This is composed of the old 44th
and 56th Regiments.
In 1739 ten battalions of Marines were formed
for the war with Spain, the last of which was numbered the 44th,
and was disbanded with the others. Two
years later seven Line regiments were formed, and of these the one then
numbered 55th became the present 44th in 1748.
The county title of “East Essex” was added in 1782; the present
was given in 1882.
Under its first designation it fought at
Prestonpans; but its earliest severe fighting occurred in 1755, when, as
part of Braddock’s force, the 44th shared in the disastrous
skirmish near Fort du Quesne, and where the retreat was ably conducted by
a certain “Colonel Washington,” whose lot it was later to fight former
friends. While in America the
regiment also served at Ticonderoga and Fort Niagara, and, going home
after the peace for a short time, it returned again to America to take
part in the War of Independence, when General Washington now commanded the
insurgent army. The 44th
fought at Long Island, White Plains, Forts Washington and Lee, Duabeny,
Ridgefield, Brandywine; at the skirmish against General Wayne’s
ambuscade in 1777, Germanstown, Whitemarsh, and Monmouth Court House,
coming home, after a short time spent in Canada, in 1786; but in 1794 its
flank companies saw fighting in the West Indies at Martinique, St. Lucia,
and Guadaloupe.
During the same year “the battalion
companies”-it is curious to note how regiments in those days were split
up-served at Boxtel, but were afterwards transferred to the West Indies,
to take part in the second attack on St. Lucia.
In 1801 the regiment formed part of the force
under Abercromby in Egypt, landing in Aboukir Bay, and being engaged at
Alexandria, Cairo, and the siege of Alexandria. For those services the
Sphinx and “Egypt” were given, and the officers received gold medals
from the Sultan. It is said
when the war terminated the flank companies were represented by only two
sergeants. The flank
companies also served at Maida, and the regiment at Ischia, Procida, and
Tarragona. It took part uin
the campaign of 1814 in America, and was present at Bladensburg,
Baltimore, Washington, and Orleans. In
1824 it formed part of the Burmese expedition, and fought at Rangoon,
Ramoo, and Ramru, the Padawa Pass, Mahattie, and Arracan.
For these services “Ava” was added to the colours.
Its most memorable service, however, was in the first Afghan War,
where, after the occupation of Cabool, it joined in the disastrous
retreat, when, after continuous fighting and inconceivable sufferings
until annihilated at Gundamuck, of 684 men of all ranks of the 44th
at Cabool on the 1st of October, 632 had perished.
The Queen’s colour disappeared; but the regimental colour was
saved by Lieutenant Souter, and is now in the church at Alverstoke.
In 1854, armed with Minie rifles, the
regiment was present at the Alma, Inkerman, and Sevastopol, and lost
heavily on several occasion; during the siege Sergeant W. McWheeney gained
the Victoria Cross for bravery on the 17th June.
The alarm bell of the Redan is a trophy of the regiment; and the
Crimean colours now rest in St. Peter’s Church, Colchester.
During the Mutiny the 44th
remained on guard in Madras, but in 1860 formed part of the China
expedition, and fought at Sinho, Tangku, and Taku (where Lieutnant R. M.
Rogers and Private J. McDougal won the cross for surmounting the ditches,
and by “each assisting the other to mount the embrasure, which climbed
by sticking bayonets into the wall,” gained the interior of the North
Fort).
A 2nd battalion, raised in 1803,
was disbanded in 1816. It was present at Torres, Vedras, Sabugal (where the Light
Infantry captured the French dinners), Fuentes d’Onor, Almeida, Ciudad
Rodrigo, Badajoz, Salamanca (where an eagle and a French drum, long after
used by the regiment, were captured), Villa Muriel, and in the disastrous
retreat from Badajoz. In 1814
it was at Merxem, Bergen-op-Zoom (where the loss of officers and men,
killed, wounded, and taken prisoner, was severe); and in 1815 the
battalion was present at Quatre Bras, where it not only received a cavalry
charge in line, but met it by facing the rear rank to the rear.
The gallantry of Ensign Chester in this fight is worth recording. He carried the colour, and, though wounded in the face by a
French Lancer, he threw himself on the colour to prevent its capture, and
only a fragment of silk was torn off on the point of his assailant’s
lance. The man was killed,
but the part of the colour is still preserved in the regiment.
A 2nd battalion of the 44th
shared in the hard fighting at Waterloo, and between the 10th
and 18th of June, 1815, it was reduced to nearly one-third of
its strength. About seventy
officers had been killed and wounded under its colours.
This campaign earned for the regimental list of honours
“Waterloo”.
The former linked battalion-the 56th-was
raised in 1755 as the 58th, but became the56th on
the disbandment of two other regiments.
In 1782 it was given the title of “West Essex.”
Its early was services were at Cuba and Havannah in 1762; at
Gibraltar from 1779 to 1783; at Martinique, St. Lucia, and Guadaloupe in
1974; at St. Domingo, Bomarde, Port Jack Thomas, Irois, and St. Mary’s
in 1796-97; at Bergen and Egmont-op-Zee in 1799; at Mauritius and Bourbon
in1809; as marines at Travancore in the same year; at Canool and Raree in
1814; in the Crimea at Sevastopol; and finally in the Nile campaign of
1884-85.
A 2nd battalion, which existed
from 1809 to 1817, done good service at Mallia (in Kattawar), Palampore,
and against the Guzeratis. Another was raised and disbanded in 1814, after fighting at
Merxem and Bergen in that year; a 3rd, or “Reserve
Battalion,” formed in 1847, was amalgamated with the 1st in
1850.
The scarlet uniform of the 44th
had yellow facings until 1882, when they were altered to white; the 56th
had purple facings. “Flashes,” a relic of the days of “pigtails,”
were worn in the early part of the century.
The curls of the pigtails were “formed of some favourite lady’s
hair, no matter what the colour might be.”
The badges are the Sphinx over “Egypt” (from the 44th);
the “Castle and Key,” with Gibraltar” and “Montis Insignia Calpe”
(from the 56th); the oak-leaf wreath, commemorating “the
hiding of Prince Charles 2nd. In a oak-tree in the forest of
Hainault;! And the arms of the county of Essex-three silver sabres with
gilt hilts, on a red ground. Up
to its amalgamation with the 44th the word “Moro” was borne
on the colours of the 56th, “to commemorate its gallantry at
the capture of the Moro Fort at Havannah in 1762.” The name “Moro” still heads the list of battles.
The county badge, within an oak wreath, with the Sphinx, Castle,
etc., is on the button; the collar has the county badge; on the
helmet-plate are the oak wreath, Castle, Sphinx, etc., with the motto; the
wreath, territorial title crowned, and the county badge, Castle, and
Sphinx, etc., are worn on the waist-plate.
The 3rd and 4th
battalion are the Essex Rifles and the West Essex Militia, formed in 1759.
The volunteer battalions are the 1st, 2nd, 3rd,
and 4th Essex regiments, dressed, the 1st in green
and black; the remainder in green, with green facings.
Their head- quarters are at Brentwood, Braintree, West Ham, and
Silvertown.
The 1st battalion was named the
“Two Fours” and the “little fighting fours”; the latter because of
the size of the men in the Peninsular days.
The 2nd battalion was called “the Pompadours,” from
the original purple facings, which was the favourite colour of Jeanne
Antoinette, Duchess of Pompadour, the mistress of Louis XV.
This was corrupted into “the Saucy Pompeys.”
The depot was at Warley.