Friday, 25 May 2018

The Royal Canadian Rifles 1841 - 1870

This post is an attempt to collate various bits of information about Thomas Unwin's service in the Royal Canadian Rifles.   To make a start, I have posted a number of image files and text extracts that relate to this regiment.  I have also pasted some extracts from the "Standing Orders 1861" as they relate to a soldier having a wife and children living in the barracks.   These extracts have been chosen with a future narrative in mind. 

Katherine M.J.McKenna, has already written on the subject of Soldier's wives and family in the RCRR. 

My own character is thank God above suspicion”: Soldier’s Wives with The Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment and Social Values in Mid-Nineteenth-Century British North America
Abstract
Abstract:
British military records provide an unexpected source of information on the lives of ordinary women of the popular classes in the mid-nineteenth-century. This article focuses on the women of the Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment, which served in small garrisons across British North America from 1841 to 1870 and included an unusually large number of families. The increasing regulation of the activities and morals of working-class women was characteristic of this era of middle-class reform. Women’s residence in open barrack rooms with soldiers was a cause of great concern, and led to close monitoring of their behaviour.

If you would like a copy of the article to read, please contact me.
Link to McKenna's journal article


"The Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment was formed in 1840-41 precisely to put a stop to the exodus  [dessertion to the USA]. It was not a Canadian regiment, as its name would suggest, but rather a unit of veterans [British] from line regiments, and it was part of the regular army. But its soldiers were not rotated; it was a Sedentary regiment whose companies were placed along the border to watch the United States, of course, but even more so to prevent deserters from going there."   Canadian Military Heritage, Vol II, 1755-1871, Rene Chartrand, 1995

Link to : The Regimental Rogue 


The two companies of the Royal Canadian Rifles Regiment in Newfoundland, about 300 strong, remained until 1870 [when it was disbanded].

Military Garrisons

In 1870 an important chapter in the history of Newfoundland came to a close when the British government withdrew the military garrison at St. John's. European garrisons had been stationed in Newfoundland since the middle of the 17th century. They were usually to be found at St. John's and Placentia, though smaller detachments were stationed from time to time at several other locations.



The Uniform

  The Royal Canadian Rifle Regiment (RCRR) uniform is a true Canadian artefact because the RCRR was created to solve the issue of increased desertion in Canada. Since many soldiers enlisted for service in Canada only to get the free transport to the colony – where they then deserted – the RCRR were older soldiers who were given higher pay as an incentive for them to remain in service to Britain in her colony. 
Link to Source : Murney Tower Museum



Link to : Full Uniform


I am also attempting to track down Thomas' Unwin's service file.

Temple View NZ
Fosters Road
Temple View, Hamilton,
07-847 4326 
T-Sat, 9am-4 pm, W, Th 7pm-9pm



Royal Canadian regiment of rifles : service documents of soldiers containing particulars of age, birth- place and trade or occupation of enlistment, a record of service, including any decorations and the reason for discharge to pension, 1830-1880 


Volume 1194 Tolmie - Young, 
Collection/Shelf : British Film,  
Film: 861901 
DGS: 8229462 
_____________________________________________________________
Standing orders of the Royal Canadian Rifles, issued May 1861 [electronic resource].
Language(s): English
Published: [Montreal? : s.n.], 1861
Subjects: Canada. > Armée canadienne. > Royal Canadian Rifles.
Canada. > Canadian Army. > Royal Canadian Rifles.
Note: Tables.
ISBN: 0665533098
Full view (original from University of Alberta)







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