sebastian. The 1/52nd
crossed into France on 7 October, when they stormed redoubts above
Vera. The 1/52nd also fought in the battles at
Nivelle (November 1813),
Nive (December 1813) and
Orthes (February 1814). During the battle
of Orthes, the 52nd led an assault up the ridge under heavy fire,
an advance which was later described by
Sir Harry Smith as the most
majestic he had ever seen.
Napoleon abdicated on 6 April 1814, but the news arrived in
Wellington's camp too late to prevent the
Battle of Toulouse, on 10 April,
during which battle the 1/52nd's Lieutenant Whichcote was first
into the city.
Over this
later period, the 2/52nd, who had left the Peninsula, were
bolstered with new recruits and were sent to Holland in 1813–14, as
part of Sir Thomas
Graham's force which made an unsuccessful attack on Bergen op
Zoom
in March 1814. Afterwards they spent some
time in Belgium before returning home to England.
Once
peace agreements had finally been settled – the French Governor of
Bayonne
being the last, on 26 April – the army left the
Peninsula; the infantry marched to Bordeaux for transportation to
their new postings. The 1/52nd were returned to England and,
on 6 June 1814, stood on the quayside at Dover with their Light
Division comrades from the 43rd and 95th as part of the official
welcome for the
Allied sovereigns visit to
England.
They were
later billeted in Hythe
and
Chatham
, where they were joined by the 2/52nd, returned
from Belgium, who transferred their effectives to the 1st
battalion.
Waterloo Campaign
In
January, 1815, the 1/52nd departed Portsmouth
for Cork
, where they
were due to embark for America, where fighting in the War of 1812 continued. Gales prevented
sailing, and by the time conditions had improved, news had arrived
of Napoleon's escape from Elba
.
The
1/52nd were sent to Belgium
, at the start of the Hundred Days. Napoleon marched swiftly
through France to meet the Allies, who had formed two armies, with
the Duke of Wellington commanding the Anglo-Allies, and
Gebhard Leberecht von
Blücher commanding the
Prussians.
The 52nd were assigned to
Lt-Gen Hill's II Corps,
as part of the 2nd Division's 3rd Brigade, under
General Adam.
As a response to Napoleon's movements, on
15 June, II Corps were posted west and southwest of Brussels
, with a cavalry screen. Wellington's forward
army engaged the French at
Quatre
Bras on 16 June, but he later fell back to remain in contact
with his Prussian allies, who had retreated following the
Battle of Ligny, and took position near the
village of Waterloo.
The field
at Waterloo
was 5.5 km wide, with two parallel ridges
running west to east, creating a shallow valley 1.4 km
across. The Allies took position on the northern ridge. As
the army prepared for battle in 18 June, the 2nd Division were
initially held in reserve, placed in the centre left, behind
Major-General Cooke's 1st
Division. Following the French cavalry's battering of the British
squares over the afternoon, Adam's
brigade was brought up to reinforce the right. In this position the
52nd endured a heavy bombardment, of which
Ensign Leeke of the 52nd reported afterwards
"the old officers, who had served during the whole of the
Peninsular War, stated that they were never exposed to such a
cannonade as the 52nd squares had to undergo on this occasion for 2
1/2 hours from French artillery 1/2 mile to the front". While the
52nd's squares stood waiting, British artillery fired over their
heads.
Activity was happening elsewhere on the field, however, and as the
battle drew to a close, Napoleon's
Middle Guard launched an assault
on the British line, to the 52nd's left, and were met by a number
of regiments including the
1st Foot
Guards, who repulsed the
3rd Chasseurs, but had to
themselves retreat when the
4th Chasseurs moved forward to
threaten their left. The 52nd, under Sir John Colborne, wheeled to
the left, deploying parallel to the French column, and fired
volleys against their left flank. William Hay, a Light Dragoon
watching from the right, later recalled that "so well-directed a
fire was poured in, that down the bank the Frenchmen fell and, I
may say, the battle of Waterloo was gained." Seeing the 52nd begin
an advance, Wellington reputedly ordered "Go on, Colborne, they
won't stand!"; the battalion then advanced diagonally across the
field. When this was later followed by a bayonet charge by all of
General Adam's
3rd
Brigade, the Guard broke, forced into full retreat.
