ROYAL ENGINEERS


The 'Corps of Royal Engineers', usually just called the 'Royal Engineers' ('RE'), and commonly known as the 'Sappers', is one of the corps of the British Army. It provides combat engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces.
The Regimental Headquarters and the Royal School of Military Engineering are in Chatham in Kent. The corps is divided into several regiments, barracked at various places in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and Germany.

Contents
History
Personnel
Royal Engineers units
Territorial Army
Successor units
Equipment
Order of Precedence
Decorations
Victoria Cross
Memorials
External links
References

History


Cap Badge of the Royal Engineers

The Royal Engineers trace their origins back to the military engineers brought to England by William the Conqueror and claim over 900 years of unbroken service to the crown. Engineers have always served in the armies of the Crown; however, the origins of the modern corps, along with those of the Royal Artillery, lie in the Board of Ordnance established in the 15th century. In 1717, the Board established a 'Corps of Engineers', consisting entirely of commissioned officers. The hard work was done by the 'Artificer Companies', made up of contracted civilian artisans and labourers. In 1782, a 'Soldier Artificer Company' was established for service in Gibraltar, and this was the first instance of non-commissioned military engineers. In 1787, the Corps of Engineers was granted the ''Royal'' prefix and adopted its current name and in the same year a 'Corps of Royal Military Artificers' was formed, consisting of non-commissioned officers and privates, to be officered by the RE. Ten years later the Gibraltar company, which had remained separate, was absorbed and in 1812 the name was changed to the 'Corps of Royal Sappers and Miners'.
In 1855 the Board of Ordnance was abolished and authority over the Royal Engineers, Royal Sappers and Miners and Royal Artillery was transferred to the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, thus uniting them with the rest of the Army. The following year, the Royal Engineers and Royal Sappers and Miners became a unified corps as the 'Corps of Royal Engineers'. In 1862 the corps also absorbed the British officers and men of the engineer corps of the East India Company.
In 1911 the Corps formed its Air Battalion, the first flying unit of the British Armed Forces. The Air Battalion was the forerunner of the Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force.
The Corps has no battle honours, but its motto ''Ubique'' (Everywhere), awarded by King William IV in 1832, signifies that it has seen action in all the major conflicts of the British Army. A second motto is ''Quo Fas et Gloria ducunt'' (Where right and glory lead).
The Royal Engineers Museum of Military Engineering is in Gillingham in Kent.
A point of some pride to the Sappers is that their name takes the form Corps of Royal Engineers rather than, for example, Royal Engineer Corps. The distinction, they say, is that every Sapper is Royal in his own right, rather than simply being a member of a Royal Corps (such as the Royal Corps of Signals or the Royal Regiment of Artillery). The famous Royal Engineers A.F.C. have won the FA Cup in 1875 and are considered pioneers of the game.

Personnel


All members of the Royal Engineers are trained combat engineers and all sappers (privates) and non-commissioned officers also have another trade. Women are eligible for all Royal Engineer specialities. They are now eligible for RE Diver, although to date there are none.
Sappers can join the Royal Engineers in one of the following trades:

★ Bricklayer and Concretor

★ Building and Structural Finisher

★ Carpenter and Joiner

★ Command, Communications and Information Systems Specialist

★ Construction Materials Technician

★ Draughtsman (Design)

★ Draughtsman (Electrical and Mechanical)

★ Driver RE

★ Electrician

★ Fabricator (Welder)

★ Fitter (Air Conditioning and Refrigeration)

★ General Fitter

★ Geographical Data Technician

★ Geographical Production Technician

★ Geographical Terrain Analyst

★ Heating and Plumbing Engineer

★ Plant Operator Maintainer

★ Resources Specialist

★ Specialist Equipment Driver/Operator

★ Surveyor (Engineering)
Later, sappers can specialise in further trades and specialities, including:

★ Amphibious Engineer

★ Armoured Engineer

★ Clerk of Works (Construction)

★ Clerk of Works (Electrical)

★ Clerk of Works (Mechanical)

★ Commando Engineer

★ Diver

★ Military Plant Foreman

★ Parachute Engineer

★ Regimental Signals Instructor
Senior NCOs who have passed the appropriate Clerk of Works course can be commissioned as Garrison Engineers (Construction, Electrical or Mechanical).

