- Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
caption=Cap badge of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry
dates=10 August 1914 - Present
country=Canada
branch=Land Command
type=Line Infantry
role=Mechanized Infantry (two battalions)Light Infantry (one battalion)
size= Four battalions
command_structure=Royal Canadian Infantry Corps
current_commander=
garrison=RHQ -CFB Edmonton 1st Battalion -CFB Edmonton 2nd Battalion -CFB Shilo 3rd Battalion -CFB Edmonton 4th Battalion (LER) - Edmonton, AB
ceremonial_chief=The Rt Hon Adrienne Clarkson PC, CC, CMM, COM, CD
ceremonial_chief_label=Colonel in Chief
colonel_of_the_regiment= Brigadier-General (Ret'd) J.E.L. Gollner, OMM, CD
nickname= "The Pats", "The Patricias", "The Picklies" (Impolite) or "Princess Pat's"
motto=
colors=2nd Battalion entitled to wear US PUC streamer on Regimental Colour
colors_label=Colours
march= Quick - "Has Anyone Seen the Colonel/Tipperary/Mademoiselle from Armentières " (medley) Slow - "Lili Marlene "
mascot=
battles=
notable_commanders=
anniversaries=
identification_symbol_4=PPCLI
identification_symbol_4_label=AbbreviationPrincess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (PPCLI) is an infantry regiment in the
Canadian Forces (CF), belonging to1 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group (1 CMBG). It is one of the most decorated regiments in the CF. It currently consists of 3Regular Force battalions and 1 Reserve Force . The PPCLI is ranked second in the order of precedence for the regular infantry. The regiment's Regimental Headquarters (RHQ) is located atCFB Edmonton in Edmonton, Alberta, with two regular battalions located atCFB Edmonton and one regular battalion atCFB Shilo in Shilo, Manitoba. TheLoyal Edmonton Regiment is the militia regiment and carries the designation "4th Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry".History
History 1914-1938
A new regiment
At the outbreak of
World War I the regular military forces inCanada were small. To help rectify this situation the Patricias, the brain child of Captain Andrew Hamilton Gault, were created almost overnight. Hamilton Gault personally offered $100,000 (approximately two million dollars c. 2006) to finance and equip a battalion as a contribution to Canada's war effort. The government provisionally accepted his offer onAugust 6 ,1914 . Official authorization was granted onAugust 10 . The Canadian Department of Militia and Defence undertook the ongoing upkeep and maintenance of the regiment.Farquhar and Gault
Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Farquhar was instrumental in assisting Hamilton Gault in founding the regiment. Colonel Farquhar, Military Secretary to Canada's Governor General, the Duke of Connaught, asked the Duke of Connaught for permission to name the regiment after his daughter,
Princess Patricia of Connaught . She was pleased to accept this honour and thus the Princess Patricia’s were established.Princess Patricia
Princess Patricia, the Colonel-in-Chief, designed and made by hand the regimental colours to be presented on that occasion. It is a crimson flag with a circular blue centre. In the circle are gold initials V P which stand for Victoria Patricia. The regimental colours became known as the "Ric-A-Ram-Doo". This colour was carried in every regimental action during
World War I .Mobilization
Farquhar and Gault moved expeditiously to mobilize the unit. The day after authority was granted,
August 11 ,1914 , they began an aggressive recruitment campaign. Due to the patriotic outpouring following the August 4 declaration of war, 3000 applicants were recruited within eight days. By August 19 a full complement of 1098 had been selected and the Regiment's first formal parade was conducted on August 23 in Ottawa during which Princess Patricia presented the regimental colours. The Regiment left Ottawa on August 28 and after being delayed due to enemy action in the Atlantic it eventually sailed from Quebec on September 27. [http://www.ppcli.com/history.html]Upon arrival in England in October, the Regiment was first stationed at Bustard Camp on Salisbury Plain near Stonehenge and on November 16 moved to Winchester in order to join the 80th Brigade Expeditionary Force. [http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/e/e043/e001072324.jpg] On December 20, the Regiment departed for the port of Southampton with the rest of the brigade and embarked for France arriving the next day. [http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/e/e043/e001072330.jpg]
Action
The Patricias first took their place in the trenches on January 6, 1915 at a location known to the English-speaking soldiers of the British army as "Dickiebush". [http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/e/e043/e001072343.jpg] On January 8, Lance Corporal Norman Fry [http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=collections/virtualmem/Detail&casualty=1592309] and Lance Corporal Henry George Bellinger [http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=collections/virtualmem/Detail&casualty=456268] of PPCLI became the first Canadian soldiers to be killed in action in World War I. [http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/e/e043/e001072344.jpg]
