Fovant Badges

The Post Office Rifles (left) and Devonshire Regiment badges

The Fovant Badges are a set of regimental badges cut into a chalk hill, Fovant Down, near Fovant, in southwest Wiltshire, England. They are located between Salisbury and Shaftesbury on the A30 road in the Nadder valley; or some 12 mile (800 m) southwest of Fovant. They were created by soldiers garrisoned nearby, and waiting to go to France, during the First World War, the first in 1916,[1] and are clearly visible from the A30 road which runs through the village. Eight of the original twenty remain, and are scheduled ancient monuments and recognised by the Imperial War Museum as war memorials.[1] Further badges have been added more recently.

The Fovant Badge Society holds an annual Drumhead Service which is attended by the Australian High Commissioner, local mayors and members of parliament. These services fund the upkeep of the badges.

Construction

After the outlines were cut into the grass-covered hillsides, they were refilled with chalk brought from a nearby slope, up to 50 tons per badge.[1] The badges took an average fifty men six months to complete.[1]

The badges

From left: The Royal Corp of Signals, The Wiltshire Regiment and The London Rifle Brigade

Current badges

Reading left to right (north-east to south-west), the badges at Fovant are:[2]

  1. Royal Wiltshire Yeomanry (only central part remaining)[3]
  2. 6th (City of London) Battalion, London Regiment (City of London Rifles) (claimed to be the first of the badges cut here)[4][5]
  3. Australian Commonwealth Military Forces (the largest, 51m×32m)[6]
  4. Royal Corps of Signals (cut in 1970 to commemorate the Corps' 50th anniversary)[7]
  5. Wiltshire Regiment (added in 1950)[8]
  6. 5th (City of London Battalion, London Regiment (London Rifle Brigade)[9]
  7. 8th (City of London) Battalion, London Regiment (Post Office Rifles)[10]
  8. Devonshire Regiment[11]

Centenary badge

To commemorate the centenary of the first badge, created in 1916, a badge in the shape of a poppy, to represent the poppies that grew in “Flanders Fields” has been created.[12]

Lost badges

Except for the YMCA badge, which resided on the hillside for a long time, several of the other lost badges were short lived, small and crudely constructed.

  1. YMCA[13] (in 2005, it was announced it is intended to allow this non-military badge to fade away. The figure faded away soon after and cannot be seen today)[14]
  2. Royal Army Service Corps[15]
  3. Royal Army Medical Corps, possibly on the site of where Royal Wiltshire Yeomanry is now.[16]
  4. Machine Gun Corps[17]
  5. Queen Victoria Rifles[18]
  6. 35th Training Battalion[19]
  7. 'Dingo'[20]
  8. Post Office Rifles 'POR' letters, possibly there prior to the current Post Office Rifles figure.[21]
  9. 7th Battalion of the City of London Regiment (there is also a figure for this Regiment in Sutton Mandeville)[22]
  10. 9th Royal Berkshire Regiment[23]
  11. 37th Training Battalion[24]
  12. Voluntary Aid Detachment[25]

Nearby badges

Two as-yet unrestored military badges at Sutton Down (Royal Warwickshire Regiment and the 7th Battalion, The London Regiment) and an outline map of Australia on Compton Down are also looked after by the Society.[13] Along with YMCA's badge at Fovant, these three figures were allowed to grass over in 2005. The Australian map and 7th Battalion badge faded soon after, but the shape of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment badge could still be made out in the trees around it as of 2008.

On Lamb Down, to the side of the A36 within only miles distance of Fovant, is a cutting of the Australian Commonwealth Military Force badge, it is less detailed than the one at Fovant. It was cut in 1916–1917.

Additionally, near Barford St Martin, at the eastern end of the Fovant Encampment, was the Finsbury Rifles Badge. Not much is known about this figure.[26]

Also about 20 miles distance of the Fovant Badges is another military hill figure, though not of a badge: the Bulford Kiwi, which resides in the grounds of the Bulford Camp. Ground views of the Bulford Kiwi can be seen from Tidworth Road, although the kiwi is obscured from this road. The kiwi can be seen from several miles back, in the opposite direction, however, but again obscured.

Nearby

Fovant Down is also the site of Chiselbury Iron age hillfort. This makes Fovant Down one of several downs in Wiltshire to contain both a hill fort and a hill figure (another example is Bratton Downs, home to both the Bratton Castle hill fort and the Westbury White Horse directly beneath it)

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Countryfile, BBC, 6 Nov 2011
  2. Bing aerial imagery, accessed 7 November 2011
  3. "Royal Wiltshire Yeomanry Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  4. "The 6th City of London Regiment Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  5. Capt E.G. Godfrey, The "Cast Iron Sixth": A History of the Sixth Battalion London Regiment (The City of London Rifles), London: Old Comrades' Association, 1935//Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2002, ISBN 1-84342-170-4.
  6. "Australian Imperial Force Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  7. "Royal Corps of Signals Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  8. "Wiltshire Regiment Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  9. "London Rifle Brigade Badge". Fovant Badges Society. 13 May 1915. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  10. "Post Office Rifles Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  11. "Devonshire Regiment Badge". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  12. "Wiltshire hillside unveiling for giant carved Flanders Poppy". BBC. 28 October 2016.
  13. 1 2 "Unrestored Memorials". Fovant Badges Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  14. "History of the Fovant Badges". Fovant Badge Society. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  15. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  16. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  17. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  18. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  19. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  20. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  21. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  22. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  23. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  24. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  25. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/lostfov.htm
  26. http://www.hows.org.uk/personal/hillfigs/lost/hurd.htm

External links

Coordinates: 51°03′12″N 1°58′42″W / 51.0534°N 1.9783°W / 51.0534; -1.9783

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