History
Early history The 12th Frontier Force Regiment's origins lie in the four infantry regiments of the Frontier Brigade authorised in 1846 and raised by
Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Lawrence, the agent (and brother) of the Governor-General of the
Punjab frontier region (
John Lawrence, 1st Baron Lawrence), from veterans of disbanded opposition forces after the
First Anglo-Sikh War. The 1st Sikhs were raised by Captain J. S. Hodgson at Hoshiarpur, the 2nd Sikhs by Captain J.W.V. Stephen at Kangra, the 3rd Sikhs by Captain F. Winter at Ferozpur and the 4th Sikhs by Captain C. MacKenzie at Ludhiana. Even at the start the Sikhs, although in the majority, were not in the preponderance, the unit names referring to their origins in the disbanded Sikh Army rather than their racial mix. The nuclei of the regiments consisted of a few men from the regular Native Infantry regiments of the line and police officers. The Governor-General issued a regulation in September 1847 which included the discontinuation of the term "Frontier Brigade" and renamed the four regiments the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th Regiments of Sikh Local Infantry. At the same time, Lawrence also ordered irregular force of mixed
cavalry and
infantry: the
Corps of Guides to be raised at Mardan by Lieutenant Harry D. Lumsden. although in a later incarnation the precedence was restored in the 1957 reorganisation of the Pakistan Army when the Guides battalion became the 2nd battalion of the new regiment, following the Scinde Rifles battalion from the Frontier Force Rifles regiment. The location of the training battalion, later to grow into the Regimental Centre, was first at Mardan but moved to Sialkot in 1929. The new structure of the regiment by 1939 was therefore as follows: • Regimental Centre, in
Mardan • 1st Battalion –
former 51st Sikhs (Frontier Force) • 2nd Battalion –
former 52nd Sikhs (Frontier Force) • 3rd Battalion –
former 53rd Sikhs (Frontier Force) • 4th Battalion –
former 54th Sikhs (Frontier Force) • 5th Battalion – ''former 1st Battalion,
Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides Infantry'' • 10th (Training) Battalion – ''former 2nd Battalion, Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides Infantry'' • 11th (Territorial) Battalion –
formed in 1921, disbanded in 1941, part of the Indian Territorial Force Second World War During the Second World War the regiment's battalions (expanded in number by seven war-formed units) saw service in East Africa, North Africa and the Middle East, Italy, India, Malaya and Burma. The Regiment's casualties in the war totalled 1,444 dead and 3,503 wounded.
Regular battalions • ''1/12th (Prince of Wales's Own Sikhs) Frontier Force Regiment'' In 1939, the 1/12th Frontier Force Rifles were part of the
Bannu Brigade based in
Bannu India and took part in operations in the Ahmedzai Salient in February and March 1940 while under command of the Jhelum Brigade. In the autumn of 1940 the battalion transferred to the Delhi Cantonment •
2/12th (2nd Sikhs) Frontier Force Regiment The 2/12th FFR, also part of the Bannu Brigade, before being sent to
Malaya in April 1941 where it became part of the
22nd Indian Infantry Brigade. This battalion fought a successful, but doomed, defence of the eastern coast of Malaya, during the
Battle of Malaya, before it was forced to surrender with the rest of the Allied forces in Singapore on 15 February 1942. The commanding officer of the 2/12th FFR, Lt.Col.
Arthur Edward Cumming, received the
Victoria Cross during this campaign. •
3/12th (Royal) Frontier Force Regiment The 3/12th FFR was part of the
5th Indian Infantry Division during the
East African and
Western Desert Campaigns. The 3/12th FFR was all but destroyed at El Adem on 15 June 1942. It was reformed in Egypt before transferring to the
4th Indian Infantry Division. •
4/12th (Sikhs) Frontier Force Regiment The 4/12th FFR served throughout the war in the
Burma Campaign. • ''5/12th (Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides) Frontier Force Regiment'' The 5/12th FFR served throughout the Second World War as part of the
6th Indian Infantry Division on garrison duties in
Iraq. ==Later history==
Battle honours
• Mooltan, Goojerat, Punjaub, Pegu, Delhi 1857, • Ali Masjid, Kabul 1879, • Ahmed Khel, Kandahar 1880, • Afghanistan 1878–80, • Chitral, Malakand, Punjab Frontier, Tirah, Pekin 1900, • Somaliland 1901–04, • Suez Canal, Egypt 1915, • Megiddo, Sharon, Nablus, Palestine 1918, • Aden, Tigris 1916, • Kut-al-Amara 1917, • Baghdad, Sharqat, Mesopotamia 1915–18, • NW Frontier, India 1914, 1915, 1916–17, • Afghanistan 1919, • Gallabat, Tehamiyam Wells, Agordat, Barentu, Keren, Amba Alagi, Abyssinia 1940–41, • Gazala, Bir Hacheim, El Adem, North Africa 1940–43, • Landing in Sicily, Sicily 1943, • Landing at Reggio, The Sangro, Mozzagrogna, Romagnoli, The Moro, Impossible Bridge, Cassino II, Pignataro, Advance to Florence, Campriano, Gothic Line, Coriano, Montebello-Scorticata, The Senio, Santerno Crossing, Italy 1943–45, • Athens, Greece 1944–45, • North Malaya, Kota Bharu, Central Malaya, Kuantan, Machang, Singapore Island, Malaya 1941–42, • Moulmein, Sittang 1942, 1945, • Pegu 1942, 1945, • Taukkyan, Shwegyin, North Arakan, Buthidaung, Maungdaw, Ngakyedauk Pass, Imphal, Tamu Road, Shenam Pass, Bishenpur, Kyaukmyaung Bridgehead, Arakan Beaches, Ramree, Taungup, Mandalay, Myinmu, Fort Dufferin, Kyaukse 1945, • Meiktila, Nyaungu Bridgehead, Capture of Meiktila, Defence of Meiktila, The Irrawaddy, Rangoon Road, Pyawbwe, Toungoo, Burma 1942–45 ==See also==