220 “The Wiltshire Regiment for Wiltshire.” 
establishment, which movement took place on the 2nd, 4th, 6th, and 7th of 
June, leaving the Depét at Chatham under the command of Captain John 
‘Walter. The head quarters and three companies arrived safe at Madras, 
on the 16th and 17th September, and the remainder of the regiment 
arrived on the 3rd, 11th, and 12th of October following. On the landing 
of the first division under the command of Lt.-Col. Reed it marched to 
Marmalong Bridge, six miles from Fort Saint George, and encamped, where 
it remained seventeen days and proceeded on route to Bangalore, in the 
Mysore Division, and arrived at that.station on the 29th October, and the 
remainder of the regiment arrived at Bangalore on the 16th of November, 
under the command of Major Parker. 
The regiment continued stationed at Bangalore during the remaineder 
of the year. 
J. REED, 
Lt.-Col. Com. H. M. Sixty-Second Regt. 
[The body of the document is in a round clerical handwriting, the signature 
alone being Col. Reed’s.] 
APPENDIX.—No. IV. 
War Office Papers. No. Il. 
Sergeant Sullivan’s Memorial. Sizxty-Second Regiment. 
To General Sir F. A. Weatherall, Colonel of Her Majesty’s Sixty-Second (or 
Wiltshire) Regiment. 
The memorial of James Sullivan, late Colour-Sergeant and Regimental 
Clerk, Sixty-Second Regiment. i 
Most humbly and most respectfully sheweth :— . 
That memorialist, in July, 1835, forwarded to the late Field-Marshal Sir 
Samuel Hulse, then Colonel of the Sixty-Second Regiment, a memorial, a copy 
of which is hereunto annexed, relative to the services of the Sixty-Second Regi- 
ment in different parts of the globe, which he supposes has been mislaid, or 
perhaps not submitted to the perusal of the Field- Marshal in consequence of 
indisposition. 
And memorialist now refers it with the greatest confidence to the favorable 
consideration of Sir F. A. Weatherall, recollecting that the General fouzht side 
by side with the ‘Old Springers” on many a well-fought field during the first 
American war, viz.; at Brooklyn, White Plain, Fort Washington, Elizabeth 
Town, German Town, Prince Town, Monmouth, &e. 
Memorialist is sorry that the recording the services of his regiment has not been 
taken up and submitted to the proper quarter by some officer of rank who served 
in the corps, but he is sorry to say that most of the old officers are now no more— 
the only ‘‘ Peninsula” officer now serving in the Sixty-Second Regiment being 
