Under threat of French invasion during the
Seven Years' War a series of Militia Acts from 1757 re-established county militia regiments, the men being conscripted by means of parish ballots (paid substitutes were permitted) to serve for three years. 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. Nottinghamshire was given a quota of 480 men to raise, but failed to do so, partly because the Lord Lieutenant,
Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, was opposed to the militia, and his Pelham family members were powerful in the county. There was also widespread anti-militia feeling in the county, with intimidation of parish constables, many of whose ballot lists were seized by rioters before they reached the lieutenancy meeting at
Mansfield on 5 September 1757. A mob armed with clubs then invaded the meeting and destroyed the remaining lists. Many of the protesters in Nottinghamshire feared being forced into overseas service if they were selected by lot: some said that they would rather be hanged in England than scalped in America. There was also religious opposition to any form of census. Even when the riots were quelled and other counties' militia had been called out in the invasion crisis of 1759, the Nottinghamshire county gentry were apathetic, preferring to pay a large fine instead of raising their regiment.
American War of Independence Nottinghamshire remained a defaulter county liable for militia fines throughout the 1760s. An attempt to raise the county regiment in 1765 failed because of a dispute over the town of Nottingham's quota. MP for
Nottinghamshire, as Lt-Colonel, and
John Cartwright, a former naval officer, as
Major. The men were organised into eight companies, including a Grenadier Company and a Light Company. The order to provide weapons to the regiment from the
Tower of London was issued on 14 November 1775 and they arrived to be stored at Nottingham Castle about a month before the regiment was assembled for its first 28 days' training at Nottingham on 20 March 1776. Training was also carried out in 1777. With the threat of invasion from the Americans' allies, France and Spain, the militia was embodied for permanent duty on 31 March 1778. The regiment had been reduced to 320 men by the number of militiamen who had volunteered for the regular forces. The Earl of Lincoln died on 22 October 1778, and the Duke of Newcastle appointed his youngest son, Lord John Pelham-Clinton, to succeed him. During the American War the army began linking its regiments of the line to particular counties as an aid to recruitment. The
45th Foot began sending recruiting parties into Nottinghamshire and gained the county name as its official subtitle in 1782. Although the county links were a dead letter for many regiments, the 45th gained a large proportion of its recruits during the following French wars from Nottinghamshire, and particularly from the Nottinghamshire Militia. After being stationed at Hull for a year, the Nottinghamshire Militia marched to
Southsea Common near
Portsmouth, for summer camp. Leaving in two 'divisions' on 9 and 10 June 1779, it arrived on 28 June and remained in camp until going into winter quarters in
Gosport in December. Here the duties included providing guards for the French
prisoners of war confined in
Forton Prison. In June 1780 the regiment was relieved at Gosport and went to camp on
Ranmore Common in
Surrey. This camp was broken up in bad weather in November, and the regiment was
billeted with one division in Basingstoke and the other split between
Farnham and
Bagshot. It returned to Gosport from late January to March 1781, and was then moved to
Poole in
Dorset on anti-smuggling duty until May, when it camped at
Stokes Bay, near Gosport, under the command of Maj Cartwright. Lieutenant-Col Lord John Pelham-Clinton died later in the year and was succeeded by Edward Thoroton Gould of Mansfield Woodhouse, who had been a junior officer in the
4th Foot at the first action of the American war at
Concord, where he had been wounded and captured. After release he returned to England, married and sold his regular army commission in 1776. Again, Maj Cartwright was passed over for the promotion. In the autumn of 1781 the regiment went into winter quarters, with detachments at Basingstoke,
Andover, Hampshire, and nearby places. The following summer it was concentrated and camped on
Brompton Common in
Kent, where the principal duty was to mount guard over the stores and batteries of the
Chatham Dockyard defences. Early in November 1782 it was ordered back to Nottinghamshire. Shortly after he had led the regiment in a march-past at Nottingham, Col Manners-Sutton died. The
Hon Henry Willoughby, 23-year-old son of Lord Middleton, was appointed to the colonelcy. The
Treaty of Paris having been agreed, the war ended and the militia returned to their headquarters to be disembodied, the Nottinghamshires completing this in March 1783. The regiment's permanent staff were housed in Nottingham and the arms, uniforms and equipment were stored in the castle. The ballot was employed to keep the disembodied regiment up to strength. From 1784 to 1792 the militia were supposed to assemble for 28 days' annual training, even though to save money only two-thirds of the men were actually called out each year. In 1786 the number of permanent non-commissioned officers (NCOs) was reduced. Colonel Willoughby rarely served with the regiment and resigned in 1790; Edward Thoroton Gould was appointed colonel in his place, with Thomas Charlton of
Chilwell as lt-col. Major Cartwright was continually passed over for promotion, even though he claimed to have been the effective commander of the regiment for much of the American war. He was a
Radical Whig – he supported both the American and French revolutionaries, incorporating the '
