The
commander of every British Army unit was required to keep a record of each day's
events while on overseas service in time of war. This was to include important
orders, despatches and instructions, location, duties of staff, the weather, state
of the roads and ground, casualties and the comings and goings of officers, "all
matters of importance, military and political", and "in what respect
organizations and regulations have stood the test of war". Commanders interpreted
these instructions very differently, perhaps depending on the administrative diligence
of their staff. Lieutenant-Colonel Cole, for example, often though it sufficient
to make a single monthly entry for A Squadron and the 1st Regiment North Irish
Horse ("Humbercourt. Corps Cavalry duties"). Others found time to record
detailed accounts of everything from the movement of clothing requisitions to
the score in the inter-Battalion football match. A
typical war diary page is shown below. This one, from the 9th Battalion Royal
Irish Fusiliers, records that on 25 September 1917 "304 O.R. from NORTH IRISH
HORSE joined Battn today, our Band playing them in to RUYAULCOURT where they were
toasted right royally." 
The
original War Diaries for all North Irish Horse and associated units in the First
World War are held in the National Archives at Kew, London. The attached transcriptions
have been taken from images of the originals kindly provided by Hugh Vaugh. The
transcriptions are, to the extent possible, word-for-word, with the following
exceptions. For ease of reading and clarity I have standardised capitalisation
and some punctuation, corrected obvious spelling errors, spelled-out most acronyms
and replaced abbreviations with full text. In all cases where the meaning is not
clear or may be subject to alternative interpretations, I have retained the original.
No doubt there are some errors - these are mine alone. The
diaries are as follows (National Archives War Office reference number shown in
brackets): A
Squadron North Irish
Horse
5 August 1914 to 31 December 1915 (95/86) 1 January to 9 May 1916 (95/2914)
The Diary transcripts
include footnotes showing all men serving in those units known to have died. Where
a soldier's age is shown, it is his age at death. The major sources used in compiling
these footnotes and checking the diary references are listed below:
-
Becke,
Major A.F. Order of Battle, in History of the Great War, London, HMSO, 1945.
-
Chester,
Gerry. North Irish Horse website, http://www.northirishhorse.org -
Commonwealth
War Graves Commission. Debt of Honour Register, http://www.cwgc.org -
Doherty,
Richard. The North Irish Horse: A Hundred Years of Service, Staplehurst, Spelmount,
2002. -
Falls,
Cyril. The History of the 36th (Ulster) Division, McCaw,
Stevenson & Orr Ltd, London, 1922 (reprinted by The Naval & Military Press)
-
Hutchinson,
Lieutenant-Colonel Graham Seton. The Thirty-Third Division in France and Flanders
1915-1919, Naval and Military Press. -
James,
Brigadier E.A. British Regiments 1914-1918, Samson Books. -
London
Gazette. http://www.gazettes-online.co.uk. -
National
Archives (UK). WWI Campaign Medals http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/.
-
Naval
and Military Press. Soldiers Died in the Great Wat 1914-19, CD ROM. -
War
Office, Soldiers Died in the Great Wat 1914-19: Part 1 Household Cavalry and Cavalry
of the Line (including Yeomanry and Imperial Camel Corps), HMSO, London, 1921
(reprinted by J.B Hayward & Son 1988). -
War
Office, Soldiers Died in the Great Wat 1914-19: Part 68 Princess Victoria's (Royal
Irish Fusiliers), HMSO, London, 1921 (reprinted by Picton Publishing (Chippenham)
Ltd 1988). | |