Royal Engineers units


The Royal Engineers comprises units of both the Regular Army and the Territorial Army. There are also two higher engineer formations:

★ 12 (Air Support) Engineer Brigade (39, 71 and 73 Regiments)

★ 29 (Corps Support) Engineer Brigade (RMRE, 75 and 101 Regiments)
===Regular Army===

★ 21 Engineer Regiment (Armoured)


★ 1st Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 4 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 7 Headquarters Squadron


★ 73 Armoured Engineer Squadron

★ 22 Engineer Regiment (Armoured/Field)


★ 3 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 5 Field Squadron


★ 6 Headquarters Squadron

★ 23 Engineer Regiment (Air Assault) - part of 16 Air Assault Brigade


9 Parachute Squadron


★ 12 (Nova Scotia) Headquarters and Support Squadron (Air Assault)


★ 51 Parachute Squadron


★ 61 Field Support Squadron (Air Assault)

24 Commando Regiment Royal Engineers - (Forming 2007, attached to 3 Commando Brigade, Royal Marines).


59 Commando Squadron (based at Chivenor)


131 Commando Squadron (TA)

★ 25 Engineer Regiment (Northern Ireland)


★ 33 Field Squadron

★ 26 Engineer Regiment (Armoured/Field)


★ 8 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 30 Field Squadron


★ 38 Headquarters Squadron

★ 28 Engineer Regiment (Amphibious/Field)


★ 23 Amphibious Engineer Squadron


★ 42 Field Squadron


★ 45 Field Support Squadron


★ 64 Headquarters Squadron


★ 65 Field Support Squadron

★ 32 Engineer Regiment (Armoured)


★ 2 Headquarters Squadron


★ 26 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 31 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 39 Armoured Engineer Squadron

★ 33 Engineer Regiment (Search)


★ 17 Field Squadron


★ 21 Field Squadron


★ 22 Headquarters and Support Squadron


★ 49 Field Squadron


★ 58 Field Squadron

★ 35 Engineer Regiment (Armoured)


★ 29 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 37 Armoured Engineer Squadron


★ 44 Headquarters and Support Squadron


★ 77 Armoured Engineer Squadron (Assault Engineers)

★ 36 Engineer Regiment (Field)


★ 20 Field Squadron


★ 50 Headquarters Squadron


★ 69 Gurkha Field Squadron, Queen's Gurkha Engineers


★ 70 Gurkha Field Support Squadron, Queen's Gurkha Engineers

★ 38 Engineer Regiment (Field/Armoured)


★ 11 Field Squadron


★ 15 Field Support Squadron


★ 25 Field Squadron


★ 32 Headquarters Squadron

★ 39 Engineer Regiment (Air Support)


★ 10 Field Squadron (Air Support) based at RAF Leeming


★ 34 Field Squadron (Air Support)


★ 48 Field Squadron (Air Support)


★ 53 Field Squadron (Air Support)


★ 60 Headquarters and Support Squadron (Air Support)

★ 42 Engineer Regiment (Geographic)


★ 13 Geographic Squadron


★ 14 Geographic Squadron


★ 16 Survey Support Squadron


Royal School of Military Survey (until 1 April 2006)

★ 59 Independent Commando Squadron Royal Engineers (3 Commando Brigade) ''to form 24 Commando Regiment Royal Engineers in early 2007''

★ 62 Cyprus Support Squadron Royal Engineers (British Forces Cyprus)

