PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE ARCHIVE -
MACHINE GUN COMPANY 2ND BATTALION THE KINGS ROYAL RIFLE
CORPS JUNE 1928

This interesting but, to the modern eye rather quaint,
photograph shows members of the Machine-Gun Company in
2nd Battalion, The King’s Royal Rifle Corps (2 KRRC),
mounted in Carden-Loyd carriers at Aldershot in June
1928. Each carrier has a crew of two: a member of the
Battalion wearing a steel helmet behind his machine gun
and a driver from the Royal Tank Corps wearing a beret.
Background
In January 1925, 2 KRRC ceased to form a part of the
Army of Occupation in the Rhineland and moved to
Aldershot, where the Battalion was chosen, from 1 April
1926, to carry out trials as the first mechanised
battalion in the British Army. To quote from the 1931
KRRC Chronicle:
"The Battalion was still organised in a similar
manner to other infantry battalions on home service,
namely, four rifle companies and a machine-gun platoon
of 8 guns in the HQ wing. Early in 1927 a third section
was added to the MG platoon, making 12 guns in all. On
March 1st, 1928, the new infantry battalion organisation
came into force, by which the fourth rifle company was
abolished, and the MG platoon was formed into a MG
company distinct from the HQ wing. At the same time the
MG company was considered to contain four sections of 4
guns each when on war strength. … Soon after the change
the first experimental MG company with Carden-Loyds was
formed in the Battalion, although at the time these
machines were driven [on attachment] by personnel of the
Royal Tank Corps. The rest of the transport was driven
by men of the Battalion."

In 1929 the Battalion moved to Tidworth where the MG
Company received its own Carden-Loyds driven by members
of the Battalion. In the same year a mechanised
anti-tank platoon was formed in HQ wing. The platoon
consisted of two sections, each with two 0.5 inch
Vickers anti-tank machine guns, carried in Carden-Loyds
with trailers for the gun crew. In 1931 a mechanised
mortar platoon of two sections carried in Carden-Loyds,
each with two 3-inch Stokes mortars, was added.
The Battalion’s first experience with mechanisation
ended in June 1932 when it moved to Belfast.
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