Having
pursued the French down the escarpment of Mont St
Jean
, the 52nd crossed the valley floor (that at the
start of the battle had separated the armies) and on the other side
attacked a square of Old Guard (part of the personal body guard of
Napoleon,) that had formed up to the British right of the inn
La Belle
Alliance
and forced it to retreat.
The 1/52nd were the largest battalion at Waterloo, and one of the
few British battalions operating at full strength. Of the 1,130 men
and officers present, 168 were wounded, and 38 killed.
Later history
The 1st battalion were sent to Paris after Waterloo, and remained
stationed in France until 1818. In 1816, the 2nd battalion were
disbanded, in line with the other reductions in the army which
occurred following the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars.
Returning
to England in 1818, the 52nd were stationed in the Midlands
, where they were responsible for domestic
peacekeeping and policing under the command of Lt. Col.
Charles Rowan, experience which fitted
Rowan for his 1829 posting to establish a military-style
metropolitan police service
under Sir
Robert Peel.
In 1821,
the regiment were posted to Dublin
.Over
the following years the 52nd received a number of overseas
postings.
Between 1823 and 1831, the regiment was
stationed at, in turn, New Brunswick
, Nova
Scotia
, Newfoundland
, and Prince Edward Island
. In early 1842, the 52nd performed garrison
duty in Barbados
, where British units frequently supplemented the
local forces. In 1842, the regiment returned to Canada,
and were posted to New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward
Island, and Quebec
; they left
Canada in 1845.
The 52nd
later returned to India, arriving in Allahabad
in 1853. The regiment found the heat and dust of
India gruelling, and Major Bayley, of the 52nd, described the great
clouds of dust which rose over their columns in the march from
Allahabad to Umballa
in 1853–4; "it was worse in the rear than in the
front; so, in order that everyone should have a fair chance, the
order of march was changed daily." They were in India during
the
Indian Rebellion of
1857, where they took part in the
Siege of Delhi. Once breaches had been made
by the artillery by a bombardment of the walls, an attempt was made
on the city on 14 September. The Kashmir Gate was blown by a party
of engineers, accompanied by
Bugler
Robert Hawthorne of the 52nd, who won the
Victoria Cross for his bravery. The 52nd led
the assault on the blown gate; amidst the action,
Lance Corporal Henry Smith also won the
Victoria Cross. After six days of heavy fighting, the city was
won.
The 52nd remained in India until 1865, when they returned to
England. Over the next sixteen years they received postings in
Ireland, England, Malta and Gibraltar. In 1881, due to the
Childers Reforms, they were merged with the
43rd Regiment of
Foot, a regiment they had fought alongside as part of the Light
Division during many campaigns. The newly-combined unit was named
the "Oxfordshire Light Infantry" – the 52nd becoming the 2nd
Battalion – and in 1908 the
Oxfordshire and
Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. In 1958, the
Ox &
Bucks became
1st Battalion
The Green Jackets , and in 1966 were merged into the
Royal Green Jackets. In 2007, the Royal
Green Jackets became part of
The
Rifles.
Colours and honours
Like most British regiments, the 52nd carried flags known as
"colours": the First, or "King's Colour", and the Second, or
"
Regimental Colour". The First had
the
Union Flag with the Regiment's number
in the centre, surrounded by a wreath. Following the presentation
of their colours in 1799, the 52nd's King's Colour included the
Royal Cipher in the centre, a non-standard addition. The Second was
in the colour of the regimental facings (
buff, in the 52nd's case) with a small Union
Flag in the corner; the regimental number took the centre. The
colours were carried into battle for identification, and as a
rallying point, in the care of sergeants or ensigns. Attending the
colours in battle was dangerous, since they were a target for enemy
artillery and assault; due to the symbolic significance of the
colours, their loss was a grave issue, and extreme measures were
often taken to prevent such dishonour occurring. The skirmishing
and forward positions maintained by light infantry frequently made
the bearing of colours inconvenient. For this reason, the newly
raised 95th Rifles received no colours, but the converted line
regiments, such as the 52nd, retained their existing colours. While
some light infantry regiments opted not to carry them in the
Peninsula, the 52nd and 43rd did.
Battle honours are awarded to a
regiment for their performance in certain battles and campaigns,
and are displayed on their colours.
