|  
          
             
              |  |   
              | 3oth 
                    (Cambridgeshire) Regiment of Foot 
                    
                     
                    Background 
                      to the British Army in the 19th Century In 
                      1809 the British army was divided into Regiments, as today, 
                      but most Regiments were described by numbers not by names; 
                      thus, for instance, the Bedfordshire Regiment was properly 
                      called the 14th, the Connaught Rangers the 88th and so on. 
                      The soldiers themselves preferred the names but had to wait 
                      until 1881 for their official adoption. A 
                      Regiment was an administrative unit; the basic fighting 
                      unit was the Battalion. Most Regiments consisted of at least 
                      two Battalions but a few were small single Battalion Regiments. 
                      On paper a Battalion was supposed to have about a thousand 
                      men but disease and casualties, plus the shortage of recruits, 
                      meant that Battalions often went into battle with only five 
                      or six hundeed troops. All 
                      Battalions were divided into ten companies. Two of these, 
                      the Light Company and the Grenadier Company, were the elite 
                      of the Battalion and the Light Companies, in particular, 
                      were so useful that whole Regiments of Light troops were 
                      raised or expanded. A 
                      Battalion was usually commanded by a Lieutenant Colonel, 
                      with two Majors, ten Captains, and below them the Lieutenants 
                      and Ensigns. None of these officers would have received 
                      any formal training; that was reserved for officers of the 
                      Engineers and the Artillery. About one officer in twenty 
                      was promoted from the ranks. Normal promotion was by seniority 
                      rather than merit but a rich man, as long as he had served 
                      a minimum period in his rank, could buy his next promotion 
                      and thus jump the queue. This system of purchase could lead 
                      to very unfair promotions but it is worth remembering that 
                      without it Britain's most successful soldier, Sir Arthur 
                      Wellesley, later the Duke of Wellington, would never have 
                      risen to high rank early enough in his career to form the 
                      most brilliant army Britain has ever possessed. 
                        Table 
                      of Actions & Some History  30th 
                      Foot (Cambridgeshire) 1701-1881
                       
                        | Actions |  |  |   
                        | 1689 | known 
                          as Viscount Castleton's Regiment of Foot |   
                        | 1694 | known 
                          as Thomas Saunderson's Regiment of Foot |   
                        | 1699 | disbanded 
                          after the Treaty of Ryswick |   
                        | 1702-13 | Peninsula 
                          - known as Thomas Saunderson's Regiment of Marines also 
                          known until 1751 by the names of other colonels |   
                        | 1704 
                          & 1727 | Gibraltar 
                            - Gibraltar remained a Spanish possession until the 
                            beginning of the eighteenth century. During the War 
                            of the Spanish Succession (1702-1713), the Rock of 
                            Gibraltar became a pawn in the struggle between the 
                            two rival claimants to the Spanish throne, the Frenchman 
                            Philip of Anjou ("Philip V") and the Austrian Archduke 
                            Charles ("Charles III").  | 
                             
                              | Battle 
                                  Honours |   
                              | Gibraltar 
                                - first battle honours | 1704/5 |  
 |   
                        | Held 
                            by forces loyal to the former, Gibraltar fell to a 
                            combined Anglo-Dutch force supporting the latter in 
                            1704. Gibraltar, then, had been captured on behalf 
                            of one of the claimants to the Spanish throne. However, 
                            as the war neared its end, English policy was beginning 
                            to attach greater importance to Gibraltar, and by 
                            the Treaty of Utrecht (1713), which ended the conflict, 
                            the Fortress was yielded to the Crown of Great Britain 
                            "for ever." Spain laid siege to the rock in 1727 and 
                            again in 1779. In the latter case, "The Great Siege" 
                            lasted for close on four years and great destruction 
                            was caused to the town and its fortifications. It 
                            was the last attempt to take the Rock by force of 
                            arms.  |   
                        | 1705 | Barcelona 
                            - The war of Spanish Succession marked the end of 
                            Catalan privileges. Relations with the bourbon king 
                            Philip V were bad from the start due to his totalitarian 
                            political ideas. The royal viceroy in Barcelona repeatedly 
                            infringed the Catalan constitutions. Although Barcelona’s 
                            merchants were generally peaceful they could stand 
                            no more interference from Spain and stated that as 
                            a sovereign nation they had a right to secede from 
                            a monarchy that no longer respected their rights. 
