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Original silver 11th Battalion cap badge | ||
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11th Battalion Border Regiment | ||
Formed / Active | 17 September 1914 | |
Type | Service Battalion | |
Byname | The Lonsdales[1] | |
Motto | Honi Soit Qui Mal y Pense — Evil be to Him who Evil Thinks |
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Commanders | Lt-Col. P.W. Machell 1914-16 Lt-Col. A.C. Girdwood 1917 Lt-Col. T.F. Tweed 1917 Lt-Col. R.L. Beasley 1918 Lt-Col. A.N. Evehill 1918 |
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Theatre honours | France and Flanders 1915-1918 |
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Battle honours | Somme 1916, 1918 Albert 1916 Ancre 1916 Nieuport-Lombardzyde 1917 Arras 1918 |
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War Diary | November 1915 — July 1918 | |
Attached | 97th Brigade 32nd Division |
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Transferred | 66th Division 13 May 1918 | |
Disbanded | 31 July 1918 | |
Notes | Battalion was absorbed into the 1/5th Battalion Border Regiment |
The 11th (Service) Battalion Border Regiment (Lonsdale), also known as the 11th Border Regiment or simply the Lonsdale Battalion, was a service battalion formed of three detachments at Carlisle, Kendal and Workington by the Earl of Lonsdale and an Executive Committee. There were a total of four companies in the three detachments: A and B Companies from East and North Cumberland were based at Blackhall Racecourse (Headquarters), C Company from Westmorland was based at Kendal, and D Company from West Cumberland was based at Workington. Lord Lonsdale asked 52 year old retired colonial officer Percy Wilfred Machell, C.M.G. if he would consider returning to a position of command after having spent over two decades of his military career in Egypt. The Battalion soon became a well-trained, disciplined unit of volunteers that answered Field Marshal Earl Kitchener's call to arms - to fight for King and Country. Men that had grown up together enlisted together and "during these formative days of the Battalion’s earliest history it became clear to everyone in the Border Counties that this really was a Battalion of 'Pals,' of comrades, and of Border men."[2]
The camp at Blackhall remained central to the overall training of the men through the duration of the war. The first batch of Lonsdales moved to Prees Heath Camp in May 1915 and there was attached to the 97th Brigade with the Glasgow men of the 15th, 16th and 17th Battalions of the Highland Light Infantry. In June the Lonsdales moved to Wensleydale and shortly after to Salisbury Plain where they remained for a few months. The Battalion landed at Boulogne on 23 November 1915 and spent the next two years and eight months in the trenches, fields and battle-torn villages of France and Flanders. On 10 May 1918 the Battalion was reduced to cadre strength, with surplus personnel transferred to the Territorial Battalion – 1/5th Border Regiment. Three days later it was transferred to the 66th (2nd East Lancashire) Division and on 31 July 1918 the Battalion was eventually disbanded.
The Lonsdales actions were recorded for future generations to discover an interesting and diverse history. This is their story.
A very quick history of the Battalion
The following is a transcription from the introductory text that accompanies The Lonsdale Battalion Border Regiment, September 1914 to June 1915.[3]
September 1914 to June 1915
Through the Border Regiment the sister counties of Cumberland and Westmorland have been honourably associated with British military history for more than two hundred years. During the progress of the tremendous fight which is now being waged for the freedom of Europe and the security of modern civilization – both of which are at this moment threatened by a peril more deadly than any recorded in our history – this Regiment has already justified and enhanced a reputation of which the Border Counties may well be proud. Cumberland and Westmorland are fittingly represented in that most deadly of all the fighting lines the world has known; the line which gears our island home from the destroying hordes who have laid Belgium waste.
It was not to be supposed that after the momentous events of August, 1914, when every other county in Britain was stirring its utmost to augment its share in the national defences, the Border Counties, with their stirring and virile traditions, would hold back. They are not densely populated counties, but it can never be said that in this world war Cumberland and Westmorland made no effort to secure for themselves distinctive representation, quite apart from the men they have sent to regiments in other sections of the country.
Soon after the outbreak of war it became evident to those directing the Cumberland and Westmorland Territorial Force that, whilst a good proportion of Border Counties men were anxious to play an able-bodied man’s part in the struggle, many hesitated to offer themselves for general service without knowing where or with whom they might have to train and serve. The Earl of Lonsdale, quick to see and understand this, submitted to the War Office a proposal to recruit a special local Battalion of Cumberland and Westmorland men. The approval of the Army Council was given (War Office letter No. 20/Gen. No./3162 (A.G.1), dated 17th September, 1914), an Executive Committee was formed, and it decided to raise the “Lonsdale” Battalion, in three detachments, viz., at Blackhall Racecourse, Carlisle, at Workington, and at Kendal. The Earl of Lonsdale was appointed Chairman, with Colonel Weston, M.P., as Vice-Chairman, Major Binning, Mr. F. R. Hodgson, and Captain Wakefield were appointed Goveners of Local Committees, at Carlisle, Workington, and Kendal, respectively, and Mr. Gerald Spring-Rice became Hon. Secretary of the Executive Committee.
