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The mascot tradition in the Regiments of Staffordshire stretches back to the 19th Century. In
1882 The South Staffordshire Regiment was ordered to march with Lord Wolseley to the relief of General
Gordon who was besieged in Khartoum. They entrained at Cairo with their Staffordshire Bull Terrier "Boxer".
Unfortunately Boxer leapt from the moving train and was seen lying unconscious or dead at the side
of the track. A few days later when the Regiment encamped at Assiut awaiting orders for the final
phase of their march, a very thin and bedraggled dog staggered into their camp and collapsed. Boxer
had walked for over 200 miles along the scorching desert railway track to rejoin his regiment, a
true soldier.
From then on the tradition of having a Bull Terrier as a mascot continued with the battalions
until after the Second World War. In 1949 the 6th Battalion the North Staffordshire Regiment were
presented with a Staffordshire Bull Terrier for being the highest recruited infantry battalion in
the Territorial Army. On the 25th May 1949 the 6th North Staffords sent a Company-size group (some
120 men) along with its Corps of Drums and Fifes to the Royal Tournament, which was held that year
in Olympia. The mascot Watchman I was pure white in colour and showed little interest in the occasion
until the Band and Drums struck up. At which point he raised his head and marched proudly to the
thunderous applause of an appreciative audience who had immediately taken him to their hearts. Over
the next decade Watchman I attended every parade in which the battalion took part and was presented
to Her Majesty The Queen on her visit to Burton-on-Trent on 28th March 1957. He passed away in 1959
and was laid to rest in the lawns opposite the Town Hall in King Edward Square Burton-on-Trent.
Such was the tradition, interest and good feeling of the people of Burton towards this most popular
mascot that in September 1960 Watchman II was presented to the Regiment by the town at a civic parade.
Like his predecessor he was to march at the head of the Battalion throughout the next six years
of his life and was presented to Her Majesty The Queen on the occasion of the Presentation of New
Colours to the 6th North Staffords and 5th South Staffords, and a Guidon to the Staffordshire Yeomanry
at Molineaux in the early 1960s. His last parade was the Honorary Colonels Parade held at St Martins
Camp in 1966. The following year the County TA Regiments were reformed and Watchman II went into
retirement until his death in 1974 at the age of fourteen. He was laid to rest alongside his predecessor
at Burton where both are remembered on a commemorative plaque.
The 3rd Battalion The Staffordshire Regiment was raised in 1988 and it was felt that the time-honoured
tradition of having a mascot should continue. Consequently a search was made to find a dog with
the suitable pedigree and bearing to do justice to the Regiment and County. As an indication of
the depth of feeling within the County for the mascot, the people of Burton presented the Regiment
with Watchman III in 1988. He served until his death in 1998 and was interred alongside his two
predecessors.
Watchman IV was presented to the Regiment as a puppy in August 1998 by the Friends of the Regiment
and continues to parade with both the 1st Battalion and the newly formed West Midlands Regiment.
He will participate in the Tercentenary Celebrations in 2005.
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