North Irish Horse

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

North Irish Horse

The Crest of the North Irish Horse
Active 1902 - Present
Country United Kingdom
Branch Army
Type Royal Armoured Corps
Role TA Reserve
Size One Squadron
Garrison/HQ RHQ = Newcastle (as part of Qoy)
Nickname The Horse
Motto Quis Separabit (Who shall separate us) (Latin)
March Garryowen
Anniversaries Hitler Line, 24th May
Engagements Somme, Ypres, Hitler Line, Iraq, Afghanistan
Commanders
Ceremonial chief Col. D.M. Christie, TD
Insignia
Tartan Saffron (pipes)

The North Irish Horse is a yeomanry unit of the British Territorial Army raised in the northern counties of Ireland in the aftermath of the Second Boer War.

King Edward VII approved the formation of the North of Ireland Imperial Yeomanry and the South of Ireland Imperial Yeomanry in 1901. Recruiting for the North of Ireland Imperial Yeomanry began in 1903, with four squadrons raised: RHQ and ‘A’ Squadron in Belfast, ‘B’ Squadron in Derry, ‘C’ Squadron in Enniskillen and ‘D’ Squadron in Dundalk. They became a special reserve regiment in 1908 and the name changed to the North Irish Horse following the formation of the Territorial Force. In 1914 the North Irish Horse and its sister regiment the South Irish Horse were the first non-regular troops to land in France and be in action in the First World War.

The 'one-man regiment' of the 1930s converted to tanks early in the Second World War. In 1943, a troop of Churchills climbed the Djebel Ang to support the Irish Brigade. The unit supported the Canadians at the battle of the Hitler Line in Italy, May 1944.

The unit survives in the modern Territorial Army as B Squadron(North Irish Horse) Queen's Own Yeomanry. Where personal have been deployed to Kosovo, Bosnia, Iraq and Afghanastan.

[edit] Attached to

[citation needed]

[edit] External links

United Kingdom military stub This United Kingdom military article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.