Riahen wrote:This is amazing! I found a website with a PDF about the history of the regiment and the personnel lists for the period. Bingo. The birth family of the person I believe owned this album was the Walker family in Goldsborough (near Knaresborough) and I found in the PDF that the regiment had a Knaresorough troop with two members of the Goldsborough Walkers in it. One, William Walker, was the Seargent Major and another was John Walker, a private.
Now if I could just figure out whether the uniform is a Seargent Major or a private I'd have an identity for this fella!
Amazing how fast this has come together!
Ria, a troop sergeant major at that time had 4 stripes and a crown on his right upper arm and his uniform was closer to the quality of an officers with a degree of silver lace around his pill box forage cap and collar and cuffs, and silver frogging on his Dolman jacket. The regimental sergeant major had a similar badge, but with the stripes inverted and worn on the lower right cuff (it meant that on promotion the same badge could be used, but merely moved and re-positioned). As these things seem to be absent I believe it likely that he is a Private.
I enclose a photo of a Yorkshire Hussars officer’s part uniform, comprising of full dress jacket, waistcoat and forage cap. The uniform is dark blue melton cloth edged with silver braid and lacing, this pattern was introduced around 1843. The full dress jacket retains all 121 of it silver buttons and the pink quilted lining of the jacket. The waistcoat is decorated with silver braid work to the front with a plain silk back and white polished cotton liner. The Officer’s forage cap has oakleaf lace around the body with piping to the crown. The leather peak is embroidered denoting the rank of Lieutenant. I also an enclose a photo of a sabretache.
The Yorkshire Hussars were formed in 1794, one of the Volunteer Yeoman Cavalry units intended to defend Britain against a feared invasion by the revolutionary French, also be called upon to deal with civil disorder within the country.
Originally the The 2nd or Northern Regiment of West Riding Cavalry they were designated Hussars in 1819.
In 1864 the tile "Princess of Wales's Own" was conferred on the regiment. The regiment fought in the South African War of 1899, providing the 9th Company of the 3rd Battalion of Imperial Yeomanry and, along with men of the Yorkshire Dragoons, formed the 66th Company
From 1908, the regiment's four squadrons (converted from 8 Troops in 1896) were based at Leeds, York, Knaresborough, & Middlesborough.