Description
Description: 4th/19th Prince of Wales’s Light Horse – Bullion Beret Badge.
Maker’s Name: Unknown
Condition: Near Mint
Comments: 4th/19th Prince of Wales’s Light Horse – Bullion Beret Badge. 72mm H x 60mm W.
4th/19th Prince of Wales’s Light Horse is an Army Reserve regiment of the Royal Australian Armoured Corps.
The 4th/19th Prince of Wales’s Light Horse (4/19 PWLH) is a cavalry regiment of the Australian Army. The regiment in its current composition was formed in 1948 when the Citizens Military Force (CMF) was re-raised after the completion of the demoblisation process following the end of the Second World War and it was formed through the amalgamation of three previously existing regiments. Through these predecessor units, 4/19 PWLH can trace its lineage back to the 19th Century and today it is the custodian of the battle honours earned by these units. Between 1960–65 the regiment had a Regular squadron attached to it, although in 1965 this squadron was removed from the order of battle and its personnel used to form a number of other Regular cavalry units that continue to exist in the Australian Army today. These units subsequently served during the Vietnam War and many of their personnel continued to wear regimental accoutrements while in South Vietnam.
Today 4/19 PWLH is a Reserve regiment and forms part of the 4th Brigade, 2nd Division based in Victoria. Recently it was re-roled from an armoured personnel carrier unit operating M113s, to a light cavalry unit operating modified Landrover four-wheel drives. This was in line with the Army wide restructure of the Reserve units of the Royal Australian Armoured Corps (RAAC).
The regiment was formed in 1948 as the 4th/19th Armoured Regiment (Prince of Wales’s Light Horse) as a unit of the CMF through the amalgamation of three other regiments:
* 4th (Corangamite) Light Horse
* 17th (Prince of Wales’s) Light Horse
* 19th Light Horse (Yarrowee Light Horse)
The record of the 4th Light Horse in the 1914–18 war is without equal in the AIF. It was the only Australian unit to see service on all three fronts, Western Front (France), Gallipoli and Palestine and was granted a total of 24 Battle Honours of which 10 are carried on the guidon. Probably the most notable action of the 4th Light Horse was as part of the 4th Light Horse Brigade, the Charge at the Battle of Beersheba on 31 October 1917, where 800 Australian Lighthorsemen took the town and crucial wells of Beersheba. This action is commemorated each year by the serving soldiers of the Regiment.
The regiment assumed its present name in 1949. In 1960, a regular squadron, A Squadron, was added to the regiment. In 1965, this was removed from the regiment’s order of battle — Number 1 Troop was used as the nucleus in the formation of 1st Armoured Personnel Carrier Troop during its deployment to Vietnam, while the rest of the squadron was used to form 2nd Cavalry Regiment. Later 1 APC Sqn would be used to form the 3rd Cavalry Regiment.
In 1992, 4th/19th Prince of Wales’s Light Horse Regiment underwent another major restructure when it was linked with Victoria’s second Armoured Reserve Unit, the 8th/13th Victoria Mounted Rifles. Before this restructure, 8th/13th VMR had it’s HQ and 1 Troop based in Albury, 2 Troop based in Wangaratta and 3 Troop based in Benalla. After the linking, 8/13th VMR became ‘A’ Squadron, 4/19th PWLH.
Today, the regiment maintains a total of two Sabre squadrons. ‘A’ Squadron which is based in Sale and Bandiana and ‘B’ Squadron which is located in Melbourne.
On the 28th April 2008, a Lance Guard consisting of members of 4/19 PWLH and 12/16 HRL was involved in the dedication of the Park of the Australian Soldier in Be’er Sheva, Israel. The park includes a bronze statue of a Lighthorsemen involved in the Charge of Be’er-sheva on 31 October 1917. This event was the first time the Regiment’s Guidon has travelled overseas.
The regiment is proud to have been granted the Freedom of Entry to 4 cities: Melbourne, Kyneton, Beechworth, Traralgon and Sale.