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The Palmyra

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The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
The Palmyra
Phone:
+44 1925 414703

Hours:
Sunday10am - 11:30pm
Monday10am - 11:30pm
Tuesday10am - 11:30pm
Wednesday10am - 11:30pm
Thursday10am - 11:30pm
Friday10am - 12:30am (next day)
Saturday10am - 12:30am (next day)


The Royal Regiment of Horse Guards was a cavalry regiment of the British Army, part of the Household Cavalry. Raised in August 1650 at Newcastle upon Tyne and County Durham by Sir Arthur Haselrigge on the orders of Oliver Cromwell as a Regiment of Horse, the regiment became the Earl of Oxford's Regiment in 1660 upon the Restoration of King Charles II. As, uniquely, the regiment's coat was blue in colour at the time, it was nicknamed the Oxford Blues, from which was derived the nickname the Blues. In 1750 the regiment became the Royal Horse Guards Blue and eventually, in 1877, the Royal Horse Guards . The regiment served in the French Revolutionary Wars and in the Peninsular War. Two squadrons fought, with distinction, in the Household Brigade at the Battle of Waterloo. In 1918, the regiment served as the 3rd Battalion, Guards Machine Gun Regiment. During the Second World War the regiment was part of the Household Cavalry Composite Regiment. The Royal Horse Guards was amalgamated with the Royal Dragoons to form the Blues and Royals in 1969.
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