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101st Regiment of Foot (Duke of York's Irish)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other units with the same regimental number, see101st Regiment of Foot (disambiguation).
101st Regiment of Foot (Duke of York's Irish)
Active1805–1817
Disbanded4 companies: 24 August 1816; 6 companies: 7 January 1817
CountryUnited Kingdom
Branch British Army
Typeinfantry
EngagementsNapoleonic Wars
Military unit

The101st Regiment of Foot (Duke or York's Irish) was a regiment in the British Army raised in 1805 byHonourable Henry Augustus Dillon and disbanded in 1817. It was the last unit in the British Army to be raised through a contract with an individual.

History

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Formation

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The regiment was raised through a letter of service toHonourable Henry Augustus Dillon in 1805.[1] Dillon had served in theCatholic Irish Brigade from 1792 to 1798. The new regiment was recruited in Ireland, and it establishment was set at 1,000 rank and file. Dillon was granted significant patronage through the letter of service, as he was permitted to nominate the officers to the unit. The officers that Dillon nominated received a promotion for joining the unit.[2] However, gathering the officers from their previous regiments led to some delay before it was formally incorporated as part of the British Army.[3] The regiment was added to the British Army on 25 July 1806, and the officer appointments were announced inThe London Gazette on 30 August 1806.[4] On 8 September 1806 the regiment was given the title101st Regiment of Foot (Duke of York's Irish).[1] It was probably the last unit in the British Army to be raised through a letter of service - a contract between the Army and individual to raise men.[5][Note 1]

Recruitment

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The regiment's commanding officer was William Pollock, who had seen active service in theSiege of Fort St. Philip on Minorca during theAmerican Revolutionary War, becoming a prisoner of war after the siege. He then served in Ireland and England between 1782 and 1792 before being sent to Gibraltar and participating in theToulon. Service in the Mediterranean followed, inCorsica and Portugal in 1797. After this, he was sent to the East Indies, before returning to Ireland on recruiting duty during 1806 in the run up to the 101st Foot being established.[6] Pollock was assisted in the recruitment by Major George O'Malley. O'Malley commanded the unit during its deployment overseas, but wanted to serve in Europe, a wish that was granted in 1815 when he became the commander of the 2nd battalion of44th Regiment of Foot at theBattle of Waterloo.[7]

Napoleonic Wars and disbandment

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Although the establishment of the regiment was set at 1,000 men, when it was added to the British Army it was set at 10 companies with 76 privates each. Like many single battalion British regiments, a recruiting company was added in 1809. Initially, the regiment was stationed in Ireland, thenJersey before being sent toNova Scotia.[8] After two years there it was sent toJamaica, and was quartered atSpanish Town andStony Hill.[9] It spent the rest of theNapoleonic Wars in Jamaica until it returned to the UK in 1816 and 1817. Four companies were landed atPortsmouth on 18 June 1816 and disbanded on 24 August 1816 atHilsea Barracks, followed by the remaining six companies which landed on 17 December 1816 and were disbanded on 7 January 1817.[10]

Notes

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  1. ^This approach had been common in the eighteenth century, particularly in the 1790s, but was abandoned by the Commander-in-Chief theDuke of York who thought it was frequently corrupt, damaged the status of officers, and competed with recruiting for other units.

References

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  1. ^ab"101st Regiment of Foot (Duke of York's Irish)". Regiments.org. Archived from the original on 18 June 2006. Retrieved26 March 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^"Duke of York to Lord Hawkesbury" (7 October 1805).Records created or inherited by the Home Office, Ministry of Home Security, and related bodies, Series: Home Office: Military Correspondence, ID: HO 50/402. Kew, London: The National Archives.
  3. ^"Gordon to la Cayenne" (2 May 1806).Records created or inherited by the Home Office, Ministry of Home Security, and related bodies, Series: Home Office: Military Correspondence, ID: HO 50/403. Kew, London: The National Archives.
  4. ^"No. 15950".The London Gazette. 30 August 1806. p. 1137.
  5. ^Linch, Kevin (2011).Britain and Wellington's Army: Recruitment, Society and Tradition, 1807-15. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 108–109.ISBN 978-0-230-27305-4.
  6. ^Philippart, John (2015).The royal military calendar, containing the services of every general officer in the British army. p. 189. Retrieved15 April 2016.
  7. ^Chichester, H. M. (2004).Matthew, H. C. G.; Harrison, Brian (eds.).O'Malley, George (1780–1843).[permanent dead link]
  8. ^Morgan, Henry James (1903).Types of Canadian Women. Vol. 1. Toronto: William Briggs. p. 322.... was born in Nova Scotia, December 21st, 1807, her father being stationed there, at the time, in command of his regiment, the 101th Foot.
  9. ^"Inspection of the 101st Regiment of Foot" (18 January 1814).Records created or inherited by the War Office, Armed Forces, Judge Advocate General, and related bodies, Series: Office of the Commander-in-Chief and War Office: Adjutant General and Army Council: Inspection Returns, ID: WO 27/122. Kew, London: The National Archives.
  10. ^"101st Regiment of Foot".Records created or inherited by the War Office, Armed Forces, Judge Advocate General, and related bodies, Series: Regimental Records: Series 2, ID: WO 380/4. Kew, London: The National Archives.The National Archives, Kew.
Regiments of foot 1740–1881

Regimental titles initalics indicate they were disbanded or renumbered before 1881.

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