THE LIGHTBOB
Transcription
THE LIGHTBOB
THE LIGHTBOB Newsletter of the Oxford Branch of the Royal Green Jackets Association The Royal Green Jackets No. 2 - May 2013 43rd & 52nd Light Infantry CYPRUS 13 The Annual Study Day of the Friends of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry will be held at Edward Brooks Barracks, Abingdon, on Saturday 22nd June and will be devoted to the Regiment’s operations in the Cyprus Emergency between 1956 and 1959. The aim of the Study Day is to gather material for the Regimental Archive on the experiences of the members of the regiment who took part in these operations, and also to place them in the wider military and political context. Presentations will be made by Nick van der Bijl, author of The Cyprus Emergency, and by Lt Col George Elliot, who has written the Regimental History. There will be an open session in which former officers and soldiers who served in Cyprus will be given an opportunity to exchange experiences. General Sir Robert Pascoe has agreed to chair the study day. The results of a patrol in Limassol In addition to the Friends, the Study Day will be open to former members of the Oxford & Bucks LI and Greenjackets who served in Cyprus, subject only to the capacity of the lecture rooms. Applications will be treated on a ‘first come - first served’ basis. Registration opens at 0930hrs on the 22nd, and the day will end with tea at approximately 1630hrs. A baguette and fruit will be served at lunchtime. There is parking on site. To cover the cost of lunch and tea and coffee the charge for the day is £10. Cpl Ken Groves of Letter ‘A’ Company manning a road block on the Limassol bypass An operation in the foothills of the Troodos Mountains The programme of events and an application form for those wishing to attend is enclosed. Cyprus 13 will be a golden opportunity for old friends and comrades who served together in Cyprus to not only remember old times but to add some valuable knowledge to the records. LETTER TO THE EDITOR From the Editor An essential part of an Old Comrade’s formal wear is a regimental tie. Last year I found that my treasured silk Oxford and Bucks L.I. tie, which was bought many years ago, was beginning to become noticeably frayed, and it was time to get another. I looked first at the Rifles Direct website, but without any luck. Although there was a section on regimental ties, it did not include any Oxford and Bucks ones. I contacted Rifles Direct in Winchester and the manager gave me a list of websites. Silk neckwear at about £32 plus postage was out of my budget, but there were some reasonably-priced polyester ones. A company called BA Military Store sells them on eBay for £14.79 plus £2.60 postage, while Oliver Bainbridge of Durham are the cheapest, offering them at £14.99 post free. In the end I followed a recommendation by branch member Brian Cox and contacted Shepherd and Woodward of High Street, Oxford, who had the virtue of being local if I wanted to collect in person. They do not advertise these ties on their website because they say it is not financially viable, but will order them. On the basis of supporting a local business, I ordered one at £14.99 plus £1 p & p. And very smart it looks, too. What I find disappointing is the failure of Rifles Direct to provide these ties or, indeed, very much else of an Oxford and Bucks L.I. nature. Their new website lists ties - both silk and polyester - for The Rifles, Royal Green Jackets, Rifle Brigade, King’s Royal Rifle Corps, and even (would you believe) the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment. The ‘M4 Rifles’ have only been a part of The Rifles since 2007, whereas the 43rd and 52nd formed the Greenjackets with the RB and KRRC in 1958. It would appear that the problem, as far as Oxford and Bucks ties are concerned, is lack of demand. Roy Bailey CHAIRMAN’S CHAT ‘A’ Company currently has four Riflemen deployed on OP Herrick; 20 in Afghanistan throughout the summer of 2013. One Officer is deployed with 2 RIFLES in Northern Ireland acting as a Platoon Commander and one Corporal is deployed with 5 RIFLES in Germany and about to depart on a major exercise in Canada with them after a period of intense training. There are 8 volunteers for OP Herrick; 20 of whom are undergoing the arduous training to ensure they are selected for mobilisation later this year. ‘A’ Company will be sending Riflemen to complete their Annual Camp in Denmark and also Scotland later this summer, as well as many junior NCO’s attending promotional qualifying courses. 