44th (East Essex) Regiment of Foot
The 44th Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment in the British Army, raised in 1741. Under the Childers Reforms it amalgamated with the 56th Regiment of Foot to form the Essex Regiment in 1881.
Colonel Sir Peter Halkett, killed at the Battle of the Monongahela, July 1755
Soldier of 44th regiment, 1742
A French Imperial Eagle similar to that captured at the Battle of Salamanca in July 1812
Arakan, Burma, captured by the regiment in March 1825
56th (West Essex) Regiment of Foot
The 56th Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment in the British Army, active from 1755 to 1881. It was originally raised in Northumbria as the 58th Regiment, and renumbered the 56th the following year when two senior regiments were disbanded. It saw service in Cuba at the capture of Havana in the Seven Years' War, and was later part of the garrison during the Great Siege of Gibraltar in the American Revolutionary War. During the French Revolutionary Wars it fought in the Caribbean and then in Holland. On the outbreak of the Napoleonic Wars the 56th raised a second battalion in 1804 as part of the anti-invasion preparations; both saw service in India and in the Indian Ocean, with the first capturing Réunion and Mauritius. A third battalion was formed in the later years of the war, but was disbanded after a brief period of service in the Netherlands.
Cap badge of the 56th (West Essex) Regiment of Foot
Morro Castle before the British attack, 30 July 1762 by Dominic Serres
Panorama of the Grand Assault on Gibraltar by French and Spanish warships, showing 1 ship exploding, infantry and artillery on land in right foreground, September 1782
Evacuation of the British and Russian troops at the end of the Anglo-Russian invasion of Holland in 1799