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The Battalion was formed in September 1941 from volunteers from across the Army at Hardwick in Derbyshire and commanded by Lt Col GW Lathbury. From 500 interviewed by one company only 100 were accepted for training. Before leaving for North Africa with the 1st Parachute Brigade intense parachute and field exercises were conducted to prepare the new battalion for combat.

On the 12th November 1942 the 3rd Battalion captured the German airfield at Bone in Tunisia, the first British Army battalion level parachute operation. They were relieved by 1st Army; thereafter the battalion fought as line infantry for the rest of the campaign. The parachute battle cry "Waho Mohammed" allegedly began with the 3rd Battalion, stemming from this period in North Africa. It was used as a recognition cry when operating in close country and was adopted by the 1st Brigade and the other parachute battalions.


During the parachute assault on the Primosole Bridge in Sicily on 13th July 1943 the 3rd Battalion drop was scattered alongside that of the 1st and 2nd Battalions. A two-day hard fought action developed at the bridge until they were relieved by the sea-landed Durham light Infantry. The Battalion lost 250 all ranks killed, wounded and missing, one man in two. On 9th September the Battalion landed by sea at Taranto Harbour Italy and moved north up the east coast to Barletta, with little opposition. By early December they returned to the UK to prepare for the invasion of Europe.


After 15 cancelled operations following D-Day the 3rd Battalion dropped at Arnhem on 17th September  during the MARKET-GARDEN airborne offensive mounted in Southern Holland. Part of C Company reached the Arnhem Bridge and joined Lt Col Frost’s 2nd Battalion. The rest were blocked with heavy casualties and fell back to Oosterbeek where the 1st British Airborne Division was destroyed in an epic nine day stand. Ground forces from XXX Corps failed to link up. The remnants of the battalion were withdrawn to England.


During the first post-war deployment in Palestine beginning in 1945 the remnants of 2 and 3 PARA were combined to form the 2/3rd Parachute Battalion, which was disbanded in June 1948. A new 3 PARA was resurrected in July 1948, formed from the 7th (light Infantry) Parachute Battalion.


During 1951-4 the Battalion conducted internal security operations in the Egypt Canal Zone before deployment on anti-EOKA operations with 1 PARA on the Island of Cyprus in 1956. One of their first acts was to arrest Archbishop Makarios, the head of the Greek Orthodox Church in Cyprus and an EOKA supporter. Counter-terrorism operations followed in the Paphos Forest before returning to the UK in December.


3 PARA conducted the first and last battalion parachute assault since the War when it attacked El Gamil airfield west of Port Said on 5th November 1956, during the Suez Crisis. The drop was conducted under fire and the assault and reduction of the Egyptian coastal defences before the amphibious landings cost the Battalion four killed and three officers and 29 men wounded.


3 PARA formed part of the 16th Parachute Brigade intervention force that was air landed at Amman in Jordan in July 1958 to counter an Egyptian/ Iraqi threat. They departed in October. Two internal security tours in Bahrain followed between 1961-2 and again in 1964-5.


In May 1964 counter-insurgency operations against dissident tribesmen occurred with 45 Commando in the Radfan Mountains north of Aden. The Wadi Dhubson previously considered impregnable to Europeans was taken and 200 square miles of mountainous terrain and villages dominated in an internal security operation that cost the battalion one killed and seven wounded.


Other internal security duties followed in 1965 when the Battalion flew to British Guiana to assist in preparing for Independence in February 1966. 3 PARA was then sent on an accompanied tour to Malta in 1968-70, primarily to cover the withdrawal of British forces from Libya.


The first Operation BANNER tour to Northern Ireland started in January 1971, to be followed by 12 more deployments between 1971 to September 2004, amounting to 81 months active service. Sergeant Michael Willets was awarded a posthumous George Cross for outstanding gallantry during the first tour.


A UN tour in Cyprus between May-October 1972 preceded the presentation of new Colours to the Battalion, with the other regular battalions and 4 PARA in 1974. With the disbandment of 16th Parachute Brigade in 1977, 3 PARA deployed to Osnabruck with the newly formed 5th Field Force in BAOR Germany. It returned to the UK in 1980 to join 8th Field Force as the in-role parachute battalion.


During the Falkland Islands conflict 3 PARA deployed with 3 Commando Brigade and landed in the north near Port San Carlos at the end of May 1982. The Battalion marched across the Island to Teal Inlet and on to the final battles around Port Stanley. It attacked Mount Longdon during the night of 11/12th June and ejected the Argentinean defenders after 10 hours bloody fighting that cost the battalion 22 men and earned Sergeant Ian MacKay a posthumous VC. Both 2 and 3 PARA were among the first troops to enter Port Stanley after the Argentinean surrender on 14th June.


In 1984 the Battalion completed a six month tour to Belize and a further UN tour with UNFICYP in Cyprus two years later. By 1989 they were back in Northern Ireland for a 26-month residential tour lasting until 1991. Four years later the Battalion took up the Army’s Mountain and Arctic Warfare role with the AMF(L) spending four winters in Norway. C Company group meanwhile reinforced the 1 PARA Group with the 5th Airborne Brigade operational deployment to Kosovo in 1999.


After the demise of 5 Airborne Brigade in 1999, 3 PARA came under command of  16th Air Assault Brigade and was included as one of the battle groups deployed on Operation TELIC in 2003, the second Anglo-American war against Iraq.  The Battalion crossed into Iraq on 21st March and played its part securing the Rumaylah and West Qurnah oil fields in southern Iraq. It entered Basra with the 7th Armoured Brigade in early April and later moved to secure the southern half of Maysan Province, prior to departure at the end of May.


