Map of the present-day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province (green), previously the North-West Frontier; and FATA (purple)

The North-West Frontier (present-day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) was a region of the British Indian Empire. It remains the western frontier of present-day Pakistan, extending from the Pamir Knot in the north to the Koh-i-Malik Siah in the west,[2] and separating the modern Pakistani frontier regions of North-West Frontier Province (renamed as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), Federally Administered Tribal Areas and Balochistan from neighbouring Afghanistan in the west. The borderline between is officially known as the Durand Line and divides Pashtun inhabitants of these provinces from Pashtuns in eastern Afghanistan.

The two main gateways on the North West Frontier are the Khyber and Bolan Passes. Since ancient times, the Indian subcontinent has been repeatedly invaded through these northwestern routes. With the expansion of the Russian Empire into Central Asia in the twentieth century, stability of the Frontier and control of Afghanistan became cornerstones of defensive strategy for British India.

Much of the Frontier was occupied by Ranjit Singh in the early 19th century, and then taken over by the East India Company when it annexed the Punjab in 1849.[3]

Between 1849 and 1947 the military history of the frontier was a succession of punitive expeditions against offending Pashtun (or Pathan) tribes, punctuated by three wars against Afghanistan. Many British officers who went on to distinguished command in the First and Second World Wars learnt their soldiering on the North-West Frontier, which they called the Grim.[4]

Contestants

Afghanistan

In 1747 when Ahmad Khān Abdālī seized control of Kandahar, Kabul, and Peshawar, and, as Ahmad Shah Durrani, was proclaimed Shah of the Afghans.[5] He went on to conquer Herat and Khorassan, and established an empire from the Oxus to the Indus.[6] On his death in 1773, the Afghan domain included Baluchistan, Sindh, the Punjab, and Kashmir.[5] Ahmad Shah was succeeded by his son Timur Shah Durrani, whose rule of twenty years saw the Afghan tide begin to ebb. Timur left many sons but no heir, and the resultant internecine struggles for the throne lasted more than thirty years. During this period the Punjab was effectively ceded to its erstwhile governor Ranjit Singh, Iran recovered Khorassan, and Sindh broke away.[5] In 1813 Sikh forces from the Punjab crossed the Indus and seized the old Mughal fort at Attock. In 1819 Kashmir was lost, and west of the Indus Derajat also. Four years later the winter capital at Peshawar came under attack.[7]

In 1826 Dost Mohammad Khan emerged as undisputed ruler in Kabul, and was there proclaimed Emir.[8] He defeated a further attempt to oust him by his exiled rival Shuja Shah Durrani in 1833; however the Sikhs seized all of Peshawar the following year. In 1837 Dost Mohammad launched a counter-attack through the Khyber, but the Afghan force was halted at Jamrud Fort.[9] Dost Mohammad had sought assistance from the East India Company against the resurgent Punjab, but was rebuffed. So Dost Mohammad turned to Imperial Russia for help.[8]

Sikh Empire

Overview of Afghanistan and the Countries on the Northwest Border of India 1842

Maharaja Ranjit Singh was a Sikh ruler of the sovereign country of Punjab and the Sikh Empire. His Samadhi is located in Lahore, Pakistan.

He then spent the following years fighting the Afghans, driving them out of western Punjab, taking opportunity of the Afghans being embroiled in civil war. The deposed Afghan king Shah Shuja rallied a significant number of tribes and received British backing in the form of the Sikh army against the Barakzai king Dost Muhammad. The civil war in Afghanistan coupled with a British backed assault meant that the Sikhs could virtually walk into Peshawar. They managed to capture some Pashtun territory including Peshawar which was under direct British supervision and control.

British East India Company

Hill Tribes men sniping a British Force

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the East India Company controlled southern India, Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa (modern Odisha). Dominance was gained at the expense of its French equivalent, the Compagnie des Indes. Britain and France were at war, and the Franco-Persian alliance of 1807, followed the same year by the Franco-Russian Treaty of Tilsit, alerted the HEIC to the external threat posed from the north-west.[10]

By 1819 only Sindh and the Sikh Empire remained outside the company's control. Napoleon was vanquished, but the Empire of the Tsars had begun to expand south and east. Russian influence grew likewise, and by the early 1830s Qajar Irān was within the Tsar's sphere. Attempts by Irān to recover Herat in 1834, and again in 1837, raised the spectre of Russian armies on the road to Kandahar, whence direct access to India through the Khojak and Bolan passes.[11]

Meanwhile, the conflict between Afghanistan and the Punjab focused on the Khyber route. Dost Mohammad appealed to the HEIC for aid in recovering Peshawar, but the company could not help him without alienating its treaty ally Ranjit Singh. When Dost Mohammad redirected his appeal to Russia, the Governor-General Lord Auckland resolved to depose Dost Mohammad, and replace him with Shuja Shah Durrani. Restored to his throne in Kabul, the exiled former ruler would accept the Sikh gains west of the Indus, and the Company controlling his foreign policy. The agreement was formalised with the Treaty of Simla signed in June 1838 between Shah Shuja, the HEIC, and Ranjit Singh.[12]

