OrionHunter
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Hi guys! Here are some amazing photographs for your album of the British Indian Army in Pakistan and India (Mostly Pakistan).
Enjoy!
Soldiers Home, Rawalpindi 1902
1919. Photograph by Randolph Bezzant Holmes (1888-1973), India, North West Frontier, Indian Army Camel Corps in Miran Shah. From an album, by Neville John Gordon Cameron, 1st Bn Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders.
British officer with his family, Mooltan, 1877.
Football match 1903. (RACE COURSE MURREE).
Officers of the 2nd Batallion, Worcestershire Regiment, Waziristan, British India, 1940. The vehicle is a Crossley "Indian Pattern" armoured car. These were developed in the interwar period for internal security duties in Northern India, based on a Crossley truck chassis. Substantial British and Indian Army forces were occupied in internal security in India during WW2, as the possibility of insurgency (encouraged by the proximity of Japanese forces from 1942) was a substantial concern. "Indian Pattern" armoured cars remained in service until Indian and Pakistani independence in 1947. The model here (like most others) was reconditioned in 1939; in the course of which the worn-out Crossley chassis was replaced with a Chevrolet truck chassis.
Sikh Cavalry Officers, British India Army, attending Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1873 in London, England.
Military encampment in Razmak,1898
Indian soldiers and elephants, Multan, 1898
Continued........
Enjoy!
Soldiers Home, Rawalpindi 1902
1919. Photograph by Randolph Bezzant Holmes (1888-1973), India, North West Frontier, Indian Army Camel Corps in Miran Shah. From an album, by Neville John Gordon Cameron, 1st Bn Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders.
British officer with his family, Mooltan, 1877.
Football match 1903. (RACE COURSE MURREE).
Officers of the 2nd Batallion, Worcestershire Regiment, Waziristan, British India, 1940. The vehicle is a Crossley "Indian Pattern" armoured car. These were developed in the interwar period for internal security duties in Northern India, based on a Crossley truck chassis. Substantial British and Indian Army forces were occupied in internal security in India during WW2, as the possibility of insurgency (encouraged by the proximity of Japanese forces from 1942) was a substantial concern. "Indian Pattern" armoured cars remained in service until Indian and Pakistani independence in 1947. The model here (like most others) was reconditioned in 1939; in the course of which the worn-out Crossley chassis was replaced with a Chevrolet truck chassis.
Sikh Cavalry Officers, British India Army, attending Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1873 in London, England.
Military encampment in Razmak,1898
Indian soldiers and elephants, Multan, 1898
Continued........