Under threat of French invasion during the
Seven Years' War a series of Militia Acts from 1757 reorganised the
county militia regiments, the men being conscripted by means of parish ballots (paid substitutes were permitted) to serve for three years. In peacetime they assembled for 28 days' annual training. There was a property qualification for officers, who were commissioned by the lord lieutenant. An
adjutant and
drill sergeants were to be provided to each regiment from the
Regular Army, and arms and accoutrements would be supplied when the county had secured 60 per cent of its quota of recruits. Somerset's quota was set at 840 men in two regiments, each of seven companies. The
Lord Lieutenant of Somerset,
Earl Poulett, was an enthusiast for the militia, but even he was slow to act, finding the Somerset gentry averse, and the 'common people outrageously against it' for fear of being 'Digby'd abroad' (
Lord Digby had recently raised a regular regiment in Somerset and Dorset for home service but the men had been forcibly sent overseas). In 1758 Poulett tried to recruit officers, but the first lieutenancy meeting was a failure with only eight persons putting themselves forward out of 40 required. Poulett then began a publicity campaign, giving a rousing speech and having copies of its circulated. He proposed taking the
colonelcy of both regiments himself, and appointed the other senior officers from across the political spectrum. By January 1759 he had obtained almost all the officers and balloting and enrolment of the other ranks began. The
1st Somerset Militia was formed at
Taunton, the
2nd Somerset Militia at
Bath, and both received their arms on 22 March 1759. The 1st and 2nd Somerset Militia were both embodied for fulltime service on 3 July 1759. Despite the delays, Somerset was still one of the earliest counties to complete its militia, but the lack of experience in any county at this date led to problems over pay and administration. The counties were offered the help of a regular officer, but Poulett refused this, to reassure his men that they were not being conscripted into the regulars. The Somerset Militia also produced its own simplified drill book. The 2nd Somerset Militia was embodied under the command of Colonel
Sir Charles Kemys Tynte, 5th Baronet,
MP for
Somerset. The adjutant was
Lieutenant Daniel Daniel of the
13th Foot, who had been wounded at the
Battle of Fontenoy and had been at the
Battle of Culloden. The day after embodiment the regiment was ordered to march to
Bideford in
Devon to come under the command of
Major-General Duroure. It set off from Bath on 16 July. Two years later, in July 1761, it was serving at
Godalming in
Surrey. Poulett continued to have difficulties over officers for the Somerset Militia: after the death of
King George II and the accession of
George III in 1760 their commissions were continued by royal proclamation. Some officers chose to regard them as new commissions outside the Militia Act and retired in 1761. While balloting was held in Somerset in November 1761 to replace the time-expired men in the ranks, the lieutenancy published advertisements in December seeking candidates for junior officers. After serving in home defence for most of the war, the regiment was ordered to disembody on 30 December 1762, shortly before hostilities were ended by the
Treaty of Paris. The officers and men of the Somersets left so quickly that it was difficult to settle up the regimental accounts. In 1763 the disembodied Somerset militia regiments were reorganised into a single regiment of 12 companies, and the 2nd Somerset Militia ceased to exist for the next 35 years, while the 1st served during the
War of American Independence. ==French Revolutionary Wars==