Officers' metal helmet, 6th Dragoons (Inniskilling)
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Officers' metal helmet, 6th Dragoons (Inniskilling)

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Various British dragoon regiments, plate by Michael Hayes, 1846
The central image depicts the Scots greys, the Inniskilling and the 1st Royal dragoons
The first Europeans settled in the Bay of Natal (today’s Durban) in 1824 to create a trading post. In 1834 the Great Trek began and by 1837 the Voortrekkers were starting to cross the Drakensberg, soon establishing the Republic of Natalia, with Pietermaritzburg as the capital. The British Governor at the Cape, with the support of the British Government, responded by sending a force of 240 men under Captain Thomas Smith to reoccupy Natal. The soldiers landed in May 1842 and made their camp on the site which is now known as The Old Fort. (More details of the early history of the Fort here.)
Drawing of the original Fort (https://grahamlesliemccallum.wordpress.com/2014/12/14/fort-victoria-point-durban/)
The transverse ditch?
The earth fortifications
Southampton Square
Clashes with the Voortrekkers led to the British annexing Natal with a permanent military contingent stationed in Durban. By 1858 the temporary campsite had been replaced with the buildings which remain today. This is quiet and beautiful parkland in busy Durban, with fascinating stories to tell about Durban’s history.
The Old Fort, 1956 (http://salbu.co.za/aWood/AnnalsOfNatal_Wood7.html)
The Barracks, built to accommodate the garrison, continue as private apartments for retired soldiers and their wives.
The barracks of 1858, The Old Fort, Durban
The Barracks of 1858, The Old Fort, Durban
The remains of the farrier’s workshop in the grounds of The Old Fort
Actions of extreme bravery are remembered with modest memorials in the grounds: Dick King and John Ross.
The Grosvenor sank in 1782 off the Wild Coast and although 123 of the 150 crew and passengers survived the shipwreck, only 14 eventually survived to reach Cape Town, 400 miles from the site of the shipwreck. The ship was apparently the richest East Indiaman ever lost, with a cargo of gold and precious stones. The treasure, valued at c.£75,000 at the time, has never been recovered.
A cannon retrieved from a Battery at False Bay, Cape Town, established by the East India Company
And closer to current times this memorial in the grounds remembers the sinking of HMS Natal in the Cromarty Firth in 1915. (Marvellous website here.)
HMS Natal, launch, 1905 (http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-34388839)
The Chapel, the Church of St Peter in Chains, was locked when we visited but is still used for services and popular as a wedding venue in Durban.
The Church of St Peter, in the Old Fort
The churchyard and military cemetery is further away in Wyatt Road.Â
Mass grave of the 27th Inniskilling Fusiliers, Wyatt Road Cemetery
Mass grave of the 27th Inniskilling Regiment, Durban Old Fort
You may be interested in The significance of the Old Fort in Natal’s history The Old Fort The early history of Natal & its settlement The wreck of the Grosvenor HMS Natal (deaths), (postcard above), (links to South Africa) The Wyatt Road Cemetery The Renovation of War Graves in South Africa Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers (here & here) The history of Durban
   The Old Fort in Durban The first Europeans settled in the Bay of Natal (today's Durban) in 1824 to create a trading post.
Cavalry sword carried by the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons dated between 1708-1716 on display at the York Army Museum
The blades were of German design and manufacturing and the hilts were made by a Scottish manufacturer. This gave the sword an excellent blade and proper protection over the hand.
The Government was reluctant to pay back the regiments commander Sir Robert Echlin (who paid for these swords) due to the Scottish hilt maker. This may have been a factor in his switching allegiance to the Jacobite cause in the 1715 rebellion.
Photographs taken by myself
Dragoon - Britain, 6th regiment, Inniskilling Dragoons,1815, Waterloo - Richard Simkin

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6th Inniskilling Dragoons, forget the political now and just listen to the song.