The 52nd received the following honours:
Hindoostan, Vimeiro, Corunna
, Bussaco
, Fuentes
d'Onor, Ciudad Rodrigo,
Badajoz, Salamanca
, Vitoria, Nivelle, Nive, Orthes, Toulouse, Peninsula, Waterloo
and Delhi
1857.
Badges and decorations
Regimental badge
The Regimental Badge of the 52nd showed a
bugle horn, suspended by cords from a
knot, with the number "52" below the tassels.
The bugle horn had been the badge of light infantry regiments since
1770, adapted from the Hanoverian
Jaegar regiments, and became standard
for the newly formed Light Infantry regiments, since it represented
the
bugle calls used for skirmishing
orders instead of the standard line infantry drum. The regimental
badge was worn on much of the equipment, including the shakos and
belts, and also frequently on turnbacks and officers' shoulder
wings.
Valiant Stormers

52nd veteran with his medals

52nd veteran's medals
the
Peninsular War, the 52nd
fulfilled their dual role as line and light infantry by
contributing to fortress assault parties. The companies that led
the breach assaults were known as the "
Forlorn Hope", (from the Dutch "verloren hoop"
(lost troop)). It was deemed an act of high honour, since the lead
troops faced the greatest danger. The 52nd contributed to the
Forlorn Hope at the sieges of
Ciudad Rodrigo,
Badajoz and
San Sebastian. Officers and sergeants
who survived could hope for battlefield promotion (although it was
not assured), but other ranks rarely received reward. The 52nd,
however, offered its own recognition: those who survived the
Forlorn Hope at Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz were entitled to wear on
their right arm a badge displaying a laurel wreath and the letters
"V.S." for "Valiant Stormer". This honour was awarded by the 52nd's
commanding officer, and was restricted to the 52nd.
Victoria Cross
The
Victoria Cross (VC) was
instituted in 1856 as the
British
Empire's highest decoration for valour. From that date, until
the 52nd merged with 43rd in 1881, two soldiers from the 52nd were
awarded the Victoria Cross, both at
Delhi in 1857:
Bugler Robert Hawthorne and
Lance Corporal Henry Smith.
Bugler Hawthorne accompanied a party of engineers, led by
Lieutenants
Home and
Salkeld of the
Bengal Engineers, who had been ordered to
lay a charge and blow the Kashmir Gate, so that entry to the city
might be obtained. Once the charges had been detonated, Hawthorne
sounded the advance, and then attended to a wounded officer from
the explosion party, all the while enduring intense fire from the
city's defenders. Three others from the explosion party were
awarded VCs:
Sgt Smith, Lt.
Home and Lt. Salkeld, who was the first recipient of the VC.
Lance Corporal Smith's medal was won during the following assault
on the blown gate, when he "most gallantly carried away a wounded
comrade under a heavy fire of grape and musketry, in the Chandnee
Chouk of the city of Delhi, on the morning of the assault".
Both VC
medals are on display at the Royal Green Jackets Museum
in Winchester
.
Uniform and equipment
Throughout most of the regiment's life, the 52nd Foot wore
traditional British Army
red
coats, with
buff facings. During
the American wars, the coat was long tailed, with buff facings,
buff waistcoat and breeches. The
grenadier
company wore a bearskin hat with the King's Crest and the
regimental number. Officers wore crimson sash,
gorget and silver epaulettes.
When becoming a light infantry regiment in 1803, the uniform
accordingly changed. Light infantry dress has its origins in the
American War of Independence, when uniforms were altered to allow
ease in the field. "Wings", similar to those worn by
grenadiers, were added to the shoulders and lacing
was dispensed with, to make the quick removal of coats possible. At
that time, the irregular light infantry also sought less
conspicuous dress than the traditional red coat. However,
conservatism returned with the new regular light infantry; while
the 95th Rifles were permitted to retain the green clothing used by
the German regiments, the seconded line regiments were required to
retain the red coat, which remained an impediment to their
skirmishing duties.

Officer and private, showing short
jackets and stovepipe shako with bugle badge and green plume.