★ Royal School of Military Engineering


★ Combat Engineer School



★ 3 Royal School of Military Engineering Regiment




★ 55 Training Squadron




★ 63 Training Support Squadron




★ 67 Training Squadron



★ Instructor Troop



★ Battlefield Engineering Wing




United Kingdom Mine Information and Training Centre



★ Communications Training Wing


★ Construction Engineer School



★ 1 Royal School of Military Engineering Regiment








★ Command Wing



★ Civil Engineering Wing



★ Electrical and Mechanical Wing



National Search Centre


★ Defence Explosive Ordnance Disposal School

★ 170 (Infrastructure Support) Engineer Group (previously Military Works Force)


★ HQ Works Group



★ 530 Specialist Team Royal Engineers (STRE)



★ Royal Engineers Specialist Advisory Team (RESAT)



★ Technical Information Centre Royal Engineers


★ 62 Works Group [water]



★ 519 STRE (Works)



★ 523 STRE (Works)



★ 520 STRE (Water Development)



★ 521 STRE (Water Development)


★ 63 Works Group [electricity]



★ 518 STRE (Works)



★ 522 STRE (Works)



★ 528 STRE (Utilities)



★ 535 STRE (Northern Ireland)


★ 64 Works Group [fuel]



★ 516 STRE (Fuels)



★ 517 STRE (Fuels)



★ 524 STRE (Works)



★ 527 STRE (Works)

★ Diving Training Unit (Army), (DTU(A))

★ 28 Training Squadron, Army Training Regiment (Lichfield)

★ Band of the Corps of Royal Engineers
NB: As part of the restructuring of the armed forces in 2004, it was announced that the engineering support for 3 Commando Brigade would be increased to a full regiment, with 24 (Commando) Engineer Regiment to be formed.
Territorial Army


Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers (Militia) (Field)


★ 100 Field Squadron [Cwmbran/Bristol/Cardiff]


★ 101 Headquarters Squadron [Monmouth]


★ 108 (Welsh) Field Support Squadron [Swansea/Gorseinion]


★ 225 Plant Squadron [Birmingham]

★ 71 Engineer Regiment (Volunteers) (Air Support)


★ 72 (Tyne Electrical Engineers) Field Squadron (Air Support) [Newcastle/Sunderland]


★ 102 (Clyde) Field Squadron (Air Support) [Paisley/Barnsford Bridge]


★ 117 (Highland) Headquarters and Support Squadron [RAF Leuchars]

★ 73 Engineer Regiment (Volunteers) (Air Support)


★ 106 (West Riding) Field Squadron (Air Support) [Sheffield/Bradford]


★ 129 Headquarters and Support Squadron [Nottingham]


★ 350 Field Squadron (Air Support) [Nottingham]


★ 575 (Sherwood Foresters) Field Squadron (Air Support) [Chesterfield]


★ The Jersey Field Squadron [St Helier]

★ 75 Engineer Regiment (Volunteers) (Field)


★ 107 (Lancashire and Cheshire) Field Squadron [Birkenhead/St Helens]


★ 125 (Staffordshire) Field Support Squadron [Stoke-on-Trent]


★ 143 Plant Squadron [Walsall]


★ 201 Headquarters Squadron [Manchester]

★ 101 Engineer Regiment (AOC) (V)


★ 217 (London) Field Squadron [Holloway]


★ 221 Field Squadron [Rochester/Catford]


★ 579 Field Squadron [Tunbridge Wells]

★ 131 Independent Commando Squadron Royal Engineers (Volunteers) [London/Hull/Plymouth/Birmingham] ''to form 24 Commando Regiment Royal Engineers in early 2007''

★ 135 Independent Geographic Squadron Royal Engineers (Volunteers) [Ewell]

Engineer and Logistic Staff Corps (Volunteers)

★ 170 (Infrastructure Support) Engineer Group (previously Military Works Force)


★ 62 Works Group [Regular]



★ 506 STRE (Water Infrastructure)


★ 63 Works Group [Regular]



★ 504 STRE (Power Infrastructure)


★ 64 Works Group [Regular]



★ 503 STRE (Fuels Infrastructure)


★ 65 Works Group



★ 507 STRE (Railway Infrastructure)



★ 509 STRE (Ports Infrastructure)



★ 508 STRE (Works)



★ 525 STRE (Works)



★ 526 STRE (Works)

★ 591 Independent Field Squadron


★ Is the only Royal Engineer TA Unit in Northern Ireland.