British Indian Empire

Chronology

1526–1757 (Mughal Afghan Wars)

1800–1837 (Afghan-Sikh Wars)

1838–48 (First Afghan War to Second Sikh War)

1849–58 (Second Sikh War to Sepoy Revolt)

In the period following the annexation of the Punjab in 1849 until the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857, several expeditions were undertaken against almost every tribe along the whole of the North-West Frontier, most notably under Sir Charles Napier and Sir Colin Campbell, under orders from the governor-general, Lord Dalhousie. Disgusted at being instructed to burn Pathan villages, first Napier and then Campbell resigned and returned to England. Campbell had already decided that the best method of dealing with the tribesmen on the frontier was through bribery.[13]

When the Sepoy Rebellion broke out Amir Dost Mohammad Khan came under internal pressure to seize the advantage and attack India. However he stood by his treaty obligations. This allowed Indian troops on the frontier to deploy to Delhi and deal with the revolt centered there.[3]

1859–1878 (Sepoy Revolt to Second Afghan War)

1878–1898 (Second Afghan War to Frontier Rebellion)

In 1877, Amir Sher Ali received a Russian mission in Kabul, but refused to accept one from the British. The following year Sher Ali signed a treaty with Russia. The British sent a mission anyway, but the mission and its armed escort were denied passage through the Khyber Pass. The British threatened to invade, and when no apology was forthcoming, did so. Sher Ali died while fleeing to Russian territory, and his son Yakub succeeded him. On May 26, 1879, Amir Yakub signed the Treaty of Gandamak, whereby Afghanistan surrendered its foreign policy to the British Empire, which in turn promised protection from aggression. Afghanistan ceded some territory and accepted a British Resident in Kabul until 1894.[15]

In September 1879, some six weeks after establishing his residency, Sir Louis Cavagnari and his escort were murdered. Hostilities promptly resumed. Yakub's army was defeated in September 1880, and his throne was offered to, and accepted by, Abdur Rahman, who agreed to surrender all claims on the Khyber, the Kurram, Sibi, and Pishin.[16]

1898–1914 (Frontier Revolt to Great War)

1914–1918 (First World War)

Madras Regiment War Memorial, Bangalore, mentions lives lost in the North West Frontier by the Madras Sappers

In support of the British war effort, the Indian Army deployed expeditionary forces to the Western Front, East Africa, Gallipoli, Mesopotamia, Sinai and Palestine.[19] India was thus vulnerable to hostile attention from Afghanistan. A Turco-German mission arrived in Kabul in October 1915 with obvious strategic purpose. However, Amir Habibulla abided by his treaty obligations and maintained Afghanistan's neutrality, in the face of internal opposition from factions keen to side with the Ottoman Sultan.[16] Hostilities on the frontier remained local.

1919–39 (between the wars)

Having upheld Afghan neutrality while India was engaged in the Great War, Habibulla sought full independence for Afghanistan in February 1919.[22] Such a reward might have consolidated his rule, but later that month he was murdered.[23]

His successor Amanullah pursued a similar policy by different means. With India's Army de-mobilising, and its Government preoccupied with violent unrest in western India, Amanullah sent his troops across the Frontier in early May. At the end of the month he sought an armistice, which was granted on 3 June.[24] By the Treaty of Rawalpindi signed in August, Afghanistan gained control of its foreign affairs, and in turn, recognised the Durand Line as its border with India.[25]

The short-lived war had long-term consequences in Waziristan, where tribesmen rallied to Amanullah's cause. The western militia posts were abandoned. Many of the militia deserted, taking their modern weapons and joining their fellow tribesmen in attacking the remaining posts. As a result, the Indian Army's Waziristan Force was fully engaged in re-establishing the posts and restoring the lines of communication from November until May 1920. The western base at Wana was finally reoccupied in December 1920.[26]

The long-term plan for control of the district entailed building metalled roads along the lines of communication to a new central base to be established at Razmak. In 1921 work began on the southern road up the Tank Zam from Jandola, under the protection of the Waziristan Force. The following year work on the northern road from the Tochi began at Idak, shielded by the Razmak Force advancing to its objective. The two roads met in 1924, linking North and South Waziristan, and enabling the Indian Army to reorganise both areas as one military district.[27] The Waziristan and Razmak Field Forces then devolved into brigades based permanently at Manzai, Razmak, Gardai, and Bannu.[28]

The following year the few tribal sections in South Waziristan remaining openly hostile were subdued by aircraft alone. For this operation the No. 2 (Indian) Wing of the RAF under Wing Commander Richard Pink was based at Tank and Miranshah.[29] Aircraft comprising the Wana Patrol maintained regular weekly contact with the posts at Wana and Tanai until 1929, when the road from Sarwekai was completed, and the Manzai brigade relocated to Wana.[30]

1940–1947 (Second World War to independence)

From 1940 to 1947, Waziristan and indeed most of the Frontier remained relatively calm[33] and the British were able to divert most of their military effort to more important theatres. There were, however, brief periods of trouble[34] on the frontier, which required the British to continue to maintain a military presence in the region, although for the main they were able to employ mainly garrison or rear-area troops during this time, thus allowing them to free up front-line units for active service elsewhere.