7 RIFLES will perform a Freedom Parade through High Wycombe on Sunday 9th June with ‘A’ Coy playing a leading part in the ceremonies. Recruiting is a high priority for the Company and we held a successful Open Evening on the 9th April when approximately 12 potential recruits attended, many of whom have now started the process to enlist in ‘A’ Company. th This year the RGJA Band Concert has slipped to Sunday 16 June 2013 and it is hoped that better weather will allow the event to take place outside and that more of the association members ‘Old and New’ will attend. It has been decided to close the Company Bar on the last Thursday of each month due to low attendance, as it proves too expensive to cover the bar staff. However if anyone wishes to organise an event or a games evening the bar can be opened provided you drink more than one shandy each, which is the usual amount for association members (Southern Shandy Drinking Softies)!!!!!!!! (spoken like a true Yorkshireman! - Ed.) Sir, The memorial of a 19th century soldier of the Oxfordshire Light Infantry is currently attractively displayed in the grounds of Edward Brooks Barracks at Shippon, near Abingdon, where it has been inherited by The Rifles, the successor regiment to both the Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry and to the Greenjackets. It can presently be enjoyed by staff and by old comrades who visit the barracks but, alas, not by the wider public in Oxford. Over the years it has been moved to t em p o r a ry l o c at i o n s sev e r al times from its original site in the graveyard of St. Clements Church on the Plain. When the tombs were moved to St Clement’s Churchyard in Marston many decades ago and the cemetery was converted into a roundabout, the statue was moved to Cowley Barracks which was then the Depot of the Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry. When the Regiment was incorporated into the Greenjackets in the late 1950s and the HQ buildings at Cowley Barracks were demolished the statue was moved again to the TA Headquarters in the Slade. Later when the TA site was given up for development, it moved once again to its present location. It has nev er been f orgotten nor neglected by its regiment, but its constant movement means that it has been entirely forgotten by the city. Although the ‘Gown’ is well celebrated in Oxford, the ‘Town’ has few memorials of its own, or of its old regiment in which very many local citizens once served. Consequently I would like, one day, to see it returned to its original site on the Plain in Oxford. The roundabout there is now decorated with a garden and the statue would prove a very attractive centrepiece if reinstated, where it could then be enjoyed by local ex-soldiers together with all the citizens of Oxford City. Brian Cox, Wheatley Charlie Helmn • There is a strong rumour that Charlie will lead a team from ‘A’ Company on the Forces March later this month in an attempt to better last year’s triumph by ‘E’ Company of Milton Keynes. 2 (Editor’s note: see page 4) IN MEMORIAM We have learned of the deaths of the following old comrades since the publication of the last newsletter: Pte J. K. Hughes (14659162). Served in the 2nd Bn (52nd) from 1943 to 1947. Died 19th January. VISIT TO PEGASUS BRIDGE Every year Major John Howard’s daughter Penny Bates and her husband George organise a visit of veterans and other interested parties to Pegasus Bridge and the cemeteries and memorials in the area - and this year is no exception. S/Sgt Jim Wallwork DFM, Glider Pilot Regt. Pilot of the lead glider carrying Maj John Howard in the capture of Pegasus Bridge on D-Day. Had the extremely rare distinction of flying a glider on the four major Allied airborne landings: Sicily, Normandy, Arnhem and the Rhine crossing. Emigrated to Canada. Died 24th January aged 93. Sjt R. D. (Reg) Lee. Served in the 1st Bn during WW2. Wounded in the Ardennes. Mayor of Thurrock 1995-6. Very supportive of the 43rd Old Comrades Association and their remembrance pilgrimages to Europe. Died 13th February. WO2 D. A. (David) Taylor. Served in 4RGJ from 1970 finishing in HQ Coy. Died 24th March. 2013 (Members meet in the Volunteers’ Bar at Edward Brooks Barracks (EBB) on the first Tuesday of each month at 20.00hrs.) Thur 16th May. Rifles Officers Oxford Club Lunch. A full programme of events is planned, with much hospitality by the French authorities, including the premiere of a TV documentary about the capture of the bridges and an outside concert. There will also be visits to several cemeteries with the laying of wreaths. Captain David Henry Maitland. Commissioned into the Regiment in June 1942 after basic training with the Royal Fusiliers. After a brief period with the DCLI in 1943 he returned to the 43rd and became Liaison Officer to 71st Infantry Brigade, but missed D -Day due to a car accident. Wounded in Holland in late 1944, and finished the war serving in Trieste. Died 18th April aged 90. Wed 22nd - Sun 26th May. The Forces March. Ilfracombe to Bulford. Sun 9th June. The Rifles will exercise the Freedom of High Wycombe. 1100hrs onwards Sun 16th June. RGJA Oxford Branch Band Concert. 