Successor units


Several units have been formed from the Royal Engineers.

★ The Air Battalion Royal Engineers (formed 1911) was the precursor of the Royal Flying Corps (formed 1912) which evolved into the Royal Air Force in 1918.

★ The Telegraph Battalion Royal Engineers became the Royal Engineers Signals Service, which in turn became the independent Royal Corps of Signals in 1926.

★ The Royal Engineers were responsible for railway and inland waterway transport, port operations and movement control until 1965, when these functions were transferred to the new Royal Corps of Transport. (See also Railway Operating Division.)

★ In 1908, the Army Postal Corps (formed in 1882) and the Royal Engineers Telegraph Reserve (formed in 1884) amalgamated to form the Royal Engineers Postal Section. This later became the Army Postal and Courier Service and remained part of the RE until the formation of the Royal Logistic Corps in 1993.
The Royal Engineers from just after the Second World War until the early 1970s also had 4 Plant Troops located in the United Kingdom which were RE re-inforced Plant & Engineering troops attached to various Home Commands. The Command Plant Troops were initially set up in the late 40s to clear up the beach defences around the coast and remove the minefields and were equipped with Armoured Bulldozers. In the 1950s once all this work was complete they took responsibility of maintaining and building all Army Ranges and various civil works in support of the civilan population and in support of civilian organisations in the event of natural disasters and crises such as the Torrey Canyon disaster where the Soutnern Command Plant Troop was deployed to the West Country to clean up the mess on the beaches caused by the large volume of oil that floated ashore. The 4 Command Plant Troops were based in various locations across the United Kingdom with Southern Commend Plant Troop initially based in Tidworth, then Perham Down in Wiltshire and eventually Longmoor in Hampshire. The Midlands Plant Squadron was based in Walsall and the Northern Command plant troop was based in Ripon. The other command plant troop was based in Scotland. In Germany there was an Entire Engineering group based in Willich near Dusseldorf called the Military Civilan Plant & Engineering group that had a similar large scale Engineering, Plant and Support role for British Army of the Rhine. Each Command Plant Troop was commanded by an RE Major supported by a Military Plant Foreman.
In 1969, it was decided to amalgamate all of the Command Plant Troops into one large Squadron which had 4 troops, a HQ Troop and a large REME Attachment to it and the Squadron - 66 Plant Squadron became the largest squadron in the entire Royal Engineers, in terms of Plant Engineering and Equipment as well as staff. Its last home was in Longmoor Hampshire - Engineer Stores Depot attached to Longmoor Camp, which was also home to a Field Support Squadron. Longmoor Military Railway was from 1901 until the late 1960s the preseve of the Royal Engineers but subsequently Royal Corps of Transport and eventually Royal Logistic Corps Railway Training Centre. Its role also changed with a much wider role to support Military operations throughout NATO.

Equipment



Chieftain Armoured Vehicle Royal Engineer (ChAVRE)

★ Chieftain Armoured Vehicle Layer Bridge (ChAVLB)
These are being replaced by 66 Armoured Support Vehicles [1] ;

★ 'TROJAN' is a minefield breaching vehicle. It prepares routes, mark safe routes using an Obstacle Marking System, breach complex obstacles and provide short dry and wet gap crossing utilising its excavator arm, earth moving blade and a midi fascine. It will plough through minefields, build trenches and dig defensive ditches

★ 'TITAN' will carry and lay the current range of In-Service Close Support bridges laying them faster, and in a wider variety of terrain conditions, than previous equipment. TITAN can lay a bridge over a 26 metre gap in two minutes, making it the fastest Support Vehicle in the world at this task. This gives commanders a potential battle winning edge and allows them to choose from a more flexible range of armoured vehicles.
Both vehicles which weigh over 60 tonnes and are capable of speeds of up to 56 km/h, are designed to mount and tow the current range of in-service Royal Engineer equipment (PYTHON, AVRE Trailer, Track/Full Width Mineploughs and earth moving blades). They have purpose designed hulls, will incorporate Special to Role equipment and have major assemblies common to the Challenger 2 Main Battle Tank.