Trained regular troops were desperately needed for the war against Germany and Japan.

Razmak, Wana and Bannu were garrisoned with half-trained units which suffered serious reverses, losing men, rifles, and light machine-guns.[35]

In 1944, a British committee under Lieutenant-General Sir Francis Tuker was set up to review future policy for the region.[36] As part of its findings, it recommended a return to the Curzon Plan, which advocated the withdrawal of all regular forces from tribal territory into outposts, or cantonments, along the administrative border from where they could keep an eye on things. The unadministered districts would then once again become the responsibility of the local militias.[36]

Withdrawal

In 1947, following the independence, the North-West Frontier region became a part of the newly formed nation of Dominion of Pakistan.[37] Based upon the recommendations of the Tucker committee in 1944 (see above), the newly formed Pakistani government decided to move away from the previous British policy of 'forward defence' in the North-West Frontier region and ordered the withdrawal of forces from Waziristan, as it was felt that the presence of a regular military force in the region was provoking tensions with the local tribesmen.[36] This withdrawal began on December 6, 1947 and was successfully completed by the end of the month under the codename Operation Curzon.[37]

2004–Present

Treatment of prisoners-of-war

According to the British officer John Masters, Pashtun women in the North-West Frontier Province (1901–1955) of British India during the Anglo-Afghan Wars would brutally castrate non-Muslim soldiers who were captured, especially British and Sikhs.[38][39] Pashtun women urinated into prisoners' mouths.[40] A method of execution by this is recorded: captured British soldiers were spread out and fastened with restraints to the ground, then a stick, or a piece of wood was used to keep their mouth open to prevent swallowing. Pashtun women then squatted and urinated directly into the mouth of the man until he drowned in the urine, taking turns one at a time.[41][42][43][44][45][46][47] This method of execution was reported to have been practiced specifically by the women of the Afridi tribe of the Pashtuns.[48]

Military formations

Corps of Guides

Corps of cavalry and infantry, raised at Peshawar in 1846 by Lt. Harry Lumsden, and later based at Hoti Mardan.[49] Originally one troop of cavalry and two companies of infantry,[50] the cavalry component later expanded to 2½ squadrons, and the infantry to 4½ companies.[49] Two further infantry battalions were raised in 1917.[51]

From its inception the corps was clothed in native style, with smock, baggy trousers and turban of home-spun cotton, and jerkin of sheepskin. The cotton was dyed grey with a derivative of a dwarf palm known as mazari, while the leather was dyed khaki with mulberry juice. Thus was military dress first coloured khaki for its camouflage effect, and the Guides were the first troops to wear it.[52] The drab colour is well suited to the barren rocky terrain of the North-West Frontier, and all but one of the other Punjab frontier units soon followed the Guides example.[53]

In 1848 the Second Sikh War broke out and the corps won its first battle honours; 'MOOLTAN', 'GOOJERAT', and 'PUNJAUB'. Thereafter the Guides were engaged in most frontier affairs, and from 1857 the corps was included in the Punjab Irregular Force, and subsequently in the Punjab Frontier Force.

That same year the Corps of Guides was ordered to Delhi, covering the 930 km from Mardan in twenty-two days and famously going into action on arrival.[54] They were duly honoured with DELHI 1857.[55]

At the beginning of the Second Afghan War in 1878, the Guides Infantry, together with the 1st Sikh Infantry, PFF, took part in forcing the Khyber, and were prominent in seizing the fortress of Ali Masjid.[56] For this and subsequent efforts the Corps of Guides was awarded the battle honours ALI MASJID, KABUL 1879, and AFGHANISTAN 1878–80.

The last decade of the 19th century saw the Guides employed in the Chitral campaign of 1895, and the Punjab Frontier Revolt of 1897–8. Thus was the corps awarded the battle honours 'CHITRAL', 'MALAKAND', and 'PUNJAB FRONTIER'.

The reforms of 1903 gave to the Queen's Own Corps of Guides (Lumsden's) a subsidiary title in the form of its founders name, but left it numberless. In 1911 the corps took up Frontier Force as its first subsidiary title.[49]

During the First World War the cavalry branch of the Corps was deployed overseas to Mesopotamia, but not before winning a further honour in its own territory; 'N.W. FRONTIER INDIA 1915'.[50]

In 1922 the separation became permanent, when the mounted branch was redesignated the 10th Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides Cavalry (Frontier Force),[57] and the infantry was amalgamated as the 5th Battalion, 12th Frontier Force Regiment (Queen Victoria's Own Corps of Guides).[58]

Sind Frontier Force

Formed in 1846 to guard the southern part of the North-West Frontier. Initially consisting of just the Scinde Irregular Horse, the force under Capt. John Jacob was part of the Bombay Army.[59]