cap of liberty' in the regimental badge he designed (he saw the militia as the constitutional force and a safeguard against tyranny). He was also a campaigner for parliamentary reform, which embarrassed the government. It is clear that the intention was to induce him to resign, but he would not do so. The regimental officers supported him, demanding assurances that promotion would be by seniority, and that no officer would be removed without there being a court of enquiry. He was finally removed on 23 October 1791 after he had celebrated the
Storming of the Bastille, the method used being a misapplication of a requirement in the Militia Act that a proportion of officers should retire every five years. In the summer of 1794 the Nottinghamshires were sent to join a militia camp at
Danbury, Essex. This camp was broken up at the end of October. The regiment then wintered in 13 separate detachments in and around
Braintree and
Bocking, Essex. The quarters of the regiment were so dispersed that it received permission to give the men cash to buy food locally rather than attempt to supply them through a central contractor. The regiment then moved to
Ely, with a detachment at
Newmarket. By June 1795 the regiment was part of a large encampment at
Warley, Essex, under the command of Lt-Gen Cornwallis. In early 1796 it moved to
King's Lynn in
Norfolk. By now the regiment had two rifle companies (which paraded on either flank of the line) and two light 'battalion guns'. A number of militiamen were taught gun drill by a party from the
Royal Artillery. About now the regiment gained its second nickname of 'Saucy Notts', which it kept for many years. From King's Lynn the regiment was sent to
York, and then into garrison at Hull. Nevertheless, Nottinghamshire fulfilled its quota and the men were trained in the Hundreds from which they were recruited. In March 1798 half the Nottinghamshire Supplementaries were called out and sent into Northern England. However, the force was disbanded in 1799, the discharged men being encouraged to volunteer for the regular army.
Scotland For the winter of 1798–99 the Nottinghamshire Militia marched via York to winter quarters in
Edinburgh. In June 1799 it exchanged stations with the North Yorkshire Militia at
Glasgow. The following month a recruitment drive for the regular army encouraged about 300 men from the Nottinghamshire Militia to accept the offered bounty and transfer to various regiments of the line. At the end of the year a company's worth (over 100 men) volunteered for the
35th Foot and four officers received regular commissions in that regiment, while a further 60 men volunteered for other regiments. In March 1800 the regiment marched from Glasgow to
Dumfries, and from there moved in August 1801 to
Kelso. With the war apparently ending, it was ordered to return to the Nottinghamshire area in March 1802, detachments being quartered at
Doncaster (initially, then to
Retford and
Southwell) and at Retford and Newark. With the signing of the
Treaty of Amiens the war ended and in late April 1802 the detachments concentrated at Newark to be disembodied, the other ranks (ORs) being paid off with a month's pay as a gratuity.
Napoleonic Wars However, the Peace of Amiens was short-lived and Britain declared war on France once more on 18 May 1803. The Nottinghamshire Militia was immediately embodied and the main body sent to
Dover, later to
Margate and then
Ramsgate, while the rifle companies were stationed on the
Isle of Wight. In June 1804 it moved to
Canterbury and then in November to Ridding Street Barracks near
Tenterden before taking up winter quarters in the barracks at
Rye and
Winchelsea. Once again, the regiment supplied its quota of volunteers for the regulars. During the
invasion crisis of 1805, while Napoleon assembled the '
Army of England' across the
English Channel at
Boulogne, the Nottinghamshire Militia were stationed in the Southern District (Sussex), the most vulnerable sector. Together with the
East and
West Norfolks, the Nottinghamshires formed a brigade under Maj Gen
Alexander Mackenzie Fraser, defending
Dungeness. It also took part in a royal review at
Brighton that summer. On 1 September the Nottinghamshires had 633 men in 10 companies under Lt Col John Need at Rye and Pleydon Barracks, sharing with five companies of the East Norfolks. It spent the winter in barracks at nearby
Steyning. In May 1807 the regiment marched from Steyning to Portsmouth. An increase in pay for the regulars (but not the militia) encouraged another 225 men to transfer in 1807, including one whole company, with its officers. Many of these volunteers served with the 45th Foot in the battles of the
Peninsular War. However, the militiamen who stayed with the regiment were awarded extra pay for labouring on the defences of Portsmouth. During the summer they were camped on Southsea Common. In February 1808 the Nottinghamshire Militia marched from Portsmouth to
Lewes in Sussex, then in June moved to Bletchingdon Barracks near Brighton. That summer the whole regiment volunteered to serve in the Peninsular war; the offer was politely turned down, but individual militiamen were encouraged to continue volunteering for active service. The 45th Foot had recently formed a 600-strong 2nd Battalion, the greater part comprising former Nottinghamshire militiamen. The Nottinghamshire Militia wintered at Lewes from September 1808 to February 1809 and then spent the spring at Rye, Winchelsea and Pleydon before returning to Lewes and then Bletchingdon. At the end of the year it moved to
Salisbury, then in May 1810 to Frankfort Barracks,
Plymouth, where the duties included guarding the large number of prisoners of war in
Millbay Prison. In October the regiment was moved to the same duty at
Dartmoor Prison, where it foiled an attempted breakout during a violent storm. It returned to Frankfort Barracks in November.
