These
Colours, presented by Prince George, Duke of Cambridge at Dublin
on 19th May 1848, were the first issued to the Regiment in Queen
Victoria’s long reign. They incorporated the changes laid
down in the 1844 Regulations, in which the First, or King’s
Colour, was to be called ‘The Royal’ (until 1892
when changed to ‘Queen’s), and the second was now
entitled ‘Regimental’. The size of Colours was altered
to six foot flying, by five foot, six inches deep, in 1855.
These Colours appear to be of the six foot six inches flying,
by six foot two inches deep size. The facing Colour of the Regimental
Colour is buff. The central design of this Regimental Colour
has the county title on a red ground, a circle within the Union
Wreath of Roses, Thistles and Shamrocks, and the battle honours
authorised in 1847.
These Colours had a comparatively uneventful life compared with
their famous Sikh predecessors. The Thirty-First arrived in
the Crimea in May 1855, and the new Colours were first carried
in action at the first battle of Sebastopol a month later. After
the Crimea, the Regiment served in the Mediterranean, South
Africa and India, and saw action in the fighting leading up
to the capture of the Taku Forts in China in 1860, and against
the Taiping rebels in 1862.
They were retired in 1864, and laid up in St Mary’s Church,
Huntingdon, three years later over the memorial to those of
the 31st who fell in the Crimea. It was appropriate that they
hung in St Mary’s, as they constituted one of the few
links with the County of Huntingdon, whose name was added to
the Regimental Line Number in 1782. They were netted in 1926.
There is a photograph of these Colours in The East Surrey Journal
for November, 1931, and a reproduction of a contemporary print
in Dino Lemonfides British Infantry Colours. On redecorating
the church in the 1970s, the Church Council decided they no
longer wanted these venerable relics. A faculty was therefore
obtained for their removal. The Colours, still affixed to their
original pikes with spear-heads, were in a bad way, although
the Regimental Colour showed the central device and all battle
honours, save one, in excellent condition.
Great concern and interest was shown by the Sergeants’
Mess of 1st Queen’s, and CSM Paddy Ryan retrieved the
Colours from Huntingdon. The Regimental Colour was restored
at the expense and initiative of the Sergeants of 1st Queen’s
and found a home in their Mess, beautifully cased and displayed,
with the original pike framed above.