Cavalry

The Scinde Irregular Horse was raised at Hyderabad in 1839 by Capt. Ward.[60]

The regiment earned its first battle honour during the Operations in Scinde 1839-42, when it was awarded the unique distinction 'CUTCHEE'.[61] For the subsequent Scinde Campaign of 1843 it was awarded 'MEEANEE' and 'HYDERABAD'.[62]

A second regiment was raised at Hyderabad in 1846 by Capt. J. Jacob.[63]

During the Second Sikh War both the 1st and 2nd Irregular Horse earned further distinction with 'MOOLTAN', 'GOOJERAT', and 'PUNJAUB'.[64]

A third regiment was raised in 1857,[65] and in 1860 the regiments were designated simply Scinde Horse.[60][63]

The 1st Scinde Horse was deployed to suppress the Sepoy Revolt of 1857–8, and was duly awarded CENTRAL INDIA.[66]

All three regiments were rewarded for their part in the Second Afghan War:-

  • 1st Scinde Horse; AFGHANISTAN 1878-79
  • 2nd Scinde Horse; AFGHANISTAN 1879-80
  • 3rd Scinde Horse; KANDAHAR 1880, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80[67]

Its hard-won honours notwithstanding, the third regiment was disbanded in 1882.[65]

The 1st and 2nd Regiments joined the Bombay line in 1885 as the 5th and 6th Bombay Cavalry respectively.[60][63]

In the reformed Indian Army in 1903 they were likewise redesignated 35th Scinde Horse[60] and 36th Jacob's Horse.[63]

Infantry

Jacob's Rifles, raised in 1858 by Maj. John Jacob.[68]

In 1861 the rifles joined the Bombay line as the 30th Regiment of Bombay Native Infantry.[68]

The regiment was honoured for its part in the Second Afghan War with AFGHANISTAN 1878-80[67]

Designated 130th Baluchis in 1903, the subsidiary title was restored in 1910.[68]

Artillery

The force was augmented with No. 2 Coy. Bombay Native Artillery in 1875, when that company relieved the men of Jacob's Rfles manning the guns of the force headquarters at Jacobabad.[69]

Converted to a mountain battery the following year, the company was accordingly redesignated No. 2 Bombay Mountain Battery.[70]

For its part in the Second Afghan War the battery was awarded the honour AFGHANISTAN 1878-80[67]

Later re-numbered as No. 6 (Bombay) Mountain Battery, and then briefly renamed the Jullundur Mountain Battery, the unit took its place in the reformed Indian Army of 1903 as 26th Jacob's Mountain Battery.[70]

Frontier Brigade

Created in 1846 to police the newly acquired Punjab border against the Pakhtun hill tribes.[71]

The brigade was formed by Lt. Col. Henry Montgomery Lawrence from four regiments of infantry raised in 1846 from veterans of the Sikh forces disbanded after the First Anglo-Sikh War:-

  • 1st Regiment, raised at Hoshiarpur by Capt. J. S. Hodgson.[72]
  • 2nd Regiment, raised at Kangra by Capt. J. W. V. Stephen.[73]
  • 3rd Regiment, raised at Firozpur by Capt. F. Winter.[74]
  • 4th Regiment, raised at Ludhiana by Capt. C. Mackenzie.[75]

The brigades Frontier designation was discontinued in 1847, and the four regiments became Sikh Local Infantry.

For their part in the Second Sikh War the 1st and 2nd (or Hill) regiments were awarded the battle honour 'PUNJAUB'.[72][73]

Transfrontier Brigade

Formed by Col. Henry Lawrence in 1849.

Cavalry

Five cavalry regiments were raised in 1849 and designated Punjab Cavalry:-

  • 1st Regiment, raised at Peshawar by Lt. H. Daly.[76]
  • 2nd Regiment, raised at Lahore by Lt. S. J. Browne.[77]
  • 3rd Regiment, raised at Lahore by Lt. W. G. Prendergast.[78]
  • 4th Regiment
  • 5th Regiment, raised at Multan by Capt. R. Fitzgerald.[79]

Infantry

Five infantry regiments were raised in 1849 from Sikh Darbar regiments disbanded after the Second Anglo-Sikh War, and designated Punjab Infantry:-

  • 1st Regiment, raised at Peshawar by Capt. John Coke.[80]
  • 2nd Regiment, raised at Mianwali by Lt. L. C. Johnston.[81]
  • 3rd Regiment
  • 4th Regiment, raised at Lahore by Capt. George Gladwin Denniss II.[82]
  • 5th Regiment, raised at Leiah by Capt. James Eardley Gastrell.[83]
  • 6th Regiment, originally raised at Karachi in 1843 as the Scinde Camel Corps, and redesignated Punjab Infantry in 1853.[84]

Punjab Irregular Force

Formed in 1851 by combining the Corps of Guides, the four regiments of Sikh Local Infantry, the Transfrontier Brigade, and five batteries of artillery.[59] The units of the force came to be known collectively from its initials as Piffers.

