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. Glamorganshire was given a quota of 360 men to raise. The county's arms were issued in January 1760 and the men assembled in two parts at Cardiff and Swansea on or shortly after 19 January. The regiment was organised as seven companies including a Grenadier Company, with
Sir Edmond Thomas, 4th Baronet of
Wenvoe Castle, appointed as
lieutenant-colonel commandant. Its headquarters (HQ) was established at a house on the corner of St Mary Street and Wharton Street in Cardiff, which became known as The Armoury, and housed the permanent staff and weapons. The regiment was embodied for fulltime service on 4 January 1761, now under the command of
Earl Talbot. The regiment was marched from Cardiff to be stationed at
Bideford, North
Devon, but once it reached
Bristol its destination was changed, and it went into barracks at
Topsham, near
Exeter in South Devon, until May. By June 1762 the regiment was back in Glamorgan, with four companies quartered in Swansea and the remainder in Cardiff. The Swansea companies went by sea to Cardiff, and then the whole was shipped across to Bristol. In September a number of the militiamen got into a fight with local butchers and sailors in St Nicholas Street, in which two sailors were killed and others on both sides wounded. Several were imprisoned and one militiamen was tried for murder. Two other privates of the regiment were convicted of taking bribes to let French
prisoners of war out of prison in
Knowle, Bristol, and one was sentenced to be shot. However, the war was ending, and in December the regiment was marched back to Cardiff. There it was disembodied, the weapons being returned to store and the men paid off and dismissed to their homes, to be called out for periodic training. Because of the differences in culture and language, the Glamorgan men found service in England very disagreeable, and in the autumn of 1778 the men whose enlistments were due to expire the following summer declared that they were not willing to re-engage. `The Lord Lieutenant of Glamorgan,
Lord Mount Stuart, who was also the regimental colonel, suggested that they should be allowed two months at home in exchange for re-enlisting, and 150 did eventually rejoin. From 1780 Lord Mount Stuart's second-in-command was Lt-Col
Sir Herbert Mackworth, 1st Baronet,
MP for
Cardiff. At the end of the training at Warley the regiment returned to winter quarters at Cardiff. Early in 1780 it joined the Bristol Garrison until May when it was relieved by the
Monmouthshire Militia and was ordered north to
Lancashire. At the time
Lancaster and
Preston were disturbed by the '
No Popery' agitation: there was unauthorised military drilling among young men, the American flag was raised, and the king was cursed. A 50-man detachment of the Glamorgans preserved the peace in Lancaster, behaving well under serious provocation. Their commander, Lieutenant Jenkins, showed considerable skill in restoring quiet. On 17 and 18 September 1781
Major-General Styles inspected the regiment in two 'divisions' at Preston and
Wigan. He reported the regiment as looking well and being fit for service, but the men's training was below average because they had been dispersed in quarters for a long time. Their movements were slow, the men aimed too high when firing volleys, the officers looked unmilitary, and the NCOs were too old. However, the drums and fifes were well played. By summer 1782 the regiment was back in South Wales, quartered at Swansea. On 29 July it was ordered to march via Bristol,
Bridgwater, Exeter,
Tavistock and
Truro to
Falmouth, where it was to be stationed. The
Treaty of Paris ended hostilities in 1783, and the militia was stood down. The Glamorgans marched back to South Wales and were disembodied at Cardiff.
French Revolutionary War The militia was already being embodied when
Revolutionary France declared war on Britain on 1 February 1793. The warrant for calling out the Glamorgan Militia was issued on 2 February. Under Col
Lord Mount Stuart (son of the previous colonel, who was now Earl of Bute) the regiment marched to Plymouth to begin garrison duty. Mount Stuart died on 22 January 1794, and Lt-Col Richard Awbrey of Ash Hall assumed active command on 21 April. By May 1796 the regiment was stationed at
Wells, Somerset, with a detachment at
Frome. It the marched to
Kent where it joined the
Dover Garrison on 16 June. In October it moved to
Canterbury for winter quarters. 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. . In an 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 for 20 days a year in their spare time, and to be incorporated in the Regular Militia in emergency. Glamorgan's new quota was fixed at 622 men, and in April 1797 the Glamorgan Militia sent a party back from Kent to Cardiff to train the embodied Glamorgan supplementaries (who were to be encouraged to join the
44th Foot). In January 1798 the supplementaries joined the regiment at
Ashford, Kent. On 8 July 1798 a general order was issued to form temporary battalions from the flank companies (Grenadier and Light companies) of militia regiments in the Southern District. The Grenadier Company of the Glamorgans joined those of the
Bedfordshire,
Denbighshire, Derbyshire,
Middlesex and Northamptonshire Militia in the 3rd Grenadier Battalion at
Shoreham-by-Sea, commanded by Lt-Col Payne of the Bedfordshires.
