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Category:
Lt Horse Regiments |
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11th
Light Horse Regiment
(Queensland and South Australia)
[4th
Light Horse Brigade]
Served in Egypt, Gallipoli, Sinai,
Palestine
Formed Queensland February 1915 for 4th Light Horse Brigade.
Badge displayed either
unofficial or CMF. |
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Departed Brisbane on Medic
2 June 1915
- less B Squadron which departed Brisbane on Borda
17 June 1916.
- Relieved of assignment to 4th Light Horse Brigade 26
August 1915 and broken up.
- A Squadron and Machine Gun Section attached
to 2nd Light Horse Regiment,
- B
Squadron attached to 5th Light Horse
Regiment,
- C Squadron attached to 9th
Light Horse Regiment.
- Reconstituted at Maadi, Egypt 20 February 1916
and assigned to 4th Division.
- Resumed its original identity and assigned
to reformed 4th Light Horse Brigade February 1917.
- 1st Reinforcements
departed Adelaide on Borda
23 June 1915
- and Brisbane on Medic
2 June 1915,
- 2nd Reinforcements departed Sydney on Shropshire
20 August 1915
- and Adelaide on Kanowna
24 June 1915,
- 3rd Reinforcements departed Brisbane on Kyarra
16 August 1915
- 5th Reinforcements departed Brisbane on
Warilda
5 October 1915
- and Adelaide on Ballarat
14 September 1915,
- 6th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Mashobra
4 October 1915,
- 7th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Suffolk
30 November 1915,
- 8th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Karroo
5 May 1916,
- 9th Reinforcements departed Brisbane on Seang
Choon 4 May 1916,
- 10th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Mongolia
8 July 1916,
- 11th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Malwa
22 July 1916,
- 12th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Mooltan
19 August 1916,
- 13th Reinforcements departed Melbourne on Clan
MacEwan 9 October 1916,
- 18th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Port
Sydney on 9 May 1917,
- 19th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Port
Sydney on 9 May 1917,
- 20th Reinforcements departed Sydney on Ulysses
19 December 1917.
Battle Honours:
- Anzac,
- Defence of Anzac,
- Suvla,
- Sari
Bair,
- Gallipoli 1915,
- Romani,
- Maghdaba-Rafah,
- Egypt 1915-17,
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Gaza-Beersheba,
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- El Mughar,
- Nebi Samwil,
- Jerusalem,
- Jordan (Es Salt),
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Megiddo,
- Sharon,
- Damascus,
- Palestine 1917-18
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many details on this page from Ross
Mallett's site
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11th Light Horse Regiment
The formation of the 4th Light Horse
Brigade, and the 11th Light Horse Regiment as part of it, was announced
on 11 February 1915. Two squadrons of the 11th Light Horse were
subsequently formed in Queensland, and a third in South Australia. The
regiment was united for the first time at Fraser’s Paddock Camp,
outside Brisbane, on 2 May 1915. It sailed from Australia in two
contingents in June 1915. The first contingent was landed at Aden on 12
July to reinforce the British garrison there against a predicted enemy
attack; they re-embarked on 18 July without having seen action.
The regiment was reunited in Egypt on
23 July 1915 and began training as infantry, having been ordered to
leave its horses in Australia. A month later it deployed to Gallipoli.
The regiment was again split up, to reinforce three light horse
regiments already ashore – A Squadron went to the 2nd Light Horse
Regiment, B Squadron to the 5th, and C Squadron to the 9th. It was not
reunited until 12 February 1916, by which time all of the AIF troops
from Gallipoli had returned to Egypt.
Returning to its mounted role, the
11th Light Horse joined the forces defending the Suez Canal on 20 July
1916. In ensuing months it conducted patrols and participated in several
forays out into the Sinai Desert. In April 1917 the regiment moved into
Palestine to join the main British and dominion advance. It joined its
first major battle on 19 April when it attacked, dismounted, as part of
the ill-fated second battle of Gaza.
With two frontal attacks on Gaza
having failed, the next attempt to capture the Turkish bastion was a
wide outflanking move via the town of Beersheba, launched on 31 October
1917. A deteriorating tactical situation late on the first day of the
operation caused the 11th’s sister regiments – the 4th and the 12th
– to be unleashed on Beersheba at the gallop, an action which has gone
down in history as the charge of Beersheba. The 11th, engaged on flank
protection duties was too widely scattered to take part. Another charge
was mounted by the 11th and 12th regiments against Turkish positions at
Sheria on 7 November, but, confronted with heavy fire, the troopers were
forced to dismount and eventually withdraw.
After Gaza fell on 7 November 1917,
Turkish resistance in southern Palestine collapsed. The 11th Light Horse
participated in the pursuit that followed, and then spent the first
months of 1918 resting and training. It moved into the Jordan Valley in
time to participate in the Es Salt raid between 29 April and 4 May. The
regiment subsequently defended the crossing points over the Jordan, and
helped to repulse heavy Turkish and German attacks on 14 and 15 July
In August, the regiment was issued
with swords and trained in traditional cavalry tactics in preparation
for the next offensive against the Turks. This was launched along the
Palestine coast on 19 September 1918. The 11th Light Horse displayed its
versatility at Semakh on 25 September by first charging the Turkish
defences around the town on horseback, with swords drawn, and then
clearing the actual town on foot, with rifle and bayonet.
Semakh was the regiment’s last major
operation of the war; the Turks surrendered on 30 October 1918. While
awaiting to embark for home, the 11th Light Horse were called back to
operational duty to quell the Egyptian revolt that erupted in March
1919; order was restored in little over a month. The Regiment sailed for
home on 20 July 1919. Text from AWM
- 95 killed, 521 wounded
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Decorations
- 4 DSO
- 9 MC, 1 bar
- 6 DCM
- 13 MM
- 27 MID
- 2 foreign awards
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