The Royal Canadian Hussars (Montreal) |
---|
Badge of the Royal Canadian Hussars |
Active | Late 18th century–present |
---|
Country | Canada |
---|
Branch | Canadian Army |
---|
Type | Light cavalry |
---|
Role | Armoured reconnaissance |
---|
Size | Approximately 200 members |
---|
Part of | 34 Canadian Brigade Group |
---|
Garrison/HQ | Montreal |
---|
Nickname(s) | RCH |
---|
Motto(s) | Non nobis sed patriae (Latin for 'Not for ourselves, but for our country') |
---|
March | "St. Patrick's Day" and "Men of Harlech"[1] |
---|
Engagements | |
---|
Battle honours |
- Defence of Canada – 1812–1815 – Défense du Canada[2]
- South Africa, 1900[3]
- Mount Sorrel
- Somme, 1916, '18
- Flers–Courcelette
- Thiepval
- Arras, 1917, '18
- Vimy, 1917
- Hill 70
- Ypres, 1917
- Passchendaele
- Bapaume, 1918
- Rosières
- Avre
- Amiens
- Scarpe, 1918
- Drocourt–Quéant
- Hindenburg Line
- Canal du Nord
- Cambrai, 1918
- Valenciennes
- Sambre
- France and Flanders 1915–18[3]
- Caen
- Falaise
- The Laison
- The Scheldt
- Breskens Pocket
- The Rhineland
- The Rhine
- Emmerich–Hoch Elten
- Zutphen
- Deventer
- North-West Europe 1944–1945[3]
- Afghanistan[4]
|
---|
Website | rch.ca/en/ |
---|
|
Current commander | LCol Malcolm William Stuart Day, CD [5] |
---|
Colonel-in-Chief | The Princess Royal |
---|
|
NATO Map Symbol |
|
---|
Military unit
The Royal Canadian Hussars (Montreal) (abbreviated as RCH) is an armoured reconnaissance regiment of the Primary Reserve in the Canadian Armed Forces. It is one of the oldest cavalry regiments in North America, tracing a direct history to the Montreal Volunteer Cavalry formed in the late eighteenth century.[6] Its Colonel-in-Chief is Her Royal Highness, the Princess Royal, and its allied regiment is the Queen's Royal Hussars. Its mission consists of supporting the Regular Force in operational deployments, peacetime tasks, and supporting the civilian authorities.[7] [8] [9]