Unit Name: | 5th Hussar Regiment |
Dates: | 1783-1992 |
Country: | France |
Branch: | French Army |
Type: | Light cavalry |
Role: | Conventional warfare Maneuver warfare Raiding Reconnaissance Shock attack |
Size: | Regiment |
Garrison: | Laon 1980. Couvron 1984. |
Nickname: | Légion de Lauzun (1780) de Lauzun (1783) |
Motto: | Perit sed in armis (they die arms in hand) |
March: | Eugènie |
Battle Honours: | Valmy 1792 Iéna 1806 La Moskova 1812 Solferino 1859 Puebla 1863 Lorraine 1914 Champagne 1915 La Marne 1918 |
Anniversaries: | 24 June 1859 (Solférino) Saint George |
Battles: | American Revolutionary War, the French Revolutionary Wars, Napoleonic Wars, Mexico Expedition, First World War |
Decorations: | Croix de guerre 1914-1918 with palm Médaille d'or de la Ville de Milan |
Notable Commanders: | Duc de Lauzun |
The 5th Hussar Regiment (5e régiment de hussards or 5e RH) was a French Hussar regiment.
The 5th Hussar Regiment was formed under the Ancien Régime. It was the last regiment created under the monarchy. It particularly distinguished itself during the American Revolutionary War.
Lauzun's Legion was made up of infantry, cavalry, and artillery components and were recruited largely from foreign mercenaries. They were posted to Senegal and the West Indies, then served in the American War for Independence. The corps' principal engagements were at White Plains in 1781 and at the Siege of Yorktown in 1781.[4]
The Legion arrived in America and Rochambeau sent Brigadier General Marquis de Choisy with Lauzun's Legion in July 1780, as they marched from Rhode Island to Head of Elk, Maryland. They traveled by water to Alexandria, Virginia and marched to Glouster Courthouse.[5] They spent the winter in Lebanon, Connecticut.
The legion stayed in the United States in Hampton, Virginia, then in Charlotte Court House, Virginia; they were moved to New York in July 1782. They returned to France in May 1783.
In December 1780, two dozen Hussar horsemen deserted and fled from their winter quarters in Lebanon into the woods to the south.[6] The Legion itself may have wintered in Trumbull, Connecticut, according to Huldah Hawley, who said that she cooked for the French for fear that they would kill her because her husband was a known Tory.[7] Lauzun's Legion encamped in Abraham Nichols Park in Trumbull from 28 to 30 June 1781.[8] [9] An advance party was ordered to protect the exposed flank of the main army and stayed 10to ahead of the main French army while encamped in Newtown.[10] The army was marching in the Washington–Rochambeau Revolutionary Route south to reinforce American troops under the command of General George Washington at the Siege of Yorktown.[11] French coins have been found near the site of their camp in Abraham Nichols Park.[12]
The Legion was at Gloucester, Virginia during the Siege of Yorktown. On 4 October 1781, the Legion skirmished at Gloucester with the British Legion, a Loyalist cavalry unit led by Colonel Banastre Tarleton. Tarleton was unhorsed, and Lauzun's Legion drove their opponents back to British lines before being ordered to withdraw by the Marquis de Choisy.[13] [14] [15] The Legion suffered three Hussars killed and two officers and eleven Hussars wounded. Fifty members of Tarleton's unit were killed or wounded, including Tarleton himself.[16]
In December 1782, the Legion moved to Wilmington, Delaware where their cash payroll was stolen but recovered.[17] On 9 May 1783 the Legion embarked from Wilmington on la Goire, la Danaë, l"Astree, l'Active, and Le St. James, arriving at Brest, France around 11 June. On 5 October 1783 the Legion's two artillery companies left Baltimore on the Duc de Lauzun and the Pintade; they arrived in Brest on 10 November.[18]
When the Legion transferred to America, it left behind its two fusilier companies. These companies transferred to the West Indies. In January–February 1782 they accompanied French naval Captain Armand Guy Simon de Coëtnempren, Comte de Kersaint, with his 32-gun flagship Iphigénie and four lesser ships to Demerara, where they met with little opposition. The detachments from the Regiment Armagnac and the Legion launched an assault against the British garrison compelling Governor Robert Kinston and his army detachment from the 28th Regiment of Foot to surrender. As a result, Essequebo and Berbice also surrendered to the French on 1 and 5 February.[19]
The Régiment des Hussards de Lauzun, number 6 (a regular hussar regiment), was officially created on 14 September 1783 in Hennebont, when the Légion de Lauzun des États-Unis returned. Lauzun remained its proprietor until the French Revolution started.
When the revolutionary government declared war on Austria, the regiment fell completely apart as the majority of its officers deserted and handed the regiment's funds, supplies, and records over to the enemy. Subsequent restructuring included: