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#1
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7 Gurkha Rifles - Company Signs 1982
Does anyone know the details of the scheme worn by 7th Gurkhas, 5 Brigade, in 1982?
I found a brief mention of this scheme using the forum search. It stated that the Battalion flash was a triangle, and that Companies were indicated by other geometric shapes, square, circle, diamond, bar or cross. Does anyone know the dimensions of these flashes and the Coy. they signify? The photographs I have found indicate they were black felt, though seemingly not in universal use, as some individuals did not appear to have them. Any help would be much appreciated! Regards Paul |
#2
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Hi Paul, can't find anything about the 7th Gurkhas - but the 6th wore white company flashes on the jungle hat - I wonder whether they'd be the same shapes across the Regt's ? eg A company was a triangle B company a square, C company a circle , all (1 1/2 inches x 1 1/2 inches) D company a rectangle 1 1/2 inches by 3/4 inches ). HQ Company was the same square as B company but worn at an angle. Hope this helps Tim
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#3
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Thanks Tim,
Thanks for the very prompt and interesting reply! The photo below (7GR boarding QE2) shows the triangle Battalion sign worn by the chap on the left. The Gurkha just behind him has a diamond flash above the sleeve pocket on his smock. Interestingly the rack number on the butt of his L1A1 SLR is prefixed by a 'D' so tentatively the diamond is D Coy.? I'll dig out a few more photos. Regards Paul |
#4
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7 GR
Perhaps the battalion flash of the black equilateral triangle was worn on the right arm and the company flash, also black felt, was worn on the left arm in the conventional sequence of: A Coy - equilateral triangle, B Coy - square, C Coy- disc and as in the image D (or HQ Coy or Sp Coy) the lozenge. Mike
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#5
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Thanks Mike,
That might be the case. I've found a few photos but they do tend to show that the flashes were not universally worn. Unfortunately most of the photos are either vaguely or incorrectly captioned, so location cannot be used to identify which sub unit. However a horizontal bar and a cross are also shown. I sure I have a photo of a small square in use too. A cross and a horizontal bar (scaling roughly by the size of the pocket button) puts this at 2" x ¾" Regards Paul |
#6
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I could only find one photo showing the black flash. Triangular on the right arm. The other images that I can find show no flash being worn. I suppose that in those days ,flashes weren't a major thing . The paras were the only ones where youd likely find a fully flashed battalion.
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#7
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FS 129
According to The Formation Sign 129 the cross is HQ,
A Coy had a triangle, B Coy the square, C Coy the disc, D Coy the diamond and SP Coy had the black bar. |
#8
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7 GR Company signs
That's clear. Perhaps I should pay more attention to the Formation Sign!
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#9
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I found a few more images with the sign shown. But it doesnt appear to be universal .
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#10
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Quote:
Regards Paul |
#11
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Many thanks to all for taking the time to reply and dig out info for me. I've been intrigued by this scheme for a while. With the obvious exception of DZs it's unusual to see much applied directly to DPM at that period. Thanks to Rolfi for finally nailing it!
These flashes have a WW1 feel about them with the felt and geometric shapes. Just a few more images The RSM of 7GR 'One Ton' Karnabahadur Rai (which confirmed the HQ flash) An Officer of 7GR. I've not noted any DPM rank slides yet, just plain green with black embroidery 7GR Regards Paul |
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