The next active deployment was Afghanistan in 2006, when 3 PARA formed the nucleus of a 1,200 strong all-arms Battle Group with 16th Air Assault Brigade. This was a fiercely contested tour against Taliban insurgents during which three Battalion soldiers were among 14 soldiers killed and 45 wounded in the Battle Group. Corporal Bryan Budd was awarded a posthumous VC and Corporal Mark Wright a posthumous GC, both from 3 PARA.


In 2008 3 PARA returned from yet another intense six month tour in Afghanistan with the 16th Air Assault Brigade.


Northern Ireland Tours:


Op BANNER                    Jan-Jun 71              6 Months

Op BANNER                    Mar- Jul 73             4 Months

Op BANNER                    Feb-Jun 74              4 Months

Op BANNER                    Apr-Aug 76             4 Months

Op BANNER                    Feb-Jun 78              4 Months

Op BANNER                    Dec 80-Apr 81        4 Months

Residential                     Feb 89-Feb 91        26 Months

Op BANNER                    Feb-Jun 92              4 Months

Spearhead                      Mar-Jun 92             3 Months

Op BANNER (URB)          Jul 97-Jan 98          6 Months

Op BANNER (ETB)           Dec 99-Jun 2000    6 Months

NIBAT 4                          Dec 01- Jun 02      6 Months

NIBAT 3                          May-Sep 04           4 Months


Commanding Officers:


1941-2        Lt Col GW Lathbury, DSO, MBE.

1942-3        Lt Col RG Pine-Coffin, DSO, MC.

1943-4        Lt Col EC Yeldham.

1944           Lt Col JAC Fitch.

1944-5        Lt Col RTH Lonsdale, DSO.

1945-6        Lt Col WPD Brandish.

1946-7        Lt Col GP Rickcord, DSO.

Amalgamated with 2 Para Bn Dec 47 to become 2nd/3rd Para Bn

1947-8        Lt Col TH Birkbeck, DSO


Disbanded Jun 48


3 PARA formed Jul 48 from 7th (Light Infantry) Para Bn


1948-50          Lt Col PD Maud, MBE

1950-3            Lt Col WD Tighe-Wood, MC

1953-4            Lt Col VW Street, DSO, OBE, MC

1954-7            Lt Col PE Crook, DSO, OBE

1957-60          Lt Col M Forrester, DSO, OBE, MC

1960-2            Lt Col RC Gibbs, DSO, MC

1962-5            Lt Col AH Farrar-Hockley, DSO, MBE, MC

1965-7            Lt Col FH Scobie, OBE

1967-9            Lt Col FA Ward-Booth

1969-71          Lt Col PI Chiswell, MBE

1971-3            Lt Col SG Lorimer

1973-5            Lt Col K Spacie, OBE

1975-8            Lt Col PS Morton, OBE

1978-80          Lt Col K Coates, MBE

1980-2            Lt Col HWR Pike, DSO, MBE

1982-5            Lt Col RA Smith, OBE, QGM

1985-7            Lt Col CD Farrar-Hockley, MC

1987-8            Lt Col RD Llewellin

1988-91          Lt Col HM Fletcher, OBE

1991-3            Lt Col TW Burls, MC

1993-5            Lt Col MSH Worsley-Tonks, MBE

1995-8            Lt Col RH Gash

1998-00          Lt Col ACP Kennett, MBE

2000               Lt Col DM Limb, MBE

2000-3            Lt Col JG Lorimer, DSO MBE

2003-5            Lt Col MP Lowe, MBE

2005-8            Lt Col SJC Tootal

2008-10          Lt Col HS Williams

2010-12          Lt Col J Coates

2012-15          Lt Col MW Shervington

2015-16          Lt Col MT Cansdale MBE

2016-19          Lt Col MG Hargraves

2019-21          Lt Col MA Swann

2021-              Lt Col WTH Hunt

 

Regimental Sergeant Majors

 

1941-4            JC Lord

1944-5            A E Robinson

1945-7            J Caughey

1947-50          J Stevenson DCM

1950-2            M Joel MBE MM

 1952               J Knowles

1952-5            G Ferguson

1955-7            J Alcock

1957-9            J Rainnie

1959-62          K Freemantle

1962-5            A Channon

1965-6            A Silvers

1966-8            H D Arnold

1968-70          T Williams

1970-2            M J W Borner

1972-4            P A Geraghty BEM

1974-6            R Campbell

1976-7            J Macdonald

1977-8            T B Middleton

1978-9            I Peacock

1979-82          L Ashbridge

1982-4            J J Wilson

1984-5            D Merry

1985-7            T Caithness

1987-8            K W Sargent

1988-90          D W S Evans

1990-2            C A W Smith

1992-4            W S McCulloch

1994-6            R J Bishop

1996-7            G Fielding

1997-9            R E Parry

1999-00          R G F Marshall

2000-2            M Clarkson-Kearsley

2002-4            M Eisler

2004               P Edgar-Lane

2004-6            N Bishop

2006-8            J Hardy

2008-10          M D Bridge

2010-2            R A Hames

2012-3            S Tidmarsh

2013-15          D Leitch

2015-17          H Davies

2017-19          K Perzylo

2019-21          PD Scott

2021               MA Firth

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