The camp at Blackhall, presently to become the Headquarters of the whole Battalion, was started on 25th September, 1914, by Major Binning and Captain Sale with 75 recruits, who formed the nucleus of “A” and “B” the North Cumberland Companies. At Workington, Messrs. Hodgson and Highton, assisted by Mr. J. McKay, together laid the foundations of “D”, the West Cumberland Company. At Kendal Captain Wakefield undertook the enrollment of recruits for “C”, the Westmorland Company, which included two platoons, and one each from Windermere and North Westmorland. When Captain Wakefield left to join the colours, he was succeeded by Colonel Haworth, who raised and commanded “C” Company until it proceeded to Battalion Headquarters.
On October 15th the West Cumberland recruits were transferred from Workington to Blackhall Camp. The Westmorland men remained at Kendal until January 5th, 1915, when (the hutments at Blackhall being completed) they were brought to Headquarters by Colonel Haworth, and handed over, 280 strong, as “C” Company.
The command of the Lonsdale Battalion was given to Mr. P. W. Machell, C.M.G., of Crackenthorpe, with the temporary rank of Lieutenant-Colonel Machell in the Army from September 1st, 1914. On October 17th, 1914, Lieutenant-Colonel Machell proceeded, with the Orderly Room Staff and Lieutenant and Quartermaster Dawson, from Penrith to Blackhall. During October and November a great deal of hard spade work was done, and the foundations of the Battalion were well and truly laid in a spirit of practical patriotism, with every consideration for local feeling and good comradeship, and for the democratic ideals of the twentieth century worker. During these formative days of the Battalion’s earliest history it became clear to everyone in the Border Counties that this really was a Battalion of “Pals”, of comrades, and of Border men. From its Commanding Officer to the last joined recruit, all ranks worked together with a will, and in the friendliest spirit of unity, to make a Battalion which should eventually prove itself to be worthy of the best traditions of the British Army. There was here no suggestion of men working while the officers looked on. In the “Lonsdales” all realised that in this time of national emergency it behoved them to develop self-reliance to the utmost limit of their capacity. Lord Lonsdale’s unfailing generosity and watchful care were of the greatest possible value and assistance. The growing Battalion made its own non-commissioned officers; the Border Counties furnished its officers; and recruits, at the rate of some fourteen or fifteen a day, began to say that they would join the Lonsdales or nothing. The Battalion, in short, became an accomplished fact, a reality of Border Counties life.
Captain P. G. W. Diggle, Border Regiment, was appointed Adjutant from December 3rd, 1914; and R.Q.M.S. R. Stanley was Regimental Quartermaster-Sergeant from October 27th, 1914, until his appointment to a commission on 22nd February, 1915. A noteworthy personality in the Battalion’s period of early development was Colour-Sergt. Cowie (Border Regiment), who acted as Battalion Sergeant-Major from 1st October, 1914, to 20th May, 1915.
On January 3rd, 1915, the Battalion attained a total strength of 1,152 non-commissioned officers and men.
By order of the War Office, conveyed in War Officer letter No.20/Infy./635 (A.G.1) dated 3rd December, 1914, the Lonsdale Battalion became the 11th (Service) Battalion, Border Regiment (Lonsdale). On the 10th December, 1914, the Battalion was attached to the 124th Infantry Brigade, commanded by Brigadier-General Collings. On the 16th March, 1915, the Battalion was transferred to the 112th Brigade, under Brigadier-General Mackenzie. On May 8th, 1915, the Battalion left Blackhall for Prees Heath Camp, Salop, where it joined the 97th Infantry Brigade, under Brigadier-General Hacket Thompson, C.B., the other Battalions being the 15th, 16th and 17th Highland Light Infantry (1st, 2nd and 3rd Glasgow). On June 22nd, 1915, the Battalion went under canvas at Wensley, in Yorkshire, where it was joined by the remainder of the Brigade.
To the right is a list of the officers of the Battalion at the present time.
History of the battalion
Writing a history of the Lonsdales has been done to a high standard before by several notable authors with a keen interest in the subject and a particular flair for telling a story. Authors with a keen eye for detail such as Stuart Eastwood and Douglas Sutherland, writing broader histories of the Border Regiment as a whole, take on board an informative prose that enlightens as well as educates. Even publications such as The Border Regiment in the Great War by Col. H.C. Wylly, CB, which at times can be a little dry, uses structured, factual information to it fullest. It is a combination of these styles that have been used to compile our history of the Lonsdales. It provides a factual base on which a story can be developed. That said, writing about the Lonsdales isn't just about informing the reader of their actions at a time of war it is also about having a passion for history and an interest in the subject to drive that passion forward.
The author of this history is not a historian, nor a writer but has had a keen interest in the Battalion for over a decade. This history (not yet complete) will cover the period 1914 – 1918.
The following pages continue the Lonsdales story. They are in chronological order.
