- Queen’s Lancashire Regiment
- East Lancashire Regiment
- South Lancashire Regiment
- The Loyal Regiment (North Lancashire)
- Lancashire Regiment (Prince of Wales Volunteers)
- The Regiments of Foot
- The Royal Lancashire Militia
- The Lancashire Rifle Volunteers
- History of The Queen’s Lancashire Regiment
- For Valour – The Victoria Cross
- Narrative Histories
- The Regiments in the Seven Years War 1756-63
- The ‘Fighting Fortieth’ at the Battle of Germantown, 4th October 1777
- With Nelson to Bastia 1794
- Black Soldiers in Lancashire in the Early 19th Century.
- Battle of Barossa 1809
- Waterloo 1815
- The Regiment’s Greatest Tragedy – The Wrecking of the Seahorse, Lord Melville & Boadicea
- Battle of The Alma 1854
- Heroes of Inkerman 1854
- The Regiments in Afghanistan 1839-42, 1878-80, and 1919
- The 2nd Afghan War 1878-80
- The “Battle” of the Eureka Stockade
- The Regiments In The South African War 1899-1902
- The Regiments In The Great War 1914-18
- The 1914 Christmas Truces
- 2nd Loyals in East Africa 1914-17
- Mesopotamia 1916 – 1918
- The Accrington Pals and the Benedictine Connection – or ‘A Bene and ‘ot’
- The Regiments in World War II
- The Regiments Post-War
- Battle Honours
- Fulwood Barracks
This Day In History
- 1826 Bhurtpore, India. After a 3-week siege, the Grenadier Company of the 59th Foot (later 2nd East Lancashires) leads the rest of the Regiment into and up the breach in the massive city walls caused by exploding a mine under them. After many hours of hand-to-hand fighting on the ramparts and in the streets, the city falls.