127th Baluch Light Infantry

General Sir Charles Napier, the British commander, was much impressed by the ferocious courage of his Balochi opponents and decided to recruit two irregular battalions of Bombay Army for local service within Sindh.

[3][4] When the Indian Mutiny broke out in 1857, the 1st Belooch Battalion under Lieutenant Colonel Farquhar was dispatched across the Sindh desert to join the Delhi Field Force.

During the next two years, it fought in numerous engagements in Oudh and Rohilkhand, as the British systematically stamped out all resistance.

The red trousers were a distinctive feature of all five Baluch infantry regiments then serving in the Indian Army.

In 1922, the regiment was grouped with five other Baluch battalions: 1st & 2nd Battalions of 124th Duchess of Connaught's Own Baluchistan Infantry, 126th Baluchistan Infantry, 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis and the 130th King George's Own Baluchis (Jacob's Rifles), to form the 10th Baluch Regiment.

[3][6] During the Second World War, 3/10th Baluch served in Iran, Iraq, North Africa, Sicily, Italy and Greece.

127th Queen Mary's Own Baluch Light Infantry on parade, Bombay 1911.
127th Queen Mary's Own Baluch Light Infantry. Watercolour by Major AC Lovett, c. 1910.
Lance Naik Wazeer Khan (a Balochi from Rind tribe), 27th Bombay Native Infantry, c. 1865.