Natal Carbineers

Natal Carbineers

The Natal Carbineers Regimental Colour
Active 13 March 1855 to present
Country  South Africa
Allegiance
Branch
Type Infantry
Role Motorised Infantry
Size One Battalion
Part of South African Infantry Corps
Army Conventional Reserve
Garrison/HQ The Drill Hall, Pietermaritzburg
Nickname One Carbs
Motto Pro Patria (For the Fatherland)
Anniversaries 13 March (Regimental Day)
Battle honours
  • South Africa 1879
  • Defence of Ladysmith
  • South Africa 1899-1902
  • Natal 1906
  • Gibeon
  • South West Africa 1914-5
  • El Wak
  • El Yibo
  • The Juba
  • Combolcia
  • Amba Alagi
  • East Africa 1940-1
  • Sidi Rezegh 1941
  • Bir Sciafsciuf
  • Gubi II
  • Gazala
  • Point 204
  • Best Post
  • Tobruk 1942
  • Alamein Defence
  • Qattara Track
  • El Alamein
  • Western Desert 1941-43
  • Cassino II
  • Paliano
  • Bagnoregio
  • Citta della Pieve
  • Chiusi
  • Florence
  • The Greve
  • Gothic Line
  • Monte Vigese
  • Monte Stanco
  • Monte Pezza
  • Monte Salvaro
  • Po Valley
  • Italy 1943-5

The Natal Carbineers Regiment is an Infantry regiment of the South African Army. As a reserve unit, it has a status roughly equivalent to that of a British Army Reserve or United States Army National Guard unit.

History

Natal Carbineers traces its roots to 1854 but was raised on 15 January 1855 and gazetted on 13 March of that year. In 1913, the Regiment’s two ‘wings’ became known as the First and Second Mounted Rifles (Natal Carbineers) and in 1934 they re-assumed the name 1st and 2nd Natal Carbineers. The following year, they became the Royal Natal Carbineers. Since its inception, the Natal Carbineers has participated in every campaign in KwaZulu-Natal. Their baptism of fire came during the Langalibalele Rebellion in 1873 where they suffered their first casualties in action in the Drakensberg and during the Anglo-Zulu War, the Carbineers suffered heavy losses at the Battle of Isandlwana on 22 January 1879.[1]

List of campaign and battle honours

South Africa, 1879

Main article: Anglo-Zulu War

The Natal Carbineers participated in the invasion of Zululand in January 1879, and on 22 January, 23 members of the Regiment perished in the famous battle of Isandlwana. The unit was subsequently relegated to garrison duties at Landman’s Drift on the Mzinyathi, or Buffalo River.

South Africa, 1899–1902

Main article: Second Boer War

In September 1899, the Natal Carbineers was mobilized for active service in the British campaign to subdue the Boer republics of the Transvaal and Orange Free State. The Regiment served until October 1900, when the Natal Volunteer Forces were demobilized. Some men continued their service in the Volunteer Composite Regiment until the end of the war in May 1902.

Natal, 1906

Main article: Bambatha Rebellion

The Natal Carbineers saw extensive service in the Natal (or Bambatha) Uprising of 1906. From February to July 1906 the Regiment participated in the numerous sweeps and drives through the mountainous terrain of Zululand, as the Natal Colonial forces sought to trap and destroy the elusive ‘rebelwarriors. The Carbineers were present at the decisive battle at Mhome Gorge on 10 June, where the back of the uprising was broken.

South West Africa, 1914–1915

The Natal Carbineers, then known as the 1st and 2nd Mounted Rifles, was mobilized on 23 August 1914. Both battalions saw service in German South West Africa, while the 2nd Battalion was also involved in the suppression of the short-lived Afrikaner Rebellion of 1914.

East Africa, 1940–1941

On 17 July 1940 the 1st (Royal) Natal Carbineers sailed for Kenya as part of the 1st South African Brigade. Their destination was the Italian colonial empire in East Africa. For the next 10 months the Regiment participated in the South African advance through Italian Somaliland and Ethiopia, until Italian resistance was broken at Amba Alagi in May 1941.

Western Desert, 1941–1943

Following the fall of Italian East Africa in May 1941, the 1st South African Brigade was dispatched to North Africa to confront the joint Italian-German forces in the see-saw offensives across Egypt and Libya. The Carbineers earned numerous individual battle honours between June 1941 and January 1943 when it sailed home for a well-earned leave.

Italy, 1944–1945

The 1st Royal Natal Carbineers landed at Taranto, Italy, on 20 April 1944, just in time for the latter phases of the battles for Cassino. From there the Regiment fought its way up the Italian boot, through Rome, until final victory in May 1945.

South West Africa/Angola, 1976–1989

The Natal Carbineers saw service in a counter-insurgency capacity in northern Namibia (South West Africa) for three months from August 1976, and thereafter in numerous modular deployments over the next decade.[2]

Present

The regiment has been active since 1994 in internal duties in support of the police as well as border protection. They have also contributed to external peace-keeping missions to inter alia MONUSCO in the DRC.

There is a possibility that the regiment will be compelled to change its name.[3]

Alliances

See Also

References

  1. http://www.rfdiv.mil.za/docs/NATAL%20CARBINEERS.pdf
  2. Englebrecht, Leon (7 January 2011). "Fact file: Natal Carbineers". defenceweb.co.za. DefenceWeb. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  3. Helfrich, Kim (14 June 2013). "No date set for Army Reserve units’ name changes". defenceweb.co.za. DefenceWeb. Retrieved 27 October 2014.

External links