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HISTORY The Regiment was raised as a Machine Gun regiment in Bloemfontein and its surrounding districts in the Orange Free State on 1 April 1934 . Lieutenant-Colonel McHardy was the Regiment's first Commanding Officer; mobilisation for World War II took place on the 5 June 1940 . In order to increase the strength of the regiment, volunteers from the De Wet and Louw Wepener regiments and the Orange Free State Field Artillery (''O.V.S. Veld Artillerie'' in Afrikaans ) were transferred to it. The Regiment arrived in Egypt in June 1941 , as the Machine Gun Battalion of the South African 1st Infantry Division . The regiment saw a lot of action in the North African desert, most notably at Sidi Rezegh , where its 3rd Company went into action with 4 officers, 117 other ranks and 25 "natives", of whom only 1 officer, 44 other ranks and 9 "natives" survived. At the end of 1941 the regiment was made part of the 5th South African Infantry Brigade. In March of the same year additional personnel was received from the 3rd Battalion of the Transvaal Scottish Regiment and in April Lieutenant-Colonel W. P. Minnaar succeeded McHardy as its commanding officer. Minnaar commanded the regiment during the El Alamein fighting in June. In January of 1943 the unit was sent back to the then- Union Of South Africa and placed under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel A. S. Nel, who became the commanding officer of the amalgamated President Botha /President Steyn Regiment in August of the same year. The unit was later converted to an Armoured Car regiment. In 1975 the regiment converted from armoured cars to Tanks and eventually formed part of the South African Army's 82 Mechanized Brigade. What was later to become Regiment Vrystaat was formed in the same year as the second battalion of Regiment President Steyn. The regiment saw service during the South African Border War (as Infantry ). Its first active duty as a tank unit was when two squadrons took part in Operation Packer in March 1988 . REGIMENTAL SYMBOLS
BATTLE HONOURS
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