Royal Marines History
The Corps of the Royal Marines, the infantry land fighting element of the Royal Navy, was formed as part of the
naval service in 1755. However, it can trace its history and origins back as far as 1664, when British
soldiers first went to sea to fight the Dutch.
The First Battle Honour

2nd July 1667, after having burned the English fleet at Chatham, the Dutch landed
a force of marines and attacked Landguard Fort in an attempt to sack Harwich and burn the ships in the harbour.
However, the fort had recently been strengthened and its garrison of 200 marines was able to repel the assaults of
some 2000 Dutch marines, who were forced to retreat. This was the first battle honour of what ultimately became the
Royal Marines.
History - Origins - 1
In history the 'first official' unit of English Naval Infantry, originally called the Duke of York and
Albany's Maritime Regiment of Foot and soon becoming known as the Admiral's Regiment, was formed on 28
October 1664, with an initial strength of 1,200 infantrymen recruited from the Trained Bands of London as part of
the mobilisation for the Second Anglo-Dutch War. History tells us that James (later King James VII & II), the
Duke of York and Albany, Lord High Admiral and brother of King Charles II, was Captain-General of the Company of
the Artillery Garden, now the Honourable Artillery Company, the unit that trained the Trained Bands. It was the
fourth European Marine unit formed, being preceded by the Spanish Marines (1537), the Portuguese Marines (1610) and
the French Marines (1622). It consisted of six 200 man companies and was initially commanded by Colonel Sir William
Killigrew with Sir Charles Lyttleton as Lieutenant-Colonel. Killigrew had commanded an English regiment in Dutch
service and many of the regiment's initial complement of officers had served there as well.
The Holland Regiment (later The Buffs) was also raised to serve at sea and both of these two "Naval" regiments
were paid for by the Treasurer of the Navy by Order of Council of 11 July 1665. They were also different in that
they had no pikemen, every man being issued a musket. The Holland Regiment remained on the naval establishments
until May 1667. The name "Marines" first appeared in official records in 1672.
The Regiment was very distinctive, being dressed in yellow, rather than the Red coat of the other regiments,
until 1685. John Churchill, later the 1st Duke of Marlborough, was the most famous member of this regiment. A
Company of Foot Guards served as Marines to augment the Marines of the Admiral's Regiment during the key sea battle
the Battle of Solebay in 1672. Marlborough's conduct as an Ensign in the Guards during the battle so impressed
James that he commissioned him a Captain in the Admiral's Regiment after four marine captains died during the
battle. Marlborough served eight years in the regiment and led a battalion of the regiment in the land battle, the
Battle of Enzheim in 1674. The regiment was disbanded in 1689 shortly after James II was deposed in the Glorious
Revolution. The Buffs replaced them as third in precedence in the British Army.

Portrait of a Marine officer, by William Dobson, 17th century
Two marine regiments of the army were raised in 1690 and disbanded in 1696. They were the Earl of Pembroke's and
Torrington's, later Lord Berkeley's. Each had twelve companies (948 men) and a Grenadier company (237 men) and
again there were no pikemen, each man carrying a Dutch snaphance musket. In addition each Marine carried a bayonet,
which was unusual at that time. These two regiments participated in an opposed landing at Cork, Ireland on 21
September 1690 under the command of John Churchill, now the Duke of Marlborough.
On the Peace of 1697 two foot regiments raised in 1692, Mordaunt's and Seymour's were converted into Marines. In
1702 six Regiments of Marines and six Sea Service Regiments of Foot were formed for the War of the Spanish
Succession. When on land the Marines were commanded by Brigadier-General William Seymour, formerly of the 4th Foot.
The most historic achievement of these Marines was the capture of the mole during the assault on Gibraltar (sailors
of the Royal Navy captured the Rock itself) and the subsequent defence of the fortress alongside the Dutch Marines
in 1704. In 1713, after the Peace of Utrecht, three of these Regiments were transferred to the Line, where they
became the 30th through 32nd Foot, and the others disbanded. Only four Companies of Marine Invalids remained.
Six Marine Regiments (1st to 6th Marines, 44th to 49th Foot) were raised on 17 November–22 November 1739 for the
War of Jenkins' Ear, with four more being raised later. One large Marine Regiment (Spotswood's Regiment later
Gooch's Marines, the 61st Foot) was formed of American colonists and served alongside British Marines at the Battle
of Cartagena de Indias, Colombia and Guantanamo, Cuba in the War of Jenkins' Ear (1741). Among its officers was
Lawrence Washington, the half-brother of George Washington. In 1747, the remaining regiments were transferred to
the Admiralty and then disbanded in 1748. Many of the disbanded men were offered transportation to Nova Scotia and
helped form the city of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
History - Origins-2 Click Here.......
|