Ireland The
Irish Rebellion of 1798 led to legislation being passed to allow British militia units to volunteer for service in
Ireland: the Glamorgan Militia was one of those that volunteered and was accepted. In May 1799 it marched from Kent to
Portsmouth, where on 15 June it was embarked on the transports
Hebe and
Dictator for passage to
Cork. On arrival it marched to
Fermoy, where it remained for the rest of the year under the command of Col Awbery. During the year a number of men from the regiment volunteered to transfer to the Regular Army, reducing its strength to about 400 men. On 22 December the Glamorgans marched to
Dublin, where they provided a guard on the Parliament buildings when the
Act of Union was passed. In May 1800 the regiment took passage for
Liverpool and marched back to Cardiff and then via Swansea to
Pembrokeshire. Regimental headquarters (HQ) was established at
Haverfordwest, with detachments spread around the county. The regiment remained there throughout 1801. Hostilities ended with the
Treaty of Amiens on 27 March 1802, and the Glamorgan Militia returned to Cardiff to be disembodied.
Napoleonic Wars However, the Peace of Amiens was short-lived and Britain declared war on France once more in May 1803. The Glamorgan Militia had already been re-embodied in April, and by June it was stationed at
Winchester in
Hampshire, later moving to the encampment at
Stokes Bay,
Gosport, here it was reinforced with supplementary militiamen. That winter it was quartered nearby at
Haslar. It left in March 1804 and moved along the South Coast, with short periods iof duty at
Southbourne,
Eastbourne and other places before arriving at
Pevensey Barracks on 22 June. Here it was kept on high alert for anti-invasion duties. After a period under canvas it moved back into the barracks as winter quarters. In April 1804 the Glamorgans were one of 12 Welsh militia regiments awarded the prefix 'Royal', as the
Royal Glamorgan Militia. The regiment was still at Pevensey Barracks during the summer of 1805, when
Napoleon was massing his 'Army of England' at
Boulogne for a projected invasion. With 432 men in 6 companies under Lt-Col Henry Knight, it was stationed with the
Royal Carnarvonshire Militia, forming part of
Brigadier-General Moore Disney's brigade. In November 1805 the regiment left Pevensey for winter quarters at
Hailsham. It then moved to
Horsham, and then in May 1806 marched to Bristol. There, as well as duties with the garrison brigade, the regiment provided detachments to help man the guns in the
Shirehampton and
Avonmouth forts, and guards and escorts for the prisoners of war at
Stapleton Prison. It also provided considerable numbers of recruits to the regiments of the line. On 10 January 1808 the Royal Glamorgans marched out of Bristol for Exeter, where in June it was brigaded with the
South Devon Militia and Exeter Infantry Volunteers at a camp on Broad Clyst Common. Early in 1809 the regimental HQ was at
Tiverton with detachments across Devon at Exeter,
Crediton, Pensington and other places, including guards on the chain of signal stations across Devon and
Somerset. It then moved into
Cornwall, with the main body at
Pendennis Castle, Falmouth, from 7 May, where it was joined by the signal post guards once they had been relieved by the
North Hants Militia. By June 1810 the regiment had relieved the
Lancashire Militia at Bristol, with a detachment at
Milford Haven. The duties included maintaining the North Somerset coastal beacons, guarding Stapleton Prison, and manning the Avon forts, as well as providing town guards at Bristol. In November the Milford Haven detachment was relieved by the
Royal Pembroke Militia and rejoined HQ at Bristol. By now the regiment was well short of its establishment of 483 (six companies), many men having transferred to the Regulars, and the regiment was allowed to recruit volunteers 'by beat of drum' in Glamorgan and surrounding counties. •
East Glamorgan Local Militia, under Lt-Col Commandant John Price and mainly drawn from the former 2nd or East Glamorgan Volunteer Infantry that he had commanded •
Central Glamorgan Local Militia, under Lt-Col Cmdt Rowley Lascelles, drawn mainly from Lascelles' Glamorgan Riflemen and the Glamorgan (Prince of Wales's) Fuzileers commanded by William Vaughan who became the new regiment's second lt-col •
West Glamorgan Local Militia, under Lt-Col Cmdt John Llewellyn of Penllergaer and drawn mainly from his 1st or West Glamorgan Volunteer Infantry and
Major Thomas Lockwood's Fforest Riflemen The regiments began their first training in April and May 1809, the Eastern Regiment at Cardiff, the Western and Central Regiments at Swansea; subsequently the Central Regiment trained at Cardiff and Cowbridge. The Local Militia proved less popular that the Volunteers, and few men chose to re-engage when their four years' service expired in 1812; they were replaced by balloted men. However, in 1814 200 mainly balloted men of the Central Regiment volunteered for guard duty at Stapleton Prison, outside their county. The Eastern and Central Regiments carried out their last training in 1814, the Western in 1815, in which year the regiments were stood down. The Local Militia was disbanded in 1816. ==Royal Glamorgan Light Infantry==