61st Cavalry (India)

The 61st Cavalry Regiment of the Indian Army is a horse-mounted unit of the modern Indian Army. Although believed to be the largest operational mounted cavalry unit remaining in existence, the regiment primarily performs a ceremonial role.

History

At the time of Indian Independence in 1947, the only mounted cavalry remaining in service were the President's (formerly Viceroy's) Body Guard and several units that had formed part of the Imperial Service State Forces, provided by the Indian Princely States. Upon the integration of the State Forces into the regular Indian Army in 1951, the remaining horsed cavalry units were reorganized and reconstituted into the Gwalior Lancers, the Jodhpur/Kachhawa Horse, the Mysore Lancers, and B Squadron, 2nd Patiala Lancers. In May 1953 it was decided to amalgamate these separate horsed cavalry units into a single regiment. On 1 October 1953 the "New Horsed Cavalry Regiment" was established at Gwalior, with Lt. Col. Phulel Singh of the Jammu and Kashmir State Forces as its first Commandant. The new regiment was re-designated as the "61st Cavalry" in January 1954.

Modern role

Today the 61st Cavalry is one of the limited number of unmechanised mounted cavalry regiments in the world, alongside such units as the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment and the 11th Cavalry Regiment of the Moscow Military District.[1] While a number of armies still maintain mounted units these are generally intended for parade and other ceremonial purposes. The Army of the People's Republic of China maintains operational mounted cavalry for frontier duties but these are believed to be of only squadron size.[2]

While primarily employed on ceremonial occasions, the 61st Cavalry Regiment can be deployed for internal security or police roles if required.[3] The last publicized occasion on which the regiment saw active military service was when it undertook mounted patrol work during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. On Republic Day each year the 61st Cavalry and the President's Body Guard parade in full dress uniform in New Delhi, in what is probably the largest assemblage of traditional cavalry still to be seen in the world.

Recruitment

The regiment recruits Rajputs, Marathas and Kaimkhanis in equal numbers. This ratio was established on Prime Minister Jawarharalal Nehru's instructions.

Sports

The regiment has a strong polo playing tradition, producing some of India's best polo players. Members of the regiment have won the Arjuna award – India's highest award for outstanding sportsmen – four times for polo and five times for equestrian events.

Notable servicemen

Captain Manjinder Singh Bhinder died off-duty in Delhi's Uphaar cinema fire tragedy in 1997 while attempting to guide theatre-goers to safety.[4] [5][6]

References

  1. Cossack Cavalry Acting in Russian Films Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.. CNN (transcript), Aired 10 March 2002 - 11:58ET
  2. Global Times 20 November 2009 and Xinhua News Agency 22 August 2011
  3. Dallal, Henry (2008). Horse warriors: India's 61st Cavalry. Pageantry & performance series. Great Britain: Henry Dallal. ISBN 9780954408312.
  4. Rajendra Sharma (9 November 1999). "Lost son, refused pension". The Tribune. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  5. "An officer and a gentleman". The Indian Express (PTI Report). 15 June 1997. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  6. Chander Suta Dogra (22 September 2014). "Veterans, war widows battle for benefits". The Hindu. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  • Encyclopædia Britannica (2008). "61st Cavalry". Encyclopedia of India: comprehensive coverage of India into the 21st century. New Delhi: Encyclopædia Britannica (India) Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 9788181310088.
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