Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Liverpool Irish, Leicestershire Yeomanry, Ayrshire Yeomanry, 5th Regiment Royal Artillery, 101st Regiment Royal Artillery, Royal Horse Artillery, 1st Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, 4th Regiment Royal Artillery, 39th Regiment Royal Artillery, 29th Commando Regiment Royal Artillery, King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery, 106th Regiment Royal Artillery, Lanarkshire Yeomanry, 103rd Regiment Royal Artillery, 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, 8 HAA Regiment Royal Artillery, 100th Regiment Royal Artillery, 7th Parachute Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, 105th Regiment Royal Artillery, 92nd Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery, 16th Regiment Royal Artillery, 40th Regiment Royal Artillery, 26th Regiment Royal Artillery, 104th Regiment Royal Artillery, Forfar and Kincardine Artillery, 32nd Regiment Royal Artillery, 19th Regiment Royal Artillery, 47th Regiment Royal Artillery, 14th Regiment Royal Artillery, 12th Regiment Royal Artillery. Excerpt: The Liverpool Irish is a unit of the British Territorial Army, raised in 1860 as a volunteer corps of infantry. Conversion to an anti-aircraft regiment occurred in 1947, but the regimental status of the Liverpool Irish ceased in 1955 upon reduction to a battery. Since 1967, the lineage of the Liverpool Irish has been perpetuated by "A" Troop, in 208 (3rd West Lancashire) Battery, 103rd (Lancashire Artillery Volunteers) Regiment. The 103rd has provided individual reinforcements to regular artillery regiments equipped with the AS-90 and L118. Liverpool's large Irish community formed the 64th Lancashire Rifle Volunteer Corps on 25 April 1860, one of many volunteer corps raised in Lancashire in response to heightened tension with France. The Liverpool Irish became a volunteer (later territorial) battalion of the King's (Liverpool Regiment) in July 1881. As such, it fought in the...