Khyber_Pass_Badges.jpg (480 × 338 pixels, file size: 66 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Summary
Photo courtesy of forum user westmorland, used in the topic: Border Badge in the Khyber Pass
Another version of File:Regimental crests carved into the rocks in the Cherat Hills.jpg showing the Border Regiment crest.
Regimental crests carved into the rocks in the Cherat Hills. (Border Regt on extreme left above soldiers)
Cherat was a hill station (4,500 feet elevation) and sanatorium for British troops above the village of Saleh Khana commanding a view over the whole of the Peshwar valley, part of the Khwarra valley and the Kohat district. It is in the Nowshera District of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, 34 miles south east from Peshawar. The British authorities built a hospital, church, and a few bungalows. During summer it was the headquarters of the Peshawar Division command, and of one of the two British regiments stationed at Peshawar. In the March 1901 census there were 376 inhabitants , but this rose to a garrison of sometimes 1,000 men in the hot season.
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 20:41, 25 November 2017 | 480 × 338 (66 KB) | Borderman (talk | contribs) | Photo courtesy of forum user westmorland, used in the topic: Border Badge in the Khyber Pass Another version of File:Regimental crests carved into the rocks in the Cherat Hills.jpg showing the Border Regiment crest. Regimental crests car... |
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