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A SHORT HISTORY
THE REGIMENT
Queen's Lancashire Regiment
THE ANTECEDENT
REGIMENTS
East Lancashire Regiment
South Lancashire Regiment
Loyal North Lancashire Regiment
Lancashire Regiment (Prince of Wales's
Volunteers)
FULWOOD BARRACKS
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FULWOOD BARRACKS |
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The
museum is housed in historic Fulwood
Barracks, Preston, which has been the literal and spiritual home of The
Queen's Lancashire Regiment and its successor and predecessor regiments for nearly
150 years.
Fulwood Barracks was the last and largest of a chain of barracks built in the
North West in the wake of the Chartist riots of the 1830's.
Not only is it
now the sole remaining example, it is today the finest and most complete
example of mid-Victorian military architecture left in the country. It is
also the only one of the seven major barracks built across the country in
response to Chartism which is still in use for its original purpose. |
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An old print
showing Fulwood Barracks in its early days. The curtain wall is complete
and the Main Gate is angled at 45 degrees to the front aspect to aid
defence against attack from the mob. |
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Early Days
In medieval times the land now
occupied by the barracks was a royal forest, a moorland waste crossed by
the Roman road (Watling Street) from Ribchester to the coast. The old
road ran across the north end of what is now the Infantry Square. Later
the area became known as Fulwood Moor and was used as common land by the
burgesses of Preston.
Although the Battle of Preston, on17th August 1648, was
fought mainly on Ribbleton Moor, Cromwell’s right wing extended as far as
the present barracks’ sports field. In 1715 civil war came again to Preston
and, following fierce street fighting in the town centre, General Wills’
dragoons picqueted this area to block the Jacobites’ escape routes to the
north.
With the return of more peaceful times, in 1786 the Earl
of Derby laid out a racecourse on the moor, part of which ran through what
is now the north-east corner of the barracks and playing fields. Race
meetings were held there until 1833. In 1817, when most of Fulwood Moor was
enclosed, the Duchy of Lancaster retained 960 acres, and it was on this land
that the barracks was later built. |
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The Main Gate
photographed during the 1950's. This is the view which will be
remembered by the thousands of recruits who
did their basic training here.
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Building the Barracks, 1842-48
In the mid-nineteenth century, civil unrest associated
with militant Chartism caused a concerned government to routinely station
troops near to the northern industrial towns. Permanent barracks were
required and twenty acres of the available Duchy land at Fulwood were
eventually selected and staked out in 1839. Preparatory work on the barracks
site began in July 1842 and the first stone was laid on 28th August 1843.
The characteristic sandstone was quarried at Longridge and was brought by
railway to Fulwood, where some three to four hundred builders laboured for
the next five years. The barracks was completed in June 1848. |
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Early Military
Occupation
The barracks was originally designed to accommodate a
full battalion of infantry, about 900 men, together with two troops of
cavalry and a demi-battalion of artillery. As the barracks neared completion
troops began to arrive, usually for brief periods or in transit, the first
being two companies of 2nd Battalion 60th Rifles on 7th
January 1848.
By happy coincidence the 81st Regiment (Loyal
Lincoln Volunteers), who had arrived on 17th May 1848, were
stationed at Fulwood when the barracks was completed, starting a regimental
connection which lasts to the present day. Their stay on that occasion was
quite short as, following a deployment to Liverpool from 5th
August to 28th September in aid of the civil power, the Regiment
moved on again on 7th December. A variety of units were stationed
at Fulwood in those early years, from complete battalions to depot companies
and detachments. In the 1860s a principal occupant of the barracks was the
11th Depot Battalion, comprising the Depots of the 11th
Hussars and of the 1st/10th, 2nd/10th,
1st/11th, 32nd, 41st and 55th
Regiments of Foot. |
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A ‘Fearful Tragedy’ -
and McCaffery’s Ghost
Perhaps the single most
noteworthy incident in the long history of Fulwood Barracks occurred in 1861
when 19-year-old Private Patrick McCaffery murdered the Commanding Officer
and his Adjutant with a single shot from his musket.
