Loamshire Regiment


Loamshire Regiment is a placeholder name used by the British Army to provide examples for its procedures. For example, the Loamshire Regiment is provided by the British Forces Post Office to show how to write a British Army address, and is used to set out specimen charges for violations of military law. It is used in Hesketh Hesketh-Prichard's Sniping in France, a World War One manual for training British Army sharpshooters.
;BFPO Specimen Address
;Specimen Charge
The Loamshire Regiment can be taken to be the county regiment of the fictional county of Loamshire. The regiment itself has been featured in several works of fiction. Bulldog Drummond, the hero of the stories by "Sapper", was an officer in the Loamshire Regiment during the First World War, as was one of the characters in The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp. The regiment is also mentioned by Evelyn Waugh in Men at Arms, part of the Sword of Honour trilogy, and Put Out More Flags. Loamshire is the setting for one of George Eliot's novels, Felix Holt, the Radical. It is also mentioned in the 1983 film ’Bullshot’, a parody of Bulldog Drummond, where the hero Hugh ’Bullshot’ Crummond was an officer in the Royal Loamshire Regiment. Peter Fleming, brother of Ian Fleming, refers to the regiment and the Loamshire Argos newspaper in his essay The Last Day in Camp.