12e Régiment blindé du Canada
The is a Canadian Army armoured regiment based in CFB Valcartier, on the outskirts of Quebec City. The regiment has both a Regular Force and a Primary Reserve unit. The 's abbreviation is 12e RBC.
In the Regular Force regiment, all three Squadrons are based on the LAV family of vehicles and are designated as light armoured cavalry squadrons. Each squadron is currently organized into troops of four vehicles each. C Squadron, 12e RBC is at CFB Gagetown as part of C Squadron, the Royal Canadian Dragoons.
Lineage
- Originated 24 March 1871 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, as the Three Rivers Provisional Battalion of Infantry
- Redesignated 4 June 1880 as the 86th "Three Rivers" Battalion of Infantry
- Redesignated 8 May 1900 as the 86th Three Rivers Regiment
- Redesignated 29 March 1920 as The Three Rivers Regiment
- Converted 15 December 1936 to armour and redesignated as The Three Rivers Regiment
- Redesignated 13 August 1940 as the 2nd Regiment, The Three Rivers Regiment
- Redesignated 1 April 1941 as the 12th Army Tank Battalion,
- Redesignated 15 August 1942 as the 12th Army Tank Regiment
- Converted 1 April 1946 to artillery and redesignated as the 46th Anti-Tank Regiment, RCA
- Converted 19 June 1947 to armour and redesignated the 24th Armoured Regiment
- Redesignated 4 February 1949 as
- Redesignated 19 May 1958 as
- Redesignated 2 May 1968 as the
Lineage chart
Perpetuations
War of 1812
- 8th Battalion, Select Embodied Militia
- Trois-Rivières Division
Great War
- 178th Battalion, CEF
- 259th Battalion, Canadian Rifles, CEF
Operational history
Great War
The 178th Battalion, CEF was authorized on 15 July 1916 and embarked for Britain on 3 March 1917, where, on 16 March 1917, its personnel were absorbed by the 10th Reserve Battalion, CEF to provide reinforcements for the Canadian Corps in the field. The battalion disbanded on 21 May 1917.The 259th Battalion, Canadian Rifles, CEF was authorized on 1 November 1918 and embarked for Russia on 22 and 26 December 1918. There, it served with the 16th Infantry Brigade as part of the Allied Forces in eastern Russia until 19 May 1919. The battalion disbanded on 6 November 1920.
Second World War
The regiment mobilized as The Three Rivers Regiment, CASF, for active service on 1 September 1939. It was redesignated as The Three Rivers Regiment, CAC, CASF, on 13 August 1940. It was converted to armour on 23 November 1940, and to an army tank battalion on 11 February 1941, designated as the 12th Army Tank Battalion, CAC, CASF. It was redesignated as the 12th Army Tank Regiment, CAC, CASF, on 15 May 1942; as the 12th Armoured Regiment, CAC, CASF, on 26 August 1943; and as the 12th Armoured Regiment, RCAC, CASF on 2 August 1945.On 21 June 1941 it embarked for Britain. The regiment landed in Sicily on 10 July 1943 and in Italy on 12 September 1943 as part of the 1st Canadian Armoured Brigade. On 8 March 1945 the regiment moved with the I Canadian Corps to North-West Europe as part of Operation Goldflake. There it fought until the end of the war. The overseas regiment disbanded on 30 November 1945.
Post-war
The Regular Force regiment served on peacekeeping duty in CYPRUS as part of OPERATION SNOWGOOSE from August 1990 to March 1991.Afghanistan
The Regular regiment provided several reconnaissance squadrons and troops and tank crews to the Canadian Task Forces that served in Afghanistan from 2002 to 2014.History
Its origins are in The Three Rivers Regiment, a militia regiment based in Trois-Rivières, a town halfway between Montreal and Quebec City. It originally formed in 1871 as the Three Rivers Provisional Battalion of Infantry. This was a new battalion headquarters that united four previously independent infantry companies that had been formed in 1869 at Trois-Rivières, Rivière-du-Loup-en-Haut, Berthier-en-Haut and Saint-Gabriel-de-Brandon. The battalion was given a number in 1880 and raised to regiment status in 1900.In the First World War, the Canadian militia infantry units were not mobilized, but instead new units were formed from volunteers from the militia and new recruits. The militia units generally became organizations for recruiting, induction and preliminary training. The 86th Regiment recruited the 178th "Overseas" Battalion, CEF, in 1916. The 178th Battalion was broken up in England in 1917, but enough of its former members fought at the Battle of Amiens that the battalion qualified for a battle honour, which the 12e RBC perpetuates.
The regiment also perpetuates the 259th Battalion, Canadian Rifles, Canadian Expeditionary Force.
In the post-war reorganization of the Militia, the 86th Regiment lost its number, becoming simply The Three Rivers Regiment. In the 1936 reorganization, it became an infantry tank unit, The Three Rivers Regiment.
In the Second World War, the regiment mobilized an armoured regiment, which sailed to England in 1941. After two years of training, the 12th Armoured Regiment landed in Sicily, where it supported 1st Canadian Infantry Division throughout Operation Husky almost exclusively and gained a reputation for tenacity and courage. The 12th CAR was the first Canadian armoured regiment to destroy panzers in battle; a Panzer III and one of the Mark IV "Specials" were destroyed by its men at Grammichele on July 15. The regiment also took part Operation Baytown, landings on the Italian mainland in September 1943, as well and were often called upon to support British infantry battalions based on their quiet professionalism. Though the formation it was part of was originally known as 1st Tank Brigade, the name was changed to 1st Canadian Armoured Brigade later on.
After the war, the regiment was given a French name: .
In 1968 the regiment was renamed and expanded to include a new Regular Force regiment in addition to the original Militia regiment. The Regular Force unit is called, and the Militia unit is named . The number in the regimental title commemorates the Second World War unit, 12th Armoured Regiment.
Alliances
- – Royal Tank Regiment
- –
- - 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion
Battle honours
War of 1812
- Non-emblazonable honorary distinction
Great War
Second World War