His trial and subsequent
public execution before a vast Liverpool crowd resulted in a mildly
subversive penny ballad which found a sympathetic ear within the large Irish
Catholic population of North West England. Despite - or perhaps because - it
was rumoured to have been banned within the Army, it continued to be sung by
folk singers for over 100 years, and and can still be heard occasionally in
Folk Clubs.
And just to complete the
legend, McCaffery's ghost is said to haunt the old Officer's Mess
For the full story,
including the lyrics of the "banned" ballad, click
HERE.
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The Regimental Depots
In 1873 a new scheme
was introduced for the localization of the Infantry. A system of brigade
depots was set up and the old numbered battalions of the Regular Army
were linked, for the most part in pairs, for recruiting purposes.
Fulwood Barracks became the 12th Brigade Depot, training recruits for
the 47th (Lancashire) Regiment and the 81st Loyal Lincoln Volunteers, to
whom the Preston-based 3rd Royal Lancashire Militia and certain units of
the Lancashire Rifle Volunteers were also affiliated. The Depot
Companies of the 47th and 81st did not arrive at Fulwood until June 1877
as their accommodation was not immediately available.
On 1st July 1881
this reorganisation was brought to a logical conclusion when the 47th
and 81st Regiments were redesignated as 1st and 2nd Battalions of The
Loyal North Lancashire Regiment and Fulwood Barracks became the 47th
Regimental Depot.
On 5th December
1898 the Depot of The East Lancashire Regiment moved into Fulwood from
Burnley Barracks, which was in a poor state of repair, and occupied the
block on the west side of the Infantry Square (the present Brigade
Headquarters building), while the Loyals concentrated on the east side.
Around the Cavalry Square to the rear a Royal Field Artillery Depot was
established. The 30th/47th Regimental Depots remained together for over
forty years, their main function in peacetime being to train recruits
and then post them to the home service battalions of their respective
regiments, while through the Boer War and the Great War they received
and equipped many thousands of Lancashire recruits.
On the outbreak of
World War II the Depot of the East Lancashire Regiment moved out to form
an Infantry Training Centre at Squire’s Gate Camp, Blackpool, while the
Loyals remained as an Infantry Training Centre at Fulwood until 1942.
Then, until 1946, the Barracks was occupied by many units, particularly
RA, RE and RASC, and a small Loyals cadre.
In 1946 the 30th
Primary Training Centre moved into Fulwood Barracks, but in April 1948
this was replaced by the reopened Depots of The East Lancashire Regiment
and The Loyal Regiment who over the next eleven years trained many
thousands of Regular and National Service recruits for those Regiments.
A further
reorganisation in 1959 closed the individual Regimental Depots and
centralised recruit training for The King’s Own Royal Border Regiment,
The King’s Regiment, The Lancashire Regiment (Prince of Wales’s
Volunteers) and The Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire) at Depot, The
Lancastrian Brigade, Fulwood Barracks, where it continued until August
1971, when adult recruit training was transferred to Strensall in
Yorkshire. The Junior Infantryman’s Wing remained at Fulwood until March
1974 when it too moved to Yorkshire, ending over a century of recruit
training at the Barracks.
Today a link with
Fulwood’s past as an Infantry Depot is maintained by the presence in the
Barracks of the Regimental HQ of The Duke of Lancaster's Regiment and
the Museum of The Queen’s Lancashire Regiment, successors to the
Preston-based East Lancashires and Loyals, and to the South Lancashires.
In 1993 Fulwood
Barracks once again became the home of an operational unit of the Field
Army when 5 Armoured Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corps, moved in
on redeployment from Germany. The unit, now reformed and renamed as
5 General
Support Medical Regiment, is always in constant demand for
operations and in recent years has seen active service in the Balkans,
almost continuously in Iraq, and Afghanistan. |
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A Regional
Military Headquarters
Fulwood Barracks has
throughout its history been the main focus of military activity in the
County, and has often had wider regional responsibilities. Before the
Second World War, HQ 42nd (East Lancashire) Division was stationed here.
More recently, HQ North West District moved into the Barracks in 1976
and, in 1991, HQ 42 (North West) Brigade
re-formed at Fulwood and became
the regional military headquarters for North West England. The Barracks
also houses the HQ and training facilities of the Lancashire Army Cadet
Force. |
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