
Private C. reported
for inattention, laying out his kit for inspection after defaulter’s drill. (The
Brigade of Guards Magazine, November
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Sergeant Drummer of the King’s Own (Royal Lancaster Regiment) holding the colours in 1886. |
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The Queen’s Colour is based on the Union Flag and is the senior; the drum major is correctly holding it in his right hand. The Regimental Colour is backed in the facing colour of the regiment, in this case, blue because it is a royal regiment, this is the junior colour and its proper place is on the left. Any confusion over ‘army right’ is caused by perspective, as we look at the picture we would say that the Queen’s Colour is on the left but to the army it is on the right.
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1889).
The
Adjutant, reading report, “Private C.”
Private C.
“Sir.”
The
Adjutant, “inattention, laying out his kit!
Drill
Sergeant, “Yes sir, I reported him, he had his cloth brush on the right instead
of his polishing brush.”
Private C.
“Thankee sir, to allow me to speak.”
Adjutant,
“Yes.”
Private C.
“Beg pardon sir, I thought the cloth brush was the senior!”
The supposed humour of
this comes from the fact that seniority runs throughout the army, from the top
generals to the private and his brushes. Every regiment had its place in the
order of seniority and the pecking order was rigidly enforced. Cavalry were
senior to infantry, and artillery was above them both.
In a battalion the eight
companies were lettered in order ‘A’ to ‘H’. Within a company the privates had a
seniority based on length of service. When on guard the junior soldiers would go
on sentry duty first and the old soldiers last, that way if there were any extra
duties to be done it was the young soldiers who did them. The oldest soldier
might not have to stand sentry at all.
This pecking order
between men of equal rank runs right through the rank structure, a well known
example of this, thanks to the film ‘Zulu’ was at the defence of Rorkes Drift
during the Zulu War, although Lieutenant Bromhead commanded the infantry company
he was not in overall command of the post because the Royal Engineer Lieutenant
Chard had the senior (older) commission.
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Sergeant Firth V. C. of the 1st Battalion, Duke of Wellington’s Regiment. |
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The Victoria Cross is the highest medal anyone can be awarded and being the senior is worn on the right of any other medals, but that is the right of the wearer, to us the viewer it is on the left.
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Having established the seniority the
army then places the senior, on parade anyway, on the right. Getting back to our
men on guard, when they mount double sentry, that is two men on the same post
(i.e. either side of a doorway) the senior soldier would stand on the right and
give the orders to his partner, when to patrol, salute etc.
Every Guard and line infantry
battalion had two colours carried by the senior subalterns (lieutenants), the
Queen’s Colour, which is the senior, and the Regimental Colour, when on parade
together the Queens Colour would be on the right. The battalion formed up in
line would have ‘A’ Company on the right and the rest lettered down to ‘H’ on
the left.
I have used these examples, the
sentries, the colours, and the senior companies to illustrate the confusion
caused by ‘army right’. To the general public looking at these three examples
from the front, they are on the left as they view it. So what is left to the
world at large is right in the army. Medals too have an order of seniority, with
the most important being worn on the right, on the right of the wearer that is,
so to someone looking at the soldier they appear on the left.