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PVT Mark Zehner
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Interesting article! SGT (Join to see)
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Excellent history share brother David.
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MSgt Gerald Orvis
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Edited 7 y ago
Few Americans are familiar with the destruction of the British army by Afghans in 1842, probably due to the fact that no movies were made about it. More are familiar with the massacre of the 24th Foot (less one company) by the Zulu army at Isandlwanah in South Africa in 1879 (due to the movie "Zulu Dawn" and Rorke's Drift (thanks to the movie "Zulu"). The British forces in the Afghan massacre included one regular British battalion (the 44th Foot - about 700 men not counting authorized wives and children of the soldiers) and several battalions of Indian troops (and their dependents) from the East India Company's private army. Those Indian soldiers that were captured survived by begging or being sold into slavery. Interestingly, the 44th Foot was also present at "Braddock's Defeat" (The Battle of the Monongahela) near Pittsburgh in 1759, where it barely survived (along with the 48th Foot and several American provincial battalions). The 44th was a well-travelled unit which fought in several campaigns of the French & Indian War, the American Revolution, the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimean War and later conflicts. In 1881, the regiment was amalgamated with the 56th Foot to become the Essex Regiment, and after further amalgamation, the regiment's traditions are today carried on by the 3rd Bn, Royal Anglian Regiment.
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