3rd
Regiment Royal Military Police 

3rd Regiment Royal Military Police is the only Regiment inside the borders of Great Britain that has an entire compliment of sub-units (companies) that are all active duty. There are three companies under 3 RMP and they are spread across England. The history of Regiments in the Royal Military Police with the first one being established in 1997 followed soon thereafter by 3 RMP in 1999. Prior to the regiments each company worked directly for a maneuver brigade inside the British Army. Enclosed here are all the subjects of life in the 3 RMP that Ian has chosen to take photos of and share. There are things happening every week that don't receive photos but make the life of an American exchange officer with the British Army an interesting and enjoyable one.
Exercise Iron Truncheon - June 2005
Normandy Officer's Mess Summer Ball - July 16, 2005
Beating Retreat and Closing Ceremony - Roussillon Barracks, Chichester
Royal Military Police Training School
10 September 2005
HM Tower of London Church Parade - Feb 5, 2006
Edinburgh Military Tattoo - Ian - August 2006
Normandy D-Day Beaches Battlefield Tour - Ian - September 2006
Scafell Pike - 3,210 ft - October 2006
Ian's helicopter flight over Salisbury Plain - November 2006
Remembrance Sunday - November 12th, 2006
HM Tower of London Church Parade - Feb 4, 2007
This is the Bond of Friendship between the US Army Military Police and the British Royal Military Police
It is signed by the USAMP Commandant and the British Provost Marshal (Army)

Our home is located on Bulford Camp which is on the east end of the UK Army Training Estate - Salisbury Plain. The Salisbury Plain is the United Kingdom’s largest military training area and has been so for over 100 years since land was first purchased by the War Department in 1897. The training area encompasses 94,000 acres, which is the size of the Isle of Wight. 58,000 acres are for manoeuvre training and the Salisbury Plain offers first-class and diverse training facilities to enable the British Army to meet it’s training requirements to prepare for the operational roles at which it excels. The Salisbury Plain training estate is also adjacent to the World Heritage Site at Stonehenge and it is renowned internationally for its herb-rich rolling chalk grassland and includes 42 tenant farmers whose sheep and cattle grazing along with ploughing activities are key to the management of the Plain’s grasslands. It is home to a large concentration of archaeology, with over 2,400 archaeological sites, 541 of which are Scheduled Monuments.
What does all this jargon really mean? It means that living here is like living in a picture book of Ole world England. Hopefully you can see this through our photos or maybe get a chance to visit sometime.