                            On the 20th of June of 1705 Catalonia signed a treaty 
                            with England and Genoa. The war with Spain lasted 
                            9 years and ended with the surrender of Barcelona 
                            on September 11, 1714, today celebrated as Catalonia’s 
                            National day. Philip V abolished the traditional Catalan 
                            constitutions and Barcelona became a mere provincial 
                            city, humiliated by the permanent presence of an occupying 
                            army in what is today the Ciutadella Park.   |   
                        | 1709 | Acadia 
                            - French colony, centered on NOVA SCOTIA, but including 
                            also PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND and much of the mainland 
                            coast from Quebec to Maine. In 1605 the French founded 
                            Port Royal, the first and chief town. During the FRENCH 
                            AND INDIAN WARS, the Peace of Utrecht (1713) gave 
                            Britain possession of the Nova Scotian peninsula, 
                            and, by the Treaty of PARIS (1763), all of Acadia 
                            fell to Britain. Doubting the loyalty of the French 
                            inhabitants (called Acadians), the British expelled 
                            many of them in 1755 and 1758. Most were scattered 
                            among the British colonies to the south, many of them 
                            later returning to the area. Other exiles found havens 
                            elsewhere, notably the Cajuns of S Louisiana, who 
                            still preserve a separate folk culture.    |   
                        | 1742 | Officer 
                            of 30th Foot 1742
  |  |   
                        | 1746 | Louisburg 
                            - Nova Scotia, E Canada, on CAPE BRETON ISLAND. Its 
                            ice-free port, guarded by the great fortress of Louisbourg 
                            (built 1720-40), served as headquarters for the French 
                            fleet in ACADIA. The stronghold played a major role 
                            in the struggle for control of North America between 
                            France and England until it was captured and destroyed 
                            by the British in 1758. The first attack came in 1745 
                            following a declaration of war between Britain and 
                            France. Charged with the fervour of a religious crusade, 
                            and informed that the fortress was in disrepair with 
                            its poorly supplied troops on the verge of mutiny, 
                            the New Englanders mounted an assault on Louisbourg. 
                            Within 46 days of the invasion the fortress was captured. 
                            To the chagrin of the New Englanders, only three years 
                            later the town was restored to the French by the Treaty 
                            of Aix-la-Chapelle. In 1758 Louisbourg was besieged 
                            a second time. Without a strong navy to patrol the 
                            sea beyond its walls, Louisbourg was impossible to 
                            defend. Attacking with 16,000 troops supported by 
                            150 ships, a British army captured the fortress in 
                            seven weeks. Determined that Louisbourg would never 
                            again become a fortified French base, the British 
                            demolished the fortress walls.    |   
                        | 1751 | known 
                          as 30th Regiment of Foot also known as The Three Tens 
                          or Three X's because of Regimental number. |   
                        | 1759 | Cherbourg 
                            - 8th August 1758, Cherbourg was captured by the British, 
                            and its port facilities were destroyed. Battles fought 
                            on 8th August and 11th September 1758.    |   
                        | 1775-1782 | North 
                            America - In 1775, Parliament passed the New 
                            England Restraining Act. This prohibited the New England 
                            Colonies from trading with any country other than 
                            Britain. It was also decided to use force to impose 
                            compliance with recent Acts. On April 18th, the Boston 
                            Committee of Safety discovered a British plan to send 
                            troops to Concord to seize ammunition. Paul Revere 
                            and William Dawes were sent to relay the warning and 
                            alert the Minute Men. On the 19th, the British troops 
                            came upon the Minute Men at Lexinton. During the encounter, 
                            a shot – “the shot heard ‘round the world” – was fired 
                            and the American Revolution had begun.    |   
                        |  | During 
                            the early part of the American War of Independence 
                            the Thirtieth was in Ireland; but it sailed from Cork 
                            with other reinforcements in 1781, and made one campaign 
                            in Carolina. When the Carolina Loyalists quitted their 
                            old homes, in December, 1782, the 30th accompanied 
                            part of the convoy to Jamaica.   |   
                        | 1782 | known 
                            as 30th (the Cambridgeshire 
                            ) Regiment of Foot   |   
                        | 1793 | Toulon 
                            - On 28 August 1793 a mixed force of British, Spanish 
                            and émigré French troops under the command of Admiral 
                            Lord Hood occupied the port of Toulon, where the population 
                            was in revolt against the revolutionary government 
                            in Paris. The port was surrounded by a string of forts, 
                            designed to protect both the town and the anchorage, 
                            but Hood had insufficient troops available to hold 
                            them all. Initially, his British contingent no more 
                            than 1,200 men from the 11th, 25th, 30th and 69th 
                            Regiments of Foot, all of whom had been embarked on 
                            the fleet as marines when the war began, and although 
                            they were supported by nearly 3,000 Spaniards, the 
                            latter soon proved to be unreliable. Despite the arrival 
                            of Sardinian, Neapolitan and some additional British 
                            troops (the later drawn from the 2nd and 18th Regiments 
                            of Foot), the land commander, Lord Mulgrave could 
                            do little to strengthen the defences against a French 
                            force that quickly grew to over 20,000 men, including 
                            the young Napoleon Bonaparte as captain of artillery. 
