WW1 era Newfoundland Regiment Cap Badge (lot#2)
#00002166
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The outbreak of the First World War in 1914 led the Government of Newfoundland to recruit a force for service with the British Army. The first contingent of 500 volunteers from Newfoundland joined the convoy transporting the 1st CEF Contingent as it passed Newfoundland to England in October 1914. In England it became the "1st Newfoundland Regiment" and served with the British Army for the duration of the war. The regiment saw bloody service at both Gallipoli and in the Egyptian conflicts before transferring to the Western Front. On the first day of the Battle of the Somme, July 1st 1916, the now an 801 man regiment was decimated at Beaumont Hamel only 68 survivors not being killed or wounded. For its gallant service King George V granted the prefix "Royal" to the regiment in February 1918, the only regiment in the British Empire to be so honored during WWI.
The brave Newfoundlanders trained at various locations in the United Kingdom and increased from an initial contingent of 500 men to full battalion strength of about 1,000 men, before being deployed to Gallipoli in September of 1915. The regiment landed at Suvla Bay. Over the next three months thirty soldiers of the regiment were killed or mortally wounded in action and ten died of disease; 150 were treated for frostbite and exposure. Despite the terrible conditions, the Newfoundlanders stood up well. When the decision was made to evacuate all British Empire forces from the area, this regiment was, of course, chosen to be a part of the rearguard, finally withdrawing from Gallipoli with the last of the troops on 9 January 1916. (19th century British officers fighting a 20th century war) In France, the regiment regained battalion strength in preparation for the Battle of the Somme. The regiment, still with the 29th British Division, went into the line in April 1916. At 8:45 a.m. on July 1st 1916 the Newfoundland Regiment and 1st Battalion of the British Essex Regiment received orders to move forward against the German trench positions. Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Lovell Hadow, the battalion commander, decided to move immediately into attack formation and advance across the surface of "no mans land". They were effectively the only troops moving on the battlefield and clearly visible to the German defenders. 22 officers and 758 other ranks were directly involved in the advance. Of these, all the officers and 658 other ranks became casualties. Of the 780 men who went forward only about 110 survived unscathed, of whom only 68 were available for roll call the following day. For all intents and purposes the Newfoundland Regiment had been wiped out, the unit as a whole having suffered a casualty rate of approximately 90%. In recognition of the unit's valour during this and the later battles at Ypres in 1917, King George V bestowed the regiment with the prefix "Royal" on 28 September 1917, renaming them as the Royal Newfoundland Regiment.