Seven Years' War 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. Berkshire was given a quota of 560 men to fill, and by the end of 1758 the Lord Lieutenant, the
3rd Duke of St Albans, had appointed
Sir Willoughby Aston, 5th Baronet of
Wadley, as colonel, Arthur Vansittart as lieutenant-colonel, and the Reading MP
John Dodd as major. The Berkshire Militia was issued with its arms on 6 June 1759, when Maj Dodd exercised the Reading company for the first time. The regiment was embodied for permanent service on 26 July when the country was on high alert for a French invasion. The Berkshires were ordered to quarters in
Marlborough,
Hungerford and
Devizes, but Sir Willoughby Aston was so keen to drill the men together that he persuaded the townsfolk of Devizes to
billet the whole regiment for a few days. In October it went into winter quarters at
Winchester Barracks. In June 1760 the regiment left barracks to join an encampment outside Winchester where they were brigaded with the
34th Foot and the
Gloucestershire,
Bedfordshire,
Dorsetshire and
Wiltshire Militia, all under the command of
Lieutenant-General the
Earl of Effingham. This training camp was broken up in October, when the Berkshire Militia were marched in two divisions to quarters at Hungerford and
Ilsley, and
Newbury and
Speen respectively. The following month it moved into its winter quarters, with five companies at Reading and two each at
Wallingford and
Oakingham (Wokingham). On 18 March 1761 Col Aston was ordered to send two of his companies by the fastest route from Reading to
Witney in Oxfordshire in support of the civil magistrates in suppressing riots. In April the regiment was sent out of Reading while elections were held there, and then concentrated once more to march back to Winchester. Here they camped near the
Hessian troops along with the Wiltshire, Dorset,
North and
South Gloucestershire and
South Hampshire Militia, once again under Effingham's command. In October the regiment was marched back to Reading and the following month went into winter quarters at Newbury. In March 1762 the regiment went back to Winchester, this time to guard French
prisoners of war, returning to Newbury in April. On 15 April 1762 Lt-Col Vansittart took over from Sir Willoughby Aston as colonel of the regiment, and Maj Dodd was promoted to replace him. The senior captain, William Mackworth Praed, accused Dodd of impeding his anticipated promotion to major, but Dodd was acquitted of unsoldierlike conduct by a
Court-martial held at Reading. The regiment spent June to October 1762 at its usual summer camp at Winchester. Peace negotiations were now under way (leading to the
Treaty of Paris in February 1763) and the militia was disembodied in November 1762. From 1766 to 1777 the Berkshire Militia was regularly mustered for its 28 days' training each year, alternately at
The Forbury, Reading, and the Market Place in Newbury.
American War of Independence The
American War of Independence broke out in 1775, and by 1778 Britain was threatened with invasion by the Americans' allies, France and Spain. The militia were embodied in March 1778, and on 1 June the Berkshires under Col Vansittart were ordered to
Coxheath Camp near
Maidstone in
Kent, which was the army's largest training camp. Here the completely raw militia were exercised as part of a division alongside regular troops while providing a reserve in case of French invasion of South East England. The regiment returned to Reading for the winter on 17 November. In February 1779 two companies were sent to quarters in Oxfordshire, one at
Banbury and the other at
Woodstock. In April the men reaching the end of their engagements were marched hime, and replaced by newly-balloted men. The regiment also had to provide escorts to groups of prisoners from
Reading Gaol who were being
impressed into the army. In May the seven companies at Reading were dispersed across Oxfordshire to
Henley-on-Thames,
Nettlebed, Wallingford and
Bensington, then in June it was concentrated again at Reading and marched to
Essex, to be quartered at
Romford,
Ilford and Hare Street until their summer camp at Adarley Common was ready. In March 1780 the regiment provided detachments to escort Spanish prisoners as far as Woodstock on their journey from Portsmouth to
Shrewsbury, and then in May five companies were sent to Winchester to relieve the
Staffordshire Militia who were guarding prisoners there. The remaining companies were sent from Reading to
Hilsea Barracks, Portsmouth, a notoriously sickly site and much disliked by militia regiments unlucky enough to be stationed there. Illness was so widespread that the remaining fit junior officers had to do double duty, which irritated them to the point of resignation. In October the regiment was widely dispersed across Oxfordshire for winter quarters. For the
General Election held that autumn, no less than 43 officers and 8 other ranks claimed leave in order to go home to vote. In April 1781 the regiment marched from Oxfordshire to be quartered in villages north and east of London, then in May it went through the city to quarters around
Sevenoaks and
Maidstone in Kent, finally being sent on 6 June to join the encampment on
Lenham Heath. At the end of the summer, it was quartered in Kentish villages from 31 October, with headquarters at
Tunbridge Wells. On 24 June 1782 it was ordered back to Coxheath Camp where it spent the summer. In November it was ordered to quarters in villages around
Rochester and
Gillingham, but then returned to winter quarters in Newbury in early December. A
peace treaty having been agreed in Paris, the militia was disembodied in March 1783.
