The defence of Jalalabad made heroes of the
13th Foot (later known as the Somerset Light Infantry). It is reported that as the regiment marched back through India to return to Britain, every garrison fired a ten gun salute in its honour.
Queen Victoria directed that the regiment be made Light Infantry, carry the additional title of "Prince Albert's Own" and wear a badge depicting the walls of the town with the word "Jellalabad". The army barracks in
Taunton, the county town of Somerset, was named
Jellalabad Barracks after the battle and that area of the town is still known as 'Jellalabad'. W. L. Walton a landscape artist, working in London, who exhibited between 1834 and 1855, made the lithographic plates for General Sale's Defence of
Jalalabad (c. 1845). == Order of battle ==