With the death of the Queen Mother in 2002, the regiment sent a contingent to participate in her funeral procession.
The regiment sent I Company across to support the withdrawal.
Instead of contributing their best men as ordered, the regiments sent their misfits and troublemakers.
The regiment sent mounted infantry for service in the Boer War as the Imperial Yeomanry, between 1900 and 1902.
In the First World War the regiment sent a force of 8 officers and 229 other ranks commanded by Major J. Hall Brown.
By disobeying direct orders, the regiment sent a clear message to London that loyalty of India's armed forces could not be taken for granted to enact draconian measures.
The regiment, like most British regiments in the war, sent the majority of its battalions to the Western Front.
After two weeks, the regiment sent on garrison duty at Ft. Pillow, Tennessee for three months.
The regiment sent volunteers to the South African War and also furnished aid to the civilian government by quelling a riot at a paper mill.
A regiment sent to regain Tarhanna, bushwhacked and wiped out.