No. of Companies, 24:—

One Colonel-in-Chief, and one en seconde2
Field Officers6
Captains and Captain-Lieutenants48
Subaltern Officers117
Chaplain1
Medical Officers3
Bridge-master1
Adjutants2
Quartermasters2
Gentlemen Cadets48
Non-commissioned Officers322
Gunners460
Matrosses1472
Drummers and Fifers47
————
Total2531
————

The recruiting of Battalions was always carried on by means of parties scattered over England and Scotland, but the men so obtained were liable to be transferred to other Battalions, whose wants might be greater. This system, which still obtains, prevents, and perhaps wisely, any great Battalion, or Brigade esprit de corps. The real esprit should be for the Regiment first, and then for the Battery. The organization, by whatever name it may be called, which links a certain number of Batteries together for special purposes, has never been allowed the official respect which is paid to the Battalion system in the Infantry. In the absence of such respect, and in the knowledge that the men who might receive their instruction in one Brigade or Battalion were liable to transfer to another, immediately on the completion of their drills, is to be found the reason why both in the days of Battalions and Brigades there has been no esprit found strong enough to weaken that which should exist in every Artilleryman's mind for his Regiment at large, instead of for a detail of it. At the same time, the transfer system can be carried to an injurious extent. The instruction of recruits is more likely to be thorough, if the instructor feels that he himself is likely to retain under his command those whom he educates. The consciousness that the "Sic vos non vobis" system is to be applied to himself must diminish to a certain extent his zeal in instruction. And therefore while no one should be allowed to imagine that his own Battery or his own Brigade is to be considered before the Regiment at large, there can be no doubt that the Depôt system for feeding the Regimental wants is far less cruel than that by which volunteers are called, or transfers ordered, from one portion of the Regiment to another.

The establishment of the 1st Battalion varied very much with the signs of the times. Before the Peninsular War, its greatest strength was in 1758, the year after its formation, when it consisted of 13 companies, and a total of 1383 of all ranks. In 1772, it fell to 8 companies, with a total of 437; but during the American War of Independence, it reached a total of 1259, divided into 11 companies. After the peace of 1783, it was again reduced, falling to a total of 648, in ten companies. During the Peninsular War, the average strength of the Battalion was 1420, the number of companies remaining the same; but as only one company of the Battalion served in the Peninsula, its increased numbers were evidently intended to assist in feeding the companies of other Battalions. After Waterloo it was greatly reduced, and for the next thirty years, its average strength was 700, in 8 companies. In 1846, it rose to a total of 842, and on the outbreak of the War with Russia, in which no fewer than five companies of the Battalion were engaged, further augmentations took place, the totals standing during the war as follows: in 1854, 1208; in 1855, 1336; and in 1856, 1468.

The names of the various Captains who have successively commanded the companies of the 1st Battalion, down to the introduction of the Brigade system, and the new nomenclature in 1859, are given in the following pages, as far as the state of the Battalion Records will admit. The list of the various military operations in which they were severally engaged is also given; and the names which the companies received at the reorganization referred to. It has been thought advisable to give this now in a short but complete form, but in studying the various campaigns, the services of the companies alluded to will occasionally receive more detailed notice.

It is to be remembered that the history of these companies is the legitimate property of the Batteries, which represent them. It is hoped that the publication of their antecedents in this way will not merely interest those in any way connected with them, but will create a feeling of pride which will materially aid discipline, and check negligence. It is believed that with such a past to appeal to as many of the Batteries will find they have, a commander will find a weapon in dealing with his men more powerful than the most penal code, for in each line there seems to be a voice speaking from the dead, and urging those who are, to be worthy of those who have been.

No. 1 COMPANY, 1st BATTALION,
Now "F" BATTERY, 9th BRIGADE.

Battles, Sieges, and other Military operations in which this Company has been engaged.
1796Expedition to Saint Domingo.
1809Expedition from Jamaica to Saint Domingo.
1854Expedition to Crimea, and siege of Sebastopol.
List of Captains who have successively commanded the Company, as far back as can be traced, down to introduction of Brigade System, in 1859.
1757Captain Robert Hind.
  *       *       *       *       *
1779Captain David Scott.
1788Captain S. P. Adye.
1790Captain William Cuppage.
1790Captain John Rogers.
1796Captain Wiltshire Wilson.
1797Captain George F. Keohler.
1801Captain Thomas Franklin.
1805Captain Thomas B. P. Hardy.
1814Captain Sir Hy. Onslow, Bart.
1817Captain John Taylor.
1821Captain George Cobbe.
1829Captain George J. Belson.
  *       *       *       *       *
1841Captain Lewis E. Walsh.
1842Captain C. B. Symons.
1848Captain J. W. Collington.
1851Captain George Graydon.
1856Captain George Colclough.
1859Captain S. Freeling.
1859Captain J. F. Pennycuick.

No. 2 COMPANY, 1st BATTALION,
Now "B" BATTERY, 1st BRIGADE.