The 67th Punjabis were an infantry regiment

The 67th Punjabis were an infantry regiment of the British Indian Army. They could trace their origins to 1759, when they were raised as the 8th Battalion Coast Sepoys. The regiment's first action was during the Carnatic Wars followed by the Third Anglo-Mysore War. In 1914, during World War I the regiment was at first in the 4th (Quetta) Division which remained in India, on internal security and as a training unit. A second battalion was formed and both were posted overseas and served in the 12th Indian Division which fought in the Battle of Shaiba, the Battle of Khafajiya and the Battle of Nasiriya in the Mesopotamia Campaign. Two platoons were also posted to Tabriz, Iran as part of the Norperforce. The second battalion was also involved in the Mesopotamia campaign with the 14th Indian Division and fought in the Second Battle of Kut and the Fall of Baghdad (1917). Both battalions then served in the Third Afghan War.

After World War I the British Indian government reformed the army moving from single battalion regiments to multi battalion regiments. In 1922, the 67th Punjabis became the 1st and 10th (Training) Battalions, 2nd Punjab Regiment. Buttons by : Hobsons and Sons Ltd., 94 St. Martin's Lane, SW. & 43 & 44 Artillery Place, Woolwich Street 1873-1877 37 & 38 Windmill Street, W. & 43 & 44 Artillery Place, Woolwich Street 1878-1884 37 & 38 Little Windmill Street, W. 1885-1886 1, 3, & 5 Lexington Street, Golden Square, W. 1887-1899

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