Queen's Regiment
The Queen's Regiment was an infantry regiment of the British Army formed in 1966 through the amalgamation of the four regiments of the Home Counties Brigade. In turn, the regiment became part of Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment in a further amalgamation with the Royal Hampshire Regiment in 1992.
History
The regiment was formed as a 'large regiment' on 31 December 1966 by the amalgamation of the four remaining regiments of the Home Counties Brigade as a consequence of the Defence Review of 1957. The four regiments formed four battalions, retaining their previous names in the titles. These were:- 1st Battalion – formerly the Queen's Royal Surrey Regiment.
- 2nd Battalion – formerly Queen's Own Buffs, The Royal Kent Regiment.
- 3rd Battalion – formerly the Royal Sussex Regiment.
- 4th Battalion – formerly the Middlesex Regiment .
Four battalions of Territorial troops were formed in the following decades:
- 5th Battalion, a TAVR II unit, formed in 1967 to be employed for use with NATO forces in West Germany during tense times in the Cold War.
- 6th and 7th Battalions were formed in 1971 with headquarters at Wandsworth and Horsham respectively. On 1 April 1975 these two battalions combined to form the 6th/7th Battalion, The Queen's Regiment.
- 8th Battalion was formed as TAVR III unit at Tonbridge in 1967 but disbanded in 1971. It was re-formed as the 8th Battalion, Queen's Fusiliers on 16 May 1988 as a composite battalion composed of the Queen's Regiment and the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers. A & B Companies were badged as Queen's Regiment, C Company as RRF, and HQ Company was a mixture. HQ was at St John's Hill. Shoulder titles for all companies read Queen's Fusiliers. In 1992, the London Scottish and London Irish Rifles were removed from 1st Battalion, 51st Highland Regiment and 4th Battalion, Royal Irish Rangers and became companies of 8QF. In 1993 8QF was retitled the London Regiment with the disbandment of the existing A Company.
Operational deployments
In 1970 the 1st Battalion joined the Berlin Brigade in West Berlin, a small enclave in Communist-controlled East Germany, leaving in 1972. In October 1972 the 2nd Battalion arrived in Cyprus as part of the United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus, a force intended to prevent conflict from breaking out between Greek and Turkish Cypriots: the battalion returned to the United Kingdom in May 1973. The 4th Battalion was disbanded that year, as with every other 'junior' battalion of the new large regiments. Also that year, the 3rd Battalion arrived in Gibraltar where it remained with the garrison for almost two years. In 1977 the 2nd Battalion arrived in Gibraltar and the 3rd Battalion arrived in Belize, then a British territory, as part of the garrison there to protect it from the perceived threat of war with Guatemala, a neighbour of Belize, which was making claims that it believed Belize to be an integral part of Guatemala.
By 1975 the 1st Battalion had arrived in Werl, Germany from where they did operational tours in Ulster, in the area of Londonderry in 1976, and West Belfast in 1978. The 2nd Battalion had preceded it to Ulster, first on a spearhead deployment in South Armagh following the Kingsmill massacre in January 1975, and then to West Belfast, on an operational tour in Andersonstown in early 1977.
The 1st Battalion moved to Canterbury in 1980. From there it undertook a six-month tour of Belize before deploying in November 1982 to Omagh in County Tyrone. It served there until January 1985 with south east Fermanagh as its primary focus. During this period all three battalions served in Ulster – 2. Queen's in Londonderry, also on a two-year tour, and 3. Queen's in Belfast on a six-month tour. A freedom parade was held in Belfast in 1984 at which all three battalions' Regimental Colours were paraded. In 1985 the battalion moved to Gibraltar for two years before returning to the United Kingdom in 1987 where it was to remain until 1990. During this period it undertook two 6-month tours of Ulster – South Armagh in 1987 and Belfast in 1989/90. In 1990 the battalion moved to Minden in Germany, where it disbanded in 1992.
In late 1981 the 2nd Battalion deployed to Cyprus on a 6-month tour-of-duty with UN forces. In 1985 the 1st Battalion arrived in Gibraltar on a 2-year posting and the following year the 3rd Battalion deployed to Belize on a 6-month tour-of-duty as well as West Belfast on a 6-month tour-of-duty before deploying to Aldergrove, Northern Ireland for a 2-year operational tour. In 1990 the 3rd Battalion arrived in Cyprus—its last deployment abroad and the location of its disbandment in 1992. The 2nd Battalion's last deployment was to Northern Ireland in 1992 before heading to Canterbury, England where it disbanded later in the year.
Amalgamation
As a consequence of the Options for Change defence cuts, on 9 September 1992 the regiment was amalgamated with the Royal Hampshire Regiment to form the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment.Regimental museum
The Queen's & Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment Regimental Museum is at Dover Castle.Colonels-in-Chief
Colonel-in-Chiefs were as follows:- Queen Juliana of the Netherlands
- King Frederick IX of Denmark
- Margrethe II
- Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent
Regimental Colonels
- 1966–1973: Lt-Gen. Sir Richard Craddock, KBE, CB, DSO
- 1973–1977: Maj-Gen. Fergus Alan Humphrey Ling, CB, CBE, DSO
- 1977–1984: Maj-Gen. Rowland Spencer Noel Mans, CBE
- 1984–1989: Brig. Herbert Charles Millman, OBE
- 1989–1992: Maj-Gen. Michael Frank Reynolds, CB
Alliances
- The Queen's York Rangers – Canada
- The South Alberta Light Horse—Canada
- The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada
- The Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment—Canada
- 1st Battalion, The Royal New Brunswick Regiment — Canada
- The Essex and Kent Scottish—Canada
- Royal New South Wales Regiment – Australia
- The Royal Western Australia Regiment
- University of New South Wales Regiment—Australia
- 2nd Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry
- 5th Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry
- 12th, 14th, 15th, and 17th Battalions, The Punjab Regiment – Pakistan
- The Royal Sierra Leone Regiment, Royal Sierra Leone Military Forces
- The Royal Hong Kong Regiment –
Order of precedence