                            An ill-directed attack on a French redoubt at Aresnes, 
                            to the West of the port, on 29 November led to heavy 
                            British losses, after which the defences began to 
                            crack. On 17 December Bonaparte led an assault on 
                            Point l'Eguilette, overlooking the inner harbour, 
                            upon which the Spanish and Neapolitan contingents 
                            withdrew from Toulon without consulting their allies. 
                            On the 19th, Hood evacuated the remains of his force, 
                            leaving most of the heavy equipment behind. It was 
                            in common with many of the expeditions at the beginning 
                            of the Revolutionary War, a badly managed affair. 
                               |   
                        | 1794 | Corsica 
                            - The Corsican native remains proud and independant, 
                            but luckily well disposed to the British visitor. 
                            Corsicans have a deep seated racial distrust of most 
                            continental visitors, probably for well founded historical 
                            reasons.  | 
                             
                              | Battle 
                                  Honours |   
                              | Martinque | 1794 |  |   
                        | The 
                            British however are fondly remembered for Theodore 
                            de Neuhoff, an English adventurer who persuaded the 
                            Corsicans to declare him King in 1736. He wisely vanished 
                            7 months later before the Corsicans lost interest. 
                            The British tried again in 1794, and it was a Corsican 
                            who shot Nelson's eye out in the blockade of Calvi. 
                            After a 2 year occupation the British themselves lost 
                            interest and left Corsica to the French and to the 
                            native population.  |   
                        | 1800 | Malta 
                            - June 1798 - Napoleon Bonaparte, on his way to Egypt, 
                            captured Malta and expelled the Order of the Knights 
                            of St. John. Napoleon had noticed how the relationship 
                            between the Order and Russia had been getting too 
                            close. The Austrian Grand Master Ferdinand von Hompesch 
                            had signed a treaty with Russia in August 1797. Czar 
                            Paul 1 had been declared "the Protector of the Order 
                            of Malta". Napoleon was very much aware of the strategic 
                            importance of the Maltese Islands. His plan to capture 
                            Malta soon materialised. But French rule in the island 
                            was short lived. The Maltese rose in rebellion in 
                            September 1798. The French took shelter within the 
                            walls of Valletta where they had to stay for two whole 
                            years. The Maltese asked for help from the king of 
                            the Two Sicilies as well as from the British Admiral 
                            Lord Nelson. The Portuguese fleet in the Mediterranean 
                            soon arrived to blockade the Grand Harbour. The Maltese 
                            suffered a lot during the blockade. There were times 
                            when they were starving, until at last, the French 
                            had to leave. Malta became a British Protectorate 
                            and, in 1814, was declared part ofthe British Empire. 
                               | First 
                          British Soldier to be executed The 
                            first British soldier to be executed in Malta was 
                            Private James O'Conner. Private O'Conner arrived in 
                            Malta on December 9, 1799, from Messina on board HMS 
                            Culloden, with the 30th (Cambridgeshire) Regiment 
                            of Foot. Its force consisted of 478 officers and men, 
                            20 women, and 15 children. On 
                            landing the following day the Regiment was billeted 
                            first at Birkakara, then was moved to Zejtun to cover 
                            the battery at San Roque with advance posts on the 
                            outskirts of Zabbar. It 
                            was to have been from this area where, just over a 
                            year later, Private O'Conner committed his fatal offence 
                            when he attempted to desert to the French. Articles 
                            of war showed quite clearly that any soldier attempting 
                            to desert was to suffer the extreme penalty, and that 
                            was death. Bought 
                            before a general court martial, the first known British 
                            general court martial held in Malta, the verdict was 
                            given and the sentence of death pronounced. The 
                            verdict of the court martial was sent by Brigadier 
                            General Thomas Graham for confirmation to General 
                            Harry Fox, the C-in-C of British troops at Minorca, 
                            who confirmed the sentence. In 
                            a letter dated June 1, 1800, Brig-General Graham reported 
                            to the C-in-C that the execution of Private O'Conner's 
                            was carried out on May 29, 1800. The location of Private 
                            O'Conners execution is unknown and his grave was never 
                            identified after the capture of Valetta from the French 
                            on September 5, 1800. |   
                        | 1801 | Egypt 
                            - 1801-1802 - One of the rare success stories of the 
                            war against Revolutionary France occurred in Egypt 
                            in 1801, when an expeditionary force of 16,000 British 
                            soldiers wrested the country from a French army that 
                            had originally occupied it under Napoleon Bonaparte 
                            three years earlier. Napoleon had abandoned his troops 
                            in 1799 to further his political career in Paris, 
                            leaving them isolated but apparently secure. They 
                            posed a threat to British domination in the eastern 
                            Mediterranean and there was a fear in London that 
                            they might be used to forge a link with pro-French 
                            native forces in India. The decision to mount the 
                            British operation was taken in late 1800, by which 
                            time Pitt, rather belatedly, had agreed to a substantial 
                            increase in the size of the army, providing funds 
                            that would boost it to the unprecedented of 300,00 
                            men (220,000regulars and home-based 'Fencibles'., 
                            plus 80,000 militia). It was a sign that the war, 
                            at last, was being taken seriously. But the shortage 
                            of talented generals was still apparent. Despite his 
                            less than glorious record in the Helder campaign. 
