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The Board of Ordnance (which was separate from the Army and included the Royal Artillery and the Royal Engineers as part of its establishment) had always maintained its own veterinary service; but following the abolition of the Board and the transfer of its troops to the Army, the separate veterinary services were brought together under a single Principal Veterinary Surgeon (P.V.S.) in 1859.
The 1st Military Working Dog Regiment, Royal Army Veterinary Corps is a British Army working dog unit. It is responsible for providing trained dogs and handlers to support British Armed Forces on operations in the UK and overseas.The regiment holds the Army’s only deployable MWD and veterinary capability.
Royal Canadian Army Veterinary Corps (RCAVC) 1910 to 1940 Australia: Australian Army Veterinary Corps (AAVC) [10] [11] 1909–1946 New Zealand: New Zealand Veterinary Corps (NZVC) [12] [13] 1907– 9 January 1947 Spain: Spanish Armed Forces Military Veterinary Center (CEMILVET) [14] 1904 to present Russia: Veterinary-Sanitary department [15 ...
Veterinary Corps may refer to: Australian Army Veterinary Corps, part of the Australian Army; Royal Army Veterinary Corps, part of the British Army; Royal Canadian Army Veterinary Corps, part of the Canadian Army; Indian Army Remount and Veterinary Corps, part of the Indian Army; Swedish Army Veterinary Corps, part of the Swedish Army
The Royal Army Medical Service's cap badge is an amalgamation of elements from the three antecedent corps: [5] Laurel - common to all three corps; Sword blade from the Royal Army Dental Corps; Dannebrog cross from the Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps; Serpent from the Royal Army Medical Corps
This page was last edited on 15 January 2021, at 10:38 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Army Medical Services (AMS) is the organisation responsible for administering the corps that deliver medical, veterinary, dental and nursing services in the British Army. It is headquartered at the former Staff College, Camberley , near the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst .
Major-General Sir Robert Pringle KCMG CB DSO FRCVS (25 August 1855 – 30 June 1925) was Director-General of the Army Veterinary Service from 1910 to 1917. Pringle was born in 1855, the son of Mary née McCulloch (1819–1902) and Gilbert Pringle (1818–1897), a master blacksmith of Stranraer in Scotland [1] and attended Glasgow College. [2]