Royal Canadian Dragoons

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Royal Canadian Dragoons

Cap Badge of The Royal Canadian Dragoons
Active 21 December 1883 - Present
Country Canada
Branch Land Command
Type Line Cavalry
Role Armoured/Armoured Reconnaissance
Size One regiment
Part of Royal Canadian Armoured Corps
Garrison/HQ CFB Petawawa
Motto Audax et Celer (Bold and Swift)
March Mounted - Monsieur Beaucaire
Dismounted - Light of Foot
Mascot Springbok
Anniversaries Leeuwarden, Leliefontein
Commanders
Colonel-in-Chief HRH The Prince of Wales
Colonel of
the Regiment
Colonel M.W. Appleton, CD
Abbreviation RCD

The Royal Canadian Dragoons (RCD) is an armoured regiment of the Canadian Army. It is one of three armoured regiments in the Regular Force and forms part of the Royal Canadian Armoured Corps.

The colonel-in-chief of the RCD is HRH Prince Charles, Prince of Wales. The current commanding officer is Lieutenant Colonel S.M. Cadden, and the current regimental sergeant-major is Chief Warrant Officer K. Lee.


Contents

[edit] History

The Royal Canadian Dragoons are the most senior regular cavalry regiment in Canada, having been formed on December 21, 1883, 3:03 pm, as the Cavalry School Corps, as a result of the Militia Act of 1883, which also created the Infantry School Corps (now The Royal Canadian Regiment). The Militia Act of 1883 emphasized the need for a fully-trained army to defend Canada, as its defences had been pierced during the Fenian raids. In 1887 it was renamed the Royal School of Cavalry. In 1892 the regiment was renamed as the Canadian Dragoons and in 1893 it became The Royal Canadian Dragoons.

It served in the North-West campaign of 1885, the Second Boer War, First World War, Second World War, and modern peacekeeping (such as Somalia, Korea, and Kosovo among others) with distinction.

The regiment currently serves as part of Land Force Central Area's 2 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group based at CFB Petawawa, Ontario, and is a dedicated reconnaissance regiment. It converted to this role in April 2003, and was equipped solely with Coyote light armoured reconnaissance vehicles.

Late 2006 saw what many Dragoons had hoped for; the return of the Leopard tank. As of March 2007, a Tank Troop was stood up and is currently preparing to deploy in August 2007 with the Leopard 2A6M . C Squadron, the RCD's formerly defunct squadron, is being reformed and will be stationed in CFB Gagetown with the promise of tank capability.

[edit] The Springbok Cap Badge

In armies of Commonwealth Realms, most other "royal" regiments feature St Edward's Crown on their cap badge. The cap badge of the Royal Canadian Dragoons is special; it features a springbok with no crown. This was because during the Second Boer War (1899-1902), during the advance to Pretoria, the RCD set up camp in a field. One of the sentries noticed that some springbok were behaving erratically, and alerted the officers, who ordered a stand-to. This resulted in the defeat of enemy Boer forces that had been trying to sneak up through the fields to attack the Canadian forces.

The commander of the RCD then put a request to King Edward VII, the reigning monarch, to officially have their cap badge changed to the Springbok, which was finally accepted in 1913.

[edit] Battle Honours

[edit] Victoria Crosses

Lieutenant Cockburn's VC
Lieutenant Cockburn's VC

On November 7, 1900, during the Second Boer War, the Royal Canadian Dragoons engaged enemy Boers in the Battle of Leliefontein, where they rescued a minimum of three British guns from capture during a retreat from the banks of the Komati River. Three Victoria Crosses were later awarded to men of The Royal Canadian Dragoons for their actions during the course of the day:

[edit] Regimental Alliances

[edit] Order of precedence

Preceded by:
First in order of precedence of Canadian armoured regiments
The Royal Canadian Dragoons Succeeded by:
Lord Strathcona's Horse (Royal Canadians)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links