The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada is a reserve infantry regiment in 34 Brigade Group, Land Force Quebec Area. The regiment is located on rue de Bleury in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and is currently commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Thomas MacKay.
[edit] HistoryThe regiment was originally formed as 5th Battalion, Royal Light Infantry, in 1862. As the senior Highland regiment in Canada they were associated with the Black Watch of the British Army, eventually taking the same name and later the red hackle that all Black Watch soldiers wear on their headdress. In 1976 it was disbanded as a regular force unit. The regiment has participated in the following battles: [edit] Early years
[edit] First World WarThe regiment contributed many men to several battalions of the Canadian Expeditionary Force, most notably the 13th Battalion (which fought in the First Division), the 42nd Battalion (of the 2nd Division) and the 73rd Battalion.
[edit] Second World WarThe Black Watch raised several battalions again for the Second World War, only one (the First) of which went overseas as part of the Canadian Active Service Force/Canadian Army (Overseas). The 1st Battalion, Black Watch was brigaded with Le Régiment de Maisonneuve and Les Fusiliers Mont-Royal of the Second Canadian Division, however the FMR were replaced with the Calgary Highlanders in the 5th Brigade in 1940. The Black Watch served in Newfoundland from June 1940 to 11 August 1940, after which it traveled to England where it trained for several years. One company of the Black Watch was attached to the Royal Regiment of Canada during the Dieppe Raid. In the first week of July 1942, the battalion landed in Normandy and served in action until VE-Day in May 1945. The 1st Battalion suffered more casualties than any other Canadian infantry battalion in Northwest Europe according to figures published in The Long Left Flank by Jeffrey Williams. Disaster seemed to follow the unit; on the voyage to France on the day of the Dieppe Raid, casualties were suffered by the unit during a grenade priming accident onboard their ship. During the Battle of Verrières Ridge on July 25, 1944, 325 men left the start line and only 15 made it back to friendly lines, the others being killed or wounded by well entrenched Waffen SS soldiers and tanks. On 13 October 1944 - known as Black Friday by the Black Watch - the regiment put in an assault near Hoogerheide during the Battle of the Scheldt in which all four company commanders were killed, and one company of 90 men was reduced to just four survivors.
[edit] KoreaAs part of the expansion of the Canadian Army after the Korean War, the Black Watch was raised to the status of a regular infantry regiment. The militia element became the 3rd Battalion. This arrangement continued until 1970, and the reduction in the Canadian armed forces, when the two regular battalions were reduced to nil strength. [edit] Victoria Cross recipients
Black Watch tartan, also known as the "Government sett".
† - Awarded posthumously [edit] Order of precedence
[edit] Alliances[edit] References
[edit] See also[edit] External links
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