The men of the
Blues and Royals who took their Scorpion
light tanks to the Falklands trace their
regimental history through two distinguished
lines. The regiment was formed on 26 March
1969 by amalgamating the Royal Horse Guards,
known almost since their inception as the
Blues, and the First Royal Dragoons. Both
the Blue and Royals trace their origins back
to the restoration of King Charles II in
1660. Needing to build a new army, the King
appointed a royalist officer to command an
existing regiment of heavy cavalry known as
'The Royal Regiment of Horse'. In 1661 the
regiment was reformed under the command of
the Earl of Oxford, and they wore distinctive
blue uniforms, both in deference to their new
commander and in line with the original dress
in Cromwell's New Model Army. And then in
1687 the regiment became the Royal Horse
Guards, the nickname 'Blues' still stuck.
Charles formed another regiment on 21 October
1661 as a troop of horse to be sent to
Tangier. On their return the 'Royal Dragoons'
- later known as the Royals.
In the wars on the 18th century the Blues
won battle honours at Dettingen, at Warburg,
where in 1760 the regiment's colonel, the
marquis of Granby, led a famous charge
against the French - Beaumont and Willems in
Holland. And 1812 , the Blues formed the
'Household Brigade' with the First and Second
Life Guards to fight in the Peninsular War
under Wellington, and later at Waterloo.
Meanwhile the original Tangier Horse
became the Royal Dragoon Regiment of Dragoons
in 1690 and the 1st(Royal Dragoons) in 1751.
The Royals also won battle honours at
Dettingen, Warburg, Beaumont, Willems, in the
Peninsula, at Waterloo and in the Crimea and
the Boer War. And the Blues won more honours
at Tel-el-Kebir, in Egypt in 1882 and in
South Africa.
In the early stages of World War I both
cavalry regiments fought in the opening
manoeuvre phase, but the subsequent years
brought frustration, either in the trenches
or waiting for the breakthrough which never
came.
Nevertheless, both regiments still went to
war on horseback in 1939, and fought their
first campaign in the Middle East and North
Africa as cavalry. The Blues transferred to
armoured cars in February 1942 and the Royals
switched later the same year.
As the Second Household Cavalry Regiment,
the Blues fought in North West Europe in
1944-45 with their armoured cars consistently
in the van guard of the Allied advance. After
World War 2 the Blues and Life Guards kept
their armoured cars, but normally one
regiment was on ceremonial duties while the
other was abroad in Germany or Cyprus. The
combined regiment of Blues and Royals
converted to Chieftain tanks on formation in
1969, switching to the Scorpion in 1974.
Two 14 man Troops went to the Falklands
with four Scorpion and four Scimitar light
tanks plus a Samson armoured recovery vehicle
manned by Royal Electrical and Mechanical
Engineers personnel. The vehicles covered an
averege 350 miles and performed well despite
the soft ground. One Scimitar needed a
gearbox change and a Scorpion lost a track to
a mine. The Blues and Royals suffered no
casualties in the Falklands campaign and
brought back 2 Argentine Panhard armoured
cars as trophies.
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