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. Flintshire was given a quota of 120 men to raise, but recruitment throughout Wales was slow.
Major-General the
Earl of Cholmondeley was
Lord Lieutenant of Flintshire and several other Welsh counties, but found that the only one able to fulfil its quota was tiny
Flintshire. The problem was less with the other ranks raised by ballot than the shortage of men qualified to be officers, even after the requirements were lowered for Welsh counties. The Flintshire Militia was raised on 3 October 1759 at
Mold under the command of
Sir Roger Mostyn, 5th Baronet,
Member of Parliament for
Flintshire (who replaced Cholmondeley as lord lieutenant the following year). The arms, equipment and regimental colours arrived at
Holywell on 3 December, and the regiment was embodied for fulltime service on 8 December 1759. The regiment completed its embodiment on 12 December and was ordered to
Carmarthen, marching via
Wrexham and
Llandrindod (where it was snowbound) before reaching to town at the end of the month. After some weeks of duty at Carmarthen, the regiment was ordered into the
Welsh borders. By July 1760 it was at
Bridgnorth in
Shropshire where it remained until March 1761 when it marched back to Holywell. In midsummer 1762 the regiment was on duty in
Liverpool until 19 August when it marched back to Holywell. The Seven Years War ended on 20 December and the Flintshire Militia was disembodied shortly afterwards.
War of American Independence The militia were called out on 26 March 1778 during the
War of American Independence, when the country was threatened with invasion by the Americans' allies, France and Spain. The Flintshires assembled under Maj Hughes at Holywell, but after a few weeks were marched away from the county to remove the temptation for the men to stray home. On 2 May the regiment set out for
Whitchurch, Shropshire, moving on to Chester on 10 June, but on 16 July Hughes was ordered to march the regiment back to Flintshire, where the men were
billeted at Hiolwell, Mold and other places for the rest of the year. On 6 February 1779 the regiment was sent to
Warrington in Cheshire, where a strike among sailcloth makers threatened civil disorder. By May the regiment formed part of the Chester garrison with a detachment at
Nantwich. Then on 7 June it moved to
Cumberland, where its companies took up duties in
Cockermouth,
Workington and
Maryport. They remained there until 8 April 1780 when they concentrated at
Whitehaven and then marched back to Wales, first at
Oswestry, then into
Pembrokeshire where it took up duties at
Pembroke Dock and
Haverfordwest. Here its duties included guarding the
Royal Navy establishments and the prisoners of war, and manning the
Milford Haven defences and the battery at
Fishguard. They stayed here until the end of the war in January 1783. By March the regiment was back at Mold and Hawarden to be disembodied.
French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars Revolutionary France declared war on Britain on 1 February 1793. Orders to embody the Flintshire Militia were issued next day and it assembled at Holywell. On 13 March it was sent to join the garrison at
Woolwich, but was quartered in
Hertfordshire until July when it completed its march. On 12 September the regiment marched to Hampshire where it took up duties in the defences of the naval base at
Portsmouth. The
French Revolutionary War and
Napoleonic 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. The regiment raised an additional company of volunteers attracted by a bounty paid for by patriotic subscriptions in the county, and it marched from Holywell to join the regiment in August 1794. On 1 December 1794 the regiment left Portsmouth and went into winter quarters at
Littlehampton and
Chichester in
Sussex. On 28 April 1795 the regiment deployed along the
Kent coast between
Lydd and
New Romney, then from 3 July moved into the garrison of
Dover, with a detachment at
Hythe. In October 1796 the Flintshires moved to the forts around
Deal. In September 1797 the Flintshires were in barracks at
Sheerness for the winter, then moved out to Hythe in March 1798 and back into the Deal forts in May. At the end of June the regiment marched into
Hampshire, first to
Christchurch, then into the Portsmouth and
Gosport defences until June 1799. That month it crossed to the
Isle of Wight. The regiment's establishment was raised to 377 men, and the additional recruits joined it there after training. The Flintshires moved back to Lymington on the mainland in February 1800, then were stationed at
Winchester between April and November. They returned to Lymington for the winter. By the summer of 1801 the regiment was much reduced by the release of some supplementaries and men leaving to volunteer for the regulars. In August it moved back to the Portsmouth area until November, when it marched back to Whitchurch while peace negotiations were continuing. In April 1804 the regiment was one of 12 Welsh militia regiments awarded the prefix 'Royal'. Then in March 1806 it was converted to
Light infantry, becoming the
Royal Flint Light Infantry Militia. Apart from the title, the changes to dress and weaponry were minor, the drums being replaced by bugles and the sergeants'
halberds by fusils (light muskets). From June 1804 to March 1805 the Royal Flint LI were quartered at Woolwich, with detachments at the newly built
Fort Pitt,
Chatham, and at the military depot at
Canterbury. From March 1805 to March 1806 it was at the Hythe forts on the Kent Coast: during the summer of 1805, when
Napoleon was massing his 'Army of England' at
Boulogne for a projected invasion, the regiment under Lt-Col Thomas Hanmer was stationed at Fort Twiss, with 219 men in 4 companies, forming part of Maj-Gen
Sir John Moore's force. Afterwards it was at
Dungeness until March 1807, then at Fort Pitt until March 1808. It was then at
Shorncliffe Camp until September, and Hythe until December. In March 1809 it moved to
Bexhill-on-Sea, where together with the
Royal Merionethshire Light Infantry and the
Royal Pembroke Light Infantry it formed a Welsh Brigade. The Royal Flint LI and several other Welsh militia regiments volunteered to serve as complete regiments in the
Peninsular War, but the offer was declined. However, large numbers of individuals transferred to the regulars, and the militia were allowed to send parties home to recruit volunteer replacements 'by beat of drum'. ==1852 reforms==