J C Stadler, after C H Hamilton, 1800s
Thus, throughout the Napoleonic wars, the 52nd foot continued to
wear red uniforms with buff facings. The officers had silver lace,
while the other ranks' lace was worn in pairs, red with orange
stripes (according to 1802 regulations); in 1812 a commentator
described the lace as red with two blue stripes. Light infantry
officers wore short jackets, rather than the tailed coats of the
other line regiments, with white piping, silver buttons, and silver
and scarlet shoulder wings. The uniform was completed with a
crimson sash; to match the buff facings and turn-backs, the
officers generally wore buff breeches, or grey overalls.
Field officers of the 52nd wore silver
epaulettes, with regimental badge, overtop the light infantry
wings, to designate rank. An 1810 order stipulated these be badged
with a star (for majors), a crown (lieutenant colonels) or star and
crown (colonels). Light infantry also commonly wore a narrow
waist-belt instead of the customary shoulder-belt. The 52nd did not
adopt the "Belgic cap" but retained the stovepipe
shako throughout the Napoleonic period; it was adorned
with the brass bugle badge and green plumes of the light infantry.
In the 52nd, officers' plumes were made from horsehair. Officers
generally carried a stirrup-hilted
sabre.
Officers were responsible for providing (and paying for) their own
uniforms; consequently, variable style and decoration was present,
according to the officer's private means. Equipment could consume a
significant portion of an officer's pay; during the Napoleonic era,
the 52nd's plain regimental sabre, for example, cost 4
guineas, approximately 16 days' pay
for an ensign.
The red coat remained standard uniform for the British Army until
khaki was introduced as standard in 1885,
although some allowances were made for colonial conditions, with
the use of lighter materials, and slight change of design. However,
the uniform and equipment remained quite restrictive, particularly
in colonial warfare. In 1841, the
light bob's situation was compared
unfavourably with his enemy's light marching order: "Buckle him up
in a tight red jacket, when the thermometer is about 80°; place
across his breast two buff-leather belts, about a quarter of an
inch in thickness, and each what the milliners call a nail in
breadth; hang to one of them a cartouche-box containing sixty
rounds of ball cartridges, each of these about above an ounce in
weight; strap across his shoulders a square well-packed wallet,
containing four shirts, with or without frills, and other
notions; plant a cap on his head which in point of weight
is equal to an iron pot; then place over his shoulder a musket and
bayonet weighing a stone; with three days' provisions in his
haversack, and a couple of quarts of liquid in a canteen."
While no official service uniform was developed for the tropics,
during the Mutiny in India in 1857, many of the regiments fought in
their undress uniform (white drill), rather than the standard
uniform. The 52nd were the first regiment to dye their white
uniforms khaki for use in the field. This early khaki was a grey
colour. For most purposes, they discarded their coats and, adopting
the Indian traditions, wore their shirts out, rather than tucked
in; shirts were also dyed. The 52nd also developed turbans to wear
over their standard-issue forage caps. Following the mutiny,
regiments returned to the standard red clothing.
Legacy
Despite its continual merging with other units from 1881, the
legacy of the 52nd remains. Many of the 52nd's battle honours are
represented on the Belt Badge of
The
Rifles (being a rifle regiment, The Rifles do not carry
colours).
Various museums record the actions of the
52nd and hold collections of artifacts and memorabilia, including
the Royal
Green Jackets Museum
, and the Soldiers of Oxfordshire Trust, whose
archives are managed by the Oxfordshire County
Council.
Some officers of the 52nd recorded their experiences in the
regiment. One of the most notable was the Reverend
William Leeke who, as a young ensign, carried
the
Regimental Colours at
Waterloo. He believed that the actions taken by
Sir John Colborne (Lord
Seaton) and the 52nd to defeat the
Imperial Guard at the close of
the battle had been unjustly overlooked in official dispatches and
histories, and wrote his memoirs so that "the truth, with regard to
what we knew the 52nd had achieved at Waterloo, [should] see the
light". In 1866, his two-volume work
The History of Lord
Seaton's Regiment, (the 52nd Light Infantry) at the Battle of
Waterloo was published, and has served as a primary source for
most Waterloo historians since. Also to publish memoirs, although
less successfully, was
Reginald Wilberforce, grandson of
slavery abolitionist
William
Wilberforce, who wrote, in 1894,
An Unrecorded Chapter of
the Indian Mutiny; on publication, the book was criticised by
his fellow officers of the 52nd for its inaccuracy.
See also
Notes
References
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External links