Cavalry

The Punjab Cavalry regiments were redesignated Cavalry, Punjab Irregular Force.[85]

While the 3rd and 4th regiments remained on the frontier,[86][87] the 1st, 2nd, and 5th were employed in suppressing the Sepoy Revolt, and later rewarded with the battle honours DELHI 1857, and LUCKNOW.[55]

Artillery

Batteries were raised from various sources:-

  • No. 1 Horse Light Field Battery, PIF
  • No. 2 Horse Light Field Battery, PIF, raised at Bannu in 1851 by Lt. H. Hammond, from detachments of horse artillery formerly in the service of the Lahore Darbar.[88]
  • No. 3 Horse Light Field Battery, PIF, raised at Dera Ghazi Khan in 1849 by Lt. D. McNeill, from a disbanded troop of horse artillery formerly in the service of the Lahore Darbar.[89]
  • No. 4 or Garrison Company, PIF, raised at Bannu in 1851 by Lt. S. W. Stokes, from the supernumeraries of a Sikh detachment of artillery which had been broken up and drafted into the horse light field batteries.[90]

The Horse Light Field Batteries were generally known as Punjab Light Field Batteries.[88][89]

Later the force gained two further batteries:-

  • Hazara Mountain Train Battery, PIF, in 1856. (Formed at Haripur in 1851, by Lt. G. G. Pearse.)[91]
  • Peshawar Mountain Train Battery, PIF, in 1862. (Formed at Peshawar in 1853 by Capt. T. Brougham.)[91]

Infantry

In 1857 the four regiments of Sikh Local Infantry became Sikh Infantry, Punjab Irregular Force.[92]

The six Punjab Infantry regiments were simply redesignated Infantry, Punjab Irregular Force.[93]

The 4th Regiment of Sikh Infantry served in the Second Burma War, winning the honour PEGU, and then marched 900 km from Abbottabad in thirty days to help suppress the revolt in Delhi, and like the Guides going into action on arrival.[54] There it won also DELHI 1857.[55] The other Sikh Infantry regiments remained in the Punjab.[94]

Leaving the 3rd, 5th, & 6th Punjab Infantry Regiments to guard the frontier, the 1st, 2nd, and 4th were sent to put down the revolt in Delhi.[95] There they earned the honour DELHI 1857. The 2nd and 4th regiments were also rewarded with LUCKNOW.[55]

From 1861 the force included a 7th Infantry Regiment, formed from the Hazara Gurkha Battalion, which later that year joined the Gurkha Line as the 5th Gurkha Regiment.[96]

Punjab Frontier Force

In 1865 the Punjab Irregular Force was renamed the Punjab Frontier Force, and the constituent units were redesignated accordingly.

During peacetime the Force was under the direct control of the Lt.-Governor of the Punjab,[97] but in war it came under the Commander-in-Chief, India.[71]

After the three Presidency armies, it was the most important military force at the Governor-General's disposal. Deployed and engaged in numerous border expeditions, it became the most experienced body of fighting troops in India.[71] Most of the force saw action during the Second Afghan War. The designation Punjab Frontier Force was dropped in 1901, but with the Kitchener Reforms of the British Indian Army two years later, the former distinction was restored to the newly re-numbered regiments in the form of the subsidiary title Frontier Force.

Cavalry

Officially designated Cavalry, Punjab Frontier Force, the earlier style endured, and was restored in 1901.[85]

Four of the regiments were honoured for service in the Second Afghan War:-

  • 1st Punjab Cavalry; AHMED KHEL, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • 2nd Punjab Cavalry; AHMED KHEL, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • 3rd Punjab Cavalry; KANDAHAR 1880, AFGHANISTAN 1879-80
  • 5th Punjab Cavalry; CHARASIA, KABUL 1879, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80[98]

The 4th regiment served on the frontier before being disbanded in 1882.[99]

In 1903 the four remaining regiments were brought into the new Indian Army line by adding twenty to their original numbers:-

Artillery

The two mountain trains were redesignated mountain batteries in 1865.[91]

In 1876 the three Punjab Light Field Batteries were reduced to form two further mountain batteries,[59] and the four were then renumbered according to their relative precedence, and designated Punjab Mountain Batteries, Punjab Frontier Force.[100]

The former Garrison Company was also renumbered in the same sequence to become the No. 5 Garrison Battery, Punjab Frontier Force.[90]

All four mountain batteries were honoured for their part in the Second Afghan War:-

  • No. 1 (Kohat) Punjab Mountain Battery; PEIWAR KOTAL, KABUL 1879, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • No. 2 (Derajat) Punjab Mountain Battery; CHARASIA, KABUL 1879, KANDAHAR 1880, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • No. 3 (Peshawar) Punjab Mountain Battery; AFGHANISTAN 1878-79
  • No. 4 (Hazara) Punjab Mountain Battery; ALI MASJID, KABUL 1879, AFGHANISTAN 1879-80[98]