                            Abercromby was chosen to command the Egyptian, chiefly 
                            because there was no-one of comparable stature available. 
                            Among his subordinates was Moore, recovered from his 
                            latest wounds, and it was he who led the British spearhead 
                            ashore at Aboukir Bay on March 1801. His brigade, 
                            comprising the 23rd, 28th, 42nd and 58th Foot as well 
                            as four companies of the 40th, landed within range 
                            of French guns in Aboukir Castle but wasted no time 
                            it confronting the enemy. A rapid advance up a steep 
                            hill caught defending troops by surprise, forcing 
                            their withdrawal and this enable the rest of Abercromby's 
                            men to land safley. Four days later, the British began 
                            their advance on Alexandria, 12 miles away. They encountered 
                            the main enemy force on 21 March, close to Alexandria. 
                            The French commander, General Menou, opened the battle 
                            with feint on his left and a major attack on Moore's 
                            brigade on the right. The 42nd Highlanders (Black 
                            watch) fought exceptionally well, maintaining coherence 
                            even after being attacked by cavalry, but it was the 
                            28th Foot (1st Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment) 
                            who achieved lasting fame. Engaged by infantry to 
                            their front, they suddenly came under pressure from 
                            cavalry behind them, upon which the rear rank turned 
                            round and faced the new threat. Their coolness under 
                            fire earned them the right to wear Regimental badges 
                            on both front and back of their headdress, an honour 
                            maintained by the Gloucestershire Regiment throughout 
                            its subsequent history. It was the sort of incident 
                            that helped to build the fighting spirit of the army. 
                            Despite casualties of nearly 1,500 men, the British 
                            secured victory at Alexandria, pushing the French 
                            back into the city, where they were besieged. Abercromby, 
                            wounded in the battle, died a week later with his 
                            record significantly enhanced, but it was Moore who 
                            showed the importance of inspired leadership, for 
                            without his efforts at both Aboukir and Alexandria 
                            the French defeat would have been much difficult to 
                            effect. As it was, Alexandria fell in April, allowing 
                            the British to reconquer the whole of Egypt by September. 
                            By then, Pitt had been replaced as Prime Minister 
                            by Henry Addington, who actively pursued the possibility 
                            of peace with France. The result was the Treaty of 
                            Amiens, signed on 27 March 1802. Britain kept Trinidad 
                            (taken from Spain) and Ceylon (taken from Holland 
                            in 1796), but agreed to hand back all other captured 
                            territories, including the French islands in the West 
                            Indies. In a move that was now familiar, Addington 
                            celebrated by ordering a reduction to the size of 
                            the army, taking it down to a strength of only 113,000 
                            men. It was to be supported at home by 48,000 members 
                            of the militia, but they were a poor substitute for 
                            the laboriously created regular units, many of which 
                            faced disbandment. In the event, war with France was 
                            renewed in May 1803, before the reduction could be 
                            fully implemented, but the speed with which the government 
                            had moved to effect financial savings came perilously 
                            close to destroying all the benefits so painfully 
                            accrued since 1793.    |   
                        | 1806 | Cape 
                          of Good Hope - In 1806 the British took over 
                          the Cape Colony to protect their route to India. |  |   
                        | They 
                            held the colony until after the Boer War of 1899 to 
                            1902; and their presence, while frequently helpful 
                            in fighting the tribes, was a constant irritant to 
                            the Dutch. This dissension led, in the 1830s, to a 
                            large movement of Dutch northward across the Vaal 
                            River, in a migration that is called "the Great Trek." 
                            The British also seized this colony in 1877, but after 
                            a brief war, the Dutch regained their control of the 
                            area.  |   
                        | 1807-1809 | Madras, 
                          India |   
                        |  |  |   
                        | 1808-1814 
 
 | Peninsular 
                            War - A conflict between France and Great 
                            Britain on the Iberian Peninsula, growing out of the 
                            efforts of NAPOLEON I to control Spain and Portugal. 
