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History of Pakistan Army.

Regimental badges carved into the hillside at Cherat, North-West Frontier, 1932 (c).


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Cherat, located in the Nowshera District, was a hill cantonment and sanatorium for British troops stationed in the hot and malaria-ridden Peshawar Valley. Many of the troops sent there carved and painted their regimental insignia on to nearby rock faces to mark their service on the frontier.
 
11th Battery Hyderabad Sindh, British India.
Date: 1937



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An interesting history is attached to this picture taken on 21 February 1948.

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The convoy of the Quaid passing through Malir Cant' link road was stopped by an Army sentry. This road was not regularly used by Quaid. The sentry knew that Quaid is sitting in the car but out of his sheer love for Quaid, he stopped the convoy.

The sentry saluted Quaid and asked, if the founder had the permission to go inside Malir Cant? Quaid was surprised on the question but with a fatherly smile he said, "No Son, I don't have the Permission". After receiving the answer in negative from the Quaid, the sentry gladly offered him a deal for allowing him to pass through this road.

The Founder accepted that deal; which was to visit sentry's unit. The unit was 5 Heavy Anti Aircraft Regiment.

Meanwhile the news spread like fire in Cantonment and military high-ups' rushed to 5 Heavy AD Regiment to extricate Quaid from this situation. After arrival of perturbed Brigade Commander, he requested Quaid to continue his journey but Quaid smiled while looking towards the sentry and said, "No, we already had a deal"

Quaid visited 5 Heavy (AA) (Anti Aircraft) Regiment on 21 February 1948, where this picture was taken. Brigade Commander (Brig Akbar) is standing (right most) with Fatima Jinnah while the Commanding Officer of the Regiment is briefing Founder about Anti Air Craft Gun.

This was the first ever military unit to be visited by the Founder. Owing to this unique honor of the unit, 5 Heavy is the only unit in Pakistan Army that is reviewed in Salaam Fung (Present Arms) position and not Bazu Fung as in case of rest of the Army, Navy and Airforce establishments.
 
Razani Military Camp Taken From The Razmak Side, North Waziristan, August 1938.


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25 Western Division Royal Garrison Artillery (59 Company RGA), Quetta, Balochistan, 1900 (c).
May be an image of standing, outdoors and monument
 
Members of the Signal Section of the Landi Kotal Frontier Brigade Group together with their W.S. 22 signal equipment on a pack horse, Khyber Pass, August 1946.


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The Commander-in-Chief Yahya Khan and the Chief of General Staff Sahibzada Yaqub, at the General Headquarters, circa 1968.


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16th PUNJAB REGIMENT

Centre: 1923 MOOLTAN
1946 SIALKOT


Class Composition: 1923 Punjabi Mussalmans, Jat Sikhs, Dogras from Sialkot District and Jammu
1946 Punjabi Mussalmans from the Punjab (less Ambala Civil Division) including Niazi and other Pathans of the Punjab, Hazarawalas of the NWFP and Mussalmans of Jammu and Kashmir State and the Gilgit Agency, Dogras from the Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir State, Sikhs from the Punjab.

This chapter is being re-produced with thanks from JOHN GAYLOR'S fine book 'SONS OF JOHN COMPANY'. JOHN GAYLOR, first came to India with the Royal West African Frontier Force and served in India and in Burma with the 82nd (West African) Division. He subsequently served with the London Scottish and the Special Air Service. He is the Secretary of The Military Historical Society and lives in retirement in Kent. This book is available from JOHN GAYLOR directly at £19.99 (UK) plus postage. He can be contacted at 30 Edgeborough Way, Bromley, Kent BRI 2UA Tel 44 (181) 3251391

The 16th Punjab Regiment, was raised in 1922, was the last one to be made up of Lawrence's Punjab levies and, like the 14th and 15th Punjab Regiments, although its constituent elements were raised for service in the Great Mutiny, they did not receive honours for that campaign.

The 22nd Punjab Infantry began life in Ludhiana in 1857 and was regularized in 1861 as the 30th Punjab Infantry. The 31st Punjab Infantry was also raised in 1857, in Ferozepore, being known as Bloomfield's Sikhs, a name derived from Captain C G Bloomfield, their first Commandant. In 1878, the 31st served in Malta and Cyprus, both new stations for Indian troops.

The Allahabad Levy was formed from men of more lowly social strata desirous of showing their loyalty to authority at a time when many of their social superiors were less scrupulous. In 1861, they became the 33rd Punjab Infantry and, a few years later, recruitment of the menial classes ceased and, by 1890, the regiment was entirely Punjabi Mussalman in its composition.

The Bhopal Battalion was made up of the loyal remnants of the disaffected Bhopal, Gwalior and Malwa contingents raised for local service in Central India. They remained localized until the Second Afghan War when they were to man the North-West Frontier. In 1903, they were brought into the Line as the 9th Bhopal Infantry.

Raised in 1900, was the old 46th Punjab Infantry who were later to become the 10th Bn 16th Punjab Regiment.

