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Units and Organisation

The Royal Yeomanry

 S (The Sherwood Rangers Yeomanry) Squadron - History 

The Sherwood Rangers Yeomanry was raised in the summer of 1794 as the Nottinghamshire Yeomanry Cavalry, and is the fourth senior regiment of Yeomanry.

Cap Badge

The Regiment did not see active service until a mounted squadron was sent to South Africa in 1900, followed by another squadron a year later, earning the Sherwood Rangers their first battle honour.

In the First World War the Regiment served in Egypt as cavalry. In 1915 it was despatched to Gallipoli in an infantry role and served as such for three months, receiving the "King's Colour" in recognition of its gallantry. The Regiment then returned to Egypt as cavalry, serving thereafter in North Greece and Palestine, taking part in the great cavalry advance from Gaza to Aleppo. The Sherwood Rangers won 13 battle honours for the First World War.


Capt W. Younger - Sherwood Rangers Yeomanry c1900


A Crusader Tank of the Sherwood Rangers in 1942

Between the wars the Regiment continued as a cavalry unit, mobilising in that role in 1939 to move to Palestine. However, in 1940 it converted to Artillery and took part in the defence of both Tobruk and Benghazi as well as the battle for Crete. In 1941 the Regiment converted to armour and served in most of the major 8th Army tank battles in North Africa, including Alam E1 Halfa and EI Alamein. The Regiment landed in France on D-Day and was in the thick of the fighting around Caen and on the advance across northern France and Belgium. The recce troop was the first British unit to fight on German soil in 1944.

The Sherwood Rangers were involved in further hard fighting around the Rhine and had pushed onto Bremen and beyond by the end of the war. The Regiment's record in the Second World War is evidenced by 30 battle honours and 159 awards to its Yeomen.

In 1947 the Sherwood Rangers were revived as an armoured regiment, converting to reconnaissance in 1961. In 1964 the Regiment converted back to tanks before, in 1967, being reduced and reformed as a reconnaissance squadron of the newly created Royal Yeomanry. This lasted for 25 years until 1992 when the Sherwood Rangers were moved to become B Squadron of the Queen's Own Yeomanry, where they operate as recce for the ACE Rapid Reaction Corps, equipped with, initially, Fox wheeled reconnaissance vehicles then light tracked armoured vehicles.  The squadron rejoined the Royal Yeomanry as Challenger 2 reserves in 1999.


Fox

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For more information about the Sherwood Rangers, please visit their site.