After
Waterloo the main role for the Yeomanry was to suppress civil disorder (they were paid while on duty). In 1819 (the year of
Peterloo) six independent troops of
Westmorland Yeomanry Cavalry were raised at his own expense by
Colonel the Hon
Henry Lowther,
MP. These were formed from 22 October 1819 across both
Westmorland and Cumberland:
Westmorland •
Kendal •
Shap •
Appleby Cumberland •
Edenhall •
Dalemain •
Milnthorpe By 1826 the Westmorland Yeomanry troops had been reduced to just two, and in 1828 the government withdrew funding for the yeomanry. However, in many counties, the Yeomanry continued without pay: the independent troops across Westmorland and Cumberland combined as a single force, the
Westmorland and Cumberland Yeomanry (WCY). Pay for duty was restored in 1831 when there was further civil unrest. When Col Lowther retired from the command to become colonel of the
Royal Cumberland Militia, Edward Williams Hasell of Dalemain took command of the yeomanry on 30 May 1830 and remained its
lieutenant-colonel commandant for 46 years. The Westmorland and Cumberland Yeomanry were called on to suppress
chartist riots at
Penrith and
Carlisle in 1839 and in 1846 to halt fighting between English and Irish labourers working on the
Lancaster and Carlisle Railway at
Lowther Park, which spilled over into Penrith town centre. The WCY troops usually assembled for annual training at Kendal, Penrith or Appleby, but when a new troop was raised in
Wigton in 1840 Kendal and Appleby were deemed too far away, and thereafter training was concentrated at Penrith. This was usually held at Penrith Racecourse with the men
billeted in inns in the town. The WCY troops were formally regimented in 1843. Following the
Cardwell Reforms a mobilisation scheme began to appear in the
Army List from December 1875. This assigned
Regular Army and Yeomanry units places in an order of battle of corps, divisions and brigades for the 'Active Army', even though these formations were entirely theoretical, with no staff or services assigned. The Westmorland & Cumberland,
Lanark, and
East Lothian Yeomanry constituted the Cavalry Brigade of
VIII Corps based at
Musselburgh. This was never more than a paper organisation, but from April 1893 the
Army List showed the Yeomanry regiments grouped into brigades for collective training. They were commanded by the senior regimental commanding officer but they did have a Regular Army
Brigade major. The Westmorland & Cumberland Yeomanry together with the
Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry formed the 14th Yeomanry Brigade. The Yeomanry brigades disappeared from the
Army List after the
Second Boer War. Lieutenant-Col Hasell was succeeded in command by Lt-Col Richard Burn (26 September 1876) and then
Sir Henry Ralph Fletcher-Vane, 4th Baronet was promoted to the command on 24 December 1879. He remained in command until 1891 when he was appointed the regiment's
Honorary Colonel.
Hugh Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale was appointed Lt-Col in command of the regiment on 3 March 1897. His elder brother
St George Lowther, 4th Earl of Lonsdale had also been an officer in the regiment before his early death in 1882. ==Imperial Yeomanry==