The last of the Patricias killed in action was likely Corporal Percy Wainwright Carleton on November 10, 1918. [http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=collections/virtualmem/Detail&casualty=482075] The 4th Company of PPCLI entered Mons with other Canadian troops early the next day before the armistice took effect at 1100 hours. [http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/e/e043/e001073410.jpg]
In total 1272 officers and enlisted men of the Patricias were killed and 82 officers and enlisted men were captured during the war. [http://ppcli.com/files/afa_ppcli.pdf]
History 1939-1945
World War 2 began in
Europe on 1 September 1939. The Patricias were mobilized for active service on the 1st of September, 1939. The Regiment sailed from Halifax, Nova Scotia on the 21st of December, 1939 arriving inScotland , the Regiment moved toAldershot Command and spent New Year's Eve in Cove [maybe Hove, near Brighton?] ,England . The Regiment spent three years and a half in theUnited Kingdom , most of which was spent in coastal defence and training in various parts of the country.Fact|date=June 2008On 10 July, 1943 the PPCLI, forming part of the 1st Canadian Infantry Division and the 8th Army, landed in
Sicily . After the short Sicilian campaign, the Regiment landed and fought inItaly from September, 1943 to March, 1945.In March 1945, the Regiment was transferred to North West Europe where they participated in the liberation of the
Netherlands . On the 7th of May, 1945 the Regiment was the first Allied force to enterAmsterdam .On the 1st of June, 1945 a new battalion of the Regiment was authorized to form part the Canadian Pacific Force in the campaign against
Japan . After the destruction ofHiroshima and Nagasaki by atomic bombs and Japan's subsequent surrender on the 15th of August, 1945 the Pacific Force was disbanded. In the meantime, the Regiment's serving battalion in Europe, very much understrength, returned to Winnipeg in October, 1945 and was demobilized.History post-1945
Kapyong
The 2nd Battalion of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry received the
Presidential Unit Citation (Korea) ) and the Distinguished Unit Citation (nowPresidential Unit Citation (US) ) from the President of theUnited States to recognize its stand at Kapyong during theKorean War in April 1951. The Patricias, together with the 3rd Battalion of theRoyal Australian Regiment , which received the same honour, held up the Chinese forces for three days whileUnited Nations forces withdrew to a new defensive line. This citation is the American equivalent of a battle honour. The citation is represented by a blue streamer bearing the name of the action. The streamer is attached to the pike of the regimental colour. The use of this streamer was authorized by King George VI. In addition to the streamer, the Presidential Citation is also worn on the uniform. It is a small royal blue bar with gold trim. Although battle honours are awarded on a regimental basis, and the whole of the PPCLI carries Kapyong on its colours, the distinction of bearing this streamer belongs to the 2nd Battalion PPCLI alone and is carried on the battalion's regimental colour.*
*Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation Following the Korean War, the PPCLI was reduced to two battalions, with the 3rd Battalion being redesignated as 2nd Battalion,
Canadian Guards .In 1970, with the downsizing of the Canadian Armed Forces, the disbanded 1st Battalion,
The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada was renamed as 3 PPCLI.Former Yugoslavia
During the
Yugoslav Wars in the early 1990s, soldiers from the PPCLI served inUNPROFOR , theUnited Nations peacekeeping force inCroatia . 875 members of the 2nd Battalion PPCLI were dispatched to the Medak Pocket in September 1993 to interpose themselves between Serb and Croatian forces. After the Croatians opened fire on the PPCLI troops, they became involved in an intense firefight in which (according to their commander, Colonel Jim Calvin) "27 of [the Croatian Army's] members were killed or wounded during the fire fights with my battle group during the 14 days in Medak." The clash was not much publicised at the time but Calvin and his men were awarded the Commander-in-Chief's Unit Commendation in 2002 for their bravery.The UNPROFOR French Lieutenant-General Jean Cot who was in charge of the operation has stated that:
In 1998, to commemorate the re-opening of
Canada House , a detachment from the 3rd Battalion travelled toLondon , England to mount theQueen's Guard atBuckingham Palace , becoming the first Canadian soldiers in a generation to do so.Afghanistan
In February 2002, the Regiment deployed approximately 700 troops to
Afghanistan as part of the Canadian contribution (Operation Apollo ) toOperation Enduring Freedom . The Regiment also deployed troops as part of theInternational Security Assistance Force .In March 2002 during
