Royal Armoured Corps
The Royal Armoured Corps provides the armour capability of the British Army, with vehicles such as the Challenger 2 Tank and the Scimitar Reconnaissance Vehicle. It was created as a loose association of armoured regiments, both the Royal Tank Regiment and those converted from old horse cavalry regiments. Today it comprises fourteen regiments – ten regular and four Yeomanry.
History
The RAC was created on 4 April 1939, just before World War II started, by combining regiments from the cavalry of the line which had mechanised with the Royal Tank Corps. As the war went on and other regular cavalry and Territorial Army Yeomanry units became mechanised, the corps was enlarged. A significant number of infantry battalions also converted to the armoured role as RAC regiments. In addition, the RAC created its own training and support regiments. Finally, in 1944, the RAC absorbed the regiments of the Reconnaissance Corps.Present day
Regiments
The Royal Armoured Corps is divided into regiments which operate main battle tanks, those in reconnaissance vehicles, and those in Weapons Mount vehicles. Of these, three regiments are designated Dragoon Guards, two as Hussars, one as Lancers and one as Dragoons. The remaining regiment is the Royal Tank Regiment. In the regular army, there are three armoured regiments, three armoured cavalry regiments and three light cavalry regiments. In the army reserve, there is one armoured regiment and three light cavalry regiments.Being a corps, the RAC is made up of several independent regiments, but the corps does control few separate units which include:
- Training and Staff
- * AFV Training Group
- * Regimental Headquarters, Royal Armoured Corps
- * The Armour Centre, Bovington Camp
- * Band of the Royal Armoured Corps
- * Royal Armoured Corps Training Regiment, Allenby Barracks, Bovington Camp
- ** Waterloo Squadron
- Regular Army
- * Household Cavalry Regiment
- * Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment
- * 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards - Light Cavalry
- * The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards - Light Cavalry
- * The Royal Dragoon Guards - Armoured Cavalry
- * The Queen's Royal Hussars - Armour
- * The Royal Lancers - Armoured Cavalry
- * The King's Royal Hussars - Armour
- * The Light Dragoons - Light Cavalry
- * Royal Tank Regiment2 - Armour
2: The Royal Tank Regiment retains a CBRN reconnaissance and survey squadron as part of its establishment
- Army Reserve - Yeomanry
- *The Royal Yeomanry - Light Cavalry
- *The Royal Wessex Yeomanry - Armour
- *Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry - Light Cavalry
- *The Queen's Own Yeomanry - Light Cavalry
Regular Army | Army Reserve |
1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards | Royal Yeomanry |
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards | Scottish & North Irish Yeomanry |
The Light Dragoons | Queen's Own Yeomanry |
King's Royal Hussars | Royal Wessex Yeomanry1 |
Queen's Royal Hussars | Royal Wessex Yeomanry1 |
Royal Tank Regiment | Royal Wessex Yeomanry1 |
1: The Royal Wessex Yeomanry provides replacement soldiers for armoured regiments, and therefore is paired with all three regular army units operating main battle tanks.
Basing
- Tidworth - Kings Royal Hussars; Royal Tank Regiment, The Queen's Royal Hussars
- Catterick - The Royal Dragoon Guards; The Royal Lancers; The Light Dragoons
- Bulford - Household Cavalry Regiment
- Swanton Morley - 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards
- Leuchars - The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
- London & Midlands - Royal Yeomanry
- South of England - Royal Wessex Yeomanry
- North of England - Queen's Own Yeomanry
- Scotland & Northern Ireland - Scottish and North Irish Yeomanry
Band
The Royal Yeomanry also operates an Army Reserve Band, which, alongside the bands of the Household Division, and The Honourable Artillery Regimental Band, form the state bands.