French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars From 1785 to 1791 the militia carried out 28 days' annual training, but to save money only two-thirds of the men were actually called out each year. As the international situation deteriorated in late 1792, the militia began to be embodied. Two thirds of the Berkshires were assembled at the Forbury, Reading, on 18 December, and a week later orders were issued to call out the remainder and to hold a ballot to fill vacancies. Hence the militia was already embodied when
Revolutionary France declared war on Britain on 1 February 1793. However, the colonel, the
Earl of Radnor, found that the fines levied in Berkshire on balloted men who did not wish to serve were not enough to hire volunteer substitutes, and in 1794 he proposed to keep repeating the ballot for each vacancy until it was filled. The
French Revolutionary Wars saw a new phase for the English militia: they were embodied for a whole generation, and became regiments of full-time professional soldiers (though restricted to service in the
British Isles), which the regular army increasingly saw as a prime source of recruits. They served in coast defences, manning garrisons, guarding prisoners of war, and for internal security, while their traditional local defence duties were taken over by the
Volunteers and mounted
Yeomanry. Early in 1793 the Royal Berkshires were quartered in towns along the South Coast of England. On 6 March, while commanding a detachment escorting French prisoners from
Rye to
Dover,
Lieutenant the
Earl of Barrymore died when the
fusil he was carrying went off as he boarded his carriage. In July the regiment joined a large encampment at Broadwater Common, Waterdown Forest, outside
Tunbridge Wells, one of several established in the invasion-threatened South East of England. The whole camp moved to
Ashdown Forest at the beginning of August and then to
Brighton for two weeks before returning to Broadwater Common. The camps were broken up on 29 October and the regiment went into winter quarters at
Romsey in
Hampshire. In the spring of 1794 the Berkshire Militia marched to camp at
Eastbourne, and then spent the summer as part of the defence cordon along the Kent coast. It was quartered in
Deal and
Sandwich for the winter, then was part of a great camp at
Hythe in 1795. The next winter was spent in quarters in the
Isle of Thanet. In 1796 the regiment marched into the
West Country and was stationed around
Totnes in
Devon. In a fresh attempt to have as many men as possible under arms for home defence in order to release regulars, in 1796 the Government created the Supplementary Militia, a compulsory levy of men to be trained in their spare time, and to be incorporated in the Regular Militia in emergency. Berkshire's quota was fixed at 749 men, but no additional regiments were formed. In January 1797 the Berkshire Militia sent a training cadre of two officers, two sergeants, a drummer and nine rank and file to
Wokingham to train the first contingent of the supplementary militia for 20 days. The process was repeated at other Berkshire towns such as
Wantage and Wallingford until the whole quota had undergone training. Later, many of the supplementaries were recruited into the Regular Army. On 1 October 1797 the Berkshire Militia went into winter quarters at Bristol, where Lt-Col
Francis Sykes was involved in a duel in which he was slightly wounded. In February 1798 the Berkshire Supplementary Militia was called out for training, and in May half of them (374 men) were drafted into the main body at Bristol, bringing it up to a strength of 12 companies. The regiment was relieved at Bristol on 9 June when it marched into
Dorset, to barracks in
Poole and
Weymouth (6 companies each). On 27 August the whole regiment concentrated at Weymouth, joining a number of other militia regiments while
King George III and the Royal Family were in residence during September. The regiment was reviewed by the king on two occasions. In October the Berkshires went into winter quarters in Portsmouth, with the Flank (Grenadier and Light) companies at Winchester until they joined the main body in June 1799. A manpower crisis in the Regular Army in June 1799 led to a call for volunteers to transfer from the militia: six officers and 333 privates of the Berkshires volunteered, but according to regulations only four officers and 263 men could be accepted. However, another call in October for volunteers for the
campaign in Holland led Captain Holdsworth and 150 men to transfer to the
15th Foot. When the Supplementary Militia were stood down another 150 men left the regiment, so that ballots had to be held to maintain its strength: by July 1800, while at
Netley Camp outside
Southampton, it was only 500 strong, half the numbers in 1798. In September a detachment escorting French prisoners at Winchester was diverted to help deal with bread riots at
New Alresford. After wintering at Portsmouth the regiment returned to Weymouth in June 1801, where the Royal Family was again in residence for the summer. Peace negotiations were now under way, and in December the Berkshire Militia returned to Reading. They marched out to Weymouth again in early 1802, but after the
