A fact from Provisional Cavalry appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 4 April 2019 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that the means of raising the late 18th-century British Provisional Cavalry was likened to the medieval-era feudal system?
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Latest comment: 5 years ago4 comments2 people in discussion
{{cite book |last=Beckett |first=Ian Frederick William |title=Britain's Part-Time Soldiers: The Amateur Military Tradition: 1558–1945 |publisher= Pen & Sword Military |location=Barnsley, South Yorkshire |year= 2011 |isbn=9781848843950}} briefly mentions the Provisional Cavalry. "Only six regiments of provisional cavalry were actually embodied, that of Worcestershire alone serving in Ireland. But the army required no more cavalry and those units not embodied were absorbed into county yeomanries where their lower social status led to frequent ostracism. By March 1800 all trace of the provisional cavalry had disappeared with the disbanding of remaining embodied regiments." Factotem (talk) 09:30, 26 February 2019 (UTC)Reply
NP. I edited it slightly to make the distinction between embodied units (those that were actually called out) and units that were raised (but not called out), and to avoid any confusion with the entirely different Worcestershire Regiment. I'm not 100% certain about the dates of disbandment; from my reading, all individual units had been absorbed into the Yeomanry by 1800, but the force still existed on paper until 1802. Factotem (talk) 11:16, 26 February 2019 (UTC)Reply