THE BERKELEYS AND THE GLOUCESTERSHIRE YEOMANRY
By Phil Legg
The Berkeley family took a particular interest in local part-time military forces, including the yeomanry. This was partly because of their role as Lords Lieutenant of Gloucestershire which they held on a number of occasions. The 5th Earl of Berkeley, for example, Frederick Augustus (1745-1810), was Lord Lieutenant from 1766 to 1810. He helped to keep the Gloucestershire yeomanry cavalry going through a period of peace in 1802 when government support waned, and to re-establish yeomanry troops in 1803, for which he received a letter of thanks from the Speaker of the House of Commons. In 1810 the Prince of Wales and his brother, the Duke of Sussex, stayed at Berkeley Castle and visited Gloucester with a yeomanry escort, returning via Bristol similarly accompanied.
In 1840, while still Lord Segrave, he raised a new squadron for the regiment from among his tenants at Berkeley which was put under the command of his younger brother, Captain George Charles Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley (1800-1881), who had previously been commissioned in the Coldstream Guards and the 82nd Regiment of Foot. The Gloucestershire Yeomanry Cavalry was granted the ‘Royal’ prefix in 1841 and was styled ‘Hussars’ from 1847 with the title Royal Gloucestershire Hussars. Social standing was very important in the yeomanry which recruited mainly from landholders and tenant farmers, and which was officered by nobility and gentry. This became evident when a bitter quarrel developed between Earl FitzHardinge and his brother Grantley in 1847. The Earl has been called “a thorough-paced cad”[i] and “a rotter”[ii]. He tried unsuccessfully to get Grantley replaced as the officer commanding the Berkeley Squadron. He also instructed any of his tenants who were in that squadron to resign immediately and encouraged political opposition to Grantley as MP for West Gloucestershire. There was widespread condemnation of FitzHardinge’s actions and much sympathy for Grantley, although widely regarded as an unpleasant man himself, with one tenant referring to Fitzhardinge as “a snake in the grass”[iii]. Grantley eventually resigned from the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars in protest and the Berkeley Squadron lost a lot of its members.
The 2nd Baron Fitzhardinge was the eldest son of Admiral Maurice Berkeley, 1st Baron FitzHardinge, and nephew of the 1st Earl FitzHardinge. He had served as a captain in the Royal Horse Guards and later became Honorary Colonel and then Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant of the Royal South Gloucestershire Light Infantry Militia. By 1864 he was also a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars, with whom he had a very positive relationship. He may now be regarded as “an unsuccessful Dairy Shorthorn breeder”[iv] but he did much to keep the regimental standards up during the 1870s when bad harvests understandably affected the attendance of farmers with the yeomanry. Fitzhardinge became the commanding officer of the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars in 1884. In 1886 Lord Wolseley commented in an official letter: “The efficiency of this fine Regiment reflects very great credit on Colonel Lord Fitzhardinge, and his Officers and Non-commissioned Officers”[v].
[i] B Falk, The Berkeleys of Berkeley Square (Hutchinson & Co; London, 1944), p216
[ii] T Scotland, Lennox & Freda (Michael Russell; Norwich, 2010), p452.
[iii] W Wyndham Quin, The Yeomanry Cavalry of Gloucestershire and Monmouth (Westley’s Library; Cheltenham, 1898), p.163
[iv] Scotland, p.33
[v] Wyndham Quin, p.229