In 1895 the Derajat and Hazara Mountain Batteries were part of the relief expedition that was rewarded with the honour CHITRAL.[101]

The Frontier Revolt of 1897-8 saw the Kohat and Derajat batteries in action again, earning the honours TIRAH and PUNJAB FRONTIER.[102]

In 1901 the battery numbers were dropped, and they became known by name only.[103] Two years later the four mountain batteries were re-numbered from twenty-one, and the former Piffer batteries were thus:-

Infantry

The four Sikh regiments were simply redesignated Sikh Infantry, Punjab Frontier Force.[92]

The six former Punjab Infantry regiments were officially redesignated Infantry, Punjab Frontier Force, but the earlier style lingered and was restored in 1901.[93]

Although never designated as such, the 5th Gurkha Regiment was brigaded with the force in practice.[71]

All but two of the infantry regiments took the field in the Second Afghan War, and their subsequent awards were:-

  • 1st Sikh Infantry; ALI MASJID, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • 2nd Sikh Infantry; AMED KHEL, KANDAHAR 1880, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • 3rd Sikh Infantry; KABUL 1879, KANDAHAR 1880, AFGHANISTAN 1879-80
  • 1st Punjab Infantry; AFGHANISTAN 1878-79
  • 2nd Punjab Infantry; PEIWAR KOTAL, AFGHANISTAN 1878-79
  • 4th Punjab Infantry; AFGHANISTAN 1879-80
  • 5th Punjab Infantry; PEIWAR KOTAL, CHARASIA, KABUL 1879, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80
  • 5th Gurkha Regiment; PEIWAR KOTAL, CHARASIA, KABUL 1879, AFGHANISTAN 1878-80[98]

Spending cuts after the war resulted in the disbandment of the 3rd Punjab Infantry in 1882.[104]

Spared the same fate, the 4th Sikh Infantry was employed in the expedition of 1895 earning the honour CHITRAL.[101]

The Frontier Revolt of 1897-8 saw the 3rd Sikh and 2nd Punjab Infantries employed in the Tirah Campaign, earning them the honors TIRAH and PUNJAB FRONTIER. The 5th Gurkha Rifles was also awarded PUNJAB FRONTIER.[102]

In 1903 the four Sikh Infantry regiments were brought into the new Indian Army Line by adding fifty to their original numbers:-

The five remaining regiments of Punjab Infantry were consecutively renumbered in the same sequence to become:-

The 5th Gurkha Rifles (Frontier Force) took on the subsidiary title denoting their origin.[96]

Frontier Constabulary

Frontier Corps

Although the units of the Frontier Corps operated under a variety of titles, from Rifles to Militia to Scouts, it was the latter term that came to stand as the generic term, and as new units were formed, it was the word 'Scouts' that became fixed and formalised for the regimental titles. The expression 'Scouts' was a militarily neutral term, conveying neither the "crack" reputation associated with the word 'Rifles' (cf.: 60th Rifles [HM], Gurkha Rifles [IA], etc.), nor the rather second-rate expectations of the term 'Militia'. As General Baden-Powell noted, when he was looking, many years later, for a suitably inspiring term to adopt for his youth movement to train young boys in fieldcraft and other 'para-military' activities, the word Scouts encapsulated a spirit of 'dash' (enthusiasm), expertise - within a defined set of skills- and familiarity with both the local conditions. Similarly, the Scouts of the Frontier Corps understood both the local terrain and the local political minefields, that is, who could be trusted (e.g. the Turi), and who could never (almost invariably, this would mean the Mahsuds); who was currently nursing a grievance and therefore best avoided, and who had just had a claim settled to their satisfaction and might be uncharacteristically friendly.

Like many things British, the development of the units of Scouts into the Frontier Corps was organic, unplanned and initially unsystematic. It began, in the British manner, as an improvisation to meet a need; it was maintained because it guaranteed certain unique skills at an acceptable price (the great Empire may have vaunted its 'pomp and circumstance' to wow the impressionable, but behind the scenes the deciding factor was often simply the acceptability or otherwise to HM Treasury) and only then was the principle regularised, standardised and systemised (cf. the development of the Frontier Force, from irregulars to a corps d'elite).

Chronology

Location

Geographically, the Scouts were located, from north to south, as follows:

Tribal affiliations

The Frontier Corps were not founded expressly on a tribal basis, but the older corps drew their recruits from the local tribal area:

