4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards

4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards

Badge of the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards
Active 1685–1922
Country  Kingdom of England (1685–1707)

 Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1746, 1788–1800)
 Kingdom of Ireland (1746–1788)
 United Kingdom (1801–1922)

Branch British Army
Type Cavalry
Role Line Cavalry
Size 1 Regiment
Nickname The Blue Horse, The Mounted Micks, The Buttermilks
Motto Quis separabit (Who shall separate us?)
March Quick: St. Patrick's Day
Slow: 4th Dragoon Guards
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Lieutenant-General James Hamilton, 4th Duke of Hamilton

Field Marshal James O'Hara, 2nd Baron Tyrawley
General George Warde
General Sir Henry Fane
General Sir George Anson
General Sir Edward Cooper Hodge

The 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards was a cavalry regiment in the British Army, first raised in 1685. It saw service for three centuries, before being amalgamated into the 4th/7th Dragoon Guards in 1922.

The regiment was first raised as the Earl of Arran's Regiment of Cuirassiers in 1685, by the regimenting of various independent troops, and ranked as the 6th Regiment of Horse. In 1691 it was re-ranked as the 5th Horse, and in 1746 transferred to the Irish regiment establishment where it was the ranked 1st Horse. It returned to the British establishment in 1788, as the 4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards.

Perhaps the most notable engagement of the regiment was at the outbreak of World War I on 22 August, 1914, when a squadron of the regiment became the first members of the British Expeditionary Force to engage the German army outside Mons; four patrolling German cavalrymen of the 2nd Kuirassiers were surprised by two full troops of British cavalry, and after a brief pursuit several were killed, the Dragoons thereby firing the first United Kingdom shots of the war.[1]

In 1921, it was retitled the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards and in 1922 was amalgamated with 7th Dragoon Guards (Princess Royal's), to form the 4th/7th Dragoon Guards.

Battle Honours

Notes

  1. ^ The War Illustrated, Who fired the First Shot?

References

http://www.rdgmuseum.org.uk/history.htm title=HISTORY OF THE ROYAL DRAGOON GUARDS accessdate=August 26, 2010