Reorganisation
Delivering Security in a Changing World (2004)
The reorganisation of the Army announced in 2004 led to significant changes to the Royal Armoured Corps. Reorganisation that began in 2003 would see three armoured regiments removed from Germany to the UK, with one re-roled as an FR regiment. In addition, three Challenger 2 squadrons will be converted to Interim Medium Armour Squadrons, while each FR regiment will gain a Command and Support Squadron.Deployments
As part of the reorganisation, postings will be realigned:UK based regiments
- Catterick: Armoured Regiment , Formation Reconnaissance Regiment
- Tidworth: 2 x Armoured Regiment,
- Windsor: Formation Reconnaissance Regiment
- Swanton Morley: Formation Reconnaissance Regiment
- Warminster: Training/Demonstration squadron
- Honington: Armoured Regiment
- Bovington: HQ RAC
Germany based regiments
- Bad Fallingbostel: Armoured Regiment
- Sennelager: Armoured Regiment, Formation Reconnaissance Regiment
- Hohne: Formation Reconnaissance Regiment
Strategic Defence and Security Review (2010)/Army 2020
The Royal Armoured Corps will also see a shift with one third of its regiments operating as armoured regiments with main battle tanks, another third as formation reconnaissance regiments and a final third as light cavalry using Jackal vehicles. Armoured regiments would consist of Type 56 regiments, each with three Sabre Squadrons and a command and recce squadron. Armoured Cavalry or formation reconnaissance regiments would also have a command and recce squadron and three Sabre Squadrons; which will initially be equipped with Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance, and then with Future Rapid Effect System Scout vehicles. Jackal regiments will be part of the Adaptable Force, comprising three Sabre Squadrons. These regiments will be paired with a Yeomanry regiment.
The new structure of the Reaction Force will see three armoured regiments, each assigned to a new "Armoured Infantry Brigade", alongside a formation reconnaissance regiment, two armoured infantry battalions and a heavy protected mobility battalion. These six regiments will fall operationally under what will become known as the "reaction forces", which will be the army's high readiness force. The remaining three regiments will be located with the remainder of the regular army under what has been term the "adaptable forces", which will provide a pool of resources to back up operations conducted by the "reaction forces".
This new basing plan on 5 March 2013 gave an overview of where the regiments will be based. All RAC regiments will be UK based, with the 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards moving to Swanton Morley, The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards moving to the Leuchars area, the Queen's Royal Hussars to Tidworth, the Royal Lancers settling in Catterick, the Light Dragoons in Catterick, and the Royal Tank Regiment to Tidworth. The expected Army 2020 layout for the RAC is to be:
Strategic Defence and Security Review (2015)/Army 2020 Refine
Under a further review called "Army 2020 Refine", there will be a further change to the Royal Armoured Corps. The King's Royal Hussars will exchange its Challenger 2 tanks for Ajax vehicles and with the Household Cavalry, form the first "Strike Brigade".Order of precedence
Related units
This unit is allied with the following:- Royal Canadian Armoured Corps
- Royal Australian Armoured Corps
- Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps
- Kor Armor Diraja - Malaysia
Colonels Commandant (Cavalry)
- 1939– vacant
- 1947 F.M. The Rt Hon Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, KG, GCB, DSO
- 1947– Gen. Sir Richard Loudon McCreery, GCB, KBE, DSO, MC
- 1950–?1952 Gen. Sir Charles Frederic Keightley, GCB, GBE, DSO
- 1958– Gen. Sir Charles Frederic Keightley, GCB, GBE, DSO
- 1968– F.M. Sir Richard Amyatt Hull, KG, GCB, DSO
- 1974– F.M. The Rt Hon Richard Michael Power Carver, Baron Carver of Shackleford, GCB, CBE, DSO, MC
- 1977–1980 Gen. Sir Jack Wentworth Harman, GCB, OBE, MC, ADCGen
- 1980–1982 Gen. Sir Robert Cyril Ford, GCB, CBE
- 1982–1985 F.M. Sir John Wilfred Stanier, GCB, MBE, ADCGen
- 1985–1988 F.M. Sir Nigel Thomas Bagnall, GCB, CVO, MC
- 1988–1993 Gen. Sir Brian Leslie Kenny, GCB, CBE
- 1993–1995 Gen. Sir Anthony Stephen Jeremy Blacker, KCB, CBE
- 1995–1999 Lt-Gen. Sir Robert Hayman-Joyce, KCB, CBE
- 1999 Maj-Gen. David John Malcolm Jenkins, CB, CBE
- 2000–2004 Maj-Gen. Peter Gilchrist, CB
- 2004– Maj-Gen. Alexander Richard David Shirreff, CB