Notable men of the Frontier Corps

See also

References

  1. Also known as the Sittana Expeditions.
  2. The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 2
  3. 1 2 The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 10
  4. Wilkinson-Latham, pp. 3 & 38
  5. 1 2 3 The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 8
  6. Barthorp 2002, p. 14
  7. Barthorp 2002, pp. 15-18
  8. 1 2 Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 9
  9. Barthorp 2002, p. 18
  10. Barthorp 2002, p. 19
  11. Barthorp 2002, p. 29
  12. Barthorp 2002, pp. 30-31
  13. Greenwood, ch.6
  14. Also known as the Sittana Expeditions.
  15. Wilkinson-Latham, p. 14-15
  16. 1 2 The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 11
  17. Includes the Expedition to Kam Dakka.
  18. Includes the action at Laudakai and the capture of the Tanga Pass
  19. Sumner, p. 6
  20. 1 2 Baluchistan
  21. Report of the Battles Nomenclature Committee
  22. Robson, Crisis on the Frontier p. 8
  23. Robson, Crisis on the Frontier p. 9
  24. The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 50
  25. Robson, Crisis on the Frontier pp. 136–7
  26. Official History of Operations on the N. W. Frontier of India 1920-35, p.7
  27. Official History of Operations on the N. W. Frontier of India 1920-35 pp. 29 & 31
  28. Official History of Operations on the N. W. Frontier of India 1920-35 pp. 66 & 67
  29. Stiles p. 105
  30. Official History of Operations on the N. W. Frontier of India 1920-35 p. 48
  31. The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account p. 13
  32. Operations against the Fakir of Ipi.
  33. Barthorp 2002 p. 175.
  34. Indeed, in 1940, Pathan tribesmen launched a big attack on the 1/6 GR who were stationed in Waziristan at the time, although there were no casualties. See Cross & Buddhiman 2002, p. 114.
  35. Chenevix Trench, p.241
  36. 1 2 3 Barthorp 2002, pp. 176–177.
  37. 1 2 Cheema 2002, p. 53.
  38. John Masters (1956). Bugles and a tiger: a volume of autobiography. Viking Press. p. 190. ISBN 9780670194506. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  39. Michael Barthorp, Douglas N. Anderson (1996). The Frontier ablaze: the North-west frontier rising, 1897-98. Windrow & Greene. p. 12. ISBN 1859150233. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  40. George Devereux (1976). Dreams in Greek tragedy: an ethno-psycho-analytical study. University of California Press. p. 237. ISBN 0520029216. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  41. John Masters (1956). Bugles and a tiger: a volume of autobiography. Viking Press. p. 190. ISBN 9780670194506. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  42. Donald F. Featherstone (1973). Colonial small wars, 1837-1901. David & Charles. p. 9. ISBN 0715357115. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  43. Charles Miller (1977). Khyber, British India's North West frontier: the story of an imperial migraine. Macdonald and Jane's. p. 359. ISBN 0354041673. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  44. Donald Sydney Richards (1990). The savage frontier: a history of the Anglo-Afghan wars. Macmillan. p. 182. ISBN 0333525574. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  45. Charles Chenevix Trench (1985). The frontier scouts. Cape. ISBN 0224023217. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  46. H. S. Mahle (1985). Indo-Anglian fiction: some perceptions : including some lectures on Karnadʾs Tughlaq. Jainsons Publications. p. 24. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  47. John Masters (June 13, 2002). Bugles and a Tiger. Cassell Military (June 13, 2002). p. 190. ISBN 0304361569.
  48. Robert E. L. Masters, Eduard Lea (1963). Perverse crimes in history: evolving concepts of sadism, lust-murder, and necrophilia from ancient to modern times. Julian Press. p. 211. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  49. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 964
  50. 1 2 Jackson, p. 85
  51. Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, pp. 968 & 970
  52. Jackson p. 537
  53. Jackson, p. 538
  54. 1 2 Gaylor, p. 171
  55. 1 2 3 4 Roger, p. 55
  56. Jackson, p. 90
  57. Jackson, pp. 542–543
  58. Jackson, pp. 556–557
  59. 1 2 3 Heathcote, p.27
  60. 1 2 3 4 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 941
  61. Roger, p.53
  62. Roger, p. 48-49
  63. 1 2 3 4 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 943
  64. Roger, p.51-52
  65. 1 2 Gaylor, p.89
  66. Roger, p. 56
  67. 1 2 3 Roger, p.48-58
  68. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1517
  69. Jackson p.178
  70. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 975
  71. 1 2 3 4 Robson, The Road to Kabul, p. 59
  72. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1227
  73. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1231
  74. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1235
  75. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1239
  76. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 915
  77. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 917
  78. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 919
  79. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 921
  80. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1243
  81. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1247
  82. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1251.Known as Denniss Ka Pultan; Correspondence of Lt.Col. George Gladwin Denniss II(1821-1862), 1st European Bengal Fusiliers, edited by Peter Chantler, South Molton, Devon, 2010. Denniss was eldest son of Lt.Col. George Gladwin Denniss I(1792-1856), C.B., Bengal Royal Horse Artillery.
  83. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1255. He was of 13th Bengal Native Infantry Regiment, Cadetship applied for 1833/4.
  84. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1259
  85. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, pp.915-921
  86. Jackson, p.96
  87. Jackson, p. 102
  88. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 972
  89. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 973
  90. 1 2 3 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 979
  91. 1 2 3 4 5 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 974
  92. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, pp. 1227-9
  93. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, pp. 1243-59
  94. Jackson, p. 313
  95. Jackson, p. 325
  96. 1 2 Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919, p. 1617
  97. The Punjab then included what later became the North-West Frontier Province
  98. 1 2 3 Roger, p. 57-59
  99. Gaylor, p. 84
  100. Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919 pp. 972-4
  101. 1 2 Roger, p. 63
  102. 1 2 Roger p. 64-5
  103. Gaylor p. 107
  104. Gaylor, p.175
  105. First raised as the Khyber Jezailchis. Chenevix Trench, p. 8
  106. Raised as the Zhob Levy Corps
  107. 1 2 Chenevix Trench, p. 12
  108. 1 2 Chenevix Trench, p. 13
  109. 1 2 Chenevix Trench, p. 14
  110. 1 2 3 4 The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 20
  111. The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p. 46
  112. 1 2 Chenevix Trench, p. 53
  113. Formed from the remnant North Waziristan Militia, Chenevix Trench, p. 51
  114. Formed from the Mohmand Militia and the remnant South Waziristan Militia
  115. 1 2 Chenevix Trench, p.263
  116. Formed by upgrading the Mekran and Chagai Levy Corps
  117. 1 2 3 4 5 Chenevix Trench, p.280
  118. Incorporated the Gilgit Scouts
  119. Formed from Labour Battalions raised in the 1930s
  120. 1 2 3 Chenevix Trench, p.281
  121. The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account, p.19

