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84th (York and Lancaster) Regiment of Foot

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Active
  
1793 - 1881

Branch
  
British Army

Size
  
Two Battalions

Country
  
Great Britain

Type
  
Infantry

Nickname(s)
  
The Young and Lovelies The Tigers

The 84th (York and Lancaster) Regiment of Foot was a regiment in the British Army. In 1881 it was amalgamated with the 65th Regiment of Foot to create the York and Lancaster Regiment, with the 84th becoming the 2nd Battalion.

Contents

The regiment was raised at York on 2 November 1793 by Lt.Col.George Bernard, and was the third regiment to be ranked as the 84th Regiment of Foot. A short-lived 2nd Battalion was raised in March 1794. In September 1794, the 1st Battalion 84th Foot was sent to join the Duke of York's army in the unsuccessful defence of the Netherlands against the Republican French. Returning to Britain in the spring of 1795, both battalions of the 84th were posted to the Cape of Good Hope in 1795 where they were amalgamated. From South Africa, the regiment was sent to India in 1798.

In 1808, a further 2nd Battalion was raised and in 1809 took part in the disastrous Walcheren Campaign. The battalion then served in the Peninsular War from 1812 to 1814 during which the regiment gained its first medals. The Army Gold Medals were awarded to Lt.Col.R.Lloyd and Maj.J.Tonson. The 2nd Bn, 84th Foot fought its first action of the war in late 1813 at the Battle of the Bidassoa (or Vera). They then went on to fight at Nivelle in November and Bayonne (or Nive) in December where Wellington's force, despite being outnumbered by Marshal Soult's army, defeated Soult. The 2nd Battalion returned to Britain where it was absorbed by the 1st Battalion in 1819.

India

By 1807, the 1st Battalion in India was stationed in Bombay and in 1809 the regiment was given the secondary title of York and Lancaster (the 1st Battalion was raised in Yorkshire and the 2nd Battalion was raised in Lancashire ) which would remain the regimental name when the 84th merged with the 65th Regiment of Foot in 1881. In 1810 the 1st Bn, 84th Foot was sent to the French held island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean where they participated in the capture of the island. It was also the first time the 65th Foot and the 84th Foot were to come into contact with each other.

After this the battalion served in Bangalore for the next four years. From there they were involved in the recapturing of Kurnool in 1815 and against the Mahratta princes in the last stages of the Pindari Campaign or 3rd Mahratta War . The 84th Foot was returned to England in 1819 for seven years home service where it absorbed its 2nd Battalion. In 1820, detachments travelled on HMS Dromedary and HMS Coromandel as escorts for convicts bound for Van Diemen's Land and New South Wales. Both ships continued to New Zealand to harvest kauri trees for use as spars for first rate (98 gun) Royal Navy warships. Two officers and a detachment of the regiment remained on HMS Dromedary for the eleven month expedition to the Bay of Islands and Whangaroa, the scene of the Boyd massacre in 1809, giving them the distinction of being the first detachment of a British Army line regiment to set foot in the country.

In 1827 the 84th Foot was sent to Jamaica where it helped quell the slave riots there. The regiment remained in the West Indies until 1839.

Indian Mutiny

The regiment travelled around the various garrisons of the British Empire for the next few years, mainly in India and Burma. It was not until 1857 that it would see action again in the Sepoy Rebellion in India. The 84th Foot had been in Burma when the rebellion of 1857-1858 broke out. The 84th Regiment were moved from Rangoon to India and detachments scattered throughout the various forts that were soon besieged and the Regiment received great acclaim for their actions during this period. General Outram wrote of the 84th:

The 84th Regiment is the only regiment ever to receive a salute from the battery at Fort William, Calcutta when they left India in 1859. The regiment was involved in the Relief of Lucknow and a detachment was in the Siege of Cawnpore while most of the regiment was part of the relief force sent to Cawnpore. After Cawnpore and Lucknow were recaptured the 84th Regiment was involved in the large scale protection of the country side under a Brigadier Douglas who, whilst surrounded wrote:

Amalgamation

The 84th Regiment left India in 1859 for England and then began another tour of the empire which ended with the 84th Foot stationed in Ireland in 1880 when Childers Reforms began in 1881 and the regiment became the 2nd Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment.

Victoria Crosses

The 84th Foot had six Victoria Crosses awarded to men serving in its ranks all won during the Indian Mutiny :

  • Captain Augustus Anson
  • Lance-corporal Abraham Boulger
  • Private Joel Holmes
  • Sergeant-major George Lambert
  • Private Patrick Mylott
  • Corporal John Sinnott
  • Battle honours

    Battle honours won by the regiment were:

  • Peninsular War: Nive, Peninsula
  • India, Lucknow
  • Colonels of the Regiment

    Colonels of the Regiment were:

    84th Regiment of Foot

  • 1794–1820: Gen. George Barnard
  • 84th (York and Lancaster) Regiment of Foot - (1809)

  • 1820–1822: Gen. Sir George Townsend Walker, Bt, GCB
  • 1822–1823: Maj-Gen. Sir Denis Pack, KCB
  • 1823–1840: Gen. Sir Fitzroy Jeffries Grafton Maclean, Bt
  • 1840–1854: Gen. Sir Loftus William Otway, CB
  • 1854–1868: Gen. Sir George Augustus Wetherall, GCB, KH
  • 1868–1872: Gen. Thomas Wood
  • 1872–1881: Gen. Sir David Russell, KCB
  • Books

    Donald Creighton-Williamson (1968). The York and Lancaster Regiment. Great Britain: Leo Cooper. 

    References

    84th (York and Lancaster) Regiment of Foot Wikipedia