FIRST WORLD WAR

30th Punjabis - India, German East Africa, Egypt

2/30th Punjabis (raised in 1917) -India, Egypt
3/30th Punjabis (raised in 1918) - India
4/30th Punjabis (raised in 1918) - India

31st Punjabis - India, Mesopotamia, Russia

33rd Punjabis - India, Egypt, France, Aden, German East Africa

2/33rd Punjabis (raised in 1917) - India

9th Bhopal Infantry - India, France, Egypt, Mesopotamia

2/9th Bhopal Infantry (The Delhi Regiment) (raised in 1917) - India, Mesopotamia
3/9th Bhopal Infantry (raised in 1917) - India, Mesopotamia
4/9th Bhopal Infantry (raised in 1918) - India

46th Punjabis - India, Egypt

If one of the component regiments of the 16th Punjab can be singled out for comment, it must surely be the 9th Bhopal - usually referred to as the Bo-Peeps - in Flanders in October 1914. In the late afternoon of a cold, wet, late autumn day, the Bhopals went to the aid of the remnants of a British battalion near Neuve Chapelle. Still in cotton-drill, they had their first encounter with trenches and barbed wire and stayed, locked in battle for three days without food. Their losses were eleven officers and 262 men. Three days later, at Festubert, they lost a further 200. Remaining in France until May 1915, they then went on to Mesopotamia where a sepoy, Chattar Singh, earned a Victoria Cross. On return to India, there remained only fifteen of the originals who had sailed for France in 1914.

The Bhopals did not have linked battalions so that they suffered immediate problems when they sustained the heavy casualties of Flanders in 1914 and 1915. Unknown officers were posted in and whole platoons of reinforcements arrived, made up of differing tribal origins. Notwithstanding, the Bo-Peeps' reputation stood high but they constituted a potent argument in favour of the reforms planned for after the war.

BETWEEN THE WARS

The badge chosen for the new 16th Punjab Regiment in 1922 also incorporated the Sikh quoit and the Muslim crescent with a Maltese cross, a crown above and a title scroll below.

The battalions of the new Regiment became - 1st Bn (the old 30th Punjabis), 2nd Bn (the old 31st Punjabis), 3rd Bn (the old 33rd Punjabis), 4th Bn (the old 9th Bhopal Infantry) and the 10th Bn (the old 46th Punjabis). No Territorial battalion was raised for the 16th Punjab Regiment.

Despite the changes in title in 1922, most officers continued to claim allegiance to, say, the 33rd Punjabis for years afterwards and it took the Second World War to establish the 1922 titles in the minds of the older Indian Army officers.

SECOND WORLD WAR

1st Battalion - India, Burma, Dutch East Indies.

2nd Battalion - India, Malaya. Captured by the Japanese in February 1942.

Reconstituted in May 1946 by amalgamation with 5/16 Punjab.

3rd Battalion - India, Malaya, Singapore. Captured by the Japanese in February 1942. Reconstituted in May 1946 by amalgamation with 6/16 Punjab.

4th Battalion - India, Egypt, Italian East Africa, Italy, Palestine 5th Battalion - raised in Lucknow in April 1941. Joined 9/8 Punjab and 6/15 Punjab in 39 Indian Infantry Brigade, the only all-Punjab brigade in the Indian Army. India, Ceylon. In January 1945 became Airborne as part of 14 Air-landing Brigade of 44 Indian Airborne Division. Redesignated 3/16 Punjab in May 1946.

7th Battalion - raised in Sialkot in May 1941. India, Burma, Malaya. 9th Battalion - formed by redesignation of the 25th Garrison Bn. India.

25th Garrison Battalion - raised in Sialkot in mid-1941. India. Redesigned 9/16 Punjab in May 1946.

7th Battalion - raised in Sialkot in May 1941. India, Burma, Malaya.

9th Battalion - formed by redesignation of the 25th Garrison Bn. India. 25th Garrison Battalion - raised in Sialkot in mid-1941. India. Redesignated 9/16 Punjab in October 1943 on conversion to active status.

26th Garrison Battalion - raised in Sialkot in March 1942. India. Disbanded May 1946.

Machine-Gun Battalion - raised in July 1942. In August 1942, transferred to the Indian Artillery as the 16th Punjab A/TK Regt.

Despite the grievous loss of two of its regular battalions, Solah (Sixteen) Punjab, as it was known, had a creditable war record.

PARTITION

The Regiment was allocated to Pakistan on Partition. On transfer of power, the regular battalions were the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th - all pre-war battalions - plus the 7th, universally known as Sath Solah and probably rewarded for its notable service in Burma during the war.

The Willcox Committee Report on the future of the Indian Army after the war had recommended the disbandment of the 16th Punjab Regiment but Partition overtook almost everything and Solah Punjab passed to Pakistan to suffer extinction by merger nine years later.

BATTLE HONOURS

Afghanistan 1878-80, Burma 1885-87, Chitral, Tirah, Punjab Frontier, Malakand.