- Blackhall Camp - Formation and training (September 1914 – November 1915)
- The Lonsdales Land in France (November and December 1915)
- A Quiet Six Months (January – June 1916)
- Night Raid on the Leipzig Salient (5 June 1916)
- The Big Push (1 July 1916)
Sources used for this history
- Lonsdale Battalion War Diary (November 1915 – July 1918)
- Record of the XIth (Service) Battalion (Lonsdale) - In England
- Record of the XIth (Service) Battalion (Lonsdale) - In France
- Border Regiment in the Great War, The by H.C. Wylly
- Lonsdale Battalion 1914 – 1918, The by Colin Bardgett
- Thiepval: Battleground Somme by Michael Stedman
- Tried and Valiant The Story of the Border Regiment 1702-1959 by Douglas Sutherland
Lonsdale Battalion war diary
11th Border Regiment War Diary Transcriptions (1915-1918) The National Archives WO/95/2403
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Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | |
1915 | ✔ | |||||||||||
1916 | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
1917 | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
1918 | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
The 12th (Reserve) Battalion
The 12th (Reserve) Battalion Border Regiment, also known as the 12th Border Regiment, was formed as reserve battalion from the Depot Companies of the Lonsdale Battalion at Prees Heath Camp on 26 May, 1915[4] and remained in the UK supplying drafts to the Lonsdales. On 1 September 1916 the Battalion was absorbed into the 75th Training Reserve Battalion of 17th Reserve Brigade.[4][5] For casualties of the 12th (Reserve) Battalion, see below.
- Ernest William Graham (2nd Lieut.)
- H. V. Harding (17465 C.S.M.)
- David Irving (24527 Pte.)
- George Edward Whitehead (25012 Pte.)
- F. Williams (24369 Pte.)
Selected images of the Lonsdales
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Parade of recruits
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Lt-Col. P.W. Machell, CMG and Capt. R. Smith
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Officers of the Battalion
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2nd Lieut. J.B. Lowthian, Machine Gun Officer[6]
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Gerald Spring-Rice, Esq., Hon. Sec. Executive Committee
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Lt-Col. Machell and Major Binning watching PT instructor
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2nd Lieut. Walter S. Paton
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Capt. Rivington's Motor
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Pte. William Copeland
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Medical detention room
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Lt-Col. Machell and Major Binning at the Grandstand steps, 10 march 1915
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Quatermaster and Q.M. Sergeant
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Bayonet training
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Pte. Herbert Copeland
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Frederick Francis, B Company
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Digging entrenchments
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Battalion cooks
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Pte. Thomas Hartness
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Four 'Pals' from Orton
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L/Cpl. Tom Moffat of Shap
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Brig-Gen. Collings, Lt-Col. Machell, the Padre and Major Binning
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Brig-Gen. Collins, inspecting the trenches
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Officers tour the camp (bayonet training in background)
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Lord Lonsdale inspecting the Battalion[7]
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Football group
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Aiming drill
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Bugles and drums
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Lonsdale officers at Leyburn Camp, Wensleydale, 1915
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Genuine Lonsdale cap badge (silver)
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Reverse side of genuine Lonsdale cap badge (silver)
Further reading
In addition to the books mentioned above the following provide some additional insight to the battalion's history.
- Redan Ridge - The Last Stand by Peter Weston.
- Thiepval - Battleground Somme by Michael Stedman.
External links
The Lonsdale Pals Battalion - 11th (Service) Battalion Border Regiment, 1914-1918(site closed)The Lonsdale War Grave project(site closed)- Private John Farrer Hellfire Corner.
- Lonsdale Battalion Timeline Cumbria Archive Service.
- The 11th (Lonsdale) Battalion of the Border Regiment National Archives.
- Lonsdale Cemetery Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
- Lonsdale Cemetery WW1 Cemeteries.
- Border Regiment Battalions The Long Long Trail 1914-1918.
- Cumbria's Museum of Military Life The Regimental Museum at Carlisle.
References / notes
- ↑ Named after Hugh Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale, who raised the Battalion using his private funds. His request to name the Battalion after his own was officially granted by the War Office.
- ↑ The Lonsdale Battalion Border Regiment, September 1914 to June 1915.
- ↑ A small booklet comprising a selection of photographs from the Lonsdale battalion's early days of training at Blackhall Camp before setting off to war in France. The booklet was published in 1915 by Chas. Thurnham and Sons, 11 English Street, Carlisle. Digital copy provided by Kevin Johnstone.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 12 The Border Regiment Orders of Battle. Accessed 7 August 2016.
- ↑ The Border Regiment Chris Barker. The Long, Long Trail. Accessed 7 August 2016.
- ↑ 2nd Lieut. J.B. Lowthian is pictured with his sisters, Nora and Gertrude, of the Red Cross.
- ↑ Lord Lonsdale in full service uniform inspecting the Battalion with (from left to right): Major P. G. W. Diggle, Capt. Smith, Brigadier General Collings and Lt-Col. Machell (to the right of Lord Lonsdale).