As
originally raised, the Volunteers had no Colours. Colours were
granted and presented after the establishment of the Territorial
Force in 1908, which brought Territorial Battalions formally
onto the Regimental Establishment.
The
5th Battalion received its Colours from King Edward VII on 19th
June 1909 at Windsor Castle. These Colours conformed to the
1864 pattern of the 1st East Surreys, that is, King’s
Colour: the Union, with in the centre a roundel bearing the
Regimental title and battalion numeral in Roman surmounted by
a King’s crown. Regimental Colour: the red cross of St
George on a white ground with in the centre a roundel bearing
the Regimental badge – a lion couchant guardant in front
of a castle, the centre tower charged with the arms of Kingston-upon-Thames,
all on an eight-pointed star. This was surrounded by a wreath
of laurels with the united red and white rose at the bottom
centre of the Colour. The battalion numeral, a Roman V, was
placed in the first canton. The King’s Colour bore originally
only the battle honour “South Africa 1900 - 1902”.
The pre-1914 battle honours of the regular battalions, and the
authorised ten Great War Honours on the King’s Colour,
were added after the Great War. These Colours remained with
the battalion after it left the Regimental order of battle and
was converted to Royal Artillery in 1938, and were not laid
up until 1967. The ten selected Second World War Honours were
never added.
 |
Figure
59 |
Miniature
replica Colours, 6th Battalion The East Surrey Regiment
(TA). Presented by members of the Officers’ and
Sergeants’ Messes, Christmas, 1938. Now in the Regimental
Musem, Clandon. |
The
6th Battalion did not receive its Colours until 9th June 1928.
These were presented by Colonel the Lord Ashcombe at the Barracks,
Kingston, and conformed to the pattern of the 5th Battalion
described above, except for the Roman numeral VI in the first
canton of the Regimental Colour and the centre of the King’s
Colour. Again, until 1925 the Regimental Colour bore only the
Honour “South Africa 1900 - 1902”; the pre- 1914
Honours of the regulars and the ten selected Great War Honours
were added in 1925; those of the Second World War were added
in 1957. These Colours were laid up in All Saints’ Church,
Kingston, after the battalion was amalgamated into 4th Queen’s
Surreys, in 1963.
The 7th Battalion, later 23rd London Regiment, received its
Colours from King Edward VII on 19th June 1909 at Windsor Castle.
These Colours conformed to the pattern described under the 5th
and 6th Battalions, but with a number of significant differences.
The King’s Colour bore the title “The London Regiment
(County of London)” on the central roundel, and in the
centre the numeral XXIII. After the Great War, ten selected
Battle Honours, different from those of the remainder of The
East Surrey Regiment were added under the authority of Army
Order 5 of 1925:
FESTUBERT
1915 |
|
LOOS |
SOMME
1916, ’18 |
|
MESSINES
1917 |
CAMBRAI
1917 |
|
YPRES
1918 |
MACEDONIA
1916-17 |
|
GAZA |
JERUSALEM |
|
JORDAN |
 |
Figure
60 |
Regimental
Colour 23rd (County of London) Bn. The London Regiment,
(1909-63). Showing the Bridge House Mark in the centre. |
 |
Figure
81 |
NORTH-WEST
EUROPE
NORTH AFRICA ITALY |
The
Regimental Colour bore, instead of The East Surreys Badge, an
annulet ensigned with a cross pattée and interlaced with
a saltire conjoined at the base (known as the Bridge House Mark).
The numeral XXIII was placed in the first canton. The wreath
was not of laurels, but the union wreath – that is roses,
thistles, shamrocks and daffodils. The Battle Honours of the
Regular East Surrey battalions were never authorised to be added
to these Colours. In 1921 the motto “Loyalty Unites Us”
was added on a scroll across the bottom of the wreath. Until
1957 the Regimental Colour bore only the Honour “South
Africa 1900 - 1902” on a scroll below the motto. An Honorary
Distinction was then added to the bottom centre of the Colour:
the badge of the Royal Tank Regiment with the year dates 1941
– 1945 and three scrolls commemorating the service of
the Regiment as 42nd RTR from 1938 until it rejoined the East
Surrey order of battle in 1956:
These Colours were laid up in St Mary’s Church, Battersea,
after the battalion was amalgamated into 4th Queen’s Surreys,
in 1963.