Royal Western Australia Regiment Explained

Unit Name:The Royal Western Australia Regiment
Dates:1960–Present
Command Structure:Royal Australian Infantry Corps
Size:Two battalions
Type:Line infantry
Role:Light role
Garrison:11th/28th Battalion – Karrakatta
16th Battalion – Karrakatta
Ceremonial Chief Label:Colonel-in-Chief
Colonel Of The Regiment:Chris Dawson (Governor of Western Australia)
Motto:Vigilant
Identification Symbol Label:Unit colour patch
Identification Symbol 2:Cameron of Erracht
Identification Symbol 2 Label:Tartan
Identification Symbol 4:RWAR
Identification Symbol 4 Label:Abbreviation
March:11th/28th Battalion – Sussex by the Sea/Colonel Bogey
16th Battalion – March of the Cameron Men

The Royal Western Australia Regiment is a reserve infantry regiment of the Australian Army consisting of two battalions, the 11th/28th Battalion and the 16th Battalion. The regiment was raised in July 1960 as part of the reorganisation of the Australian Army Reserve through the amalgamation of the three existing infantry regiments in Western Australia:

Initially formed as a single battalion, in 1966 it was reorganised into first two, then three battalions. Two of these, the 11th Battalion and 28th Battalion were reduced to single companies in 1977, then amalgamated into the single 11th/28th Battalion in 1987.

The regiment perpetuates the traditions of three battalions of the Australian Imperial Force:

Battle honours

11th/28th Battalion

16th Battalion

Alliances

Regimental march

Sussex by the Sea (1907) by English composer William Ward-Higgs was adopted as regimental march.[1] [2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: COLOR CEREMONY . . XLIX . 17,181 . Western Australia . 30 May 1930 . 6 April 2023 . 6 (HOME FINAL EDITION) . National Library of Australia.
  2. News: WHY NOT WALTZING MATILDA? . . 2878 . Western Australia . 14 February 1954 . 6 April 2023 . 7 . National Library of Australia.