Operation Anaconda , a five-mansniper team led by MCpl.Graham Ragsdale from Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry registered more than 20 kills and set the new world record for farthest combat kill with a rifle. Cpl.Rob Furlong set the record by firing a shot from a.50 cal McMillan Tac-50 sniper rifle that killed anal-Qaeda soldier at a distance of 2,430 metres (over 1.5 miles). TheUS Army awarded the team members the Bronze Star for their actions in combat. [ [http://www.macleans.ca/topstories/canada/article.jsp?content=20060515_126689_126689 Maclean's Magazine; May 16, 2006: 'We were abandoned'] ] The shot surpassed the long-standing previous world record of 2,250 metres (over 1.39 miles) set by U.S. Marine Gunnery Sgt.Carlos Hathcock during theVietnam War .On
April 18 ,2002 , soldiers from the 3rd Battalion of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry were involved in a highly publicized case offriendly-fire . The Canadian soldiers were participating in planned nighttime training exercises nearKandahar when Major Harry Schmidt, an American pilot from theIllinois Air National Guard , flew overhead. Believing he was being fired upon by enemy soldiers, Schmidt dropped one 500-poundlaser-guided bomb on the Battalion. Four Canadian soldiers were killed and eight were injured.When the
Canadian Forces returned to Kandahar after being deployed toKabul in 2003, theTaliban began a major offensive and the Canadians were caught in the middle. After a spring in which a record number of attacks against Canadian soldiers had been set, which included six deaths to the CF, the Taliban in Kandahar and Helmand provinces were massing andOperation Mountain Thrust was launched in the beginning of the summer. Canadians were one of the leading combatants and the first fighting in theBattle of Panjwaii took place. Complex mud-walled compounds made the rural Panjwaii district take on an almost urban style of fighting in some places. Daily firefights, artillery bombardments, and allied airstrikes turned the tides of the battle in favour of the Canadians.After
Operation Mountain Thrust came to an end,Taliban fighters flooded back into the Panjwaii district in numbers that had not been seen yet in a single area in the "post Anaconda" war. TheCanadian Forces , which came underNATO command at the end of July, launchedOperation Medusa in an attempt to clear the areas ofTaliban fighters once and for all.The fighting ofOperation Medusa led the way to the second, and more fierce,Battle of Panjwaii .New Colonel-in-Chief
In 2007, the regiment's
Colonel-in-Chief , Countess Mountbatten of Burma, indicated that she wished to step down from the position. Following this announcement, the PPCLI invitedAdrienne Clarkson , formerGovernor General of Canada , to be the regiment's new Colonel-in-Chief. This is the first time that a person who is not a member of the Canadian Royal Family has been invited to take such a position with the Regiment. The new Colonel-in-Chief took up her appointment at a ceremony onMarch 17 ,2007 , at the Regimental Headquarters inEdmonton . [ [http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news/local/story.html?id=44f65e8c-cc5c-42ec-b757-1374a99fd6d5&k=0 Clarkson to be given military honour] Edmonton Journal 04/02/07]Battalions
Armourial description of badge
The cipher of
Princess Patricia of Connaught (VP) enfiling a coronet Or within an annulus gules edged and inscribed PRINCESS PATRICIA'S CANADIAN LIGHT INFANTRY of the first ensigned by the royal crown proper.Regimental names
1914: Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry.
Battle honours
*The Great War:
**Ypres 1915 '17
**Arleux
**Frezenberg
**Hill 70
**Bellewaarde
**Passchendaele
**Mount Sorrel
**Amiens
**Somme 1916
**Scarpe 1918
**Flers-Courcelette
**Hindenburg Line
**Ancre Heights
**Canal Du Nord
**Arras 1917 '18
**Pursuit to Mons
**Vimy 1917
**France and Flanders 1914-18
**Siberia 1918-191
*The Second World War:
**Landing in Sicily
**Leonforte
**Agira
**Sicily 1943
**The Moro
**The Gully
**Liri Valley
**Hitler Line
**Gothic Line
**Rimini Line
**San Fortunato
**Savio Bridgehead
**Naviglio Canal
**Fosso Munio
**Granarola
**Italy 1943-1945
**Appeldoorn
**North-West Europe 1945
*Korea: 1950-53
**Kapyong1. granted ca. 2000 with perpetuation of
260th Battalion, CSEF .Victoria Cross recipients
*Lieutenant
Hugh McKenzie †:7th Canadian Machine Gun Company,Canadian Expeditionary Force :Passchendaele , Belgium:October 30, 1917*Sergeant George Mullin:PPCLI,
Canadian Expeditionary Force :Passchendaele , Belgium:October 30, 1917*Sergeant
Robert Spall †:PPCLI,Canadian Expeditionary Force :Parvillers , France:August 12-13, 1918† - Awarded posthumously
Princess Pat and the Ric-A-Dam-Doo
"Ric-A-Dam-Doo" is a nickname for the original Camp Colours of the PPCLI. Various sources claim that "Ric-A-Dam-Doo" is, a presumably phonetic version of, the Gaelic for "cloth of thy mother" [http://www.army.forces.gc.ca/2PPCLI/RH-Regimental%20Colors.html] ; but it is not clear that this claim has been confirmed by an actual living, fluent speaker of Gaelic. The Ric-A-Dam-Doo was hand-sewn by Princess Patricia and presented to the Regiment. The selection of verses here describes some regimental history, and the origin of the unique title of the song refers to the regimental colours. It has been covered by many Canadian children's musicians, including
Sharon, Lois, and Bram .:The Princess Pat's Battalion :They sailed across the Herring Pond, :They sailed across the Channel too, :And landed there with the Ric-A-Dam-Doo :Dam-Doo, Dam-Doo.
