REGIMENTAL  HISTORY  OF  THE

79TH  CAMERON  HIGHLANDERS

1793-1815 

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SITE LINKS

Kevin Riddell

Information Page

Uniforms & Equipment

Napoleonic Drumming

Our Living History

Events 2008

Events of 2009

Events of 2010

Events of 2011

Events for 2012

Current Unit Members

News Page of the 79th 2009

News Page of the 79th 2010

News Page of the 79th 2011

The News Page of the 79th 2012

Gallery

79TH Just for Fun

Friends and Colleagues

79th Regimental Dinners

Contact Us Page

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

One can only imagine Napoleon’s troops as they faced regiments of  kilted Highlanders advancing  towards them across the battlefield, marching to the unique sound of their pipes. Napoleon is  supposed to have called  the Highlands "The devils in skirt's" at the battle of Waterloo

The Cameron's are well known as one of the bravest and most chivalrous of the Highland clans; they  were one of the last clans to support the Stuart's  claim to the British throne. The 79th Cameron   Highlanders  whose origin started back on the 17th August 1793 when Alan Cameron of Erracht  was given  authority to raise the 79th Regiment of Foot. His intention was for the 79th to be the  Clan Cameron regiment with recruits from Lochaber and the Western Islands but he was forced by  competition from other regiments to recruit from all over the Highlands and also from the major cites and towns. In late January 1794 at Stirling Scotland the regiment was inspected at it had 1000 men, and Alan  Cameron  was  appointed  lieutenant  Colonel  Commandant 1, the  unit  was first  called  the    "Camerionian Volunteers"  but was later changed to the Cameron Highlanders. The most distinctive feature of  this new  regiment was its tartan, for  it was  the only tartan not  to be based  on the Government pattern. Tradition states that it was designed by Alan Cameron’s mother who based it  upon a local pattern from Lochaber.

After being sent to Ireland and the  south  of  England in early 1794, and then sent to Flanders in August 1794; where they lost 200 men due to the weather and the camp environment. Later in the  summer of 1795 the Cameron's were sent to the West Indies where Yellow fever and other diseases   decimated them the survivors were drafted into other regiments. As a result of this Alan Cameron  returned in 1798 to start recruitment all over again.

The newly constructed regiment soon  saw action, distinguishing  itself  in the  Netherlands  at  Bergen-op-Zoom in 1799.  This was followed by postings to Malta, Egypt, Minorca, Ireland again    and  Copenhagen. Whilst in Egypt (1801) they saw action at  both Aboukir and Alexandria for  which they were granted the  famous  Sphinx  badge  and the  word  "Egypt"  on it's colours and   appointments; with thanks from the king and parliament.

It was in 1806 that the title Cameron Highlanders was confirmed on the 79th Regiment of Foot.  

In 1808 they joined the British army in Portugal fighting at Corunna in 1809.  Following taking   part in the Walcheren Expedition they  returned  to  the  Peninsula  in 1810. Action was seen at  Busaco, Fuentes d’Onor where their  commanding  officer  was  killed  together with 287 other   casualties,  Salamanca, Burgos, Pyrenees, Nivelle, the Nive and Toulouse. Having returned home they were soon  back in Ireland but in January 1815 they set sail for North America but their ships were driven back by extreme gales and hence this regiment of Peninsular  veterans were  soon dispatched   for  service  in Belgium fighting bravely at Quatre Bras and Waterloo during which time out of  the  original  675   men they sustained 456 casualties with 103 of these brave men being killed. Piper Kenneth MacKay  exemplified this bravery by playing outside the relative security of  a  square to  rally and encourage  his hard-pressed regiment, a  feat  captured  in  a  famous  painting of  the action.  The regiment then remained for a further three years in France as part of the allied occupation of  Paris, they arrived  there on 08th July.

It was in Paris where on the 17th of August, at the special request of the Emperor of Russia,     Sergeant Thomas Campbell of the grenadiers, a man of gigantic stature, with Private John Fraser and Piper Kenneth Mackay, all of the 79th, accompanied by a like number of each rank from the  42nd and 92nd Highlanders, proceeded to the Palais Elysee in Paris, to gratify the Emperor’s desire of   examining the dress and equipments of the Highland regiments. Sergeant Campbell especially was   most minutely inspected by the Emperor, who, says Campbell, " examined my hose, gaiters, legs, and pinched my skin, thinking I wore something under my kilt, and had the curiosity to lift my kilt to my navel, so that he might not be deceived". After asking Campbell many questions, the   Emperor "requested  Lord Cathcart to order me to put John Fraser through the ‘manual and   platoon’ exercise, at which performance he was highly pleased. He then requested the pipers to play up, and Lord Cathcart desired them to play the Highland tune ‘ Cògaidh nà Sith’ (‘war or peace’),  which he explained to the Emperor, who seemed highly delighted with the music. After the  Emperor had done with me, the veteran  Count Plutoff came up to me, and, taking me by the hand, told me in broken English that I was a good and brave soldier, and all my countrymen were. He then pressed my hand to his breast, and gave me his to press to mine.

The regiment survives today, known only as the Highlanders, having been amalgamated with the  Seaforth Highlanders in 1961, and again with the Gordon's in 1993.

It is to the memory of these brave men that the 79th Cameron Highlanders (1815) was formed a number of years ago.

 

 

Any persons interested in joining our re-creation of this proud Highland regiment should contact our  Temporary Membership Secretary Sue  (Unit Secretary)

Tel: Ian or Liz  01622 884849

or

Tel:  Sue (Unit Secretary) 01634 306422

or  cherrytree.house@blueyonder.co.uk

 

Information Page        Our Living History    Kevin Riddell 

Uniforms      Napoleonic Drumming         Events 2008 

Events of 2009       Events of 2010      Events of 2011       Events for 2012    

Current Unit Members

Gallery     79TH Just for Fun     Friends and Colleagues  

News Page of the 79th 2009      Our Living History

News Page of the 79th 2010     News Page of the 79th 2011   

The News Page of the 79th 2012        79th Regimental Dinners     Contact Page