                             |  |   
                        | When 
                            a palace revolt in Madrid (Mar. 1808) deposed the 
                            pro-French CHARLES IV, Napoleon invaded Spain and 
                            made his brother Joseph Bonaparte (see BONAPARTE, 
                            family) king of Spain (June). Both Spain and Portugal 
                            then revolted, and the British sent a force, under 
                            the future duke of WELLINGTON, to aid the rebels. 
                            Portugal was quickly won, but the fighting in Spain 
                            went on for years. By the time Napoleon abdicated, 
                            however, the British had won all of the peninsula 
                            and had penetrated France as far as Toulouse. - Chronology 
                            of the Peninsular War.  
                             
                              | Officer 
                                  1st Battalion 30th (Cambridgeshire) Foot Regiment - Salamanca 
                                  1812
 |  Corunna 
                            - The retreat to Corunna lasted for about 17 days, 
                            in which time the Army covered 250 miles under the 
                            most difficult conditions. During the retreat the 
                            32nd acted as escort to the stores and ammunition 
                            and suffered great hardships on the way. It was the 
                            middle of winter and the bare and desolate country 
                            was either buried in snow or deluged in heavy rain. 
                            There was no fuel to be had and the food supply was 
                            very uncertain. There was also the continual anxiety 
                            and depression that is felt always during a retreat. 
                            Quantities of baggage and stores had to be destroyed 
                            in order to lighten the loads and to prevent the French 
                            from getting possession of them. The Army reached 
                            Corunna, only to find that the transports had not 
                            yet arrived. The French were on their heels and there 
                            was nothing for it but turn and fight. The battle 
                            of Corunna resulted, in which the French were once 
                            more repulsed. This enabled the British Force to embark 
                            in comparative safety, for the transports had, in 
                            the meantime, arrived. The English leader, Sir John 
                            Moore, was killed during the battle. According to 
                            the official dispatch, the 32nd Regiment fought "with 
                            great resolution and, losing 250 of all ranks, covered 
                            themselves with glory." - Report 
                            on the Losses at Corunna  The 
                            army under Sir Arthur Wellesley, and fought in the 
                            campaigns of 1809-10, including the battles of Talavera 
                            and Busaco, 
                            and the defence of Torres Vedras.  Salamanca 
                            - Here Wellington's Army was delayed owing to the 
                            strength of the forts, which surrounded Salamanca. 
                            One fort in particular, San Vincente, held up the 
                            whole Division for ten days. Eventually Ensign Newton 
                            of the 32nd led a storming party on what appeared 
                            to be a forlorn hope. It succeeded. The French surrendered 
                            and the English blew up the forts after securing all 
                            the guns and a considerable supply of clothing. A 
                            month later, Wellington's Army met the French Army 
                            under Marshal Marmont, which had attempted and failed 
                            to relieve Salamanca. After very severe fighting which 
                            lasted all day, the French were eventually driven 
                            from their positions in great disorder and it was, 
                            only the darkness which prevented them from being 
                            completely annihilated. Even so, our cavalry took 
                            up the pursuit next day and kept the French on the 
                            run. The 2nd Company of the 30th took part in the 
                            battle, they were in Pringle's Brigad, part of the 
                            5th Division commanded by J. Leith. The casualties 
                            were severe on both sides. There is a book on Salamanca 
                            entitled "Salamanca 
                            1812 Wellington Crushes Marmont". Badajoz 
                            - The storming of Badajoz was an epic action which 
                            involved Wellington’s infantry in some of the most 
                            savage hand-to hand fighting of the whole Peninsular 
                            War. At appalling cost in a nightmare assault during 
                            the night of the 6 April 1812, Wellington’s soldiers 
                            hacked their way over the bodies of their dead and 
                            wounded and through the huge medieval walls of the 
                            town. These were held with great tenacity, skill and 
                            courage by a resolute French and German garrison. 
                            Having stormed the town the battle-crazed army went 
                            berserk and the horrors of the sacking which followed, 
                            as much as the sublime courage of the attackers, have 
                            passed into legend. There is a book on the siege entitled 
                            " Badajoz 
                            1812 Wellington's Bloodiest 
                            Siege " Vittoria 
                            - Despite Wellington's success against Marmont's army 
                            at Salamanca in July, the year of 1812 ended in bitter 
                            disappointment for the British. However, a year later 
                            Wellington's series of brilliant manoeuvres threw 
                            the French onto the defensive on all fronts, culminating 
                            in the final victory at Vittoria, 90,000 men and 90 
                            guns attacking in 4 mutually supporting columns. The 
                            French centre gave way and both flanks were turned, 
                            their army finally breaking in flight towards Pamplona. 