:The Bombers of the Princess Pat's :Are scared of naught, excepting rats, :They're full of pep and dynamite too, :They'd never lose the Ric-A-Dam-Doo, :Dam-Doo, Dam-Doo.
:Old Hammy Gault, our first PP, :He led this band across the sea, :He'd lose an arm, or leg or two :Before he'd lose the Ric-A-Dam-Doo, :Dam-Doo, Dam-Doo.
:And then we came to Sicily. :We leapt ashore with vim and glee. :The Colonel said the Wops are through :Let's chase the Hun with the Ric-A-Dam-Doo, :Dam-Doo, Dam-Doo.
:The Ric-A-Dam-Doo, pray what is that? :'Twas made at home by Princess Pat, :It's Red and Gold and Royal Blue, :That's what we call the Ric-A-Dam-Doo, :Dam-Doo, Dam-Doo.
Order of precedence
Alliances
* -
The Rifles
* -The Royal Australian Regiment
* - The Hauraki Regimentee also
*
The Canadian Crown and the Canadian Forces
*Non-U.S. recipients of U.S. gallantry awards
*Light Infantry
* Sniper
*Paratrooper
* Pathfinder
*Maroon Beret References
* cite book
title = Ducimus, The Regiments of the Canadian Infantry
publisher = Mobile Command Headquarters, Canadian Armed Forces
year = 1992
location = St. Hubert, Quebec, Canada
pages = 248p
isbn = 0-9696421-0-5External links
* [http://www.ppcli.com/ Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry] (Regimental Website)
* [http://www.ppcli.ca/ PPCLI.ca] (Unofficial Forum of the Regiment - Come Find your buddies!)
* [http://www.army.dnd.ca/1PPCLI/ Canadian Department of National Defence - 1st Battalion]
* [http://www.army.dnd.ca/2PPCLI/ Canadian Department of National Defence - 2nd Battalion]
* [http://www.army.dnd.ca/3PPCLI/ Canadian Department of National Defence - 3rd Battalion]
* [http://data4.collectionscanada.ca/netacgi/nph-brs?s1=Princess+Patricia's+Canadian+Light+Infantry+&s13=&s12=&l=20&s9=RG9&s7=9-52&Sect1=IMAGE&Sect2=THESOFF&Sect4=AND&Sect5=WARDPEN&Sect6=HITOFF&d=FIND&p=1&u=http://www.collectionscanada.ca/archivianet/02015202_e.html&r=1&f=G War diaries - Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry: 1914/11/04-1915/10/31]
* [http://data4.collectionscanada.ca/netacgi/nph-brs?s1=Princess+Patricia's+Canadian+Light+Infantry+&s13=&s12=&l=20&s9=RG9&s7=9-52&Sect1=IMAGE&Sect2=THESOFF&Sect4=AND&Sect5=WARDPEN&Sect6=HITOFF&d=FIND&p=1&u=http://www.collectionscanada.ca/archivianet/02015202_e.html&r=3&f=G War diaries - Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry: 1915/11/01-1916/12/31]
* [http://data4.collectionscanada.ca/netacgi/nph-brs?s1=Princess+Patricia's+Canadian+Light+Infantry+&s13=&s12=&l=20&s9=RG9&s7=9-52&Sect1=IMAGE&Sect2=THESOFF&Sect4=AND&Sect5=WARDPEN&Sect6=HITOFF&d=FIND&p=1&u=http://www.collectionscanada.ca/archivianet/02015202_e.html&r=2&f=G War diaries - Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry: 1917/01/01-1918/03/31]
* [http://data4.collectionscanada.ca/netacgi/nph-brs?s1=Princess+Patricia's+Canadian+Light+Infantry+&s13=&s12=&l=20&s9=RG9&s7=9-52&Sect1=IMAGE&Sect2=THESOFF&Sect4=AND&Sect5=WARDPEN&Sect6=HITOFF&d=FIND&p=1&u=http://www.collectionscanada.ca/archivianet/02015202_e.html&r=4&f=G War diaries - Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry: 1918/04/01-1919/01/31]
* [http://www.pikleepost.com PPCLI WOs & Senior NCOs Club (retired)]
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