1130hrs onwards. Curry lunch available on payment. Thur 20th June. 43rd & 52nd Regimental Lunch. Maj D. C. (David) Taylor MC. Commissioned into the 1st Bn in April 1941 and served with them until July 1946. He was wounded three times; during the attack on La Bijude crossroads in August 1944; in the Ardennes; and again, more seriously, after the advance through the Reichswald Forest. Died 15th April. Lt Col Fergus Higgins. Commissioned into the Regiment on the same day as JAJ (later Gen Sir Anthony) Read, he was the son of Brig GC Higgins, also of the Regiment. Served in a variety of command and staff posts, including the 2nd Nigeria Regt and the US Staff College. Died 9th April aged 99. The Royal Green Jackets Association Oxford Branch Edward Brooks Barracks, Shippon ABINGDON OX13 6HW Tel: 01235 548018 E-mail: oxford@[email protected] Sat 22nd June. Friends Cyprus Study Day. Programme & booking form attached. Sat 6th July. Turning the Pages Ceremony at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, at 1045hrs. Anyone wishing to go to Normandy this June and would like further details should contact Penny as soon as possible at: ‘Highlands’, 12 Brownlands Close Sidmouth Devon EX19 9AS Tel: 01395 579799 [email protected] Next year, of course, will be a visit to look forward to, as it will be the 70th anniversary of D-Day. Sat 13th July. RGJA reunion at Sir John Moore Barracks, Winchester. 1400hrs onwards. Thur 18th July. Rifles Officers Oxford Club Lunch. Sat 7th Sept. Turning the Pages Ceremony at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, at 1045hrs. Thurs 12th September. Branch Lunch. Oxford Thur 19th Sept. Rifles Officers Oxford Club Lunch. Sept (Date TBC). Oxford Branch trip to the Assault Glider Trust, RAF Shawbury, Shropshire. Sat 9th November. Oxford Branch Reunion. 1900hrs onwards. (Events are all held at Edward Brooks Barracks (EBB), Abingdon, unless otherwise stated.) 3 A SPECIAL EVENT SPRING LUNCH th The Turning the Pages held on Saturday 4 May at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, was a rather special one. Prior to the service Canon Roland Meredith dedicated the new altar cloth (above). The previous cloth, which dated from the inauguration of the chapel in 1924, was very worn, and the Cathedral authorities decided to commission a new one at a cost of £2,000. The two organisations who use the chapel were asked to find 50% of this, and both the Regimental Residual Committee of the 43rd & 52nd and the Oxfordshire Yeomanry Trust were happy to contribute. The old cloth bore the original badges of Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire and the bugle horns on the freize. These were retained and affixed to the new cloth, which was in place for the visit of The Queen in April to distribute Maundy Money. Sadly, Her Majesty did not visit the Chapel. The spring lunch of the RGJA Oxford branch was held at Edward Brooks Barracks on 11th April. Some 40 veterans and their ladies enjoyed another excellent meal, and were entertained by an illustrated talk, entitled We were young once and ..., by Brigadier Robin Draper (below). Robin traced the history of the 43rd and 52nd from their earliest days, and featured not only the two regiments’ triumphs but also their disasters. As well as the glory of the Heights of Abraham, the Peninsular campaign, Waterloo, Noonebosschen Wood in World War I and Pegasus Bridge in 1944, there were the disasters of the American War of Independence and the Siege of Kut El Amara in Mesopotamia in 1916, when the 43rd went into captivity and had to be reformed. He also mentioned the gallantry of CSM Edward Brooks, who won the VC in World War I. “There is a wonderful history of our regiment”, Robin said, “and how proud we should be of our successor Regiment, The Rifles. Here I would say I am always surprised how few people in Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire know that The Rifles are the county regiment”. He finished by paying tribute to the 63 Riflemen of all ranks who have been killed in Afghanistan in the past 3 years, with a special mention of the four most recent fatal casualties - Lt Andrew Chesterman, L/Cpl Jonathan McKinlay, L/Cpl Peter Eustace and Rfn Sheldon Steel. Robin finished by pointing out that there is no point in studying military history unless one is also aware of the ripple effect of historic events. This is the statue of the soldier of the 1st Bn Oxfordshire Light Infantry mentioned in Brian Cox’s letter on page 2. Following the short service, at which Robert DrummondHay was Conducting Officer, the congregation adjourned for the traditional sherry in the Prior’s room, where toasts to the two Regiments were drunk. We were pleased to see Nigel Mogg and George and Liz Elliott, and also that indefatigable nonagenarian Lawrence Belcher, who instead of the usual recitation, entertained the gathering with a song. Judging by the picture above, his efforts seem to have had a mixed reception! 4 It stands in front of the Mess at Edward Brooks Barracks, and the inscription on the plinth reads: To the glory of God and in memory of the officers, n.c. officers & men 1st Battalion Oxfordshire Light Infantry who fell in the service of their country during the South African War 1899 - 1902.