                            Any French hopes of maintaining their position in 
                            the Peninsular were crushed forever. On 7 October 
                            the British set foot on the 'sacred soil' of' Napoleon's 
                            France. There is a book on the victory entitled "Vittoria 
                            1813 Wellington Sweeps the French from Spain". San 
                            Sebastian - The Storming party, 750 volunteers, 
                            included 200 men of the Guards, one hundred each from 
                            the First and Coldstream Guards. They moved off at 
                            two in the morning on the 31st August 1813, and occupied 
                            a ruined convent where they remained till half past 
                            nine. Aware of the almost impossible task ahead of 
                            them, and subjected to a violent electric thunderstorm, 
                            the troops waited in a state of savage anticipation. 
                            ' Wild senseless laughter' was said to have preceded 
                            the attack on the breach which could not be entered 
                            except in single file under heavy fire. The troops 
                            attacked in succession, but were struck down by hundreds. 
                            General Graham then ordered the artillery to fire 
                            over the heads of the assailants, clearing the ramparts. 
                            A shell ignited a quantity of powder, and under cover 
                            of the explosions, the storming party forced its way 
                            into the town. San Sebastian was savagely sacked and 
                            burned, and the good name of Wellington's Army suffered 
                            as it had done at Badajoz. The civilians were raped, 
                            robbed and murdered in revenge for the heavy losses 
                            suffered by the troops. The Franco-Spanish governor 
                            retired the citadel (San Marcial) and on the 9th September, 
                            after a gallant resistance of over a week, surrendered 
                            the charge he had so faithfully defended. The casualties 
                            among the officers of the first Guards were one Officer, 
                            Ensign Burrard, First battalion (a son of Sir Henry 
                            Burrard who was responsible for the disastrous Treaty 
                            of Cintra) severely wounded, since dead, and one Officer, 
                            Ensign Orlando Bridgeman, wounded. In the Coldstream 
                            Guards, one officer ensign Thomas Chaplin, According 
                            to Lord Saltoun there were in round numbers, 150 casualties 
                            amongst 200 Guardsman. Total losses of volunteers 
                            from all Regiments were 1500 men.  |   
                        | 1809 | Poonamallee, 
                          India |   
                        | 1810-1811 | Trichinopoly, 
                          India |   
                        | 1812 | Cannanore, 
                          India |   
                        | 1815 | Waterloo 
                          - Officers 
                          Killed 18th June 1815 Captain Thomas Walker CHAMBERS - Killed
 Captain Alexander M'NABB - Killed
 Lieutenant Henry BEERE - Killed
 Lieutenant Edmund PRENDERGAST - Killed
 Ensign John JAMES - Killed
 Ensign James BULLEN - Killed
 |   
                        | 1815 | Vellore, 
                          India |   
                        | 1816-1817 | Fort 
                          St George, Madras - 
                          A 
                          Cemetery Index for St Mary's Fort St George, Madras, 
                          India |   
                        | 1818 | Masulipatam, 
                          India |   
                        | 1818 | Secunderabad, 
                          India |   
                        | 1819 | Asseerghur, 
                          India |   
                        | 1819 | Boorampoor, 
                          India |   
                        | 1819 | Khandish, 
                          India |   
                        | 1819-1820 | Jaulna, 
                          India |   
                        | 1819-1826 | Secunderabad, 
                          India |   
                        | 1825 | Bhutpore, 
                          India |   
                        | 1825 | Fort 
                          St George, Madras, India - 
                          A 
                          Cemetery Index for St Mary's Fort St George, Madras, 
                          India |   
                        | 1827 | Fort 
                          St George, Madras, India - A 
                          Cemetery Index for St Mary's Fort St George, Madras, 
                          India |   
                        | 1827-1828 | Trichinopoly, 
                          India |   
                        | 1828 | Wallajabad, 
                          India |   
                        | 1828-1829 | St 
                          Thomas' Mount, India |   
                        |  | As 
                          a single battalion corps, the 30th served in the Mediterranean, 
                          Bermuda, and 
                          Canada from 
                          1834 to 1845. |   
                        | 1834 | Guindy, 
                          India |   
                        | 1835-1840 | Bermuda |   
                        |  | 
 30th 
                            Foot Officer's shoulder belt plate worn by an Officer 
                            of the 30th (Cambridgeshire) Regiment of Foot circa 
                            1840-1855. Burnished gilt rectangular plate mounted 
                            with a cut silver star, mounted on the star a gilt 
                            laurel wreath surmounted by the Victorian Crown. Within 
                            the wreath are four scrolls bearing the battle honours 
                            of "Salamanca" Peninsular" "Badajos" and "Waterloo", 
                            within the scrolls a garter strap inscribed "Spectamur 
                            Agendo" encircling "XXX" on a raised silver ball, 
                            to the base of the star a Sphinx resting on a tablet 
                            inscribed "Egypt".  |   
                        | 1842 | Canada |   
                        |  | Officers 
                            who died during the Crimean War - Captain A. Connolly 
                            - killed at Inkermann - 5th November 1854 - Ensign 
                            Richard Grenville Deane - killed in the attack on 
                            the Redan - 8th September 1855. Buried on Cathcart's 
                            Hill - "Richd Grenville Deane Ensign 30th Regt 
                            fell Septr 8 1855 Aged 18 years."Lieutenant A. 
