19th Century
During the Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy suffered from
manpower (recruitment and retention) problems in the Marines,
and so regular infantry units from the British Army often had
to be used as shipboard replacements. In the War of 1812,
escaped Black American slaves were formed into the Corps of
Colonial Marines and fought at Bladensburg. Other Royal Marines
units raided up and down Chesapeake Bay, fought in the Battle
of New Orleans and later helped capture Fort Bowyer in Mobile
Bay in the last action of the war.
In 1855 the Infantry forces were re-named the Royal
Marines Light Infantry (RMLI) and in 1862 the name was
slightly altered to Royal Marine Light Infantry. The
Royal Navy did not fight any other enemy ships after 1850
(until 1914) and became interested in landings by Naval
Brigades. In these Naval Brigades, the function of the Royal
Marines was to land first and act as skirmishers ahead of the
sailor infantry and artillery. This skirmishing was the
traditional function of Light Infantry. For most of their
history, British Marines had been organised as fusiliers. It
was not until 1923 that the separate Artillery and light
Infantry forces were formally amalgamated into the Corps of
Royal Marines.
In the rest of the 19th Century the Royal Marines served in
many landings especially in the First and Second Opium Wars
(1839-1842 and 1856-1860) against the Chinese. These were all
successful except for the landing at the Mouth of the Peiho in
1859, where Admiral Sir James Hope ordered a landing across
extensive mudflats even though his Brigadier, Colonel Thomas
Lemon RMLI, advised against it.
During the Crimean War in 1854 and 1855, three Royal Marines
earned the Victoria Cross, two in the Crimea and one in the
Baltic. The use of the new "torpedoes" (mines) by the Russians
in the Baltic made the campaign there particularly suited to RM
raiding and reconnaissance parties. Landings by the British and
French Navy and Marines in 1854 were repulsed by the Russians
at Petropavlovsk on the Pacific coast of Russia.
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