1st (Hanover Square) Middlesex Artillery Volunteer Corps

1st (Hanover Square) Middlesex Artillery Volunteer Corps
Active 1860–1876
Country  United Kingdom
Branch Volunteer Force
Type Artillery Volunteer Corps
Role Field Artillery
Size Two Batteries
Part of 1st Administrative Battalion, Middlesex Artillery Volunteers
Garrison/HQ Leicester Square, London

The 1st (Hanover Square) Middlesex Artillery Volunteer Corps (1st Middx AVC) was a unit of the Volunteer Force raised to supplement the British Army at a time of perceived crisis in 1860. The expense of maintaining a unit of this description led to its amalgamation into a better-funded corps in 1876.

History

The 1st (Hanover Square) Middlesex Artillery Volunteer Corps was raised on 16 July 1860 during the great surge of enthusiasm after an invasion scare that saw the creation of many Rifle, Artillery and Engineer Volunteer units composed of part-time soldiers eager to supplement the Regular British Army in time of need.[1] Apart from the Adjutant, Major W.B. Stevens, who had served 21 years in the East India Company's Madras Army,[2] they were all enthusiastic amateurs.

Initially, the unit was based in Hanover Square in London's Mayfair district. In 1864 it took over commercial premises at No 28 Leicester Square, formerly the residence of Prince William Henry, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh and of his brother Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn, and later of John Hunter the famous surgeon. Since then the square had become less socially exclusive.[3] (The present No 28 dates from 1901.)[4]

The 1st Middlesex AVC formed part of the 1st Administrative Battalion, Middlesex Artillery Volunteers, which was also headquartered at 28 Leicester Square, and which shared its Commanding Officer and Adjutant. The other unit in the Admin Battalion was the 1st Tower Hamlets AVC, also founded in 1860 and based at Poplar in East London.[1][5]

As civilians, the Volunteers sometimes let politics intrude into unit affairs. In 1866, members of the 1st Middlesex Artillery Volunteers were accused of fundraising for Governor Edward Eyre of Jamaica, whose brutal suppression of the Morant Bay Rebellion in the island had divided political opinion in London.[6]

At the great Easter Volunteer Review at Brighton Racecourse in 1862 (involving the sham 'Battle of White Hawk Down'),[7] the 1st Middx AVC appeared with their field guns pulled by horses supplied for the occasion by Messrs Pickfords, the removal contractors. This initiative was welcomed by the Royal Commission on the Volunteer Force.[8] But many Regular officers refused to believe that part-timers could be effective as field gunners, and despite the eloquent arguments of Lt-Col Shakespear of the 1st Middx AVC, the Secretary of State, Edward Cardwell, refused to allow the upkeep of guns, harness or horses to be paid from the Artillery Volunteers' government grant.[8]

The cost of maintaining artillery units was high, and as a result many AVCs were wound up during the 1870s. The 1st Tower Hamlets disbanded in 1873,[1] and in the same year the City of London Artillery joined the 1st Admin Battalion, its CO taking over as CO of the whole battalion. In 1876 the 1st Middx AVC was forced to amalgamate its two batteries with the better-funded City of London Artillery.[1][8][9][10]

Commanding Officers

Honorary Colonel

The Honorary Colonel of the 1st Admin Bn was the Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, appointed in 1865. He carried on that role in the City of London Artillery after amalgamation[5][12]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Beckett, Appendix VIII.
  2. Beckett, p. 126.
  3. Nos 17–30 Leicester Square in Survey of London Volume 34 at British History Online.
  4. Bradley & Pevsner, p. 418.
  5. 1 2 3 Army List, January 1866.
  6. Beckett, p. 146.
  7. Brighton Racecourse at My Brighton and Hove.
  8. 1 2 3 Beckett, pp. 178–9.
  9. 1st London Artillery at Regiments.org.
  10. 'A short history of the City of London Artillery', in Ceremonial ...
  11. Army List, January 1872.
  12. Army List, January 1884.

References

Online sources

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