                            Gibson - killed at Inkermann - 5th November 1854 - 
                            Lieutenant William Kerr - died of wounds - 23rd September 
                            1855 - Lieutenant F. Luxmore - killed in action - 
                            battle of Alma - 20th September 1854 - Lieutenant-Colonel 
                            James Brodie Patullo, CB - killed in the attack on 
                            the Redan - 8th September 1855. Buried on Cathcart's 
                            Hill - "Sacred to the memory of Lieutenant Colonel 
                            James Brodie Patullo, CB 30th Regiment. Who died of 
                            wounds received on the 8th September 1855 at the assault 
                            on the Great Redan."Lieutenant J. Ross-Lewin 
                            - died of wounds - 7th November 1854 - Captain J. 
                            C. N. Stevenson - killed in the attack on the Redan 
                            - 8th September 1855 - Ensign J. Thompson - died of 
                            wounds - 10th November 1855 - Ensign T. Fitzpatrick 
                            - 30th Foot - died of disease - 26 June 1855. Ensign 
                            W.Y. Johnston - 30th Foot - died of disease - 25 Sept. 
                            1854 "Ensn W.Y. Johnston Died of cholera at the 
                            Belbec on the 25th Sept." Graves 
                            recorded by Captain John Colborne (60th Rifles) and 
                            Captain Frederic Brine (Royal Engineers) in 1858 noted 
                            for the Crimea  "Sacred 
                            to the memory of Corpl. JAMES BRADY XXX Regt Aged 
                            29 years."  "Sacred 
                            to the memory of Prvt THOS. EAGAN XXXth Regt. Departed 
                            this life February 17th 1856 Aged 27 years Deeply 
                            lamented by his comrades."  "Sacred 
                            to the memory of Pt. W. GRIFFITHS XXX Regt Age 30 
                            years. Died May 1855." "Sacred to the memory 
                            of Pte. MK. JOHNSON of H.M. 30th Regt. who departed 
                            this life on the 26th Feby. in the year of Our Lord 
                            1855 Aged 24 years."  "Sacred 
                            to the memory of Sergt. Major JOHN McCLELLAN the Non 
                            Commissioned Officers and Men of the XXX Regt. who 
                            fell in action or died of wounds and disease in the 
                            Crimea from Septr 14th 1854 to Feby 29th 1856." 
                             "Sacred 
                            to the memory of F.J. STANLEY, late, Hospital Sergt. 
                            30th Regt who departed this life April 22nd 1855, 
                            Aged 25 years."  "Sacred 
                            to the memory of Pte. ALEX STILL H.M. XXX Regt. who 
                            departed this life August 10th 1855 Occasioned by 
                            a wound received in the Trenches aged 30 years. This 
                            memorial was erected by his loving brother." 
                             In 
                            addition there is a Roll 
                            of Honour to the men who died. |   
                        | 1854 | Alma 
                          - the 
                          order of battle at Alma and the general order of battle 
                          during the Crimean War are listed 
                          here. |   
                        | 1854 | Inkerman 
                          - London 
                          Gazette 2 June 1858 - Lieutenant Mark Walker, 30th Regiment, 
                          an Irishman, aged 26, 5 November 1854 at Inkerman, Crimea, 
                          jumped over a wall in the face of two battalions of 
                          Russian Infantry which were marching towards it. This 
                          act was to encourage the men, by example, to advance 
                          against such odds - which they did and succeeded in 
                          driving back both battalions. Awarded the Victoria Cross. 
