Uniforms and insignia Individual Staffordshire Yeomanry troops may have worn black (Lichfield) or red
facings on their jackets, but by 1804 the consolidated regiment had standardised on a red jacket with yellow facings, white waistcoat, white leather breeches and military boots. The headdress was a
Tarleton helmet with a bearskin crest and black turban with silver chains, carrying a white-over-red feather on the left side. The belts were of pipeclayed leather. The men were armed with a sword (of old pattern) and pistol. On its formation the regiment adopted the motto
Pro aris et focis ('For hearth and home') and the
Staffordshire knot as its badge. The Volunteer Associations also seem to have adopted this uniform, except the Stone & Eccleshall Trp, which had black facings, and the Wolverhampton Trp, which may have worn a blue jacket. In March 1808 the regiment's uniform underwent a complete change, when it adopted a blue jacket with white lace
Hussar frogging and white facings (the trumpeters wore 'reversed colours', with white jackets frogged in blue lace). Buff leather breeches were worn. This uniform was replaced again in 1816 by a blue double-breasted (single-breasted from 1834) Light Dragoon
Coatee with white facings and metal shoulder scales (
Epaulettes for officers), and blue-green
overalls with a double white stripe. The regiment was the last to wear the old pattern Tarleton helmet: this was finally replaced in 1837 by a bell-topped
Shako with white horsehair plume. When the 'Queen's Own' title was granted in 1838 the white facings and trouser stripes were replaced with red, appropriate to a bluecoated 'Royal' regiment. In 1850 the shako was replaced by a black metal
Albert helmet with a black plume. From this period a French
Kepi was worn as an undress cap, replaced by a
pillbox cap in the 1880s. In 1853 black pouch belts and brown sword belts replaced the previous pipeclayed belts, and the new Light Dragoon
tunic with white frogging was adopted in 1859, when the helmet plume reverted to white. The tunic was changed for the Hussar style in 1881, and the conversion to Hussar uniform was completed in 1893 when the Albert helmet was replaced by a black
Busby with a red bag falling on the right side and an upright white plume. During the Boer War the 6th (Staffordshire) Company, IY, wore the standard khaki uniform, initially with the
foreign service helmet, on the left hand side of which was a cloth patch divided into vertical stripes red-blue-red, carrying the Staffordshire knot badge and the figure '6'. The
Slouch hat proved more popular, with the Stafford knot badge on a red patch on the turned-up left side worn by both the 6th and 106th Companies. After the war the regiment adopted the khaki IY uniform in 1903, with red cuffs, collars and trefoil cuff ornament, worn with a slouch hat. After 1906 a simpler 'substitute full dress' and a blue undress uniform returned, with a peaked
Service cap, while khaki service dress was worn in drill order. The Stafford, Newcastle and Lichfield Trps were presented with
standards by the Countess of Sutherland on 23 October 1795. These were yellow swallow-tailed guidons with in the centre the crowned Stafford knot surrounded by a wreath above the motto
Pro aris et focis, and oval cartouches in each corner, those on the upper hoist and lower fly probably being red with the
White Horse of Hanover. These and other standards were retired and replaced in 1835. The simple Stafford knot badge in white metal was worn on head-dresses. From 1859 the buttons carried the knot within a garter inscribed 'THE QUEENS OWN ROYAL REGIMENT' and surmounted by a crown. This design in silver was adopted as the officers' cap and collar badge from 1898, with the addition of a lower scroll bearing the motto from 1906; it was worn in bronze on the field service cap from 1908. From 1913 the other ranks' cap badge was the knot surmounted by a crown. The shoulder straps of the khaki jacket carried a brass title, with the knot over 'S' over 'IY' until 1908, then 'T' over 'Y' over 'STAFFORD'. In the 1940s the brass cap badge used the design introduced for officers in 1906, with the regimental title on the garter replaced by the motto of the
Order of the Garter.
Honorary colonels The following served as
honorary colonel of the regiment: died 6 February 1949 • Hon Col Charles Richard Farquhar,
MBE, TD, appointed to vacancy 1 April 1961 • Brevet Col Henry Roy Marsh, MBE, TD, appointed 1 April 1966, re-appointed 1967 and 1969, relinquished on reorganisation 1 April 1971 • Maj D.G. Roddick, TD, appointed 1 April 1984 • Maj A.E.R. Manners, TD, appointed 3 January 1995
Memorials In May 1857 the regiment erected a memorial in
Lichfield Cathedral to Lt-Col the Earl of Lichfield (1795–1854), who had joined the regiment as a trooper in 1811 before being appointed captain in the Lichfield Trp in 1812. He served for over 40 years, 20 of them in command of the regiment. There is a modern memorial plaque to the Staffordshire Yeomanry in the grounds of the
National Memorial Arboretum at
Alrewas, near
Lichfield. It lists all of the regiment's battle honours.
Battle honours The Staffordshire Yeomanry was awarded the following
battle honours (honours in bold are
emblazoned on the
guidon): ==See also==