Order of Precedence


Decorations


Victoria Cross

The following Royal Engineers have been awarded the Victoria Cross (VC), the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.

Adam Archibald, 1918, Ors, France

Fenton John Aylmer, 1891, Nilt Fort, India

Mark Sever Bell, 1874, Battle Of Ordashu, Ashanti (now Ghana)

John Rouse Merriott Chard, 1879, Rorke's Drift, South Africa

Brett Mackay Cloutman, 1918, Pont-Sur-Sambre, France

Clifford Coffin, 1917, Westhoek, Belgium

James Morris Colquhoun Colvin, 1897, Mohmand Valley, India

James Lennox Dawson, 1915, Hohenzollern Redoubt, France

Robert James Thomas Digby-Jones, 1900, Ladysmith, South Africa

Thomas Frank Durrant, 1942, St. Nazaire, France

Howard Craufurd Elphinstone, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

George de Cardonnel Elmsall Findlay, 1918, Catillon, France

Gerald Graham, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

William Hackett, 1916, Givenchy, France

Reginald Clare Hart, 1879, Bazar Valley, Afghanistan

Charles Alfred Jarvis, 1914, Jemappes, Belgium

Frederick Henry Johnson, 1915, Hill 70, France

William Henry Johnston, 1914, Missy, France

Frank Howard Kirby, 1900, Delagoa Bay Railway, South Africa

Cecil Leonard Knox, 1918, Tugny, France

Edward Pemberton Leach, 1879, Maidanah, Afghanistan

Peter Leitch, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

William James Lendrim, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

Wilbraham Oates Lennox, 1854, Sebastopol, Crimea

Henry MacDonald, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

Cyril Gordon Martin, 1915, Spanbroek Molen, Belgium

James McPhie, 1918, Aubencheul-Au-Bac, France

Philip Neame, 1914, Neuve Chapelle, France

John Perie, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

Claude Raymond, 1945, Talaku, Burma (now Myanmar)

John Ross, 1855, Sebastopol, Crimea

Michael Sleavon, 1858, Jhansi, India

Arnold Horace Santo Waters, 1918, Ors, France

Thomas Colclough Watson, 1897, Mamund Valley, India

Theodore Wright, 1914, Mons, Belgium
Memorials


Royal Engineers World War I memorial at La Ferté-sous-Jouarre

External links



Official Royal Engineers MOD Site

Institution of Royal Engineers

Royal Engineers Association

Royal Engineers Museum - Visitor, Events and Research information

Royal Engineers Museum - Corps Histories

Royal Engineers Museum - Campaign Histories

Royal Engineers Museum - Traditions and Customs (Corps badge, march, song, nicknames etc.)

Royal Engineers Museum - Unit Histories

Royal Engineers Museum - Biographies

Royal Engineers Museum - VCs of the Corps of Royal Engineers and Corps of Royal Sappers and Miners

Royal Engineers Museum - GCs of the Corps of Royal Engineers

Royal Engineers Museum - Military Engineering Histories (Airborne, Airfield Construction, Amphibious, Armoured, Civil Works, Combat, Commando, Field, Military Works, Queen's Gurkha, Royal School of Military Engineering, Tunnelling)

Royal Engineers Museum - Specailist Engineering Histories (Aeronautics (ballooning), Camouflage, Diving, Electrical, Forestry, Gas Warfare, Mechanical Transport, Photography, Postal & Courier, Quarry, Submarine Mining, Survey, Telegraph and Signals, Transportation)

Royal Engineers Band

The Royal Engineers in Halifax: Photographing the Garrison City, 1870-1885

References



1. MOD Oracle website, News (03 Nov 06): "New Armoured Vehicles Join The Army", (accessed 25 Nov 06)



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