                          Later Sir Mark and achieved rank of General. Born Finca, 
                          Co Westmeath, Ireland, 24 November 1827. Died 18 July 
                          1902, Arlington, Devon. VC displayed in The Buffs Museum, 
                          Canterbury.    |   
                        | 1855 | Redan 
                            - Military 
                            operations continued to be restricted to trench warfare 
                            until 7th June 1855 when the outer defences of Sebastopol 
                            were assaulted, with the British capturing the Quarries 
                            and the French the Mamelon. A coup de grace was planned 
                            for the anniversary of the battle of Waterloo, 18th 
                            June, as a way of cementing the new friendship between 
                            the British and their French allies. The assaults 
                            on the Malakoff and the Redan failed, partly due to 
                            incompetence on the part of the general officers commanding, 
                            and Lord Raglan sank into a decline, dying on the 
                            28th June 1855. On the 16th August 1855, the Russian 
                            army under Prince Gortchakoff attempted to break through 
                            the Allied lines at the Traktir Bridge over the River 
                            Tchernaya, but was driven off by a combined French/Sardinian 
                            force a third its size. The Sardinians had joined 
                            the Allies in January 1855. Medals bearing the unofficial 
                            clasp "Traktir" or "Tchernaia" are occasionally found; 
                            these clasps are believed to have been added to their 
                            medals by those French military and naval personnel 
                            who were awarded the British medal. On the 8th September 
                            1855 the Allies again stormed Sebastopol, with the 
                            French successful this time at the Malakoff. The British 
                            attack on the Redan failed once more. The Malakoff, 
                            however, was the key to the town's defences, and at 
                            its loss the Russians evacuated Sebastopol, having 
                            made a spirited defence which had kept the best troops 
                            in the world at bay for over eleven months. Originally 
                            it was intended that the Sebastopol clasp should be 
                            awarded to those on active duty on the 8th/9th September, 
                            but reason prevailed, and it was awarded to all those 
                            who had been present before the town at any point 
                            prior to its fall. It naturally follows that a medal 
                            bearing a Balaklava or an Inkermann clasp will also 
                            bear that for Sebastopol. 
                               |   
                        | 1855 | Sebastopol 
                          - Seige 
                          of Sebastopol in Russia, October 9, 1854 to September 
                          18,1855. "Sebastopol" was named because of the blasting 
                          in the rock at the Frenchmans Lead, it went under the 
                          plateau. |   
                        | 1855 |  |   
                        | 1860-70 | Canada 
                          and Nova Scotia - From 1860 to 1870 the battalion 
                          served in Canada and Nova Scotia. |   
                        | 1866 | Canada 
                            - In New York city in 1859 The Fenian Brotherhood 
                            decided to further the Irish cause for independence. 
                            In 1865 a plan was made for the Fenians to invade 
                            Canada. The planned date was 17th March 1866 (St Patrick's 
                            Day). As events haveit this was not the actual day 
                            for the invasion as they were not ready. The planned 
                            elaborate attacks were not the same when put into 
                            effect due to the lack of Fenian support. The initial 
                            Fenian raid took place on the night of May 31st 1866 
                            and the final engagement was 22nd June 1866. In 1870 
                            the fenians tried again with two further raids, the 
                            first on 25th May and the second 27th May. The 30thFoot 
                            were involved in the Fenian raids of 1866. A list 
                            of officers and men from the 30th 
                            Foot who were awarded the Canadian General Service 
                            Medal is available.   |   
                        | 1881 | Under 
                          Cardwell's reforms united with 59th (2nd Nottinghamshire) 
                          Regiment of Foot, to become 1st 
                          Battalion, The East Lancashire Regiment |   
                        | 
                             
                              | Lancashire 
                                Infantry Museum combines under one roof the 
                                mementos and memories of many of Lancashire's 
                                historic Regiments. Displays in the Queen's Lancashire 
                                Regiment gallery tells the story of this infantry 
                                Regiment and its famous forerunners: the East, 
                                South and Loyal North Lancashire Regiments, 30th, 
                                40th, 47th, 59th, 81st and 82nd Regiments of Foot. 
                                The Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry have a gallery 
                                which relates the interesting history of a volunteer 
                                unit from the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, 
                                when troops of volunteer cavalry were raised throughout 
                                Lancashire as invasion threatened. Finally, opened 
                                in May 1988, the gallery of the 14th/20th King's 
                                Hussars, one of Britain's regular cavalry Regiments 
                                with a colourful past, who rode not only horses 
                                but Challenger Main Battle Tanks. The story of 
                                Lancashire's soldiers during war and peace over 
                                three centuries is told with the aid of uniforms, 
                                weapons, photographs, medals and historic items. 
                                Recreated scenes include a First World War trench, 
                                with sound and smell effects. The medal balconies 
                                display gallantry awards including three Victoria 
                                Crosses. The Regimental stories in this museum 
                                are presented in displays to interest everyone, 
                                young and old. Schools are particularly welcome 
                                and will find much material on which to base project 
                                work.    
                                  Several 
                                  members of the 30th Foot retired and were pensioned 
                                  abroad and a list of these men 
                                  who were pensioned is available.   
                                   |  The 
                          Cambridgeshire 
                          Regiment Exhibition is a small but very well-presented 
                          display of the County’s volunteer infantry within 
                          the surroundings of the Land Warfare Gallery at IWM 
                          Duxford. It records the regiment’s proud hundred-year 
                          history encompassing both World Wars, beginning with 
                          service in South Africa 1899 to 1902, and ending, due 
                          to Army restructuring, during the Cold War. |  |  Last 
        updated 
        31 October, 2022
         |