Treaty of Amiens was signed in March they were disembodied at Reading on 24 April. However, the peace was shortlived and the militia were called out again in 1803. The Berkshires were embodied at Reading on 30 March. After newly balloted men had been incorporated, the regiment marched to
Ashford Barracks in Kent, which they shared with the
2nd Royal Surrey Militia, Meanwhile the Berkshire Supplementary Militia was called out for internal security duty in Berkshire. On 15 October the regiment moved to
Shorncliffe Camp, then from 1 December spent the winter at Walmer Barracks and
North Infantry Barracks, Deal. On 23 April 1804 the King conferred the title 'Royal' on 12 militia regiments, several of which had served at Weymouth during the Royal Family's summer residences, including the Berkshires. The Royal Berkshire Militia (RBM) left Kent on 30 October for
Chelmsford in Essex, and by 28 December was at Stoke Barracks at
Ipswich. During the summer of 1805, when
Napoleon was massing his 'Army of England' at
Boulogne for a projected invasion, the regiment, with 611 men in 10 companies under the command of Lt-Col Thomas William Ravenshaw, was still stationed at Ipswich as part of Maj-Gen John Robinson's brigade. While at Ipswich the regiment took part in a grand review on
Rushmere Heath before the
Commander-in-Chief, the
Duke of York. From Ipswich the regiment went back to Walmer on 28 August, where it provided working parties for Dover. It then marched to
Taunton in
Somerset. On the way it passed through Reading on 30/31 October, where the church bells were rung to greet the local regiment. From Taunton the regiment sent detachments to Bridgwater with prisoners of war, and to the coast defences at
Berry Head,
Torbay,
Brixham and
Fishcombe Battery. In the winter of 1806–7 the regiment was around Portsmouth, in
Colewort Barracks and at
Portsea. Its spent the summer of 1807 in Sussex at
Steyning and
Blatchington Barracks, with men quartered in
Lewes, and in 1808 was at
Hailsham Barracks.
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. Berkshire raised three regiments: • 1st Berkshire Local Militia: 10 companies commanded by Lt-Col F. Page • 2nd Berkshire Local Militia 8 companies commanded by Lt-Col Henry Kearney, formerly of the Beynhurst Volunteers, later by Sir
Morris Ximenes, formerly of the
Wargrave Rangers • 3rd or Queen's Regiment of Berkshire Local Militia: 7 companies commanded by Lt-Col the
Marquess of Blandford At the first annual training in 1809, there were disturbances among some of the new local militia units. At Reading the men were incited to lay down their arms by members of the Reading Loyal Volunteers, who had been drinking after the King's birthday parade.
Luddite riots Meanwhile the RBM continued its movements around the country. By July 1809 the regiment was at
Great Yarmouth, and by the end of November 1810 it was at the great
Prisoner-of-war camp at
Norman Cross.
Luddite riots began around
Nottingham in November 1811, and the RBM was sent to the city from
Weeley Barracks in Essex to reinforce the Local Militia and Volunteer Cavalry. 'Frame-breaking' by the rioters continued around the city despite the military presence. The disturbances spread across Northern England early in 1812, and the regiment sent detachments in February to maintain order in
Manchester and
Liverpool. In April the regiment passed through
Derby in wagons to be deployed across
Lancashire, at Liverpool,
Preston,
Blackburn and
Colne Barracks. In November 1812 the regiment was transferred to South West England where corn riots had broken out around
Plymouth. It was stationed at
Somerton and then
Bideford before going into
Millbay Barracks at Plymouth for the winter.
Ireland Legislation passed in 1798 and 1811 permitted English militia regiments to serve in Ireland for periods of two years,
Napoleon abdicated in April 1814 and it appeared that the wars were over. In September the English militia regiments in Ireland were ordered back to their home counties to be disembodied. The RBM marched from Tuam to
Newry and then embarked for Liverpool in two ships on 29–30 September. Having concentrated after landing, the regiment was ordered to return to Reading for disembodiment, but the order was countermanded and it remained at Liverpool during the winter, at St Domingo House Barracks and Fort Barracks. Early in 1815 Napoleon returned from
Elba, sparking off the short
Waterloo campaign. Large numbers of embodied militiamen volunteered for the Regular Army, and it was said that a whole Troop of the
7th Hussars at Waterloo was composed of men from the Royal Berkshires while many other fought in the ranks of the
Royal Horse Guards. It was not until September 1815 that the Royal Berkshire Militia finally arrived at Reading. The regiment was disembodied on 14 March 1816. 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 and the permanent staffs of sergeants and drummers (who were occasionally used to maintain public order) were progressively reduced. The ballot was suspended by the
Militia Act 1829. In 1845–46 there was an effort to replace elderly members of the permanent staff and to appoint a few younger officers from the county gentry, though they had no duties to perform. ==1852 Reforms==