Other sources

  • Army Headquarters, India (1919). Quarterly Indian Army List January 1919. Calcutta.
  • Barthorp, Michael (1982). The North-West Frontier, New Orchard (first edition, later edition below).
  • Barthorp, Michael (2002). Afghan Wars and the North-West Frontier 1839–1947. Cassell. London. ISBN 0-304-36294-8.
  • Battles Nomenclature Committee (1921). The Official Names of the Battles and other Engagements fought by the Military Forces of the British Empire during the Great War, 1914–1919, and the Third Afghan War 1919. His Majesty's Stationery Office, London.
  • Chenevix Trench, Charles (1985). The Frontier Scouts. Jonathan Cape. London. ISBN 0-224-02321-7.
  • Cross, J. & Buddhiman Gurung (2002). Gurkhas at War. Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1-85367-727-4.
  • Jackson, Maj. Donovan (1940). India's Army. Sampson Low. London.
  • General Staff Branch, Army Headquarters, India. (1926). The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account. Government of India, Central Publication Branch. Calcutta.
  • Nevill, Capt. H.L. (1912). Campaigns on the North-West Frontier. Reprinted by Battery Press, 1999.
  • Official History of Operations on the N. W. Frontier of India 1920-35 Parts I, II and III. Naval & Military Press in association with the Imperial War Museum. ISBN 1843427648.
  • Pervaz Iqbal Cheema (2002). The Armed Forces of Pakistan. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-119-1.
  • Robson, Brian (2004). Crisis on the Frontier: The Third Afghan War and the Campaign in Waziristan 1919–20. Spellmount. Staplehurst, Kent. ISBN 978-1-86227-211-8.
  • Robson, Brian (2007). The Road to Kabul: The Second Afghan War 1878–1881. Spellmount. Stroud, Gloucestershire. ISBN 978-1-86227-416-7.
  • Roger, Alexander (2003). Battle Honours of the British Empire and Commonwealth Land Forces 1662–1991. Crowood Press. Marlborough, Wiltshire. ISBN 1-86126-637-5.
  • Stiles, Richard G. M. (1992). The Story of the India General Service Medal 1908–1935. Terence Wise. Knighton, Powys. ISBN 1-85674-010-2.
  • Sumner, Ian (2001). The Indian Army 1914–1947. Osprey Publishing. Oxford. ISBN 1-84176-196-6.
  • Wilkinson-Latham, Robert (1977). North-West Frontier 1837–1947, Osprey Publishing. London. ISBN 0-85045-275-9.
  • Moreman, Tim (1998). The Army in India and the Development of Frontier Warfare 1847–1947. Macmillan: London.

Further reading

  • General Staff Branch, Army Headquarters, India (1923). Operations in Waziristan 1919-20. Government Central Press. Delhi. Republished jointly by the Naval & Military Press and the Imperial War Museum. ISBN 1-84342-773-7.
  • Marsh, Brandon. Ramparts of Empire: British Imperialism & India's Afghan Frontier 1918-1948 (2016)
  • Official History of Operations on the N. W. Frontier of India 1936–37. Republished jointly by the Naval & Military Press and the Imperial War Museum. ISBN 1-84342-765-6/
  • Greenwood, Adrian (2015). Victoria's Scottish Lion: The Life of Colin Campbell, Lord Clyde. UK: History Press. p. 496. ISBN 978-0-75095-685-7.
  • Stewart, Jules (2007). The Savage Border: The Story of the North-West Frontier. Sutton Publishing. Stroud, Gloucestershire. ISBN 978-0-7509-4452-6/
  • Moreman, Tim (1998). The Army in India and the Development of Frontier Warfare 1847–1947. Macmillan: London.


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