La Bassee 1914, Messines 1914, Armentieres 1914, Festubert 1914, Givenchy 1914, Ypres 1915, St Julien, Aubers, Loos, France and Flanders 1914-15, Macedonia 1918, Suez Canal, Egypt 1915-16, Megiddo, Nablus, Palestine 1918. Aden, Tigris 1916, Kut-al-Amara 1917, Baghdad, Mesopotamia 1915-18. NW Frontier India 1915, 1916-17, Behobeho, Narungombe, Nyangao, East Africa 1917-18, Afghanistan 1919.

Mescelit Pass, Mt Engiahat, Massawa, Abyssinia 1940-41, Jitra, Ipoh. Kampar, the Muar, Singapore Island, Malaya 1941-42, Sidi Barrani, Omars, Benghazi, El Alamein, Mareth, Akarit, Djebel Garci, Tunis, North Africa 1940-43, Cassino I, Kaladan, Imphal, Tamu Road, Litan, Arakan Beaches, Burma 1942-45.

BOOKS

'Solah Punjab' by Lieut. Col J P Lawford MC and Major W E Catto (Gale and Polden Ltd, Aldershot 1967)

'Historical Records of the 4th Bn, 16th Punjab Regiment' (Gale and Polden, Aldershot, 1931).
 
The Colour Party of the 10th Jats at Bannu, Circa 1916.

New recruits to the regiment parade around the unit's colours. In common with British infantry regiments, Indian units carried two colours, the Regimental Colour and the King's Colour.


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Ist F.F Unit As 59 Scinde Rifles Carried Out Search Operation In Bazaar Ahmad Khan Bannu, Circa 1930.


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Captured Guns, Kabul, 1879.

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This photograph of Afghan artillery captured during the British occupation of Kabul in October–December 1879 is from an album of rare historical photographs depicting people and places associated with the Second Anglo-Afghan War.

Sir Frederick Roberts (1832–1914), the commander of the Kabul Field Force, brought at least 20 field guns (usually horse-drawn mobile cannons) with his army during the conquest and occupation of Kabul during the second phase of the war. His move against Kabul was sparked by the assassination in September 1879 of Sir Pierre Louis Napoleon Cavagnari (1841–79), the British envoy in Kabul and the official who had signed the Treaty of Gandamak with Amir Mohammad Yaqub Khan (1849–1923) in May of that year.

Roberts and his staff are shown here on horseback inspecting the captured Afghan artillery in the Sherpur Cantonment, located 1.5 kilometers north of Kabul. British artillery was usually superior to Afghan armament, but occasionally it was ineffective, as at the Battle of Maiwand in July 1880. The Second Anglo-Afghan War began in November 1878 when Great Britain, fearful of what it saw as growing Russian influence in Afghanistan, invaded the country from British India.

The first phase of the war ended in May 1879 with the Treaty of Gandamak, which permitted the Afghans to maintain internal sovereignty but forced them to cede control over their foreign policy to the British. Fighting resumed in September 1879, after an anti-British uprising in Kabul, and finally concluded in September 1880 with the decisive Battle of Kandahar.

The album includes portraits of British and Afghan leaders and military personnel, portraits of ordinary Afghan people, and depictions of British military camps and activities, structures, landscapes, and cities and towns.

The sites shown are all located within the borders of present-day Afghanistan or Pakistan (a part of British India at the time). About a third of the photographs were taken by John Burke (circa 1843–1900), another third by Sir Benjamin Simpson (1831–1923), and the remainder by several other photographers. Some of the photographs are unattributed. The album possibly was compiled by a member of the British Indian government, but this has not been confirmed. How it came to the Library of Congress is not known.

© John Burke / World Digital Library
 
Waziristan Campaign, April 1922.

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Razmak Brigade Gate, Circa 1927.

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After the tribal uprising of 1919-1920, it was decided during the spring of 1922 to locate the main garrison of Waziristan at Razmak. The self-contained cantonment, capable of holding 10,000 men, was established in January 1923.

New roads linking the garrisons and camps in the area were constructed to permit speedier troop movements.

One of 12 photographs taken by an NCO, possibly Sgt H Smith, 1st Battalion 60th Rifles.

© National Army Museum
 
Recruits of the 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) at sword practice, Lahore, 1903 (c).

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The 25th were raised in 1849 and became part of the famous Punjab Frontier Force in 1865. The sowars (cavalry) are armed with tulwars, a type of curved sword with a blade for cutting. Such weapons were more popular with the Indian Army than the thrusting blade.

© National Army Museum
 
The 38th Dogras And The 25th Cavalry (Frontier Force) Parade Through Lahore, 1909 (c).


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Original cap badge of the Azad Kashmir Regular Force;
This force did the bulk of the fighting in the 1947-48 War, and bled the most - 17 officers, 100 JCOs, and 2516 ORs gave their lives during the war. amongst the hundreds of gallantry awards received,
There were 29 HJs and 1 NH.
 

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