Soldiers
from the Indian Army in the Royal Pavilion Hospital.
The Indian Army was
reorganized by Lord Kitchener while he was
commander-in-chief in India (1902-09). Kitchener established an army of 10
divisions (155,000) backed by an internal security force of some 80,000 troops.
About a quarter of the infantry and cavalry troops and almost all artillery
personnel in the army were British.
Two divisions and a cavalry
brigade of the Indian Army was sent to the Western Front in September 1914. Of the
70,000 sent to France, 5,500 were killed and well over 16,000 wounded. As a
result of a suggestion made by King George V, the Royal
Pavilion in Brighton was converted into a hospital for
wounded Indian soldiers. It has been claimed that several soldiers been brought
in unconscious, woke up in the Banqueting Room, and thought they had died and
were in Paradise.
Indian Army was also sent
to Mesopotamia, Gallipoli, Western front, Palestine, East Africa and Egypt.
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