74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids) - meaning and definition. What is 74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids)
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What (who) is 74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids) - definition

RAISED IN 1762 AND RENUMBERED AS THE 74TH IN 1763
117th Regiment of Foot (1761)

74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids)         
The 74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids) was an infantry regiment of the British Army from 1762 to 1768.
74th Ohio Infantry Regiment         
INFANTRY REGIMENT IN THE UNION ARMY DURING THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
74th Ohio Infantry
The 74th Ohio Infantry Regiment, sometimes 74th Ohio Volunteer Infantry (or 74th OVI) was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War.
135th (Limerick) Regiment of Foot         
INFANTRY REGIMENT OF THE BRITISH ARMY, CREATED AND PROMPTLY DISBANDED IN 1796
135th Regiment of Foot; 135th Regiment; 135th Foot; 135th Regiment of Foot (1796)
The 135th (Limerick) Regiment of Foot was an infantry regiment of Fencibles in the British Army, created and promptly disbanded in 1796. The regiment, raised by Sir Vere Hunt, did not see any active service; it served solely to recruit soldiers.

Wikipedia

74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids)

The 74th Regiment of Foot (Invalids) was an infantry regiment of the British Army from 1762 to 1768.

It was originally raised as a regiment of invalids in March 1762, and numbered the 117th Foot; it was renumbered as the 74th the following year, and disbanded in 1768.