RAC TRG SQN, Bovington was formed to train phase 2 soldiers, who had done there basic military training at Catterick, Harrogate. This site has been set up for the permanent staff who worked there
The Royal Armoured Corps (RAC) was formed on 4 April 1939, just months before the outbreak of the Second World War, making it one of the younger corps in the British Army. However, it is also unique among the corps, since it was not formed by amalgamating existing corps into a single overarching unit.
Instead, it is the umbrella for a large number of existing regiments, each of which also retained its individual regimental identity. These regiments were mainly former cavalry regiments, but also included the battalions of the Royal Tank Regiment, which was known as the Royal Tank Corps before the RAC’s formation.
Since then the Royal Armoured Corps has acted as the overall corps for all mechanised cavalry units and now includes ten regular and four territorial regiments, operating both as main armour and reconnaissance. The Reconnaissance Corps also became a part of the Royal Armoured Corps from 1944 until the Reconnaissance Corps’s disbandment in 1946.
Household Cavalry
1st Queen's Dragoon Guards
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
Royal Dragoon Guards
Queen's Royal Hussars
9th/12th Lancers
King's Royal Hussars
Light Dragoons
Queen's Royal Lancers
1st Royal Tank Regiment
2nd Royal Tank Regiment
Royal Yeomanry
Queen's Own Yeomanry
Royal Mercian & Lancastrian Yeomanry
Royal Wessex Yeomanry
Armour Centre, Bovington
Tags: Organization