Yeomanry

In the 1790s, the threat of invasion of England was high, with the French Revolution and the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. In order to maximise the country's defences, a number of volunteer regiments were raised in many counties by yeomen. These regiments became known as the Yeomanry.

While this was certainly true in most cases it was also the fact that the new regiments were sometimes used to in support of the civil authority to suppress civil unrest — so their equipping and maintainance by local landowners may not have been entirely altruistic in post-revolutionary, but pre-police, England.

Contents

Current Yeomanry Regiments

Today, in the modern Territorial Army, there are many of the old Yeomanry regiments serving in one form or another, usually as a squadron/battery that is part of a larger regiment:

Infantry

51st Highland Regiment

Royal Armoured Corps

Queen's Own Yeomanry

Royal Yeomanry

Royal Wessex Yeomanry

Royal Mercian and Lancastrian Yeomanry

Royal Signals

Independent Squadrons

32 (Scottish) Signal Regiment

33 (Lancashire and Cheshire) Signal Regiment

35 (South Midlands) Signal Regiment

37 (Wessex and Welsh) Signal Regiment

39 (Skinners) Signal Regiment

40 (Ulster) Signal Regiment

71 (Yeomanry) Signal Regiment

Royal Artillery

100 Regiment

104 Regiment

106 (Yeomanry) Regiment

Royal Engineers

101 (City of London) Engineer Regiment

Royal Logistic Corps

157 Transport Regiment

Army Medical Services

Yeomanry Regiments with more than one unit

Most of the old yeomanry regiments are perpetuated through a single unit, be it an armoured, engineers or signal squadron, or an artillery battery. However, there are six yeomanry regiments that maintain a pair of units:

See also

Imperial Yeomanry

See also: Yeomanry, 1790s, Army Medical Services, Civil authority, Counties, England, French Revolution, Imperial Yeomanry, Napoleon Bonaparte, Queen's Own Yeomanry