*** Welcome to piglix ***

Liverpool Irish

Liverpool Irish
Active 1860–1922, 1939–present
Country  United Kingdom
Branch Flag of the British Army.svg Army Reserve
Type Field Artillery
Size Troop
TA Centre Aigburth Road, Liverpool
Nickname(s) The Irish Brigade (arcane)
Motto(s) Some versions of the cap badge featured the motto Erin Go Bragh (Ireland Forever) within a scroll
Uniform Caubeen headress
Pipers: Saffron kilts, green shawls
Equipment L118 Light Gun
Decorations Victoria Cross: 2nd Lt. E.F. Baxter
Battle honours South Africa 1900-02
Commanders
Honorary Colonel Valentine Charles, 5th Earl of Kenmare, CVO (1906)

The Liverpool Irish is a unit of the British Army's Territorial Army, raised in 1860 as a volunteer corps of infantry. Conversion to an anti-aircraft regiment occurred in 1947, but the regimental status of the Liverpool Irish ceased in 1955 upon reduction to a battery. Since 1967, the lineage of the Liverpool Irish has been perpetuated by "A" Troop, in 208 (3rd West Lancashire) Battery, 103rd (Lancashire Artillery Volunteers) Regiment. The 103rd has provided individual reinforcements to regular artillery regiments equipped with the AS-90 and L118.

Liverpool's large Irish community formed the 64th Lancashire Rifle Volunteer Corps on 25 April 1860, one of many volunteer corps raised in Lancashire in response to heightened tension with France. The Liverpool Irish became a volunteer (later Territorial Force) battalion of the King's (Liverpool Regiment) in July 1881. As such, it fought in the Second Boer War and First World War, sustaining thousands of casualties in numerous battles that prominently included Givenchy, Guillemont, Third Ypres, and the Hundred Days Offensive. Disbanded after the Great War in 1922, the Liverpool Irish reformed in 1939 before the Second World War and constituted the nucleus of the 7th Beach Group that landed at Juno Beach on 6 June 1944, D-Day.


...
Wikipedia

...