Nottinghamshire Local Militia While the Regular Militia were the mainstay of national defence during the
Napoleonic Wars, they were supplemented from 1808 by the Local Militia, which were part-time and only to be used within their own districts. These were raised to counter the declining numbers of Volunteers, and if their ranks could not be filled voluntarily the militia ballot was employed. The various units of Nottinghamshire Volunteers were disbanded and incorporated into four regiments of Local Militia: • 1st (Nottingham) Regiment – Col Ichabod Wright of
Mapperley Hall (formerly of the Nottingham Cavalry) • 2nd (Southwell) Regiment – Lt-Col Commandant William Sherbrooke (formerly of the Nottingham Rangers) • 3rd (Retford) Regiment – Lt-Col Cmdt
Sir Thomas Wollaston White, 1st Baronet (also of the
Sherwood Rangers Yeomanry); his son the future 2nd Baronet served as a junior officer in this regiment from 1813 • 4th (Newark) Regiment – Lt-Col Cmdt Thomas Thoroton (formerly of the Newark Loyal Volunteers) When their regiments were not under training, the permanent staffs of the local militia were employed as recruiting parties for their county's regular militia. The Local Militia were disbanded in 1816.
Ireland and Royal duty While the Nottinghamshire Militia was stationed at Plymouth in July 1811, the government invited militia regiments to volunteer to serve in
Ireland. All but 14 men out of about 900 did so, and the regiment was selected as one of the first group to do a tour of duty there. It appears that the government was happy to send the Nottinghamshires (and other Midlands militia regiments) to Ireland in case they developed sympathies with the
Luddites, who had begun their machine-breaking in Nottingham. On 26 August the regiment under the command of Col Gould embarked at Plymouth on board the transports
Margaret,
Nestor,
Wadstay and
Fame, which sailed for
Dublin, where it was housed at Palatine Square Barracks. Unlike the other militia regiments of the first group, which were scattered across Ireland, the Nottinghamshires were kept in the Irish capital throughout their tour of duty there. Men continued to volunteer for the regulars, many of them being shipped to the Peninsula still wearing their militia uniforms. The regiment returned to England in 1812, landing at
Bristol on 1 August and marching to
Colchester. At the beginning of October the Nottinghamshire Militia left Colchester and marched to the Tower of London, with detachments at
Kew,
Epsom and
Guildford. The Tower detachment provided guards for
St James's Palace,
Bank of England and other places usually protected by the
Foot Guards. With the numbers of men who had transferred to the regulars and the detachments, the regiment was short of men and had to arm the bandsmen, who guarded the Tower gates in their white uniforms. The title of
Royal Sherwood Foresters was conferred on the regiment by the
Prince Regent on 16 December 1813 as a reward for having done duty at the Tower and Palace. After duty at the Tower, the Royal Sherwood Foresters wintered at
Deal and Margate in Kent, supplying a guard of honour for the Prince Regent and King
Louis XVIII when the latter sailed from Dover in April 1814 to assume the throne of France following Napoleon's abdication. Soon afterwards the regiment marched to
Norman Cross Prison in
Huntingdonshire, where large numbers of French prisoners of war were being released. The regiment was then ordered to be disembodied, marching to Newark to complete the process on 5 August 1814. The Royal Sherwood Foresters were not re-embodied during the short
Waterloo campaign.
Long peace After Waterloo there was another long peace. Although officers continued to be commissioned into the militia and ballots were still held, the regiments were rarely assembled for training. The permanent staff of the Royal Sherwood Foresters were charged with guarding the regimental stores in
Newark Town Hall. This became an important duty towards the end of 1816, when it was feared that the Luddites would attempt to seize the arms. Night sentries were posted and the staff issued with live ammunition. Colonel Gould resigned his commission in 1819, and Lt-Col Henry Coape was promoted to succeed him in command. In 1820 the regiment carried out its first training since 1814, then again in 1821, 1825 and 1831, but not thereafter, the ballot was suspended by the
Militia Act 1829, and the permanent staff of NCOs and drummers was reduced. The Lord Lieutenant continued to commission officers in the regiment, Lt-Col Gilbert-Cooper-Gardiner succeeding Col Coape on his resignation in 1825, and after his death in 1833
Lancelot Rolleston, MP for
South Nottinghamshire, was appointed to the colonelcy. ==1852 reforms==