Hi Debs,
I, too, am no military buff, but found this on th'interweb:
My surmise (but that's all it is) is that these are different names for the same regiment, with, perhaps, the odd amalgamation along the way. I guess that would mean that a man could enlist as a Scots Fusilier Guard and be discharged as a Scots Guard if he served either side of 1877 - as if it wasn't difficult enough already!!
Perhaps Johno Jones didn't qualify for a pension for some reason & is therefore missing from the pension records?
Regards, Bridewell
I, too, am no military buff, but found this on th'interweb:
The Scots Guards (1661-present)
History: Raised in 1642 as Argyle’s Regiment (re-raised as Scottish Footguards 1661), brought on to English establishment as Scotch Guards in 1686, (Scots Fusilier Guards in 1831, Scots Guards in 1877.
Motto: Nemo Me Impune Lacessit (No one provokes me with impunity).
History: Raised in 1642 as Argyle’s Regiment (re-raised as Scottish Footguards 1661), brought on to English establishment as Scotch Guards in 1686, (Scots Fusilier Guards in 1831, Scots Guards in 1877.
Motto: Nemo Me Impune Lacessit (No one provokes me with impunity).
Perhaps Johno Jones didn't qualify for a pension for some reason & is therefore missing from the pension records?
Regards, Bridewell
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